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authorPaolo Valente <[email protected]>2019-01-29 12:06:31 +0100
committerJens Axboe <[email protected]>2019-01-31 12:50:23 -0700
commitac8b0cb415f3aa9162009d39624501d37031533b (patch)
tree7535aac3227f576c0625be34b15d1bbcedeb9d31 /tools/perf/scripts/python
parent05c2f5c30b3ca2346a5bb7c74b0c9515d8f4fbd2 (diff)
block, bfq: do not plug I/O of in-service queue when harmful
If the in-service bfq_queue is sync and remains temporarily idle, then I/O dispatching (from other queues) may be plugged. It may be dome for two reasons: either to boost throughput, or to preserve the bandwidth share of the in-service queue. In the first case, if the I/O of the in-service queue, when it finally arrives, consists only of one small I/O request, then it makes sense to plug even the I/O of the in-service queue. In fact, serving such a small request immediately is likely to lower throughput instead of boosting it, whereas waiting a little bit is likely to let that request grow, thanks to request merging, and become more profitable in terms of throughput (this is likely to happen exactly because the I/O of the queue has been detected to boost throughput). On the opposite end, if I/O dispatching is being plugged only to preserve the bandwidth of the in-service queue, then it would be better not to plug also the I/O of the in-service queue, because such a plugging is likely to cause only loss of bandwidth for the queue. Unfortunately, no distinction is made between the two cases, and the I/O of the in-service queue is always plugged in case just a small I/O request arrives. This commit draws this missing distinction and does not perform harmful plugging. Signed-off-by: Paolo Valente <[email protected]> Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python')
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