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Following the PI operation inside nvme/perf, add 2 PI options into fio engine option. SPDK ioengine will check whether PI information should be generated or verified. Running with PI setting, following settings are required: 1. In fio configure file, add PRACT like "pi_act=0", and set PRCHK by flags(GUARD|REFTAG|APPTAG), like "pi_chk=GUARD". 2. Format device namespace with proper PI setting 3. In fio configure file, blocksize should be set as the sum of data and metadata. Sequential Write and following Sequential Read can be used to evaluate it quickly. Change-Id: I54e202bb8510cd987772117dff241aec714c8fb9 Signed-off-by: Xiaodong Liu <xiaodong.liu@intel.com> Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/414753 Tested-by: SPDK Automated Test System <sys_sgsw@intel.com> Reviewed-by: John Kariuki <John.K.Kariuki@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Changpeng Liu <changpeng.liu@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> Chandler-Test-Pool: SPDK Automated Test System <sys_sgsw@intel.com> |
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.. | ||
.gitignore | ||
example_config.fio | ||
fio_plugin.c | ||
full_bench.fio | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
Compiling fio
First, clone the fio source repository from https://github.com/axboe/fio
git clone https://github.com/axboe/fio
Then check out the fio 3.3:
cd fio && git checkout fio-3.3
Finally, compile the code:
make
Compiling SPDK
First, clone the SPDK source repository from https://github.com/spdk/spdk
git clone https://github.com/spdk/spdk
git submodule update --init
Then, run the SPDK configure script to enable fio (point it to the root of the fio repository):
cd spdk
./configure --with-fio=/path/to/fio/repo <other configuration options>
Finally, build SPDK:
make
Note to advanced users: These steps assume you're using the DPDK submodule. If you are using your own version of DPDK, the fio plugin requires that DPDK be compiled with -fPIC. You can compile DPDK with -fPIC by modifying your DPDK configuration file and adding the line:
EXTRA_CFLAGS=-fPIC
Usage
To use the SPDK fio plugin with fio, specify the plugin binary using LD_PRELOAD when running fio and set ioengine=spdk in the fio configuration file (see example_config.fio in the same directory as this README).
LD_PRELOAD=<path to spdk repo>/examples/nvme/fio_plugin/fio_plugin fio
To select NVMe devices, you pass an SPDK Transport Identifier string as the filename. These are in the form:
filename=key=value [key=value] ... ns=value
Specifically, for local PCIe NVMe devices it will look like this:
filename=trtype=PCIe traddr=0000.04.00.0 ns=1
And remote devices accessed via NVMe over Fabrics will look like this:
filename=trtype=RDMA adrfam=IPv4 traddr=192.168.100.8 trsvcid=4420 ns=1
Note: The specification of the PCIe address should not use the normal ':' and instead only use '.'. This is a limitation in fio - it splits filenames on ':'. Also, the NVMe namespaces start at 1, not 0, and the namespace must be specified at the end of the string.
Currently the SPDK fio plugin is limited to the thread usage model, so fio jobs must also specify thread=1 when using the SPDK fio plugin.
fio also currently has a race condition on shutdown if dynamically loading the ioengine by specifying the engine's full path via the ioengine parameter - LD_PRELOAD is recommended to avoid this race condition.
When testing random workloads, it is recommended to set norandommap=1. fio's random map processing consumes extra CPU cycles which will degrade performance over time with the fio_plugin since all I/O are submitted and completed on a single CPU core.
When testing FIO on multiple NVMe SSDs with SPDK plugin, it is recommended to use multiple jobs in FIO configurion. It has been observed that there are some performance gap between FIO(with SPDK plugin enabled) and SPDK perf (examples/nvme/perf/perf) on testing multiple NVMe SSDs. If you use one job(i.e., use one CPU core) configured for FIO test, the performance is worse than SPDK perf (also using one CPU core) against many NVMe SSDs. But if you use multiple jobs for FIO test, the performance of FIO is similiar with SPDK perf. After analyzing this phenomenon, we think that is caused by the FIO architecture. Mainly FIO can scale with multiple threads (i.e., using CPU cores), but it is not good to use one thread against many I/O devices.
End-to-end Data Protection (Optional)
Running with PI setting, following settings steps are required. First, format device namespace with proper PI setting. For example:
nvme format /dev/nvme0n1 -l 1 -i 1 -p 0 -m 1
In fio configure file, add PRACT and set PRCHK by flags(GUARD|REFTAG|APPTAG) properly. For example:
pi_act=0
pi_chk=GUARD
Blocksize should be set as the sum of data and metadata. For example, if data blocksize is 512 Byte, host generated PI metadata is 8 Byte, then blocksize in fio configure file should be 520 Byte:
bs=520