From patchwork Mon Aug 12 16:42:28 2019 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Patchwork-Submitter: Boaz Harrosh X-Patchwork-Id: 11090131 Return-Path: Received: from mail.wl.linuxfoundation.org (pdx-wl-mail.web.codeaurora.org [172.30.200.125]) by pdx-korg-patchwork-2.web.codeaurora.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 627EC746 for ; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 16:42:51 +0000 (UTC) Received: from mail.wl.linuxfoundation.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by mail.wl.linuxfoundation.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 51A96281E1 for ; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 16:42:51 +0000 (UTC) Received: by mail.wl.linuxfoundation.org (Postfix, from userid 486) id 45F8B2853C; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 16:42:51 +0000 (UTC) X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.3.1 (2010-03-16) on pdx-wl-mail.web.codeaurora.org X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-Status: No, score=-7.9 required=2.0 tests=BAYES_00,DKIM_SIGNED, DKIM_VALID,MAILING_LIST_MULTI,RCVD_IN_DNSWL_HI autolearn=ham version=3.3.1 Received: from vger.kernel.org (vger.kernel.org [209.132.180.67]) by mail.wl.linuxfoundation.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 21EA8281E1 for ; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 16:42:50 +0000 (UTC) Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S1726506AbfHLQmt (ORCPT ); Mon, 12 Aug 2019 12:42:49 -0400 Received: from mail-wm1-f67.google.com ([209.85.128.67]:55658 "EHLO mail-wm1-f67.google.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1725901AbfHLQmt (ORCPT ); Mon, 12 Aug 2019 12:42:49 -0400 Received: by mail-wm1-f67.google.com with SMTP id f72so145667wmf.5 for ; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 09:42:47 -0700 (PDT) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=plexistor-com.20150623.gappssmtp.com; s=20150623; h=from:to:cc:subject:date:message-id:mime-version :content-transfer-encoding; bh=/FKPizWGbGVEz/UndPoqN8/HIvU7KLf2kRrG7aN8su4=; b=SJ5/NSuU5jYKbhI5Y1Mi7OcSVxKcng73BgI8hiwV+1n7et0QJ7YYCeyaxV8R7pjrgq 8UUz9Lq1NGGemGNE6CZceT22ochp/eIfFo1pENkK2C3Eu/Fzsu8YxezsWdDzbsWDOdr+ RzF43Unuo7/jJk+rjrAfNhtVQzUIbay/Td/ix3rRjGcv/KsMGZmWaRwwJfi4n74U1pco fTs4CMtM9CyCTcGfJP9WK3O6oADKbjOUaBsEYjMz98btLxIkif/yMdnHgHObho1Wcjhu dL5l0vRfzYbljfDNT2LJCb/Fv9l8ND3QydYOjIMEV5S6OUq3uSHUaTMK+F8Dgu/Nncje 3Sag== X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20161025; h=x-gm-message-state:from:to:cc:subject:date:message-id:mime-version :content-transfer-encoding; bh=/FKPizWGbGVEz/UndPoqN8/HIvU7KLf2kRrG7aN8su4=; b=ug/mw/c2av4jS1aaOZUnZ5wGq2n9xFd5Xgkm8OMQ0Wi+smG4y9lP4BMnGeG1Ch2FLs Ko0U+VEG5YddqbPHqoBlAnOMIkEknaOpOuAAbLFHcpddnOpPxiaH7GhW1w04VDyXHxQh uLfsHL4eTfTbgmb6lod6aJXaorYDu8Ewl0U3m2AmsiBh0jqkABbIgCg81spUKGNHFpTt Iv5UcXGzyhY7rsm75fL55OXcK9BRtZVY+9FLtLQX/B05gldGnkxGaFQuW0a02JAWVBmU tSVt0dMTV2OGkjYoF+zYUUOJpMetflanrnUkG4ZLDMm+pYllISWgFHd7QJU3h7Agy4rU UsZQ== X-Gm-Message-State: APjAAAVSUlpz4DbxoHG/pct2GTERfl7gKljrh9qPjfbrdjEHmNg7xQ+b H0AFFvCV1Ktx3jqtH/Se79xBSA== X-Google-Smtp-Source: APXvYqwKRrNH5qC69r+xsOFF+2TtVoxXns7c2KHnTfJnSGi/vQU+4ZCTXdaZM4ZqrfET8zeNighD5Q== X-Received: by 2002:a7b:c632:: with SMTP id p18mr223351wmk.114.1565628166876; Mon, 12 Aug 2019 09:42:46 -0700 (PDT) Received: from Bfire.plexistor.com ([217.70.211.18]) by smtp.googlemail.com with ESMTPSA id w13sm46285233wre.44.2019.08.12.09.42.45 (version=TLS1_3 cipher=AEAD-AES256-GCM-SHA384 bits=256/256); Mon, 12 Aug 2019 09:42:46 -0700 (PDT) From: Boaz Harrosh X-Google-Original-From: Boaz Harrosh To: Boaz Harrosh , Boaz Harrosh , linux-fsdevel Cc: Boaz Harrosh Subject: [PATCHSET 00/16] zuf: ZUFS Zero-copy User-mode FileSystem Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2019 19:42:28 +0300 Message-Id: <20190812164244.15580-1-boazh@netapp.com> X-Mailer: git-send-email 2.20.1 MIME-Version: 1.0 Sender: linux-fsdevel-owner@vger.kernel.org Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org X-Virus-Scanned: ClamAV using ClamSMTP I would please like to submit the Kernel code part of the ZUFS file system, for review. ZUFS is a full implementation of a VFS filesystem. But mainly it is a very new way to communicate with user-mode servers. With performance and scalability never seen before. (<4us latency) Why? the core communication with user-mode is completely lockless, per-cpu locality, NUMA aware. The Kernel code presented here can be found at: https://github.com/NetApp/zufs-zuf upstream And the User-mode Server + example FSs here: https://github.com/NetApp/zufs-zus ZUFS - stands for Zero-copy User-mode FS The Intention of this project was performance and low-latency. * True zero copy end to end of both data and meta data. * Very *low latency*, very high CPU locality, lock-less parallelism. * Synchronous operations (for low latency) * Numa awareness Short description: ZUFS is a from scratch implementation of a filesystem-in-user-space, which tries to address the above goals. from the get go it is aimed for pmem based FSs. But supports any other type of FSs. The novelty of this project is that the interface is designed with a modern multi-core NUMA machine in mind down to the ABI. Also it utilizes the normal mount API of the Kernel. Multiple block devices are supported per superblock, Kernel owns those devices. FileSystem types are registered/exposed via the regular way The Kernel is released as a pure GPLv2 License. The user-mode core is BSD-3 so to be friendly with other OSs. Current status: There are a couple of trivial open-source filesystem implementations and a full blown proprietary implementation from Netapp. 3 more ports to more serious open-source filesystems are on the way. A usermode CEPH client, a ZFS implementation, and port of the infamous PMFS to demonstrate the amazing pmem performance under zufs. (Will be released as Open source when they are ready) Together with the Kernel module submitted here the User-mode-Server and the zusFSs User-mode plugins, pass Netapp QA including xfstests + internal QA tests. And is released to costumers as Maxdata 1.5. So it is very stable and performant In the git repository above there is also a backport for rhel 7.6 and 7.7 Including rpm packages for Kernel and Server components. (Also available evaluation licenses of Maxdata 1.5 for developers. Please contact Amit Golander if you need one) Performance: A simple fio direct 4k random write test with incrementing number of threads. [fuse] threads wr_iops wr_bw wr_lat 1 33606 134424 26.53226 2 57056 228224 30.38476 4 88667 354668 40.12783 7 116561 466245 53.98572 8 129134 516539 55.6134 [fuse-splice] threads wr_iops wr_bw wr_lat 1 39670 158682 21.8399 2 51100 204400 34.63294 4 75220 300882 47.42344 7 97706 390825 63.04435 8 98034 392137 73.24263 [xfs-dax] threads wr_iops wr_bw wr_lat    [Maxdata-1.5-zufs] threads wr_iops wr_bw wr_lat 1 1041802 260,450 3.623 2 1983997 495,999 3.808 4 3829456 957,364 3.959 7 4501154 1,125,288 5.895330 8 4400698 1,100,174 6.922174 I have used an 8 way KVM-qemu with 2 NUMA nodes. (on an Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1230 v6 @ 3.50GHz) Running fio with 4k random writes O_DIRECT | O_SYNC to a DRAM simulated pmem. (memmap=! at grub) Fuse-fs was a memcpy same 4k null-FS fio was run with more and more threads (see threads column) to test for scalability. We see a bit of a slowdown when pushing to 8 threads. This is mainly a scheduler and KVM issue. Big metal machines do better (more flat scalability) but also degrade a bit on full load I will try to post real metal scores later. The in Kernel xfs-dax is slower than a zufs-pmem because: 1. It was not built specifically for pmem so there are latency issues (async operations) and extra copies in places. 2. In writes because of the Journal there are actually 3 IOPs for every write. Where with pmem other means can keep things crash-proof. 3. Because in random write + DAX each block is written twice It is first ZEROed then copied too. 4. But mainly because we use a single pmem on one of the NUMAs with zufs we put a pmem device on each NUMA node. And each core writes locally. So the memory bandwith is doubled. (Perhaps there is a way to use a dm configuration that makes this better but at the base xfs is not NUMA aware) Is why I chose writes. With reads xfs-dax is much faster. In zufs reads are actually 10% slower because in reads we do regular memcpy-from-pmem which is exactly 10% slower than mov_nt operations [Changes since last RFC submission] Lots and lots of changes since then. More hardening stability and more fixtures. But mainly is the NEW-IO way. The old way of IO where we mmap application-pages into the Server is still there because there are modes where this is faster still. For example direct IO from network type of FSs. We are all about choice. (The zusFS is the one that decides which mode to use) But the results above are with the NEW-IO way. The new way is - we ask the Server what are the blocks to read/write (both pmem or bdev) and the IO or pmem_memcpy is done in Kernel. (We do not yet cache these results in Kernel but might in future ((when caching will actually make things faster currently xarray does not scale for us))) Please help with *reviews*, comments, questions. We believe this is a very important project that opens new ways for implementing Server-applications, including but not restricted to FS Server applications. Thank you Boaz ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Boaz Harrosh (16): fs: Add the ZUF filesystem to the build + License MAINTAINERS: Add the ZUFS maintainership zuf: Preliminary Documentation zuf: zuf-rootfs zuf: zuf-core The ZTs zuf: Multy Devices zuf: mounting zuf: Namei and directory operations zuf: readdir operation zuf: symlink zuf: Write/Read implementation zuf: mmap & sync zuf: More file operations zuf: ioctl implementation zuf: xattr && acl implementation zuf: Support for dynamic-debug of zusFSs Documentation/filesystems/zufs.txt | 370 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ MAINTAINERS | 6 + fs/Kconfig | 1 + fs/Makefile | 1 + fs/zuf/Kconfig | 24 ++ fs/zuf/Makefile | 23 ++ fs/zuf/_extern.h | 180 ++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/_pr.h | 63 +++++ fs/zuf/acl.c | 270 +++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/directory.c | 167 +++++++++++++ fs/zuf/file.c | 840 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/inode.c | 693 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/ioctl.c | 313 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/md.c | 752 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/md.h | 332 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/md_def.h | 145 ++++++++++++ fs/zuf/mmap.c | 300 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/module.c | 28 +++ fs/zuf/namei.c | 435 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/relay.h | 104 +++++++++ fs/zuf/rw.c | 977 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/super.c | 925 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/symlink.c | 74 ++++++ fs/zuf/t1.c | 135 +++++++++++ fs/zuf/t2.c | 356 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/t2.h | 68 ++++++ fs/zuf/xattr.c | 314 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/zuf-core.c | 1716 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/zuf-root.c | 520 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/zuf.h | 437 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fs/zuf/zus_api.h | 1079 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 31 files changed, 11648 insertions(+)