On 3/25/22 12:29 PM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 18, 2022 at 02:34:29PM +0100, Claudio Fontana wrote:
>> On 3/17/22 4:03 PM, Dr. David Alan Gilbert wrote:
>>> * Claudio Fontana (cfontana(a)suse.de) wrote:
>>>> On 3/17/22 2:41 PM, Claudio Fontana wrote:
>>>>> On 3/17/22 11:25 AM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
>>>>>> On Thu, Mar 17, 2022 at 11:12:11AM +0100, Claudio Fontana wrote:
>>>>>>> On 3/16/22 1:17 PM, Claudio Fontana wrote:
>>>>>>>> On 3/14/22 6:48 PM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
>>>>>>>>> On Mon, Mar 14, 2022 at 06:38:31PM +0100, Claudio
Fontana wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On 3/14/22 6:17 PM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> On Sat, Mar 12, 2022 at 05:30:01PM +0100,
Claudio Fontana wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>> the first user is the qemu driver,
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> virsh save/resume would slow to a crawl
with a default pipe size (64k).
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> This improves the situation by 400%.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Going through io_helper still seems to
incur in some penalty (~15%-ish)
>>>>>>>>>>>> compared with direct qemu migration to a
nc socket to a file.
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Claudio Fontana
<cfontana(a)suse.de>
>>>>>>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>>>>>>> src/qemu/qemu_driver.c | 6 +++---
>>>>>>>>>>>> src/qemu/qemu_saveimage.c | 11
++++++-----
>>>>>>>>>>>> src/util/virfile.c | 12
++++++++++++
>>>>>>>>>>>> src/util/virfile.h | 1 +
>>>>>>>>>>>> 4 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 8
deletions(-)
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Hello, I initially thought this to be a
qemu performance issue,
>>>>>>>>>>>> so you can find the discussion about this
in qemu-devel:
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> "Re: bad virsh save /dev/null
performance (600 MiB/s max)"
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2022-03/msg03142.html
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Current results show these experimental averages maximum
throughput
>>>>>>> migrating to /dev/null per each FdWrapper Pipe Size (as per
QEMU QMP
>>>>>>> "query-migrate", tests repeated 5 times for each).
>>>>>>> VM Size is 60G, most of the memory effectively touched before
migration,
>>>>>>> through user application allocating and touching all memory
with
>>>>>>> pseudorandom data.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 64K: 5200 Mbps (current situation)
>>>>>>> 128K: 5800 Mbps
>>>>>>> 256K: 20900 Mbps
>>>>>>> 512K: 21600 Mbps
>>>>>>> 1M: 22800 Mbps
>>>>>>> 2M: 22800 Mbps
>>>>>>> 4M: 22400 Mbps
>>>>>>> 8M: 22500 Mbps
>>>>>>> 16M: 22800 Mbps
>>>>>>> 32M: 22900 Mbps
>>>>>>> 64M: 22900 Mbps
>>>>>>> 128M: 22800 Mbps
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This above is the throughput out of patched libvirt with
multiple Pipe Sizes for the FDWrapper.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Ok, its bouncing around with noise after 1 MB. So I'd suggest
that
>>>>>> libvirt attempt to raise the pipe limit to 1 MB by default, but
>>>>>> not try to go higher.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> As for the theoretical limit for the libvirt architecture,
>>>>>>> I ran a qemu migration directly issuing the appropriate QMP
>>>>>>> commands, setting the same migration parameters as per
libvirt,
>>>>>>> and then migrating to a socket netcatted to /dev/null via
>>>>>>> {"execute": "migrate",
"arguments": { "uri", "unix:///tmp/netcat.sock" } } :
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> QMP: 37000 Mbps
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> So although the Pipe size improves things (in particular the
>>>>>>> large jump is for the 256K size, although 1M seems a very
good value),
>>>>>>> there is still a second bottleneck in there somewhere that
>>>>>>> accounts for a loss of ~14200 Mbps in throughput.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Interesting addition: I tested quickly on a system with faster cpus and
larger VM sizes, up to 200GB,
>>>> and the difference in throughput libvirt vs qemu is basically the same
~14500 Mbps.
>>>>
>>>> ~50000 mbps qemu to netcat socket to /dev/null
>>>> ~35500 mbps virsh save to /dev/null
>>>>
>>>> Seems it is not proportional to cpu speed by the looks of it (not a
totally fair comparison because the VM sizes are different).
>>>
>>> It might be closer to RAM or cache bandwidth limited though; for an extra
copy.
>>
>> I was thinking about sendfile(2) in iohelper, but that probably
>> can't work as the input fd is a socket, I am getting EINVAL.
>
> Yep, sendfile() requires the input to be a mmapable FD,
> and the output to be a socket.
>
> Try splice() instead which merely requires 1 end to be a
> pipe, and the other end can be any FD afaik.
>
> With regards,
> Daniel
>
I did try splice(), but performance is worse by around 500%.
It also fails with EINVAL when trying to use it in combination with O_DIRECT.
Tried larger and smaller buffers, flags like SPLICE_F_MORE an SPLICE_F_MOVE in any
combination; no change, just awful performance.
when doing read from the save file, performance is actually okish (when doing virsh
restore), still slightly worse than normal read/write.
Claudio
Here is the code:
#ifdef __linux__
+static ssize_t safesplice(int fdin, int fdout, size_t todo)
+{
+ unsigned int flags = SPLICE_F_MOVE | SPLICE_F_MORE;
+ ssize_t ncopied = 0;
+
+ while (todo > 0) {
+ ssize_t r = splice(fdin, NULL, fdout, NULL, todo, flags);
+ if (r < 0 && errno == EINTR)
+ continue;
+ if (r < 0)
+ return r;
+ if (r == 0)
+ return ncopied;
+ todo -= r;
+ ncopied += r;
+ }
+ return ncopied;
+}
+
+static ssize_t runIOCopy(const struct runIOParams p)
+{
+ size_t len = 1024 * 1024;
+ ssize_t total = 0;
+
+ while (1) {
+ ssize_t got = safesplice(p.fdin, p.fdout, len);
+ if (got < 0)
+ return -1;
+ if (got == 0)
+ break;
+
+ total += got;
+
+ /* handle last write truncate in direct case */
+ if (got < len && p.isDirect && p.isWrite &&
!p.isBlockDev) {
+ if (ftruncate(p.fdout, total) < 0) {
+ return -4;
+ }
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ return total;
+}
+
+#endif
Any ideas welcome,
Claudio