[PATCH v7 0/3] FDP and per-io hints
Javier González
javier.gonz at samsung.com
Thu Oct 10 00:07:36 PDT 2024
On 09.10.2024 09:06, Keith Busch wrote:
>On Wed, Oct 09, 2024 at 11:28:28AM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
>> On Tue, Oct 08, 2024 at 08:44:28AM -0600, Keith Busch wrote:
>> > Then let's just continue with patches 1 and 2. They introduce no new
>> > user or kernel APIs, and people have already reported improvements using
>> > it.
>>
>> They are still not any way actually exposing the FDP functionality
>> in the standard though. How is your application going to align
>> anything to the reclaim unit? Or is this another of the cases where
>> as a hyperscaler you just "know" from the data sheet?
>
>As far as I know, this is an inconsequential spec detail that is not
>being considered by any applications testing this. And yet, the expected
>imrpovements are still there, so I don't see a point holding this up for
>that reason.
I am re-reading the thread to find a common ground. I realize that my
last email came sharper than I intended. I apologize for that Christoph.
Let me summarize and propose something constructive so that we can move
forward.
It is clear that you have a lot of insight on how a FS API should look
like to unify the different data placement alternatives across
protocols. I have not seen code for it, but based on the technical
feedback you are providing, it seems to be fairly clear in your mind.
I think we should attempt to pursue that with an example in mind. Seems
XFS is the clear candidate. You have done work already in enable SMR
HDDs; it seems we can get FDP under that umbrella. This will however
take time to get right. We can help with development, testing, and
experimental evaluation on the WAF benefits for such an interface.
However, this work should not block existing hardware enabling an
existing use-case. The current patches are not intrusive. They do not
make changse to the API and merely wire up what is there to the driver.
Anyone using temperaturs will be able to use FDP - this is a win without
a maintainance burden attached to it. The change to the FS / application
API will not require major changes either; I believe we all agree that
we cannot remove the temperatures, so all existing temperature users
will be able to continue using them; we will just add an alternative for
power users on the side.
So the proposal is to merge the patches as they are and commit to work
together on a new, better API for in-kernel users (FS), and for
applications (syscall, uring).
Christoph, would this be a viable way to move forward for you?
Thanks,
Javier
More information about the Linux-nvme
mailing list