* Re: [ATTEND][LSF/MM TOPIC] FUSE: write-back cache policy and other improvements
[not found] <511BAC51.4030309@parallels.com>
@ 2013-02-28 12:19 ` Maxim V. Patlasov
0 siblings, 0 replies; only message in thread
From: Maxim V. Patlasov @ 2013-02-28 12:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: lsf-pc; +Cc: linux-fsdevel, fuse-devel, linux-mm
Adding linux-mm to cc:. One more point to discuss:
* balance_dirty_pages(): should we account NR_WRITEBACK_TEMP there?
Currently, any FUSE user may consume arbitrary amount of RAM (stuck in
kernel FUSE writeback) by intensive write to a huge mmap-ed area.
02/13/2013 07:08 PM, Maxim V. Patlasov D?D,N?DuN?:
> Hi,
>
> I'm interested in attending to discuss the latest advances in
> accelerating FUSE and making it more friendly to distributed
> file-systems. I'd like to propose and participate in the following
> discussions in the upcoming LSF/MM:
>
> * write-back cache policy: one of the problems with the existing FUSE
> implementation is that it uses the write-through cache policy which
> results in performance problems on certain workloads. A good solution
> of this is switching the FUSE page cache into a write-back policy.
> With this file data are pushed to the userspace with big chunks which
> lets the FUSE daemons handle requests in a more efficient manner.
>
> * optimize scatter-gather direct IO: dio performance can be improved
> significantly by stuffing many io-vectors into a single fuse request.
> This is especially the case for device virtualization thread
> performing i/o on behalf of virtual-machine it serves.
>
> * process direct IO asynchronously: both AIO and ordinary synchronous
> direct IO can be boosted by submitting fuse requests in non-blocking
> way (where it's possible) and either returning -EIOCBQUEUED or waiting
> for their completions synchronously.
>
> * synchronous close(2): currently, in-kernel fuse sends release
> request to userspace and returns without waiting for ACK from
> userspace. Consequently, there is a gap when user regards the file
> released while userspace fuse is still working on it. This leads to
> unnecessary synchronization complications for file-systems with shared
> access. That behaviour can be fixed by making close(2) synchronous.
>
> * throttle request allocations: currently, in-kernel fuse throttles
> allocations of all fuse requests. Switching to the policy where only
> background requests are throttled would improve the latency of
> synchronous requests and resolve thundering herd problem of waking up
> all threads blocked on fuse request allocations.
>
> Thanks,
> Maxim
>
>
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