public inbox for [email protected]
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: Kent Overstreet <[email protected]>
To: Bernd Schubert <[email protected]>
Cc: Miklos Szeredi <[email protected]>,
	Bernd Schubert <[email protected]>,
	 Amir Goldstein <[email protected]>,
	[email protected],
	 Andrew Morton <[email protected]>,
	[email protected], Ingo Molnar <[email protected]>,
	 Peter Zijlstra <[email protected]>,
	Andrei Vagin <[email protected]>,
	[email protected]
Subject: Re: [PATCH RFC v2 00/19] fuse: fuse-over-io-uring
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 2024 19:35:01 -0400	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <im6hqczm7qpr3oxndwupyydnclzne6nmpidln6wee4cer7i6up@hmpv4juppgii> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>

On Tue, Jun 11, 2024 at 07:37:30PM GMT, Bernd Schubert wrote:
> 
> 
> On 6/11/24 17:35, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> > On Tue, 11 Jun 2024 at 12:26, Bernd Schubert <[email protected]> wrote:
> > 
> >> Secondly, with IORING_OP_URING_CMD we already have only a single command
> >> to submit requests and fetch the next one - half of the system calls.
> >>
> >> Wouldn't IORING_OP_READV/IORING_OP_WRITEV be just this approach?
> >> https://github.com/uroni/fuseuring?
> >> I.e. it hook into the existing fuse and just changes from read()/write()
> >> of /dev/fuse to io-uring of /dev/fuse. With the disadvantage of zero
> >> control which ring/queue and which ring-entry handles the request.
> > 
> > Unlike system calls, io_uring ops should have very little overhead.
> > That's one of the main selling points of io_uring (as described in the
> > io_uring(7) man page).
> > 
> > So I don't think it matters to performance whether there's a combined
> > WRITEV + READV (or COMMIT + FETCH) op or separate ops.
> 
> This has to be performance proven and is no means what I'm seeing. How
> should io-uring improve performance if you have the same number of
> system calls?
> 
> As I see it (@Jens or @Pavel or anyone else please correct me if I'm
> wrong), advantage of io-uring comes when there is no syscall overhead at
> all - either you have a ring with multiple entries and then one side
> operates on multiple entries or you have polling and no syscall overhead
> either. We cannot afford cpu intensive polling - out of question,
> besides that I had even tried SQPOLL and it made things worse (that is
> actually where my idea about application polling comes from).
> As I see it, for sync blocking calls (like meta operations) with one
> entry in the queue, you would get no advantage with
> IORING_OP_READV/IORING_OP_WRITEV -  io-uring has  do two system calls -
> one to submit from kernel to userspace and another from userspace to
> kernel. Why should io-uring be faster there?
> 
> And from my testing this is exactly what I had seen - io-uring for meta
> requests (i.e. without a large request queue and *without* core
> affinity) makes meta operations even slower that /dev/fuse.
> 
> For anything that imposes a large ring queue and where either side
> (kernel or userspace) needs to process multiple ring entries - system
> call overhead gets reduced by the queue size. Just for DIO or meta
> operations that is hard to reach.
> 
> Also, if you are using IORING_OP_READV/IORING_OP_WRITEV, nothing would
> change in fuse kernel? I.e. IOs would go via fuse_dev_read()?
> I.e. we would not have encoded in the request which queue it belongs to?

Want to try out my new ringbuffer syscall?

I haven't yet dug far into the fuse protocol or /dev/fuse code yet, only
skimmed. But using it to replace the read/write syscall overhead should
be straightforward; you'll want to spin up a kthread for responding to
requests.

The next thing I was going to look at is how you guys are using splice,
we want to get away from that too.

Brian was also saying the fuse virtio_fs code may be worth
investigating, maybe that could be adapted?

  reply	other threads:[~2024-06-11 23:35 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 56+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2024-05-29 18:00 [PATCH RFC v2 00/19] fuse: fuse-over-io-uring Bernd Schubert
2024-05-29 18:00 ` [PATCH RFC v2 19/19] fuse: {uring} Optimize async sends Bernd Schubert
2024-05-31 16:24   ` Jens Axboe
2024-05-31 17:36     ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-31 19:10       ` Jens Axboe
2024-06-01 16:37         ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-30  7:07 ` [PATCH RFC v2 00/19] fuse: fuse-over-io-uring Amir Goldstein
2024-05-30 12:09   ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-30 15:36 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-30 16:02   ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-30 16:10     ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-30 16:17       ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-30 17:30         ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-30 19:09         ` Josef Bacik
2024-05-30 20:05           ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-31  3:53         ` [PATCH] fs: sys_ringbuffer() (WIP) Kent Overstreet
2024-05-31 13:11           ` kernel test robot
2024-05-31 15:49           ` kernel test robot
2024-05-30 16:21     ` [PATCH RFC v2 00/19] fuse: fuse-over-io-uring Jens Axboe
2024-05-30 16:32       ` Bernd Schubert
2024-05-30 17:26         ` Jens Axboe
2024-05-30 17:16       ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-30 17:28         ` Jens Axboe
2024-05-30 17:58           ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-30 18:48             ` Jens Axboe
2024-05-30 19:35               ` Kent Overstreet
2024-05-31  0:11                 ` Jens Axboe
2024-06-04 23:45       ` Ming Lei
2024-05-30 20:47 ` Josef Bacik
2024-06-11  8:20 ` Miklos Szeredi
2024-06-11 10:26   ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-11 15:35     ` Miklos Szeredi
2024-06-11 17:37       ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-11 23:35         ` Kent Overstreet [this message]
2024-06-12 13:53           ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12 14:19             ` Kent Overstreet
2024-06-12 15:40               ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12 15:55                 ` Kent Overstreet
2024-06-12 16:15                   ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12 16:24                     ` Kent Overstreet
2024-06-12 16:44                       ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12  7:39         ` Miklos Szeredi
2024-06-12 13:32           ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12 13:46             ` Bernd Schubert
2024-06-12 14:07             ` Miklos Szeredi
2024-06-12 14:56               ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-02 23:03                 ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-29 22:32                 ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-30 13:12                   ` Jens Axboe
2024-08-30 13:28                     ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-30 13:33                       ` Jens Axboe
2024-08-30 14:55                         ` Pavel Begunkov
2024-08-30 15:10                           ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-30 20:08                           ` Jens Axboe
2024-08-31  0:02                             ` Bernd Schubert
2024-08-31  0:49                               ` Bernd Schubert

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to=im6hqczm7qpr3oxndwupyydnclzne6nmpidln6wee4cer7i6up@hmpv4juppgii \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    [email protected] \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox