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Re: xfs and swift

To: Mark Seger <mjseger@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: xfs and swift
From: Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 7 Jan 2016 09:10:04 +1100
Cc: Laurence Oberman <loberman@xxxxxxxxxx>, Linux fs XFS <xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Delivered-to: xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx
In-reply-to: <20160106220454.GI21461@dastard>
References: <CAC2B=ZGX2bkEhdgCrpS2X5v+SpAg0jtxZ19vk_9+O9aHME-FSA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20160106220454.GI21461@dastard>
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)
On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 09:04:54AM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 06, 2016 at 10:15:25AM -0500, Mark Seger wrote:
> > I've recently found the performance our development swift system is
> > degrading over time as the number of objects/files increases.  This is a
> > relatively small system, each server has 3 400GB disks.  The system I'm
> > currently looking at has about 70GB tied up in slabs alone, close to 55GB
> > in xfs inodes and ili, and about 2GB free.  The kernel
> > is 3.14.57-1-amd64-hlinux.
> 
> So you go 50M cached inodes in memory, and a relatively old kernel.
> 
> > Here's the way the filesystems are mounted:
> > 
> > /dev/sdb1 on /srv/node/disk0 type xfs
> > (rw,noatime,nodiratime,attr2,nobarrier,inode64,logbufs=8,logbsize=256k,sunit=512,swidth=1536,noquota)
> > 
> > I can do about 2000 1K file creates/sec when running 2 minute PUT tests at
> > 100 threads.  If I repeat that tests for multiple hours, I see the number
> > of IOPS steadily decreasing to about 770 and the very next run it drops to
> > 260 and continues to fall from there.  This happens at about 12M files.
> 
> According to the numbers you've provided:
> 
>       lookups         creates         removes
> Fast: 1550            1350            300
> Slow: 1000             900            250
> 
> This is pretty much what I'd expect on the XFS level when going from
> a small empty filesystem to one containing 12M 1k files.
> 
> That does not correlate to your numbers above, so it's not at all
> clear that there is realy a problem here at the XFS level.
> 
> > The directory structure is 2 tiered, with 1000 directories per tier so we
> > can have about 1M of them, though they don't currently all exist.
> 
> That's insane.
> 
> The xfs directory structure is much, much more space, time, IO and
> memory efficient that a directory hierachy like this. The only thing
> you need a directory hash hierarchy for is to provide sufficient
> concurrency for your operations, which you would probably get with a
> single level with one or two subdirs per filesystem AG.

BTW, you might want to read the section on directory block size for
a quick introduction to XFS directory design and scalability:

https://git.kernel.org/cgit/fs/xfs/xfs-documentation.git/tree/admin/XFS_Performance_Tuning/filesystem_tunables.asciidoc

Cheers,

Dave.
-- 
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

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