Commit 7248e0ce authored by Qu Wenruo's avatar Qu Wenruo Committed by David Sterba

btrfs: skip update of block group item if used bytes are the same

[BACKGROUND]

When committing a transaction, we will update block group items for all
dirty block groups.

But in fact, dirty block groups don't always need to update their block
group items.
It's pretty common to have a metadata block group which experienced
several COW operations, but still have the same amount of used bytes.

In that case, we may unnecessarily COW a tree block doing nothing.

[ENHANCEMENT]

This patch will introduce btrfs_block_group::commit_used member to
remember the last used bytes, and use that new member to skip
unnecessary block group item update.

This would be more common for large filesystems, where metadata block
group can be as large as 1GiB, containing at most 64K metadata items.

In that case, if COW added and then deleted one metadata item near the
end of the block group, then it's completely possible we don't need to
touch the block group item at all.

[BENCHMARK]

The change itself can have quite a high chance (20~80%) to skip block
group item updates in lot of workloads.

As a result, it would result shorter time spent on
btrfs_write_dirty_block_groups(), and overall reduce the execution time
of the critical section of btrfs_commit_transaction().

Here comes a fio command, which will do random writes in 4K block size,
causing a very heavy metadata updates.

fio --filename=$mnt/file --size=512M --rw=randwrite --direct=1 --bs=4k \
    --ioengine=libaio --iodepth=64 --runtime=300 --numjobs=4 \
    --name=random_write --fallocate=none --time_based --fsync_on_close=1

The file size (512M) and number of threads (4) means 2GiB file size in
total, but during the full 300s run time, my dedicated SATA SSD is able
to write around 20~25GiB, which is over 10 times the file size.

Thus after we fill the initial 2G, we should not cause much block group
item updates.

Please note, the fio numbers by themselves don't have much change, but
if we look deeper, there is some reduced execution time, especially for
the critical section of btrfs_commit_transaction().

I added extra trace_printk() to measure the following per-transaction
execution time:

- Critical section of btrfs_commit_transaction()
  By re-using the existing update_commit_stats() function, which
  has already calculated the interval correctly.

- The while() loop for btrfs_write_dirty_block_groups()
  Although this includes the execution time of btrfs_run_delayed_refs(),
  it should still be representative overall.

Both result involves transid 7~30, the same amount of transaction
committed.

The result looks like this:

                      |      Before       |     After      |  Diff
----------------------+-------------------+----------------+--------
Transaction interval  | 229247198.5       | 215016933.6    | -6.2%
Block group interval  | 23133.33333       | 18970.83333    | -18.0%

The change in block group item updates is more obvious, as skipped block
group item updates also mean less delayed refs.

And the overall execution time for that block group update loop is
pretty small, thus we can assume the extent tree is already mostly
cached.  If we can skip an uncached tree block, it would cause more
obvious change.

Unfortunately the overall reduction in commit transaction critical
section is much smaller, as the block group item updates loop is not
really the major part, at least not for the above fio script.

But still we have a observable reduction in the critical section.
Reviewed-by: default avatarJosef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarQu Wenruo <wqu@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
parent cc37ea61
......@@ -2071,6 +2071,7 @@ static int read_one_block_group(struct btrfs_fs_info *info,
cache->length = key->offset;
cache->used = btrfs_stack_block_group_used(bgi);
cache->commit_used = cache->used;
cache->flags = btrfs_stack_block_group_flags(bgi);
cache->global_root_id = btrfs_stack_block_group_chunk_objectid(bgi);
......@@ -2762,6 +2763,25 @@ static int update_block_group_item(struct btrfs_trans_handle *trans,
struct extent_buffer *leaf;
struct btrfs_block_group_item bgi;
struct btrfs_key key;
u64 old_commit_used;
u64 used;
/*
* Block group items update can be triggered out of commit transaction
* critical section, thus we need a consistent view of used bytes.
* We cannot use cache->used directly outside of the spin lock, as it
* may be changed.
*/
spin_lock(&cache->lock);
old_commit_used = cache->commit_used;
used = cache->used;
/* No change in used bytes, can safely skip it. */
if (cache->commit_used == used) {
spin_unlock(&cache->lock);
return 0;
}
cache->commit_used = used;
spin_unlock(&cache->lock);
key.objectid = cache->start;
key.type = BTRFS_BLOCK_GROUP_ITEM_KEY;
......@@ -2776,7 +2796,7 @@ static int update_block_group_item(struct btrfs_trans_handle *trans,
leaf = path->nodes[0];
bi = btrfs_item_ptr_offset(leaf, path->slots[0]);
btrfs_set_stack_block_group_used(&bgi, cache->used);
btrfs_set_stack_block_group_used(&bgi, used);
btrfs_set_stack_block_group_chunk_objectid(&bgi,
cache->global_root_id);
btrfs_set_stack_block_group_flags(&bgi, cache->flags);
......@@ -2784,6 +2804,12 @@ static int update_block_group_item(struct btrfs_trans_handle *trans,
btrfs_mark_buffer_dirty(leaf);
fail:
btrfs_release_path(path);
/* We didn't update the block group item, need to revert @commit_used. */
if (ret < 0) {
spin_lock(&cache->lock);
cache->commit_used = old_commit_used;
spin_unlock(&cache->lock);
}
return ret;
}
......
......@@ -99,6 +99,12 @@ struct btrfs_block_group {
u64 cache_generation;
u64 global_root_id;
/*
* The last committed used bytes of this block group, if the above @used
* is still the same as @commit_used, we don't need to update block
* group item of this block group.
*/
u64 commit_used;
/*
* If the free space extent count exceeds this number, convert the block
* group to bitmaps.
......
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