• J
    block: revert part of 18ce3751 · 78f707bf
    Jens Axboe 提交于
    The above commit added WRITE_SYNC and switched various places to using
    that for committing writes that will be waited upon immediately after
    submission. However, this causes a performance regression with AS and CFQ
    for ext3 at least, since sync_dirty_buffer() will submit some writes with
    WRITE_SYNC while ext3 has sumitted others dependent writes without the sync
    flag set. This causes excessive anticipation/idling in the IO scheduler
    because sync and async writes get interleaved, causing a big performance
    regression for the below test case (which is meant to simulate sqlite
    like behaviour).
    
    ---- test case ----
    
    int main(int argc, char **argv)
    {
    
    	int fdes, i;
    	FILE *fp;
    	struct timeval start;
    	struct timeval end;
    	struct timeval res;
    
    	gettimeofday(&start, NULL);
    	for (i=0; i<ROWS; i++) {
    		fp = fopen("test_file", "a");
    		fprintf(fp, "Some Text Data\n");
    		fdes = fileno(fp);
    		fsync(fdes);
    		fclose(fp);
    	}
    	gettimeofday(&end, NULL);
    
    	timersub(&end, &start, &res);
    	fprintf(stdout, "time to write %d lines is %ld(msec)\n", ROWS,
    			(res.tv_sec*1000000 + res.tv_usec)/1000);
    
    	return 0;
    }
    
    -------------------
    
    Thanks to Sean.White@APCC.com for tracking down this performance
    regression and providing a test case.
    Signed-off-by: NJens Axboe <jens.axboe@oracle.com>
    78f707bf
buffer.c 89.5 KB