On 01/18/2017 06:02 AM, Hannes Reinecke wrote:
> On 01/17/2017 05:50 PM, Sagi Grimberg wrote:
>>
>>>     So it looks like we are super not efficient because most of the
>>>     times we catch 1
>>>     completion per interrupt and the whole point is that we need to find
>>>     more! This fio
>>>     is single threaded with QD=32 so I'd expect that we be somewhere in
>>>     8-31 almost all
>>>     the time... I also tried QD=1024, histogram is still the same.
>>>
>>>
>>> It looks like it takes you longer to submit an I/O than to service an
>>> interrupt,
>>
>> Well, with irq-poll we do practically nothing in the interrupt handler,
>> only schedule irq-poll. Note that the latency measures are only from
>> the point the interrupt arrives and the point we actually service it
>> by polling for completions.
>>
>>> so increasing queue depth in the singe-threaded case doesn't
>>> make much difference. You might want to try multiple threads per core
>>> with QD, say, 32
>>
>> This is how I ran, QD=32.
> 
> The one thing which I found _really_ curious is this:
> 
>   IO depths    : 1=0.1%, 2=0.1%, 4=0.1%, 8=0.1%, 16=0.1%, 32=0.1%,
>> =64=100.0%
>      submit    : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%,
>> =64=0.0%
>      complete  : 0=0.0%, 4=100.0%, 8=0.0%, 16=0.0%, 32=0.0%, 64=0.0%,
>> =64=0.1%
>      issued    : total=r=7673377/w=0/d=0, short=r=0/w=0/d=0,
> drop=r=0/w=0/d=0
>      latency   : target=0, window=0, percentile=100.00%, depth=256
> 
> (note the lines starting with 'submit' and 'complete').
> They are _always_ 4, irrespective of the hardware and/or tests which I
> run. Jens, what are these numbers supposed to mean?
> Is this intended?

It's bucketized. 0=0.0% means that 0% of the submissions didn't submit
anything (unsurprisingly), and ditto for the complete side. The next bucket
is 1..4, so 100% of submissions and completions was in that range.

-- 
Jens Axboe

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