On 3/25/22 2:13 PM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2022 at 01:54:51PM +0100, Claudio Fontana wrote:
>> currently the only user of virFileWrapperFdNew is the qemu driver;
>> virsh save is very slow with a default pipe size.
>> This change improves throughput by ~400% on fast nvme or ramdisk.
>>
>> Best value currently measured is 1MB, which happens to be also
>> the kernel default for the pipe-max-size.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Claudio Fontana <cfontana(a)suse.de>
>> ---
>>
>> see v2 at
>>
https://listman.redhat.com/archives/libvir-list/2022-March/229423.html
>>
>> Changes v2 -> v3:
>>
>> * removed reading of max-pipe-size from procfs,
>> instead make multiple attempts on EPERM with smaller sizes.
>> In the regular case, this should succeed on the first try.
>> (Daniel)
>>
>> Changes v1 -> v2:
>>
>> * removed VIR_FILE_WRAPPER_BIG_PIPE, made the new pipe resizing
>> unconditional (Michal)
>>
>> * moved code to separate functions (Michal)
>>
>> * removed ternary op, disliked in libvirt (Michal)
>>
>> * added #ifdef __linux__ (Ani Sinha)
>>
>> * try smallest value between currently best measured value (1MB)
>> and the pipe-max-size setting. If pipe-max-size cannot be read,
>> try kernel default max (1MB). (Daniel)
>>
>>
>> src/util/virfile.c | 49 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> 1 file changed, 49 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/src/util/virfile.c b/src/util/virfile.c
>> index a04f888e06..876b865974 100644
>> --- a/src/util/virfile.c
>> +++ b/src/util/virfile.c
>> @@ -201,6 +201,51 @@ struct _virFileWrapperFd {
>> };
>>
>> #ifndef WIN32
>> +
>> +#ifdef __linux__
>> +
>> +/**
>> + * virFileWrapperSetPipeSize:
>> + * @fd: the fd of the pipe
>> + *
>> + * Set best pipe size on the passed file descriptor for bulk transfers of
data.
>> + *
>> + * default pipe size (usually 64K) is generally not suited for large transfers
>> + * to fast devices. A value of 1MB has been measured to improve virsh save
>> + * by 400% in ideal conditions. We retry multiple times with smaller sizes
>> + * on EPERM to account for possible small values of
/proc/sys/fs/pipe-max-size.
>> + *
>> + * Return value is 0 on success, -1 and errno set on error.
>> + * OS note: only for linux, on other OS this is a no-op.
>> + */
>> +static int
>> +virFileWrapperSetPipeSize(int fd)
>> +{
>> + int sz;
>> +
>> + for (sz = 1024 * 1024; sz >= 64 * 1024; sz /= 2) {
>> + int rv = fcntl(fd, F_SETPIPE_SZ, sz);
>> + if (rv < 0 && errno == EPERM) {
>> + continue; /* retry with half the size */
>> + }
>> + if (rv < 0) {
>> + break;
>> + }
>> + VIR_INFO("fd %d pipe size adjusted to %d", fd, sz);
>> + return 0;
>> + }
>> + VIR_WARN("failed to set pipe size to %d (errno=%d)", sz, errno);
>> + return -1;
>> +}
>> +
>> +#else /* !__linux__ */
>> +static int virFileWrapperSetPipeSize(int fd)
>> +{
>> + return 0;
>> +}
>> +#endif /* !__linux__ */
>> +
>> +
>> /**
>> * virFileWrapperFdNew:
>> * @fd: pointer to fd to wrap
>> @@ -282,6 +327,10 @@ virFileWrapperFdNew(int *fd, const char *name, unsigned int
flags)
>>
>> ret->cmd = virCommandNewArgList(iohelper_path, name, NULL);
>>
>> + if (virFileWrapperSetPipeSize(pipefd[!output]) < 0) {
>> + virReportError(VIR_ERR_SYSTEM_ERROR, "%s", _("unable to
set pipe size, data transfer might be slow"));
>
> Push this into virFileWrapperSetPipeSize instead of the VIR_WARN
> there, and use virReportSystemError passing in the errno value too.
ok, what about also warning on EPERM? In the normal case we should succeed on the first
try I think.
We generally try to avoid any VIR_WARN in cases that we expect to be
still functional. Users tend to complain when they get warnings for
these kind of things. I think coping with smaller max size is a normal
situation, so its merely a perf factor, not a functional problem.
With regards,
Daniel
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