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Filipe Manana authored
The possibility of extents being shared (through clone and deduplication operations) requires special care when logging data checksums, to avoid having a log tree with different checksum items that cover ranges which overlap (which resulted in missing checksums after replaying a log tree). Such problems were fixed in the past by the following commits: commit 40e046ac ("Btrfs: fix missing data checksums after replaying a log tree") commit e289f03e ("btrfs: fix corrupt log due to concurrent fsync of inodes with shared extents") Test case generic/588 exercises the scenario solved by the first commit (purely sequential and deterministic) while test case generic/457 often triggered the case fixed by the second commit (not deterministic, requires specific timings under concurrency). The problems were addressed by deleting, from the log tree, any existing checksums before logging the new ones. And also by doing the deletion and logging of the cheksums while locking the checksum range in an extent io tree (root->log_csum_range), to deal with the case where we have concurrent fsyncs against files with shared extents. That however causes more contention on the leaves of a log tree where we store checksums (and all the nodes in the paths leading to them), even when we do not have shared extents, or all the shared extents were created by past transactions. It also adds a bit of contention on the spin lock of the log_csums_range extent io tree of the log root. This change adds a 'last_reflink_trans' field to the inode to keep track of the last transaction where a new extent was shared between inodes (through clone and deduplication operations). It is updated for both the source and destination inodes of reflink operations whenever a new extent (created in the current transaction) becomes shared by the inodes. This field is kept in memory only, not persisted in the inode item, similar to other existing fields (last_unlink_trans, logged_trans). When logging checksums for an extent, if the value of 'last_reflink_trans' is smaller then the current transaction's generation/id, we skip locking the extent range and deletion of checksums from the log tree, since we know we do not have new shared extents. This reduces contention on the log tree's leaves where checksums are stored. The following script, which uses fio, was used to measure the impact of this change: $ cat test-fsync.sh #!/bin/bash DEV=/dev/sdk MNT=/mnt/sdk MOUNT_OPTIONS="-o ssd" MKFS_OPTIONS="-d single -m single" if [ $# -ne 3 ]; then echo "Use $0 NUM_JOBS FILE_SIZE FSYNC_FREQ" exit 1 fi NUM_JOBS=$1 FILE_SIZE=$2 FSYNC_FREQ=$3 cat <<EOF > /tmp/fio-job.ini [writers] rw=write fsync=$FSYNC_FREQ fallocate=none group_reporting=1 direct=0 bs=64k ioengine=sync size=$FILE_SIZE directory=$MNT numjobs=$NUM_JOBS EOF echo "Using config:" echo cat /tmp/fio-job.ini echo mkfs.btrfs -f $MKFS_OPTIONS $DEV mount $MOUNT_OPTIONS $DEV $MNT fio /tmp/fio-job.ini umount $MNT The tests were performed for different numbers of jobs, file sizes and fsync frequency. A qemu VM using kvm was used, with 8 cores (the host has 12 cores, with cpu governance set to performance mode on all cores), 16GiB of ram (the host has 64GiB) and using a NVMe device directly (without an intermediary filesystem in the host). While running the tests, the host was not used for anything else, to avoid disturbing the tests. The obtained results were the following (the last line of fio's output was pasted). Starting with 16 jobs is where a significant difference is observable in this particular setup and hardware (differences highlighted below). The very small differences for tests with less than 16 jobs are possibly just noise and random. **** 1 job, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=23.8MiB/s (24.9MB/s), 23.8MiB/s-23.8MiB/s (24.9MB/s-24.9MB/s), io=1024MiB (1074MB), run=43075-43075msec after this change: WRITE: bw=24.4MiB/s (25.6MB/s), 24.4MiB/s-24.4MiB/s (25.6MB/s-25.6MB/s), io=1024MiB (1074MB), run=41938-41938msec **** 2 jobs, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=37.7MiB/s (39.5MB/s), 37.7MiB/s-37.7MiB/s (39.5MB/s-39.5MB/s), io=2048MiB (2147MB), run=54351-54351msec after this change: WRITE: bw=37.7MiB/s (39.5MB/s), 37.6MiB/s-37.6MiB/s (39.5MB/s-39.5MB/s), io=2048MiB (2147MB), run=54428-54428msec **** 4 jobs, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=67.5MiB/s (70.8MB/s), 67.5MiB/s-67.5MiB/s (70.8MB/s-70.8MB/s), io=4096MiB (4295MB), run=60669-60669msec after this change: WRITE: bw=68.6MiB/s (71.0MB/s), 68.6MiB/s-68.6MiB/s (71.0MB/s-71.0MB/s), io=4096MiB (4295MB), run=59678-59678msec **** 8 jobs, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=128MiB/s (134MB/s), 128MiB/s-128MiB/s (134MB/s-134MB/s), io=8192MiB (8590MB), run=64048-64048msec after this change: WRITE: bw=129MiB/s (135MB/s), 129MiB/s-129MiB/s (135MB/s-135MB/s), io=8192MiB (8590MB), run=63405-63405msec **** 16 jobs, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=78.5MiB/s (82.3MB/s), 78.5MiB/s-78.5MiB/s (82.3MB/s-82.3MB/s), io=16.0GiB (17.2GB), run=208676-208676msec after this change: WRITE: bw=110MiB/s (115MB/s), 110MiB/s-110MiB/s (115MB/s-115MB/s), io=16.0GiB (17.2GB), run=149295-149295msec (+40.1% throughput, -28.5% runtime) **** 32 jobs, file size 1G, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=58.8MiB/s (61.7MB/s), 58.8MiB/s-58.8MiB/s (61.7MB/s-61.7MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=557134-557134msec after this change: WRITE: bw=76.1MiB/s (79.8MB/s), 76.1MiB/s-76.1MiB/s (79.8MB/s-79.8MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=430550-430550msec (+29.4% throughput, -22.7% runtime) **** 64 jobs, file size 512M, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=65.8MiB/s (68.0MB/s), 65.8MiB/s-65.8MiB/s (68.0MB/s-68.0MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=498055-498055msec after this change: WRITE: bw=85.1MiB/s (89.2MB/s), 85.1MiB/s-85.1MiB/s (89.2MB/s-89.2MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=385116-385116msec (+29.3% throughput, -22.7% runtime) **** 128 jobs, file size 256M, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=54.7MiB/s (57.3MB/s), 54.7MiB/s-54.7MiB/s (57.3MB/s-57.3MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=599373-599373msec after this change: WRITE: bw=121MiB/s (126MB/s), 121MiB/s-121MiB/s (126MB/s-126MB/s), io=32.0GiB (34.4GB), run=271907-271907msec (+121.2% throughput, -54.6% runtime) **** 256 jobs, file size 256M, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=69.2MiB/s (72.5MB/s), 69.2MiB/s-69.2MiB/s (72.5MB/s-72.5MB/s), io=64.0GiB (68.7GB), run=947536-947536msec after this change: WRITE: bw=121MiB/s (127MB/s), 121MiB/s-121MiB/s (127MB/s-127MB/s), io=64.0GiB (68.7GB), run=541916-541916msec (+74.9% throughput, -42.8% runtime) **** 512 jobs, file size 128M, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=85.4MiB/s (89.5MB/s), 85.4MiB/s-85.4MiB/s (89.5MB/s-89.5MB/s), io=64.0GiB (68.7GB), run=767734-767734msec after this change: WRITE: bw=141MiB/s (147MB/s), 141MiB/s-141MiB/s (147MB/s-147MB/s), io=64.0GiB (68.7GB), run=466022-466022msec (+65.1% throughput, -39.3% runtime) **** 1024 jobs, file size 128M, fsync frequency 1 **** before this change: WRITE: bw=115MiB/s (120MB/s), 115MiB/s-115MiB/s (120MB/s-120MB/s), io=128GiB (137GB), run=1143775-1143775msec after this change: WRITE: bw=171MiB/s (180MB/s), 171MiB/s-171MiB/s (180MB/s-180MB/s), io=128GiB (137GB), run=764843-764843msec (+48.7% throughput, -33.1% runtime) Reviewed-by: Josef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com> Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com> Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
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