• J
    Btrfs: turbo charge fsync · 5dc562c5
    Josef Bacik 提交于
    At least for the vm workload.  Currently on fsync we will
    
    1) Truncate all items in the log tree for the given inode if they exist
    
    and
    
    2) Copy all items for a given inode into the log
    
    The problem with this is that for things like VMs you can have lots of
    extents from the fragmented writing behavior, and worst yet you may have
    only modified a few extents, not the entire thing.  This patch fixes this
    problem by tracking which transid modified our extent, and then when we do
    the tree logging we find all of the extents we've modified in our current
    transaction, sort them and commit them.  We also only truncate up to the
    xattrs of the inode and copy that stuff in normally, and then just drop any
    extents in the range we have that exist in the log already.  Here are some
    numbers of a 50 meg fio job that does random writes and fsync()s after every
    write
    
    		Original	Patched
    SATA drive	82KB/s		140KB/s
    Fusion drive	431KB/s		2532KB/s
    
    So around 2-6 times faster depending on your hardware.  There are a few
    corner cases, for example if you truncate at all we have to do it the old
    way since there is no way to be sure what is in the log is ok.  This
    probably could be done smarter, but if you write-fsync-truncate-write-fsync
    you deserve what you get.  All this work is in RAM of course so if your
    inode gets evicted from cache and you read it in and fsync it we'll do it
    the slow way if we are still in the same transaction that we last modified
    the inode in.
    
    The biggest cool part of this is that it requires no changes to the recovery
    code, so if you fsync with this patch and crash and load an old kernel, it
    will run the recovery and be a-ok.  I have tested this pretty thoroughly
    with an fsync tester and everything comes back fine, as well as xfstests.
    Thanks,
    Signed-off-by: NJosef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
    5dc562c5
inode.c 206.8 KB