2018-04-20 22:34 GMT+08:00 Jens Axboe <[email protected]>:
> On 4/19/18 9:51 PM, Zhengyuan Liu wrote:
>> Hi, Shaohua
>>
>> I found it indeed doesn't do front merge when two threads flush plug list  
>> concurrently.   To
>> reappear , I prepared two IO threads , named a0.io and a1.io .
>> Thread a1.io  uses libaio to write 5 requests :
>>     sectors: 16 + 8, 40 + 8, 64 + 8, 88 + 8, 112 + 8
>> Thread a0.io  uses libaio to write other 5 requests :
>>     sectors: 8+ 8, 32 + 8, 56 + 8, 80 + 8, 104 + 8
>
> I'm cutting some of the below.
>
> Thanks for the detailed email. It's mostly on purpose that we don't
> spend cycles and memory on maintaining a separate front merge hash,
> since it's generally not something that happens very often. If you have
> a thread pool doing IO and split sequential IO such that you would
> benefit a lot from front merging, then I would generally claim that
> you're not writing your app in the most optimal manner.
>

Thanks for explanation, I only consider the problem through the code's 
perspective and ignore the reality situation of app. 

> So I'm curious, what's the big interest in front merging?

If it's not something that happens so much often, I think it's not worth to 
support front merging too.

By the way, I got another question that why not  blktrace tracing the back
merging of requests while flushing plugged requests to queue,  if it does
we may get a more clear view about IO merging.

>
> --
> Jens Axboe
>

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