mirror_zfs/include/sys/metaslab_impl.h
Alexander Motin 94a3fabcb0
Unified allocation throttling (#17020)
Existing allocation throttling had a goal to improve write speed
by allocating more data to vdevs that are able to write it faster.
But in the process it completely broken the original mechanism,
designed to balance vdev space usage.  With severe vdev space use
imbalance it is possible that some with higher use start growing
fragmentation sooner than others and after getting full will stop
any writes at all.  Also after vdev addition it might take a very
long time for pool to restore the balance, since the new vdev does
not have any real preference, unless the old one is already much
slower due to fragmentation.  Also the old throttling was request-
based, which was unpredictable with block sizes varying from 512B
to 16MB, neither it made much sense in case of I/O aggregation,
when its 32-100 requests could be aggregated into few, leaving
device underutilized, submitting fewer and/or shorter requests,
or in opposite try to queue up to 1.6GB of writes per device.

This change presents a completely new throttling algorithm. Unlike
the request-based old one, this one measures allocation queue in
bytes.  It makes possible to integrate with the reworked allocation
quota (aliquot) mechanism, which is also byte-based.  Unlike the
original code, balancing the vdevs amounts of free space, this one
balances their free/used space fractions.  It should result in a
lower and more uniform fragmentation in a long run.

This algorithm still allows to improve write speed by allocating
more data to faster vdevs, but does it in more controllable way.
On top of space-based allocation quota, it also calculates minimum
queue depth that vdev is allowed to maintain, and respectively the
amount of extra allocations it can receive if it appear faster.
That amount is based on vdev's capacity and space usage, but also
applied only when the pool is busy.  This way the code can choose
between faster writes when needed and better vdev balance when not,
with the choice gradually reducing together with the free space.

This change also makes allocation queues per-class, allowing them
to throttle independently and in parallel.  Allocations that are
bounced between classes due to allocation errors will be able to
properly throttle in the new class.  Allocations that should not
be throttled (ZIL, gang, copies) are not, but may still follow
the rotor and allocation quota mechanism of the class without
disrupting it.

Signed-off-by:	Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by:	iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
2025-03-24 09:25:01 -07:00

547 lines
20 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: CDDL-1.0
/*
* CDDL HEADER START
*
* The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
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* You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
*
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions
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*
* When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
* file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
* If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
* fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
* information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
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*/
/*
* Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* Use is subject to license terms.
*/
/*
* Copyright (c) 2011, 2019 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
*/
#ifndef _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H
#define _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H
#include <sys/metaslab.h>
#include <sys/space_map.h>
#include <sys/range_tree.h>
#include <sys/vdev.h>
#include <sys/txg.h>
#include <sys/avl.h>
#include <sys/multilist.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/*
* Metaslab allocation tracing record.
*/
typedef struct metaslab_alloc_trace {
list_node_t mat_list_node;
metaslab_group_t *mat_mg;
metaslab_t *mat_msp;
uint64_t mat_size;
uint64_t mat_weight;
uint32_t mat_dva_id;
uint64_t mat_offset;
int mat_allocator;
} metaslab_alloc_trace_t;
/*
* Used by the metaslab allocation tracing facility to indicate
* error conditions. These errors are stored to the offset member
* of the metaslab_alloc_trace_t record and displayed by mdb.
*/
typedef enum trace_alloc_type {
TRACE_ALLOC_FAILURE = -1ULL,
TRACE_TOO_SMALL = -2ULL,
TRACE_FORCE_GANG = -3ULL,
TRACE_NOT_ALLOCATABLE = -4ULL,
TRACE_GROUP_FAILURE = -5ULL,
TRACE_ENOSPC = -6ULL,
TRACE_CONDENSING = -7ULL,
TRACE_VDEV_ERROR = -8ULL,
TRACE_DISABLED = -9ULL,
} trace_alloc_type_t;
#define METASLAB_WEIGHT_PRIMARY (1ULL << 63)
#define METASLAB_WEIGHT_SECONDARY (1ULL << 62)
#define METASLAB_WEIGHT_CLAIM (1ULL << 61)
#define METASLAB_WEIGHT_TYPE (1ULL << 60)
#define METASLAB_ACTIVE_MASK \
(METASLAB_WEIGHT_PRIMARY | METASLAB_WEIGHT_SECONDARY | \
METASLAB_WEIGHT_CLAIM)
/*
* The metaslab weight is used to encode the amount of free space in a
* metaslab, such that the "best" metaslab appears first when sorting the
* metaslabs by weight. The weight (and therefore the "best" metaslab) can
* be determined in two different ways: by computing a weighted sum of all
* the free space in the metaslab (a space based weight) or by counting only
* the free segments of the largest size (a segment based weight). We prefer
* the segment based weight because it reflects how the free space is
* comprised, but we cannot always use it -- legacy pools do not have the
* space map histogram information necessary to determine the largest
* contiguous regions. Pools that have the space map histogram determine
* the segment weight by looking at each bucket in the histogram and
* determining the free space whose size in bytes is in the range:
* [2^i, 2^(i+1))
* We then encode the largest index, i, that contains regions into the
* segment-weighted value.
*
* Space-based weight:
*
* 64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8 0
* +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
* |PSC1| weighted-free space |
* +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
*
* PS - indicates primary and secondary activation
* C - indicates activation for claimed block zio
* space - the fragmentation-weighted space
*
* Segment-based weight:
*
* 64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8 0
* +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
* |PSC0| idx| count of segments in region |
* +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
*
* PS - indicates primary and secondary activation
* C - indicates activation for claimed block zio
* idx - index for the highest bucket in the histogram
* count - number of segments in the specified bucket
*/
#define WEIGHT_GET_ACTIVE(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 61, 3)
#define WEIGHT_SET_ACTIVE(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 61, 3, x)
#define WEIGHT_IS_SPACEBASED(weight) \
((weight) == 0 || BF64_GET((weight), 60, 1))
#define WEIGHT_SET_SPACEBASED(weight) BF64_SET((weight), 60, 1, 1)
/*
* These macros are only applicable to segment-based weighting.
*/
#define WEIGHT_GET_INDEX(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 54, 6)
#define WEIGHT_SET_INDEX(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 54, 6, x)
#define WEIGHT_GET_COUNT(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 0, 54)
#define WEIGHT_SET_COUNT(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 0, 54, x)
/*
* Per-allocator data structure.
*/
typedef struct metaslab_class_allocator {
kmutex_t mca_lock;
avl_tree_t mca_tree;
metaslab_group_t *mca_rotor;
uint64_t mca_aliquot;
/*
* The allocation throttle works on a reservation system. Whenever
* an asynchronous zio wants to perform an allocation it must
* first reserve the number of bytes that it wants to allocate.
* If there aren't sufficient slots available for the pending zio
* then that I/O is throttled until more slots free up. The current
* size of reserved allocations is maintained by mca_reserved.
* The maximum total size of reserved allocations is determined by
* mc_alloc_max in the metaslab_class_t. Gang blocks are allowed
* to reserve for their headers even if we've reached the maximum.
*/
uint64_t mca_reserved;
} ____cacheline_aligned metaslab_class_allocator_t;
/*
* A metaslab class encompasses a category of allocatable top-level vdevs.
* Each top-level vdev is associated with a metaslab group which defines
* the allocatable region for that vdev. Examples of these categories include
* "normal" for data block allocations (i.e. main pool allocations) or "log"
* for allocations designated for intent log devices (i.e. slog devices).
* When a block allocation is requested from the SPA it is associated with a
* metaslab_class_t, and only top-level vdevs (i.e. metaslab groups) belonging
* to the class can be used to satisfy that request. Allocations are done
* by traversing the metaslab groups that are linked off of the mca_rotor field.
* This rotor points to the next metaslab group where allocations will be
* attempted. Allocating a block is a 3 step process -- select the metaslab
* group, select the metaslab, and then allocate the block. The metaslab
* class defines the low-level block allocator that will be used as the
* final step in allocation. These allocators are pluggable allowing each class
* to use a block allocator that best suits that class.
*/
struct metaslab_class {
kmutex_t mc_lock;
spa_t *mc_spa;
const metaslab_ops_t *mc_ops;
/*
* Track the number of metaslab groups that have been initialized
* and can accept allocations. An initialized metaslab group is
* one has been completely added to the config (i.e. we have
* updated the MOS config and the space has been added to the pool).
*/
uint64_t mc_groups;
boolean_t mc_is_log;
boolean_t mc_alloc_throttle_enabled;
uint64_t mc_alloc_io_size;
uint64_t mc_alloc_max;
uint64_t mc_alloc_groups; /* # of allocatable groups */
uint64_t mc_alloc; /* total allocated space */
uint64_t mc_deferred; /* total deferred frees */
uint64_t mc_space; /* total space (alloc + free) */
uint64_t mc_dspace; /* total deflated space */
uint64_t mc_histogram[ZFS_RANGE_TREE_HISTOGRAM_SIZE];
/*
* List of all loaded metaslabs in the class, sorted in order of most
* recent use.
*/
multilist_t mc_metaslab_txg_list;
metaslab_class_allocator_t mc_allocator[];
};
/*
* Per-allocator data structure.
*/
typedef struct metaslab_group_allocator {
zfs_refcount_t mga_queue_depth;
metaslab_t *mga_primary;
metaslab_t *mga_secondary;
} ____cacheline_aligned metaslab_group_allocator_t;
/*
* Metaslab groups encapsulate all the allocatable regions (i.e. metaslabs)
* of a top-level vdev. They are linked together to form a circular linked
* list and can belong to only one metaslab class. Metaslab groups may become
* ineligible for allocations for a number of reasons such as limited free
* space, fragmentation, or going offline. When this happens the allocator will
* simply find the next metaslab group in the linked list and attempt
* to allocate from that group instead.
*/
struct metaslab_group {
kmutex_t mg_lock;
avl_tree_t mg_metaslab_tree;
uint64_t mg_aliquot;
uint64_t mg_queue_target;
boolean_t mg_allocatable; /* can we allocate? */
uint64_t mg_ms_ready;
/*
* A metaslab group is considered to be initialized only after
* we have updated the MOS config and added the space to the pool.
* We only allow allocation attempts to a metaslab group if it
* has been initialized.
*/
boolean_t mg_initialized;
int64_t mg_activation_count;
metaslab_class_t *mg_class;
vdev_t *mg_vd;
metaslab_group_t *mg_prev;
metaslab_group_t *mg_next;
/*
* A metalab group that can no longer allocate the minimum block
* size will set mg_no_free_space. Once a metaslab group is out
* of space then its share of work must be distributed to other
* groups.
*/
boolean_t mg_no_free_space;
uint64_t mg_fragmentation;
uint64_t mg_histogram[ZFS_RANGE_TREE_HISTOGRAM_SIZE];
int mg_ms_disabled;
boolean_t mg_disabled_updating;
kmutex_t mg_ms_disabled_lock;
kcondvar_t mg_ms_disabled_cv;
int mg_allocators;
metaslab_group_allocator_t mg_allocator[];
};
/*
* This value defines the number of elements in the ms_lbas array. The value
* of 64 was chosen as it covers all power of 2 buckets up to UINT64_MAX.
* This is the equivalent of highbit(UINT64_MAX).
*/
#define MAX_LBAS 64
/*
* Each metaslab maintains a set of in-core trees to track metaslab
* operations. The in-core free tree (ms_allocatable) contains the list of
* free segments which are eligible for allocation. As blocks are
* allocated, the allocated segments are removed from the ms_allocatable and
* added to a per txg allocation tree (ms_allocating). As blocks are
* freed, they are added to the free tree (ms_freeing). These trees
* allow us to process all allocations and frees in syncing context
* where it is safe to update the on-disk space maps. An additional set
* of in-core trees is maintained to track deferred frees
* (ms_defer). Once a block is freed it will move from the
* ms_freed to the ms_defer tree. A deferred free means that a block
* has been freed but cannot be used by the pool until TXG_DEFER_SIZE
* transactions groups later. For example, a block that is freed in txg
* 50 will not be available for reallocation until txg 52 (50 +
* TXG_DEFER_SIZE). This provides a safety net for uberblock rollback.
* A pool could be safely rolled back TXG_DEFERS_SIZE transactions
* groups and ensure that no block has been reallocated.
*
* The simplified transition diagram looks like this:
*
*
* ALLOCATE
* |
* V
* free segment (ms_allocatable) -> ms_allocating[4] -> (write to space map)
* ^
* | ms_freeing <--- FREE
* | |
* | v
* | ms_freed
* | |
* +-------- ms_defer[2] <-------+-------> (write to space map)
*
*
* Each metaslab's space is tracked in a single space map in the MOS,
* which is only updated in syncing context. Each time we sync a txg,
* we append the allocs and frees from that txg to the space map. The
* pool space is only updated once all metaslabs have finished syncing.
*
* To load the in-core free tree we read the space map from disk. This
* object contains a series of alloc and free records that are combined
* to make up the list of all free segments in this metaslab. These
* segments are represented in-core by the ms_allocatable and are stored
* in an AVL tree.
*
* As the space map grows (as a result of the appends) it will
* eventually become space-inefficient. When the metaslab's in-core
* free tree is zfs_condense_pct/100 times the size of the minimal
* on-disk representation, we rewrite it in its minimized form. If a
* metaslab needs to condense then we must set the ms_condensing flag to
* ensure that allocations are not performed on the metaslab that is
* being written.
*/
struct metaslab {
/*
* This is the main lock of the metaslab and its purpose is to
* coordinate our allocations and frees [e.g., metaslab_block_alloc(),
* metaslab_free_concrete(), ..etc] with our various syncing
* procedures [e.g., metaslab_sync(), metaslab_sync_done(), ..etc].
*
* The lock is also used during some miscellaneous operations like
* using the metaslab's histogram for the metaslab group's histogram
* aggregation, or marking the metaslab for initialization.
*/
kmutex_t ms_lock;
/*
* Acquired together with the ms_lock whenever we expect to
* write to metaslab data on-disk (i.e flushing entries to
* the metaslab's space map). It helps coordinate readers of
* the metaslab's space map [see spa_vdev_remove_thread()]
* with writers [see metaslab_sync() or metaslab_flush()].
*
* Note that metaslab_load(), even though a reader, uses
* a completely different mechanism to deal with the reading
* of the metaslab's space map based on ms_synced_length. That
* said, the function still uses the ms_sync_lock after it
* has read the ms_sm [see relevant comment in metaslab_load()
* as to why].
*/
kmutex_t ms_sync_lock;
kcondvar_t ms_load_cv;
space_map_t *ms_sm;
uint64_t ms_id;
uint64_t ms_start;
uint64_t ms_size;
uint64_t ms_fragmentation;
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_allocating[TXG_SIZE];
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_allocatable;
uint64_t ms_allocated_this_txg;
uint64_t ms_allocating_total;
/*
* The following range trees are accessed only from syncing context.
* ms_free*tree only have entries while syncing, and are empty
* between syncs.
*/
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_freeing; /* to free this syncing txg */
/* already freed this syncing txg */
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_freed;
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_defer[TXG_DEFER_SIZE];
/* to add to the checkpoint */
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_checkpointing;
/*
* The ms_trim tree is the set of allocatable segments which are
* eligible for trimming. (When the metaslab is loaded, it's a
* subset of ms_allocatable.) It's kept in-core as long as the
* autotrim property is set and is not vacated when the metaslab
* is unloaded. Its purpose is to aggregate freed ranges to
* facilitate efficient trimming.
*/
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_trim;
boolean_t ms_condensing; /* condensing? */
boolean_t ms_condense_wanted;
/*
* The number of consumers which have disabled the metaslab.
*/
uint64_t ms_disabled;
/*
* We must always hold the ms_lock when modifying ms_loaded
* and ms_loading.
*/
boolean_t ms_loaded;
boolean_t ms_loading;
kcondvar_t ms_flush_cv;
boolean_t ms_flushing;
/*
* The following histograms count entries that are in the
* metaslab's space map (and its histogram) but are not in
* ms_allocatable yet, because they are in ms_freed, ms_freeing,
* or ms_defer[].
*
* When the metaslab is not loaded, its ms_weight needs to
* reflect what is allocatable (i.e. what will be part of
* ms_allocatable if it is loaded). The weight is computed from
* the spacemap histogram, but that includes ranges that are
* not yet allocatable (because they are in ms_freed,
* ms_freeing, or ms_defer[]). Therefore, when calculating the
* weight, we need to remove those ranges.
*
* The ranges in the ms_freed and ms_defer[] range trees are all
* present in the spacemap. However, the spacemap may have
* multiple entries to represent a contiguous range, because it
* is written across multiple sync passes, but the changes of
* all sync passes are consolidated into the range trees.
* Adjacent ranges that are freed in different sync passes of
* one txg will be represented separately (as 2 or more entries)
* in the space map (and its histogram), but these adjacent
* ranges will be consolidated (represented as one entry) in the
* ms_freed/ms_defer[] range trees (and their histograms).
*
* When calculating the weight, we can not simply subtract the
* range trees' histograms from the spacemap's histogram,
* because the range trees' histograms may have entries in
* higher buckets than the spacemap, due to consolidation.
* Instead we must subtract the exact entries that were added to
* the spacemap's histogram. ms_synchist and ms_deferhist[]
* represent these exact entries, so we can subtract them from
* the spacemap's histogram when calculating ms_weight.
*
* ms_synchist represents the same ranges as ms_freeing +
* ms_freed, but without consolidation across sync passes.
*
* ms_deferhist[i] represents the same ranges as ms_defer[i],
* but without consolidation across sync passes.
*/
uint64_t ms_synchist[SPACE_MAP_HISTOGRAM_SIZE];
uint64_t ms_deferhist[TXG_DEFER_SIZE][SPACE_MAP_HISTOGRAM_SIZE];
/*
* Tracks the exact amount of allocated space of this metaslab
* (and specifically the metaslab's space map) up to the most
* recently completed sync pass [see usage in metaslab_sync()].
*/
uint64_t ms_allocated_space;
int64_t ms_deferspace; /* sum of ms_defermap[] space */
uint64_t ms_weight; /* weight vs. others in group */
uint64_t ms_activation_weight; /* activation weight */
/*
* Track of whenever a metaslab is selected for loading or allocation.
* We use this value to determine how long the metaslab should
* stay cached.
*/
uint64_t ms_selected_txg;
/*
* ms_load/unload_time can be used for performance monitoring
* (e.g. by dtrace or mdb).
*/
hrtime_t ms_load_time; /* time last loaded */
hrtime_t ms_unload_time; /* time last unloaded */
uint64_t ms_selected_time; /* time last allocated from (secs) */
uint64_t ms_alloc_txg; /* last successful alloc (debug only) */
uint64_t ms_max_size; /* maximum allocatable size */
/*
* -1 if it's not active in an allocator, otherwise set to the allocator
* this metaslab is active for.
*/
int ms_allocator;
boolean_t ms_primary; /* Only valid if ms_allocator is not -1 */
/*
* The metaslab block allocators can optionally use a size-ordered
* range tree and/or an array of LBAs. Not all allocators use
* this functionality. The ms_allocatable_by_size should always
* contain the same number of segments as the ms_allocatable. The
* only difference is that the ms_allocatable_by_size is ordered by
* segment sizes.
*/
zfs_btree_t ms_allocatable_by_size;
zfs_btree_t ms_unflushed_frees_by_size;
uint64_t ms_lbas[MAX_LBAS];
metaslab_group_t *ms_group; /* metaslab group */
avl_node_t ms_group_node; /* node in metaslab group tree */
txg_node_t ms_txg_node; /* per-txg dirty metaslab links */
avl_node_t ms_spa_txg_node; /* node in spa_metaslabs_by_txg */
/*
* Node in metaslab class's selected txg list
*/
multilist_node_t ms_class_txg_node;
/*
* Allocs and frees that are committed to the vdev log spacemap but
* not yet to this metaslab's spacemap.
*/
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_unflushed_allocs;
zfs_range_tree_t *ms_unflushed_frees;
/*
* We have flushed entries up to but not including this TXG. In
* other words, all changes from this TXG and onward should not
* be in this metaslab's space map and must be read from the
* log space maps.
*/
uint64_t ms_unflushed_txg;
boolean_t ms_unflushed_dirty;
/* updated every time we are done syncing the metaslab's space map */
uint64_t ms_synced_length;
boolean_t ms_new;
};
typedef struct metaslab_unflushed_phys {
/* on-disk counterpart of ms_unflushed_txg */
uint64_t msp_unflushed_txg;
} metaslab_unflushed_phys_t;
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H */