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- Guidance for writing policies
- =============================
- Try to keep transactionality out of it. The core is careful to
- avoid asking about anything that is migrating. This is a pain, but
- makes it easier to write the policies.
- Mappings are loaded into the policy at construction time.
- Every bio that is mapped by the target is referred to the policy.
- The policy can return a simple HIT or MISS or issue a migration.
- Currently there's no way for the policy to issue background work,
- e.g. to start writing back dirty blocks that are going to be evicted
- soon.
- Because we map bios, rather than requests it's easy for the policy
- to get fooled by many small bios. For this reason the core target
- issues periodic ticks to the policy. It's suggested that the policy
- doesn't update states (eg, hit counts) for a block more than once
- for each tick. The core ticks by watching bios complete, and so
- trying to see when the io scheduler has let the ios run.
- Overview of supplied cache replacement policies
- ===============================================
- multiqueue (mq)
- ---------------
- This policy is now an alias for smq (see below).
- The following tunables are accepted, but have no effect:
- 'sequential_threshold <#nr_sequential_ios>'
- 'random_threshold <#nr_random_ios>'
- 'read_promote_adjustment <value>'
- 'write_promote_adjustment <value>'
- 'discard_promote_adjustment <value>'
- Stochastic multiqueue (smq)
- ---------------------------
- This policy is the default.
- The stochastic multi-queue (smq) policy addresses some of the problems
- with the multiqueue (mq) policy.
- The smq policy (vs mq) offers the promise of less memory utilization,
- improved performance and increased adaptability in the face of changing
- workloads. smq also does not have any cumbersome tuning knobs.
- Users may switch from "mq" to "smq" simply by appropriately reloading a
- DM table that is using the cache target. Doing so will cause all of the
- mq policy's hints to be dropped. Also, performance of the cache may
- degrade slightly until smq recalculates the origin device's hotspots
- that should be cached.
- Memory usage:
- The mq policy used a lot of memory; 88 bytes per cache block on a 64
- bit machine.
- smq uses 28bit indexes to implement it's data structures rather than
- pointers. It avoids storing an explicit hit count for each block. It
- has a 'hotspot' queue, rather than a pre-cache, which uses a quarter of
- the entries (each hotspot block covers a larger area than a single
- cache block).
- All this means smq uses ~25bytes per cache block. Still a lot of
- memory, but a substantial improvement nontheless.
- Level balancing:
- mq placed entries in different levels of the multiqueue structures
- based on their hit count (~ln(hit count)). This meant the bottom
- levels generally had the most entries, and the top ones had very
- few. Having unbalanced levels like this reduced the efficacy of the
- multiqueue.
- smq does not maintain a hit count, instead it swaps hit entries with
- the least recently used entry from the level above. The overall
- ordering being a side effect of this stochastic process. With this
- scheme we can decide how many entries occupy each multiqueue level,
- resulting in better promotion/demotion decisions.
- Adaptability:
- The mq policy maintained a hit count for each cache block. For a
- different block to get promoted to the cache it's hit count has to
- exceed the lowest currently in the cache. This meant it could take a
- long time for the cache to adapt between varying IO patterns.
- smq doesn't maintain hit counts, so a lot of this problem just goes
- away. In addition it tracks performance of the hotspot queue, which
- is used to decide which blocks to promote. If the hotspot queue is
- performing badly then it starts moving entries more quickly between
- levels. This lets it adapt to new IO patterns very quickly.
- Performance:
- Testing smq shows substantially better performance than mq.
- cleaner
- -------
- The cleaner writes back all dirty blocks in a cache to decommission it.
- Examples
- ========
- The syntax for a table is:
- cache <metadata dev> <cache dev> <origin dev> <block size>
- <#feature_args> [<feature arg>]*
- <policy> <#policy_args> [<policy arg>]*
- The syntax to send a message using the dmsetup command is:
- dmsetup message <mapped device> 0 sequential_threshold 1024
- dmsetup message <mapped device> 0 random_threshold 8
- Using dmsetup:
- dmsetup create blah --table "0 268435456 cache /dev/sdb /dev/sdc \
- /dev/sdd 512 0 mq 4 sequential_threshold 1024 random_threshold 8"
- creates a 128GB large mapped device named 'blah' with the
- sequential threshold set to 1024 and the random_threshold set to 8.
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