bfq: Provide helper to generate bfqq name
[linux-2.6-block.git] / block / bfq-iosched.c
CommitLineData
a497ee34 1// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
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2/*
3 * Budget Fair Queueing (BFQ) I/O scheduler.
4 *
5 * Based on ideas and code from CFQ:
6 * Copyright (C) 2003 Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
7 *
8 * Copyright (C) 2008 Fabio Checconi <fabio@gandalf.sssup.it>
9 * Paolo Valente <paolo.valente@unimore.it>
10 *
11 * Copyright (C) 2010 Paolo Valente <paolo.valente@unimore.it>
12 * Arianna Avanzini <avanzini@google.com>
13 *
14 * Copyright (C) 2017 Paolo Valente <paolo.valente@linaro.org>
15 *
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16 * BFQ is a proportional-share I/O scheduler, with some extra
17 * low-latency capabilities. BFQ also supports full hierarchical
18 * scheduling through cgroups. Next paragraphs provide an introduction
19 * on BFQ inner workings. Details on BFQ benefits, usage and
898bd37a 20 * limitations can be found in Documentation/block/bfq-iosched.rst.
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21 *
22 * BFQ is a proportional-share storage-I/O scheduling algorithm based
23 * on the slice-by-slice service scheme of CFQ. But BFQ assigns
24 * budgets, measured in number of sectors, to processes instead of
25 * time slices. The device is not granted to the in-service process
26 * for a given time slice, but until it has exhausted its assigned
27 * budget. This change from the time to the service domain enables BFQ
28 * to distribute the device throughput among processes as desired,
29 * without any distortion due to throughput fluctuations, or to device
30 * internal queueing. BFQ uses an ad hoc internal scheduler, called
31 * B-WF2Q+, to schedule processes according to their budgets. More
32 * precisely, BFQ schedules queues associated with processes. Each
33 * process/queue is assigned a user-configurable weight, and B-WF2Q+
34 * guarantees that each queue receives a fraction of the throughput
35 * proportional to its weight. Thanks to the accurate policy of
36 * B-WF2Q+, BFQ can afford to assign high budgets to I/O-bound
37 * processes issuing sequential requests (to boost the throughput),
38 * and yet guarantee a low latency to interactive and soft real-time
39 * applications.
40 *
41 * In particular, to provide these low-latency guarantees, BFQ
42 * explicitly privileges the I/O of two classes of time-sensitive
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43 * applications: interactive and soft real-time. In more detail, BFQ
44 * behaves this way if the low_latency parameter is set (default
45 * configuration). This feature enables BFQ to provide applications in
46 * these classes with a very low latency.
47 *
48 * To implement this feature, BFQ constantly tries to detect whether
49 * the I/O requests in a bfq_queue come from an interactive or a soft
50 * real-time application. For brevity, in these cases, the queue is
51 * said to be interactive or soft real-time. In both cases, BFQ
52 * privileges the service of the queue, over that of non-interactive
53 * and non-soft-real-time queues. This privileging is performed,
54 * mainly, by raising the weight of the queue. So, for brevity, we
55 * call just weight-raising periods the time periods during which a
56 * queue is privileged, because deemed interactive or soft real-time.
57 *
58 * The detection of soft real-time queues/applications is described in
59 * detail in the comments on the function
60 * bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start. On the other hand, the detection of an
61 * interactive queue works as follows: a queue is deemed interactive
62 * if it is constantly non empty only for a limited time interval,
63 * after which it does become empty. The queue may be deemed
64 * interactive again (for a limited time), if it restarts being
65 * constantly non empty, provided that this happens only after the
66 * queue has remained empty for a given minimum idle time.
67 *
68 * By default, BFQ computes automatically the above maximum time
69 * interval, i.e., the time interval after which a constantly
70 * non-empty queue stops being deemed interactive. Since a queue is
71 * weight-raised while it is deemed interactive, this maximum time
72 * interval happens to coincide with the (maximum) duration of the
73 * weight-raising for interactive queues.
74 *
75 * Finally, BFQ also features additional heuristics for
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76 * preserving both a low latency and a high throughput on NCQ-capable,
77 * rotational or flash-based devices, and to get the job done quickly
78 * for applications consisting in many I/O-bound processes.
79 *
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80 * NOTE: if the main or only goal, with a given device, is to achieve
81 * the maximum-possible throughput at all times, then do switch off
82 * all low-latency heuristics for that device, by setting low_latency
83 * to 0.
84 *
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85 * BFQ is described in [1], where also a reference to the initial,
86 * more theoretical paper on BFQ can be found. The interested reader
87 * can find in the latter paper full details on the main algorithm, as
88 * well as formulas of the guarantees and formal proofs of all the
89 * properties. With respect to the version of BFQ presented in these
90 * papers, this implementation adds a few more heuristics, such as the
91 * ones that guarantee a low latency to interactive and soft real-time
92 * applications, and a hierarchical extension based on H-WF2Q+.
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93 *
94 * B-WF2Q+ is based on WF2Q+, which is described in [2], together with
95 * H-WF2Q+, while the augmented tree used here to implement B-WF2Q+
96 * with O(log N) complexity derives from the one introduced with EEVDF
97 * in [3].
98 *
99 * [1] P. Valente, A. Avanzini, "Evolution of the BFQ Storage I/O
100 * Scheduler", Proceedings of the First Workshop on Mobile System
101 * Technologies (MST-2015), May 2015.
102 * http://algogroup.unimore.it/people/paolo/disk_sched/mst-2015.pdf
103 *
104 * [2] Jon C.R. Bennett and H. Zhang, "Hierarchical Packet Fair Queueing
105 * Algorithms", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 5(5):675-689,
106 * Oct 1997.
107 *
108 * http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~hzhang/papers/TON-97-Oct.ps.gz
109 *
110 * [3] I. Stoica and H. Abdel-Wahab, "Earliest Eligible Virtual Deadline
111 * First: A Flexible and Accurate Mechanism for Proportional Share
112 * Resource Allocation", technical report.
113 *
114 * http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~istoica/papers/eevdf-tr-95.pdf
115 */
116#include <linux/module.h>
117#include <linux/slab.h>
118#include <linux/blkdev.h>
e21b7a0b 119#include <linux/cgroup.h>
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120#include <linux/ktime.h>
121#include <linux/rbtree.h>
122#include <linux/ioprio.h>
123#include <linux/sbitmap.h>
124#include <linux/delay.h>
d51cfc53 125#include <linux/backing-dev.h>
aee69d78 126
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127#include <trace/events/block.h>
128
2e9bc346 129#include "elevator.h"
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130#include "blk.h"
131#include "blk-mq.h"
132#include "blk-mq-tag.h"
133#include "blk-mq-sched.h"
ea25da48 134#include "bfq-iosched.h"
b5dc5d4d 135#include "blk-wbt.h"
aee69d78 136
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137#define BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(name) \
138void bfq_mark_bfqq_##name(struct bfq_queue *bfqq) \
139{ \
140 __set_bit(BFQQF_##name, &(bfqq)->flags); \
141} \
142void bfq_clear_bfqq_##name(struct bfq_queue *bfqq) \
143{ \
144 __clear_bit(BFQQF_##name, &(bfqq)->flags); \
145} \
146int bfq_bfqq_##name(const struct bfq_queue *bfqq) \
147{ \
148 return test_bit(BFQQF_##name, &(bfqq)->flags); \
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149}
150
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151BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(just_created);
152BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(busy);
153BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(wait_request);
154BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(non_blocking_wait_rq);
155BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(fifo_expire);
d5be3fef 156BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(has_short_ttime);
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157BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(sync);
158BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(IO_bound);
159BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(in_large_burst);
160BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(coop);
161BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(split_coop);
162BFQ_BFQQ_FNS(softrt_update);
163#undef BFQ_BFQQ_FNS \
aee69d78 164
4168a8d2 165/* Expiration time of async (0) and sync (1) requests, in ns. */
ea25da48 166static const u64 bfq_fifo_expire[2] = { NSEC_PER_SEC / 4, NSEC_PER_SEC / 8 };
aee69d78 167
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168/* Maximum backwards seek (magic number lifted from CFQ), in KiB. */
169static const int bfq_back_max = 16 * 1024;
aee69d78 170
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171/* Penalty of a backwards seek, in number of sectors. */
172static const int bfq_back_penalty = 2;
e21b7a0b 173
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174/* Idling period duration, in ns. */
175static u64 bfq_slice_idle = NSEC_PER_SEC / 125;
aee69d78 176
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177/* Minimum number of assigned budgets for which stats are safe to compute. */
178static const int bfq_stats_min_budgets = 194;
aee69d78 179
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180/* Default maximum budget values, in sectors and number of requests. */
181static const int bfq_default_max_budget = 16 * 1024;
e21b7a0b 182
ea25da48 183/*
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184 * When a sync request is dispatched, the queue that contains that
185 * request, and all the ancestor entities of that queue, are charged
636b8fe8 186 * with the number of sectors of the request. In contrast, if the
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187 * request is async, then the queue and its ancestor entities are
188 * charged with the number of sectors of the request, multiplied by
189 * the factor below. This throttles the bandwidth for async I/O,
190 * w.r.t. to sync I/O, and it is done to counter the tendency of async
191 * writes to steal I/O throughput to reads.
192 *
193 * The current value of this parameter is the result of a tuning with
194 * several hardware and software configurations. We tried to find the
195 * lowest value for which writes do not cause noticeable problems to
196 * reads. In fact, the lower this parameter, the stabler I/O control,
197 * in the following respect. The lower this parameter is, the less
198 * the bandwidth enjoyed by a group decreases
199 * - when the group does writes, w.r.t. to when it does reads;
200 * - when other groups do reads, w.r.t. to when they do writes.
ea25da48 201 */
d5801088 202static const int bfq_async_charge_factor = 3;
aee69d78 203
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204/* Default timeout values, in jiffies, approximating CFQ defaults. */
205const int bfq_timeout = HZ / 8;
aee69d78 206
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207/*
208 * Time limit for merging (see comments in bfq_setup_cooperator). Set
209 * to the slowest value that, in our tests, proved to be effective in
210 * removing false positives, while not causing true positives to miss
211 * queue merging.
212 *
213 * As can be deduced from the low time limit below, queue merging, if
636b8fe8 214 * successful, happens at the very beginning of the I/O of the involved
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215 * cooperating processes, as a consequence of the arrival of the very
216 * first requests from each cooperator. After that, there is very
217 * little chance to find cooperators.
218 */
219static const unsigned long bfq_merge_time_limit = HZ/10;
220
ea25da48 221static struct kmem_cache *bfq_pool;
e21b7a0b 222
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223/* Below this threshold (in ns), we consider thinktime immediate. */
224#define BFQ_MIN_TT (2 * NSEC_PER_MSEC)
e21b7a0b 225
ea25da48 226/* hw_tag detection: parallel requests threshold and min samples needed. */
a3c92560 227#define BFQ_HW_QUEUE_THRESHOLD 3
ea25da48 228#define BFQ_HW_QUEUE_SAMPLES 32
aee69d78 229
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230#define BFQQ_SEEK_THR (sector_t)(8 * 100)
231#define BFQQ_SECT_THR_NONROT (sector_t)(2 * 32)
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232#define BFQ_RQ_SEEKY(bfqd, last_pos, rq) \
233 (get_sdist(last_pos, rq) > \
234 BFQQ_SEEK_THR && \
235 (!blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue) || \
236 blk_rq_sectors(rq) < BFQQ_SECT_THR_NONROT))
ea25da48 237#define BFQQ_CLOSE_THR (sector_t)(8 * 1024)
f0ba5ea2 238#define BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq) (hweight32(bfqq->seek_history) > 19)
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239/*
240 * Sync random I/O is likely to be confused with soft real-time I/O,
241 * because it is characterized by limited throughput and apparently
242 * isochronous arrival pattern. To avoid false positives, queues
243 * containing only random (seeky) I/O are prevented from being tagged
244 * as soft real-time.
245 */
e6feaf21 246#define BFQQ_TOTALLY_SEEKY(bfqq) (bfqq->seek_history == -1)
aee69d78 247
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248/* Min number of samples required to perform peak-rate update */
249#define BFQ_RATE_MIN_SAMPLES 32
250/* Min observation time interval required to perform a peak-rate update (ns) */
251#define BFQ_RATE_MIN_INTERVAL (300*NSEC_PER_MSEC)
252/* Target observation time interval for a peak-rate update (ns) */
253#define BFQ_RATE_REF_INTERVAL NSEC_PER_SEC
aee69d78 254
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255/*
256 * Shift used for peak-rate fixed precision calculations.
257 * With
258 * - the current shift: 16 positions
259 * - the current type used to store rate: u32
260 * - the current unit of measure for rate: [sectors/usec], or, more precisely,
261 * [(sectors/usec) / 2^BFQ_RATE_SHIFT] to take into account the shift,
262 * the range of rates that can be stored is
263 * [1 / 2^BFQ_RATE_SHIFT, 2^(32 - BFQ_RATE_SHIFT)] sectors/usec =
264 * [1 / 2^16, 2^16] sectors/usec = [15e-6, 65536] sectors/usec =
265 * [15, 65G] sectors/sec
266 * Which, assuming a sector size of 512B, corresponds to a range of
267 * [7.5K, 33T] B/sec
268 */
ea25da48 269#define BFQ_RATE_SHIFT 16
aee69d78 270
ea25da48 271/*
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272 * When configured for computing the duration of the weight-raising
273 * for interactive queues automatically (see the comments at the
274 * beginning of this file), BFQ does it using the following formula:
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275 * duration = (ref_rate / r) * ref_wr_duration,
276 * where r is the peak rate of the device, and ref_rate and
277 * ref_wr_duration are two reference parameters. In particular,
278 * ref_rate is the peak rate of the reference storage device (see
279 * below), and ref_wr_duration is about the maximum time needed, with
280 * BFQ and while reading two files in parallel, to load typical large
281 * applications on the reference device (see the comments on
282 * max_service_from_wr below, for more details on how ref_wr_duration
283 * is obtained). In practice, the slower/faster the device at hand
284 * is, the more/less it takes to load applications with respect to the
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285 * reference device. Accordingly, the longer/shorter BFQ grants
286 * weight raising to interactive applications.
ea25da48 287 *
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288 * BFQ uses two different reference pairs (ref_rate, ref_wr_duration),
289 * depending on whether the device is rotational or non-rotational.
ea25da48 290 *
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291 * In the following definitions, ref_rate[0] and ref_wr_duration[0]
292 * are the reference values for a rotational device, whereas
293 * ref_rate[1] and ref_wr_duration[1] are the reference values for a
294 * non-rotational device. The reference rates are not the actual peak
295 * rates of the devices used as a reference, but slightly lower
296 * values. The reason for using slightly lower values is that the
297 * peak-rate estimator tends to yield slightly lower values than the
298 * actual peak rate (it can yield the actual peak rate only if there
299 * is only one process doing I/O, and the process does sequential
300 * I/O).
ea25da48 301 *
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302 * The reference peak rates are measured in sectors/usec, left-shifted
303 * by BFQ_RATE_SHIFT.
ea25da48 304 */
e24f1c24 305static int ref_rate[2] = {14000, 33000};
ea25da48 306/*
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307 * To improve readability, a conversion function is used to initialize
308 * the following array, which entails that the array can be
309 * initialized only in a function.
ea25da48 310 */
e24f1c24 311static int ref_wr_duration[2];
aee69d78 312
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313/*
314 * BFQ uses the above-detailed, time-based weight-raising mechanism to
315 * privilege interactive tasks. This mechanism is vulnerable to the
316 * following false positives: I/O-bound applications that will go on
317 * doing I/O for much longer than the duration of weight
318 * raising. These applications have basically no benefit from being
319 * weight-raised at the beginning of their I/O. On the opposite end,
320 * while being weight-raised, these applications
321 * a) unjustly steal throughput to applications that may actually need
322 * low latency;
323 * b) make BFQ uselessly perform device idling; device idling results
324 * in loss of device throughput with most flash-based storage, and may
325 * increase latencies when used purposelessly.
326 *
327 * BFQ tries to reduce these problems, by adopting the following
328 * countermeasure. To introduce this countermeasure, we need first to
329 * finish explaining how the duration of weight-raising for
330 * interactive tasks is computed.
331 *
332 * For a bfq_queue deemed as interactive, the duration of weight
333 * raising is dynamically adjusted, as a function of the estimated
334 * peak rate of the device, so as to be equal to the time needed to
335 * execute the 'largest' interactive task we benchmarked so far. By
336 * largest task, we mean the task for which each involved process has
337 * to do more I/O than for any of the other tasks we benchmarked. This
338 * reference interactive task is the start-up of LibreOffice Writer,
339 * and in this task each process/bfq_queue needs to have at most ~110K
340 * sectors transferred.
341 *
342 * This last piece of information enables BFQ to reduce the actual
343 * duration of weight-raising for at least one class of I/O-bound
344 * applications: those doing sequential or quasi-sequential I/O. An
345 * example is file copy. In fact, once started, the main I/O-bound
346 * processes of these applications usually consume the above 110K
347 * sectors in much less time than the processes of an application that
348 * is starting, because these I/O-bound processes will greedily devote
349 * almost all their CPU cycles only to their target,
350 * throughput-friendly I/O operations. This is even more true if BFQ
351 * happens to be underestimating the device peak rate, and thus
352 * overestimating the duration of weight raising. But, according to
353 * our measurements, once transferred 110K sectors, these processes
354 * have no right to be weight-raised any longer.
355 *
356 * Basing on the last consideration, BFQ ends weight-raising for a
357 * bfq_queue if the latter happens to have received an amount of
358 * service at least equal to the following constant. The constant is
359 * set to slightly more than 110K, to have a minimum safety margin.
360 *
361 * This early ending of weight-raising reduces the amount of time
362 * during which interactive false positives cause the two problems
363 * described at the beginning of these comments.
364 */
365static const unsigned long max_service_from_wr = 120000;
366
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367/*
368 * Maximum time between the creation of two queues, for stable merge
369 * to be activated (in ms)
370 */
371static const unsigned long bfq_activation_stable_merging = 600;
372/*
373 * Minimum time to be waited before evaluating delayed stable merge (in ms)
374 */
375static const unsigned long bfq_late_stable_merging = 600;
376
12cd3a2f 377#define RQ_BIC(rq) icq_to_bic((rq)->elv.priv[0])
ea25da48 378#define RQ_BFQQ(rq) ((rq)->elv.priv[1])
aee69d78 379
ea25da48 380struct bfq_queue *bic_to_bfqq(struct bfq_io_cq *bic, bool is_sync)
e21b7a0b 381{
ea25da48 382 return bic->bfqq[is_sync];
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383}
384
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385static void bfq_put_stable_ref(struct bfq_queue *bfqq);
386
ea25da48 387void bic_set_bfqq(struct bfq_io_cq *bic, struct bfq_queue *bfqq, bool is_sync)
aee69d78 388{
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389 /*
390 * If bfqq != NULL, then a non-stable queue merge between
391 * bic->bfqq and bfqq is happening here. This causes troubles
392 * in the following case: bic->bfqq has also been scheduled
393 * for a possible stable merge with bic->stable_merge_bfqq,
394 * and bic->stable_merge_bfqq == bfqq happens to
395 * hold. Troubles occur because bfqq may then undergo a split,
396 * thereby becoming eligible for a stable merge. Yet, if
397 * bic->stable_merge_bfqq points exactly to bfqq, then bfqq
398 * would be stably merged with itself. To avoid this anomaly,
399 * we cancel the stable merge if
400 * bic->stable_merge_bfqq == bfqq.
401 */
ea25da48 402 bic->bfqq[is_sync] = bfqq;
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403
404 if (bfqq && bic->stable_merge_bfqq == bfqq) {
405 /*
406 * Actually, these same instructions are executed also
407 * in bfq_setup_cooperator, in case of abort or actual
408 * execution of a stable merge. We could avoid
409 * repeating these instructions there too, but if we
410 * did so, we would nest even more complexity in this
411 * function.
412 */
413 bfq_put_stable_ref(bic->stable_merge_bfqq);
414
415 bic->stable_merge_bfqq = NULL;
416 }
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417}
418
ea25da48 419struct bfq_data *bic_to_bfqd(struct bfq_io_cq *bic)
aee69d78 420{
ea25da48 421 return bic->icq.q->elevator->elevator_data;
e21b7a0b 422}
aee69d78 423
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424/**
425 * icq_to_bic - convert iocontext queue structure to bfq_io_cq.
426 * @icq: the iocontext queue.
427 */
428static struct bfq_io_cq *icq_to_bic(struct io_cq *icq)
e21b7a0b 429{
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430 /* bic->icq is the first member, %NULL will convert to %NULL */
431 return container_of(icq, struct bfq_io_cq, icq);
e21b7a0b 432}
aee69d78 433
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434/**
435 * bfq_bic_lookup - search into @ioc a bic associated to @bfqd.
436 * @bfqd: the lookup key.
437 * @ioc: the io_context of the process doing I/O.
438 * @q: the request queue.
439 */
440static struct bfq_io_cq *bfq_bic_lookup(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
441 struct io_context *ioc,
442 struct request_queue *q)
e21b7a0b 443{
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444 if (ioc) {
445 unsigned long flags;
446 struct bfq_io_cq *icq;
aee69d78 447
0d945c1f 448 spin_lock_irqsave(&q->queue_lock, flags);
ea25da48 449 icq = icq_to_bic(ioc_lookup_icq(ioc, q));
0d945c1f 450 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&q->queue_lock, flags);
aee69d78 451
ea25da48 452 return icq;
e21b7a0b 453 }
e21b7a0b 454
ea25da48 455 return NULL;
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456}
457
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458/*
459 * Scheduler run of queue, if there are requests pending and no one in the
460 * driver that will restart queueing.
461 */
462void bfq_schedule_dispatch(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
aee69d78 463{
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464 if (bfqd->queued != 0) {
465 bfq_log(bfqd, "schedule dispatch");
466 blk_mq_run_hw_queues(bfqd->queue, true);
e21b7a0b 467 }
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468}
469
470#define bfq_class_idle(bfqq) ((bfqq)->ioprio_class == IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE)
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471
472#define bfq_sample_valid(samples) ((samples) > 80)
473
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474/*
475 * Lifted from AS - choose which of rq1 and rq2 that is best served now.
636b8fe8 476 * We choose the request that is closer to the head right now. Distance
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477 * behind the head is penalized and only allowed to a certain extent.
478 */
479static struct request *bfq_choose_req(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
480 struct request *rq1,
481 struct request *rq2,
482 sector_t last)
483{
484 sector_t s1, s2, d1 = 0, d2 = 0;
485 unsigned long back_max;
486#define BFQ_RQ1_WRAP 0x01 /* request 1 wraps */
487#define BFQ_RQ2_WRAP 0x02 /* request 2 wraps */
488 unsigned int wrap = 0; /* bit mask: requests behind the disk head? */
489
490 if (!rq1 || rq1 == rq2)
491 return rq2;
492 if (!rq2)
493 return rq1;
494
495 if (rq_is_sync(rq1) && !rq_is_sync(rq2))
496 return rq1;
497 else if (rq_is_sync(rq2) && !rq_is_sync(rq1))
498 return rq2;
499 if ((rq1->cmd_flags & REQ_META) && !(rq2->cmd_flags & REQ_META))
500 return rq1;
501 else if ((rq2->cmd_flags & REQ_META) && !(rq1->cmd_flags & REQ_META))
502 return rq2;
503
504 s1 = blk_rq_pos(rq1);
505 s2 = blk_rq_pos(rq2);
506
507 /*
508 * By definition, 1KiB is 2 sectors.
509 */
510 back_max = bfqd->bfq_back_max * 2;
511
512 /*
513 * Strict one way elevator _except_ in the case where we allow
514 * short backward seeks which are biased as twice the cost of a
515 * similar forward seek.
516 */
517 if (s1 >= last)
518 d1 = s1 - last;
519 else if (s1 + back_max >= last)
520 d1 = (last - s1) * bfqd->bfq_back_penalty;
521 else
522 wrap |= BFQ_RQ1_WRAP;
523
524 if (s2 >= last)
525 d2 = s2 - last;
526 else if (s2 + back_max >= last)
527 d2 = (last - s2) * bfqd->bfq_back_penalty;
528 else
529 wrap |= BFQ_RQ2_WRAP;
530
531 /* Found required data */
532
533 /*
534 * By doing switch() on the bit mask "wrap" we avoid having to
535 * check two variables for all permutations: --> faster!
536 */
537 switch (wrap) {
538 case 0: /* common case for CFQ: rq1 and rq2 not wrapped */
539 if (d1 < d2)
540 return rq1;
541 else if (d2 < d1)
542 return rq2;
543
544 if (s1 >= s2)
545 return rq1;
546 else
547 return rq2;
548
549 case BFQ_RQ2_WRAP:
550 return rq1;
551 case BFQ_RQ1_WRAP:
552 return rq2;
553 case BFQ_RQ1_WRAP|BFQ_RQ2_WRAP: /* both rqs wrapped */
554 default:
555 /*
556 * Since both rqs are wrapped,
557 * start with the one that's further behind head
558 * (--> only *one* back seek required),
559 * since back seek takes more time than forward.
560 */
561 if (s1 <= s2)
562 return rq1;
563 else
564 return rq2;
565 }
566}
567
76f1df88
JK
568#define BFQ_LIMIT_INLINE_DEPTH 16
569
570#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
571static bool bfqq_request_over_limit(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, int limit)
572{
573 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
574 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
575 struct bfq_entity *inline_entities[BFQ_LIMIT_INLINE_DEPTH];
576 struct bfq_entity **entities = inline_entities;
577 int depth, level;
578 int class_idx = bfqq->ioprio_class - 1;
579 struct bfq_sched_data *sched_data;
580 unsigned long wsum;
581 bool ret = false;
582
583 if (!entity->on_st_or_in_serv)
584 return false;
585
586 /* +1 for bfqq entity, root cgroup not included */
587 depth = bfqg_to_blkg(bfqq_group(bfqq))->blkcg->css.cgroup->level + 1;
588 if (depth > BFQ_LIMIT_INLINE_DEPTH) {
589 entities = kmalloc_array(depth, sizeof(*entities), GFP_NOIO);
590 if (!entities)
591 return false;
592 }
593
594 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
595 sched_data = entity->sched_data;
596 /* Gather our ancestors as we need to traverse them in reverse order */
597 level = 0;
598 for_each_entity(entity) {
599 /*
600 * If at some level entity is not even active, allow request
601 * queueing so that BFQ knows there's work to do and activate
602 * entities.
603 */
604 if (!entity->on_st_or_in_serv)
605 goto out;
606 /* Uh, more parents than cgroup subsystem thinks? */
607 if (WARN_ON_ONCE(level >= depth))
608 break;
609 entities[level++] = entity;
610 }
611 WARN_ON_ONCE(level != depth);
612 for (level--; level >= 0; level--) {
613 entity = entities[level];
614 if (level > 0) {
615 wsum = bfq_entity_service_tree(entity)->wsum;
616 } else {
617 int i;
618 /*
619 * For bfqq itself we take into account service trees
620 * of all higher priority classes and multiply their
621 * weights so that low prio queue from higher class
622 * gets more requests than high prio queue from lower
623 * class.
624 */
625 wsum = 0;
626 for (i = 0; i <= class_idx; i++) {
627 wsum = wsum * IOPRIO_BE_NR +
628 sched_data->service_tree[i].wsum;
629 }
630 }
631 limit = DIV_ROUND_CLOSEST(limit * entity->weight, wsum);
632 if (entity->allocated >= limit) {
633 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq,
634 "too many requests: allocated %d limit %d level %d",
635 entity->allocated, limit, level);
636 ret = true;
637 break;
638 }
639 }
640out:
641 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
642 if (entities != inline_entities)
643 kfree(entities);
644 return ret;
645}
646#else
647static bool bfqq_request_over_limit(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, int limit)
648{
649 return false;
650}
651#endif
652
a52a69ea
PV
653/*
654 * Async I/O can easily starve sync I/O (both sync reads and sync
655 * writes), by consuming all tags. Similarly, storms of sync writes,
656 * such as those that sync(2) may trigger, can starve sync reads.
657 * Limit depths of async I/O and sync writes so as to counter both
658 * problems.
76f1df88
JK
659 *
660 * Also if a bfq queue or its parent cgroup consume more tags than would be
661 * appropriate for their weight, we trim the available tag depth to 1. This
662 * avoids a situation where one cgroup can starve another cgroup from tags and
663 * thus block service differentiation among cgroups. Note that because the
664 * queue / cgroup already has many requests allocated and queued, this does not
665 * significantly affect service guarantees coming from the BFQ scheduling
666 * algorithm.
a52a69ea
PV
667 */
668static void bfq_limit_depth(unsigned int op, struct blk_mq_alloc_data *data)
669{
a52a69ea 670 struct bfq_data *bfqd = data->q->elevator->elevator_data;
76f1df88
JK
671 struct bfq_io_cq *bic = icq_to_bic(blk_mq_sched_get_icq(data->q));
672 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bic ? bic_to_bfqq(bic, op_is_sync(op)) : NULL;
673 int depth;
674 unsigned limit = data->q->nr_requests;
675
676 /* Sync reads have full depth available */
677 if (op_is_sync(op) && !op_is_write(op)) {
678 depth = 0;
679 } else {
680 depth = bfqd->word_depths[!!bfqd->wr_busy_queues][op_is_sync(op)];
681 limit = (limit * depth) >> bfqd->full_depth_shift;
682 }
a52a69ea 683
76f1df88
JK
684 /*
685 * Does queue (or any parent entity) exceed number of requests that
686 * should be available to it? Heavily limit depth so that it cannot
687 * consume more available requests and thus starve other entities.
688 */
689 if (bfqq && bfqq_request_over_limit(bfqq, limit))
690 depth = 1;
a52a69ea
PV
691
692 bfq_log(bfqd, "[%s] wr_busy %d sync %d depth %u",
76f1df88
JK
693 __func__, bfqd->wr_busy_queues, op_is_sync(op), depth);
694 if (depth)
695 data->shallow_depth = depth;
a52a69ea
PV
696}
697
36eca894
AA
698static struct bfq_queue *
699bfq_rq_pos_tree_lookup(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct rb_root *root,
700 sector_t sector, struct rb_node **ret_parent,
701 struct rb_node ***rb_link)
702{
703 struct rb_node **p, *parent;
704 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = NULL;
705
706 parent = NULL;
707 p = &root->rb_node;
708 while (*p) {
709 struct rb_node **n;
710
711 parent = *p;
712 bfqq = rb_entry(parent, struct bfq_queue, pos_node);
713
714 /*
715 * Sort strictly based on sector. Smallest to the left,
716 * largest to the right.
717 */
718 if (sector > blk_rq_pos(bfqq->next_rq))
719 n = &(*p)->rb_right;
720 else if (sector < blk_rq_pos(bfqq->next_rq))
721 n = &(*p)->rb_left;
722 else
723 break;
724 p = n;
725 bfqq = NULL;
726 }
727
728 *ret_parent = parent;
729 if (rb_link)
730 *rb_link = p;
731
732 bfq_log(bfqd, "rq_pos_tree_lookup %llu: returning %d",
733 (unsigned long long)sector,
734 bfqq ? bfqq->pid : 0);
735
736 return bfqq;
737}
738
7b8fa3b9
PV
739static bool bfq_too_late_for_merging(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
740{
741 return bfqq->service_from_backlogged > 0 &&
742 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->first_IO_time +
743 bfq_merge_time_limit);
744}
745
8cacc5ab
PV
746/*
747 * The following function is not marked as __cold because it is
748 * actually cold, but for the same performance goal described in the
749 * comments on the likely() at the beginning of
750 * bfq_setup_cooperator(). Unexpectedly, to reach an even lower
751 * execution time for the case where this function is not invoked, we
752 * had to add an unlikely() in each involved if().
753 */
754void __cold
755bfq_pos_tree_add_move(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
36eca894
AA
756{
757 struct rb_node **p, *parent;
758 struct bfq_queue *__bfqq;
759
760 if (bfqq->pos_root) {
761 rb_erase(&bfqq->pos_node, bfqq->pos_root);
762 bfqq->pos_root = NULL;
763 }
764
32c59e3a
PV
765 /* oom_bfqq does not participate in queue merging */
766 if (bfqq == &bfqd->oom_bfqq)
767 return;
768
7b8fa3b9
PV
769 /*
770 * bfqq cannot be merged any longer (see comments in
771 * bfq_setup_cooperator): no point in adding bfqq into the
772 * position tree.
773 */
774 if (bfq_too_late_for_merging(bfqq))
775 return;
776
36eca894
AA
777 if (bfq_class_idle(bfqq))
778 return;
779 if (!bfqq->next_rq)
780 return;
781
782 bfqq->pos_root = &bfq_bfqq_to_bfqg(bfqq)->rq_pos_tree;
783 __bfqq = bfq_rq_pos_tree_lookup(bfqd, bfqq->pos_root,
784 blk_rq_pos(bfqq->next_rq), &parent, &p);
785 if (!__bfqq) {
786 rb_link_node(&bfqq->pos_node, parent, p);
787 rb_insert_color(&bfqq->pos_node, bfqq->pos_root);
788 } else
789 bfqq->pos_root = NULL;
790}
791
1de0c4cd 792/*
fb53ac6c
PV
793 * The following function returns false either if every active queue
794 * must receive the same share of the throughput (symmetric scenario),
795 * or, as a special case, if bfqq must receive a share of the
796 * throughput lower than or equal to the share that every other active
797 * queue must receive. If bfqq does sync I/O, then these are the only
798 * two cases where bfqq happens to be guaranteed its share of the
799 * throughput even if I/O dispatching is not plugged when bfqq remains
800 * temporarily empty (for more details, see the comments in the
801 * function bfq_better_to_idle()). For this reason, the return value
802 * of this function is used to check whether I/O-dispatch plugging can
803 * be avoided.
1de0c4cd 804 *
fb53ac6c 805 * The above first case (symmetric scenario) occurs when:
1de0c4cd 806 * 1) all active queues have the same weight,
73d58118 807 * 2) all active queues belong to the same I/O-priority class,
1de0c4cd 808 * 3) all active groups at the same level in the groups tree have the same
73d58118
PV
809 * weight,
810 * 4) all active groups at the same level in the groups tree have the same
1de0c4cd
AA
811 * number of children.
812 *
2d29c9f8
FM
813 * Unfortunately, keeping the necessary state for evaluating exactly
814 * the last two symmetry sub-conditions above would be quite complex
73d58118
PV
815 * and time consuming. Therefore this function evaluates, instead,
816 * only the following stronger three sub-conditions, for which it is
2d29c9f8 817 * much easier to maintain the needed state:
1de0c4cd 818 * 1) all active queues have the same weight,
73d58118
PV
819 * 2) all active queues belong to the same I/O-priority class,
820 * 3) there are no active groups.
2d29c9f8
FM
821 * In particular, the last condition is always true if hierarchical
822 * support or the cgroups interface are not enabled, thus no state
823 * needs to be maintained in this case.
1de0c4cd 824 */
fb53ac6c
PV
825static bool bfq_asymmetric_scenario(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
826 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1de0c4cd 827{
fb53ac6c
PV
828 bool smallest_weight = bfqq &&
829 bfqq->weight_counter &&
830 bfqq->weight_counter ==
831 container_of(
832 rb_first_cached(&bfqd->queue_weights_tree),
833 struct bfq_weight_counter,
834 weights_node);
835
73d58118
PV
836 /*
837 * For queue weights to differ, queue_weights_tree must contain
838 * at least two nodes.
839 */
fb53ac6c
PV
840 bool varied_queue_weights = !smallest_weight &&
841 !RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqd->queue_weights_tree.rb_root) &&
842 (bfqd->queue_weights_tree.rb_root.rb_node->rb_left ||
843 bfqd->queue_weights_tree.rb_root.rb_node->rb_right);
73d58118
PV
844
845 bool multiple_classes_busy =
846 (bfqd->busy_queues[0] && bfqd->busy_queues[1]) ||
847 (bfqd->busy_queues[0] && bfqd->busy_queues[2]) ||
848 (bfqd->busy_queues[1] && bfqd->busy_queues[2]);
849
fb53ac6c 850 return varied_queue_weights || multiple_classes_busy
42b1bd33 851#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
73d58118
PV
852 || bfqd->num_groups_with_pending_reqs > 0
853#endif
fb53ac6c 854 ;
1de0c4cd
AA
855}
856
857/*
858 * If the weight-counter tree passed as input contains no counter for
2d29c9f8 859 * the weight of the input queue, then add that counter; otherwise just
1de0c4cd
AA
860 * increment the existing counter.
861 *
862 * Note that weight-counter trees contain few nodes in mostly symmetric
863 * scenarios. For example, if all queues have the same weight, then the
864 * weight-counter tree for the queues may contain at most one node.
865 * This holds even if low_latency is on, because weight-raised queues
866 * are not inserted in the tree.
867 * In most scenarios, the rate at which nodes are created/destroyed
868 * should be low too.
869 */
2d29c9f8 870void bfq_weights_tree_add(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
fb53ac6c 871 struct rb_root_cached *root)
1de0c4cd 872{
2d29c9f8 873 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
fb53ac6c
PV
874 struct rb_node **new = &(root->rb_root.rb_node), *parent = NULL;
875 bool leftmost = true;
1de0c4cd
AA
876
877 /*
2d29c9f8 878 * Do not insert if the queue is already associated with a
1de0c4cd 879 * counter, which happens if:
2d29c9f8 880 * 1) a request arrival has caused the queue to become both
1de0c4cd
AA
881 * non-weight-raised, and hence change its weight, and
882 * backlogged; in this respect, each of the two events
883 * causes an invocation of this function,
2d29c9f8 884 * 2) this is the invocation of this function caused by the
1de0c4cd
AA
885 * second event. This second invocation is actually useless,
886 * and we handle this fact by exiting immediately. More
887 * efficient or clearer solutions might possibly be adopted.
888 */
2d29c9f8 889 if (bfqq->weight_counter)
1de0c4cd
AA
890 return;
891
892 while (*new) {
893 struct bfq_weight_counter *__counter = container_of(*new,
894 struct bfq_weight_counter,
895 weights_node);
896 parent = *new;
897
898 if (entity->weight == __counter->weight) {
2d29c9f8 899 bfqq->weight_counter = __counter;
1de0c4cd
AA
900 goto inc_counter;
901 }
902 if (entity->weight < __counter->weight)
903 new = &((*new)->rb_left);
fb53ac6c 904 else {
1de0c4cd 905 new = &((*new)->rb_right);
fb53ac6c
PV
906 leftmost = false;
907 }
1de0c4cd
AA
908 }
909
2d29c9f8
FM
910 bfqq->weight_counter = kzalloc(sizeof(struct bfq_weight_counter),
911 GFP_ATOMIC);
1de0c4cd
AA
912
913 /*
914 * In the unlucky event of an allocation failure, we just
2d29c9f8 915 * exit. This will cause the weight of queue to not be
fb53ac6c 916 * considered in bfq_asymmetric_scenario, which, in its turn,
73d58118
PV
917 * causes the scenario to be deemed wrongly symmetric in case
918 * bfqq's weight would have been the only weight making the
919 * scenario asymmetric. On the bright side, no unbalance will
920 * however occur when bfqq becomes inactive again (the
921 * invocation of this function is triggered by an activation
922 * of queue). In fact, bfq_weights_tree_remove does nothing
923 * if !bfqq->weight_counter.
1de0c4cd 924 */
2d29c9f8 925 if (unlikely(!bfqq->weight_counter))
1de0c4cd
AA
926 return;
927
2d29c9f8
FM
928 bfqq->weight_counter->weight = entity->weight;
929 rb_link_node(&bfqq->weight_counter->weights_node, parent, new);
fb53ac6c
PV
930 rb_insert_color_cached(&bfqq->weight_counter->weights_node, root,
931 leftmost);
1de0c4cd
AA
932
933inc_counter:
2d29c9f8 934 bfqq->weight_counter->num_active++;
9dee8b3b 935 bfqq->ref++;
1de0c4cd
AA
936}
937
938/*
2d29c9f8 939 * Decrement the weight counter associated with the queue, and, if the
1de0c4cd
AA
940 * counter reaches 0, remove the counter from the tree.
941 * See the comments to the function bfq_weights_tree_add() for considerations
942 * about overhead.
943 */
0471559c 944void __bfq_weights_tree_remove(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2d29c9f8 945 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
fb53ac6c 946 struct rb_root_cached *root)
1de0c4cd 947{
2d29c9f8 948 if (!bfqq->weight_counter)
1de0c4cd
AA
949 return;
950
2d29c9f8
FM
951 bfqq->weight_counter->num_active--;
952 if (bfqq->weight_counter->num_active > 0)
1de0c4cd
AA
953 goto reset_entity_pointer;
954
fb53ac6c 955 rb_erase_cached(&bfqq->weight_counter->weights_node, root);
2d29c9f8 956 kfree(bfqq->weight_counter);
1de0c4cd
AA
957
958reset_entity_pointer:
2d29c9f8 959 bfqq->weight_counter = NULL;
9dee8b3b 960 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
1de0c4cd
AA
961}
962
0471559c 963/*
2d29c9f8
FM
964 * Invoke __bfq_weights_tree_remove on bfqq and decrement the number
965 * of active groups for each queue's inactive parent entity.
0471559c
PV
966 */
967void bfq_weights_tree_remove(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
968 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
969{
970 struct bfq_entity *entity = bfqq->entity.parent;
971
0471559c
PV
972 for_each_entity(entity) {
973 struct bfq_sched_data *sd = entity->my_sched_data;
974
975 if (sd->next_in_service || sd->in_service_entity) {
976 /*
977 * entity is still active, because either
978 * next_in_service or in_service_entity is not
979 * NULL (see the comments on the definition of
980 * next_in_service for details on why
981 * in_service_entity must be checked too).
982 *
2d29c9f8
FM
983 * As a consequence, its parent entities are
984 * active as well, and thus this loop must
985 * stop here.
0471559c
PV
986 */
987 break;
988 }
ba7aeae5
PV
989
990 /*
991 * The decrement of num_groups_with_pending_reqs is
992 * not performed immediately upon the deactivation of
993 * entity, but it is delayed to when it also happens
994 * that the first leaf descendant bfqq of entity gets
995 * all its pending requests completed. The following
996 * instructions perform this delayed decrement, if
997 * needed. See the comments on
998 * num_groups_with_pending_reqs for details.
999 */
1000 if (entity->in_groups_with_pending_reqs) {
1001 entity->in_groups_with_pending_reqs = false;
1002 bfqd->num_groups_with_pending_reqs--;
1003 }
0471559c 1004 }
9dee8b3b
PV
1005
1006 /*
1007 * Next function is invoked last, because it causes bfqq to be
1008 * freed if the following holds: bfqq is not in service and
1009 * has no dispatched request. DO NOT use bfqq after the next
1010 * function invocation.
1011 */
1012 __bfq_weights_tree_remove(bfqd, bfqq,
1013 &bfqd->queue_weights_tree);
0471559c
PV
1014}
1015
aee69d78
PV
1016/*
1017 * Return expired entry, or NULL to just start from scratch in rbtree.
1018 */
1019static struct request *bfq_check_fifo(struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
1020 struct request *last)
1021{
1022 struct request *rq;
1023
1024 if (bfq_bfqq_fifo_expire(bfqq))
1025 return NULL;
1026
1027 bfq_mark_bfqq_fifo_expire(bfqq);
1028
1029 rq = rq_entry_fifo(bfqq->fifo.next);
1030
1031 if (rq == last || ktime_get_ns() < rq->fifo_time)
1032 return NULL;
1033
1034 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq, "check_fifo: returned %p", rq);
1035 return rq;
1036}
1037
1038static struct request *bfq_find_next_rq(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1039 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
1040 struct request *last)
1041{
1042 struct rb_node *rbnext = rb_next(&last->rb_node);
1043 struct rb_node *rbprev = rb_prev(&last->rb_node);
1044 struct request *next, *prev = NULL;
1045
1046 /* Follow expired path, else get first next available. */
1047 next = bfq_check_fifo(bfqq, last);
1048 if (next)
1049 return next;
1050
1051 if (rbprev)
1052 prev = rb_entry_rq(rbprev);
1053
1054 if (rbnext)
1055 next = rb_entry_rq(rbnext);
1056 else {
1057 rbnext = rb_first(&bfqq->sort_list);
1058 if (rbnext && rbnext != &last->rb_node)
1059 next = rb_entry_rq(rbnext);
1060 }
1061
1062 return bfq_choose_req(bfqd, next, prev, blk_rq_pos(last));
1063}
1064
c074170e 1065/* see the definition of bfq_async_charge_factor for details */
aee69d78
PV
1066static unsigned long bfq_serv_to_charge(struct request *rq,
1067 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1068{
02a6d787 1069 if (bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) || bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 ||
fb53ac6c 1070 bfq_asymmetric_scenario(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq))
c074170e
PV
1071 return blk_rq_sectors(rq);
1072
d5801088 1073 return blk_rq_sectors(rq) * bfq_async_charge_factor;
aee69d78
PV
1074}
1075
1076/**
1077 * bfq_updated_next_req - update the queue after a new next_rq selection.
1078 * @bfqd: the device data the queue belongs to.
1079 * @bfqq: the queue to update.
1080 *
1081 * If the first request of a queue changes we make sure that the queue
1082 * has enough budget to serve at least its first request (if the
1083 * request has grown). We do this because if the queue has not enough
1084 * budget for its first request, it has to go through two dispatch
1085 * rounds to actually get it dispatched.
1086 */
1087static void bfq_updated_next_req(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1088 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1089{
1090 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
1091 struct request *next_rq = bfqq->next_rq;
1092 unsigned long new_budget;
1093
1094 if (!next_rq)
1095 return;
1096
1097 if (bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue)
1098 /*
1099 * In order not to break guarantees, budgets cannot be
1100 * changed after an entity has been selected.
1101 */
1102 return;
1103
f3218ad8
PV
1104 new_budget = max_t(unsigned long,
1105 max_t(unsigned long, bfqq->max_budget,
1106 bfq_serv_to_charge(next_rq, bfqq)),
1107 entity->service);
aee69d78
PV
1108 if (entity->budget != new_budget) {
1109 entity->budget = new_budget;
1110 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "updated next rq: new budget %lu",
1111 new_budget);
80294c3b 1112 bfq_requeue_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, false);
aee69d78
PV
1113 }
1114}
1115
3e2bdd6d
PV
1116static unsigned int bfq_wr_duration(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
1117{
1118 u64 dur;
1119
1120 if (bfqd->bfq_wr_max_time > 0)
1121 return bfqd->bfq_wr_max_time;
1122
e24f1c24 1123 dur = bfqd->rate_dur_prod;
3e2bdd6d
PV
1124 do_div(dur, bfqd->peak_rate);
1125
1126 /*
d450542e
DS
1127 * Limit duration between 3 and 25 seconds. The upper limit
1128 * has been conservatively set after the following worst case:
1129 * on a QEMU/KVM virtual machine
1130 * - running in a slow PC
1131 * - with a virtual disk stacked on a slow low-end 5400rpm HDD
1132 * - serving a heavy I/O workload, such as the sequential reading
1133 * of several files
1134 * mplayer took 23 seconds to start, if constantly weight-raised.
1135 *
636b8fe8 1136 * As for higher values than that accommodating the above bad
d450542e
DS
1137 * scenario, tests show that higher values would often yield
1138 * the opposite of the desired result, i.e., would worsen
1139 * responsiveness by allowing non-interactive applications to
1140 * preserve weight raising for too long.
3e2bdd6d
PV
1141 *
1142 * On the other end, lower values than 3 seconds make it
1143 * difficult for most interactive tasks to complete their jobs
1144 * before weight-raising finishes.
1145 */
d450542e 1146 return clamp_val(dur, msecs_to_jiffies(3000), msecs_to_jiffies(25000));
3e2bdd6d
PV
1147}
1148
1149/* switch back from soft real-time to interactive weight raising */
1150static void switch_back_to_interactive_wr(struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
1151 struct bfq_data *bfqd)
1152{
1153 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
1154 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqd);
1155 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt;
1156}
1157
36eca894 1158static void
13c931bd
PV
1159bfq_bfqq_resume_state(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1160 struct bfq_io_cq *bic, bool bfq_already_existing)
36eca894 1161{
8c544770 1162 unsigned int old_wr_coeff = 1;
13c931bd
PV
1163 bool busy = bfq_already_existing && bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq);
1164
d5be3fef
PV
1165 if (bic->saved_has_short_ttime)
1166 bfq_mark_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
36eca894 1167 else
d5be3fef 1168 bfq_clear_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
36eca894
AA
1169
1170 if (bic->saved_IO_bound)
1171 bfq_mark_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
1172 else
1173 bfq_clear_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
1174
5a5436b9
PV
1175 bfqq->last_serv_time_ns = bic->saved_last_serv_time_ns;
1176 bfqq->inject_limit = bic->saved_inject_limit;
1177 bfqq->decrease_time_jif = bic->saved_decrease_time_jif;
1178
fffca087 1179 bfqq->entity.new_weight = bic->saved_weight;
36eca894 1180 bfqq->ttime = bic->saved_ttime;
eb2fd80f
PV
1181 bfqq->io_start_time = bic->saved_io_start_time;
1182 bfqq->tot_idle_time = bic->saved_tot_idle_time;
8c544770
PV
1183 /*
1184 * Restore weight coefficient only if low_latency is on
1185 */
1186 if (bfqd->low_latency) {
1187 old_wr_coeff = bfqq->wr_coeff;
1188 bfqq->wr_coeff = bic->saved_wr_coeff;
1189 }
e673914d 1190 bfqq->service_from_wr = bic->saved_service_from_wr;
36eca894
AA
1191 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt = bic->saved_wr_start_at_switch_to_srt;
1192 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = bic->saved_last_wr_start_finish;
1193 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bic->saved_wr_cur_max_time;
1194
e1b2324d 1195 if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 && (bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq) ||
36eca894 1196 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->last_wr_start_finish +
e1b2324d 1197 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time))) {
3e2bdd6d
PV
1198 if (bfqq->wr_cur_max_time == bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time &&
1199 !bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq) &&
1200 time_is_after_eq_jiffies(bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt +
1201 bfq_wr_duration(bfqd))) {
1202 switch_back_to_interactive_wr(bfqq, bfqd);
1203 } else {
1204 bfqq->wr_coeff = 1;
1205 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq,
1206 "resume state: switching off wr");
1207 }
36eca894
AA
1208 }
1209
1210 /* make sure weight will be updated, however we got here */
1211 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
13c931bd
PV
1212
1213 if (likely(!busy))
1214 return;
1215
1216 if (old_wr_coeff == 1 && bfqq->wr_coeff > 1)
1217 bfqd->wr_busy_queues++;
1218 else if (old_wr_coeff > 1 && bfqq->wr_coeff == 1)
1219 bfqd->wr_busy_queues--;
36eca894
AA
1220}
1221
1222static int bfqq_process_refs(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1223{
98f04499
JK
1224 return bfqq->ref - bfqq->entity.allocated -
1225 bfqq->entity.on_st_or_in_serv -
430a67f9 1226 (bfqq->weight_counter != NULL) - bfqq->stable_ref;
36eca894
AA
1227}
1228
e1b2324d
AA
1229/* Empty burst list and add just bfqq (see comments on bfq_handle_burst) */
1230static void bfq_reset_burst_list(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1231{
1232 struct bfq_queue *item;
1233 struct hlist_node *n;
1234
1235 hlist_for_each_entry_safe(item, n, &bfqd->burst_list, burst_list_node)
1236 hlist_del_init(&item->burst_list_node);
84a74689
PV
1237
1238 /*
1239 * Start the creation of a new burst list only if there is no
1240 * active queue. See comments on the conditional invocation of
1241 * bfq_handle_burst().
1242 */
1243 if (bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) == 0) {
1244 hlist_add_head(&bfqq->burst_list_node, &bfqd->burst_list);
1245 bfqd->burst_size = 1;
1246 } else
1247 bfqd->burst_size = 0;
1248
e1b2324d
AA
1249 bfqd->burst_parent_entity = bfqq->entity.parent;
1250}
1251
1252/* Add bfqq to the list of queues in current burst (see bfq_handle_burst) */
1253static void bfq_add_to_burst(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1254{
1255 /* Increment burst size to take into account also bfqq */
1256 bfqd->burst_size++;
1257
1258 if (bfqd->burst_size == bfqd->bfq_large_burst_thresh) {
1259 struct bfq_queue *pos, *bfqq_item;
1260 struct hlist_node *n;
1261
1262 /*
1263 * Enough queues have been activated shortly after each
1264 * other to consider this burst as large.
1265 */
1266 bfqd->large_burst = true;
1267
1268 /*
1269 * We can now mark all queues in the burst list as
1270 * belonging to a large burst.
1271 */
1272 hlist_for_each_entry(bfqq_item, &bfqd->burst_list,
1273 burst_list_node)
1274 bfq_mark_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq_item);
1275 bfq_mark_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
1276
1277 /*
1278 * From now on, and until the current burst finishes, any
1279 * new queue being activated shortly after the last queue
1280 * was inserted in the burst can be immediately marked as
1281 * belonging to a large burst. So the burst list is not
1282 * needed any more. Remove it.
1283 */
1284 hlist_for_each_entry_safe(pos, n, &bfqd->burst_list,
1285 burst_list_node)
1286 hlist_del_init(&pos->burst_list_node);
1287 } else /*
1288 * Burst not yet large: add bfqq to the burst list. Do
1289 * not increment the ref counter for bfqq, because bfqq
1290 * is removed from the burst list before freeing bfqq
1291 * in put_queue.
1292 */
1293 hlist_add_head(&bfqq->burst_list_node, &bfqd->burst_list);
1294}
1295
1296/*
1297 * If many queues belonging to the same group happen to be created
1298 * shortly after each other, then the processes associated with these
1299 * queues have typically a common goal. In particular, bursts of queue
1300 * creations are usually caused by services or applications that spawn
1301 * many parallel threads/processes. Examples are systemd during boot,
1302 * or git grep. To help these processes get their job done as soon as
1303 * possible, it is usually better to not grant either weight-raising
84a74689
PV
1304 * or device idling to their queues, unless these queues must be
1305 * protected from the I/O flowing through other active queues.
e1b2324d
AA
1306 *
1307 * In this comment we describe, firstly, the reasons why this fact
1308 * holds, and, secondly, the next function, which implements the main
1309 * steps needed to properly mark these queues so that they can then be
1310 * treated in a different way.
1311 *
1312 * The above services or applications benefit mostly from a high
1313 * throughput: the quicker the requests of the activated queues are
1314 * cumulatively served, the sooner the target job of these queues gets
1315 * completed. As a consequence, weight-raising any of these queues,
1316 * which also implies idling the device for it, is almost always
84a74689
PV
1317 * counterproductive, unless there are other active queues to isolate
1318 * these new queues from. If there no other active queues, then
1319 * weight-raising these new queues just lowers throughput in most
1320 * cases.
e1b2324d
AA
1321 *
1322 * On the other hand, a burst of queue creations may be caused also by
1323 * the start of an application that does not consist of a lot of
1324 * parallel I/O-bound threads. In fact, with a complex application,
1325 * several short processes may need to be executed to start-up the
1326 * application. In this respect, to start an application as quickly as
1327 * possible, the best thing to do is in any case to privilege the I/O
1328 * related to the application with respect to all other
1329 * I/O. Therefore, the best strategy to start as quickly as possible
1330 * an application that causes a burst of queue creations is to
1331 * weight-raise all the queues created during the burst. This is the
1332 * exact opposite of the best strategy for the other type of bursts.
1333 *
1334 * In the end, to take the best action for each of the two cases, the
1335 * two types of bursts need to be distinguished. Fortunately, this
1336 * seems relatively easy, by looking at the sizes of the bursts. In
1337 * particular, we found a threshold such that only bursts with a
1338 * larger size than that threshold are apparently caused by
1339 * services or commands such as systemd or git grep. For brevity,
1340 * hereafter we call just 'large' these bursts. BFQ *does not*
1341 * weight-raise queues whose creation occurs in a large burst. In
1342 * addition, for each of these queues BFQ performs or does not perform
1343 * idling depending on which choice boosts the throughput more. The
1344 * exact choice depends on the device and request pattern at
1345 * hand.
1346 *
1347 * Unfortunately, false positives may occur while an interactive task
1348 * is starting (e.g., an application is being started). The
1349 * consequence is that the queues associated with the task do not
1350 * enjoy weight raising as expected. Fortunately these false positives
1351 * are very rare. They typically occur if some service happens to
1352 * start doing I/O exactly when the interactive task starts.
1353 *
84a74689
PV
1354 * Turning back to the next function, it is invoked only if there are
1355 * no active queues (apart from active queues that would belong to the
1356 * same, possible burst bfqq would belong to), and it implements all
1357 * the steps needed to detect the occurrence of a large burst and to
1358 * properly mark all the queues belonging to it (so that they can then
1359 * be treated in a different way). This goal is achieved by
1360 * maintaining a "burst list" that holds, temporarily, the queues that
1361 * belong to the burst in progress. The list is then used to mark
1362 * these queues as belonging to a large burst if the burst does become
1363 * large. The main steps are the following.
e1b2324d
AA
1364 *
1365 * . when the very first queue is created, the queue is inserted into the
1366 * list (as it could be the first queue in a possible burst)
1367 *
1368 * . if the current burst has not yet become large, and a queue Q that does
1369 * not yet belong to the burst is activated shortly after the last time
1370 * at which a new queue entered the burst list, then the function appends
1371 * Q to the burst list
1372 *
1373 * . if, as a consequence of the previous step, the burst size reaches
1374 * the large-burst threshold, then
1375 *
1376 * . all the queues in the burst list are marked as belonging to a
1377 * large burst
1378 *
1379 * . the burst list is deleted; in fact, the burst list already served
1380 * its purpose (keeping temporarily track of the queues in a burst,
1381 * so as to be able to mark them as belonging to a large burst in the
1382 * previous sub-step), and now is not needed any more
1383 *
1384 * . the device enters a large-burst mode
1385 *
1386 * . if a queue Q that does not belong to the burst is created while
1387 * the device is in large-burst mode and shortly after the last time
1388 * at which a queue either entered the burst list or was marked as
1389 * belonging to the current large burst, then Q is immediately marked
1390 * as belonging to a large burst.
1391 *
1392 * . if a queue Q that does not belong to the burst is created a while
1393 * later, i.e., not shortly after, than the last time at which a queue
1394 * either entered the burst list or was marked as belonging to the
1395 * current large burst, then the current burst is deemed as finished and:
1396 *
1397 * . the large-burst mode is reset if set
1398 *
1399 * . the burst list is emptied
1400 *
1401 * . Q is inserted in the burst list, as Q may be the first queue
1402 * in a possible new burst (then the burst list contains just Q
1403 * after this step).
1404 */
1405static void bfq_handle_burst(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1406{
1407 /*
1408 * If bfqq is already in the burst list or is part of a large
1409 * burst, or finally has just been split, then there is
1410 * nothing else to do.
1411 */
1412 if (!hlist_unhashed(&bfqq->burst_list_node) ||
1413 bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq) ||
1414 time_is_after_eq_jiffies(bfqq->split_time +
1415 msecs_to_jiffies(10)))
1416 return;
1417
1418 /*
1419 * If bfqq's creation happens late enough, or bfqq belongs to
1420 * a different group than the burst group, then the current
1421 * burst is finished, and related data structures must be
1422 * reset.
1423 *
1424 * In this respect, consider the special case where bfqq is
1425 * the very first queue created after BFQ is selected for this
1426 * device. In this case, last_ins_in_burst and
1427 * burst_parent_entity are not yet significant when we get
1428 * here. But it is easy to verify that, whether or not the
1429 * following condition is true, bfqq will end up being
1430 * inserted into the burst list. In particular the list will
1431 * happen to contain only bfqq. And this is exactly what has
1432 * to happen, as bfqq may be the first queue of the first
1433 * burst.
1434 */
1435 if (time_is_before_jiffies(bfqd->last_ins_in_burst +
1436 bfqd->bfq_burst_interval) ||
1437 bfqq->entity.parent != bfqd->burst_parent_entity) {
1438 bfqd->large_burst = false;
1439 bfq_reset_burst_list(bfqd, bfqq);
1440 goto end;
1441 }
1442
1443 /*
1444 * If we get here, then bfqq is being activated shortly after the
1445 * last queue. So, if the current burst is also large, we can mark
1446 * bfqq as belonging to this large burst immediately.
1447 */
1448 if (bfqd->large_burst) {
1449 bfq_mark_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
1450 goto end;
1451 }
1452
1453 /*
1454 * If we get here, then a large-burst state has not yet been
1455 * reached, but bfqq is being activated shortly after the last
1456 * queue. Then we add bfqq to the burst.
1457 */
1458 bfq_add_to_burst(bfqd, bfqq);
1459end:
1460 /*
1461 * At this point, bfqq either has been added to the current
1462 * burst or has caused the current burst to terminate and a
1463 * possible new burst to start. In particular, in the second
1464 * case, bfqq has become the first queue in the possible new
1465 * burst. In both cases last_ins_in_burst needs to be moved
1466 * forward.
1467 */
1468 bfqd->last_ins_in_burst = jiffies;
1469}
1470
aee69d78
PV
1471static int bfq_bfqq_budget_left(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1472{
1473 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
1474
1475 return entity->budget - entity->service;
1476}
1477
1478/*
1479 * If enough samples have been computed, return the current max budget
1480 * stored in bfqd, which is dynamically updated according to the
1481 * estimated disk peak rate; otherwise return the default max budget
1482 */
1483static int bfq_max_budget(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
1484{
1485 if (bfqd->budgets_assigned < bfq_stats_min_budgets)
1486 return bfq_default_max_budget;
1487 else
1488 return bfqd->bfq_max_budget;
1489}
1490
1491/*
1492 * Return min budget, which is a fraction of the current or default
1493 * max budget (trying with 1/32)
1494 */
1495static int bfq_min_budget(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
1496{
1497 if (bfqd->budgets_assigned < bfq_stats_min_budgets)
1498 return bfq_default_max_budget / 32;
1499 else
1500 return bfqd->bfq_max_budget / 32;
1501}
1502
aee69d78
PV
1503/*
1504 * The next function, invoked after the input queue bfqq switches from
1505 * idle to busy, updates the budget of bfqq. The function also tells
1506 * whether the in-service queue should be expired, by returning
1507 * true. The purpose of expiring the in-service queue is to give bfqq
1508 * the chance to possibly preempt the in-service queue, and the reason
44e44a1b
PV
1509 * for preempting the in-service queue is to achieve one of the two
1510 * goals below.
aee69d78 1511 *
44e44a1b
PV
1512 * 1. Guarantee to bfqq its reserved bandwidth even if bfqq has
1513 * expired because it has remained idle. In particular, bfqq may have
1514 * expired for one of the following two reasons:
aee69d78
PV
1515 *
1516 * - BFQQE_NO_MORE_REQUESTS bfqq did not enjoy any device idling
1517 * and did not make it to issue a new request before its last
1518 * request was served;
1519 *
1520 * - BFQQE_TOO_IDLE bfqq did enjoy device idling, but did not issue
1521 * a new request before the expiration of the idling-time.
1522 *
1523 * Even if bfqq has expired for one of the above reasons, the process
1524 * associated with the queue may be however issuing requests greedily,
1525 * and thus be sensitive to the bandwidth it receives (bfqq may have
1526 * remained idle for other reasons: CPU high load, bfqq not enjoying
1527 * idling, I/O throttling somewhere in the path from the process to
1528 * the I/O scheduler, ...). But if, after every expiration for one of
1529 * the above two reasons, bfqq has to wait for the service of at least
1530 * one full budget of another queue before being served again, then
1531 * bfqq is likely to get a much lower bandwidth or resource time than
1532 * its reserved ones. To address this issue, two countermeasures need
1533 * to be taken.
1534 *
1535 * First, the budget and the timestamps of bfqq need to be updated in
1536 * a special way on bfqq reactivation: they need to be updated as if
1537 * bfqq did not remain idle and did not expire. In fact, if they are
1538 * computed as if bfqq expired and remained idle until reactivation,
1539 * then the process associated with bfqq is treated as if, instead of
1540 * being greedy, it stopped issuing requests when bfqq remained idle,
1541 * and restarts issuing requests only on this reactivation. In other
1542 * words, the scheduler does not help the process recover the "service
1543 * hole" between bfqq expiration and reactivation. As a consequence,
1544 * the process receives a lower bandwidth than its reserved one. In
1545 * contrast, to recover this hole, the budget must be updated as if
1546 * bfqq was not expired at all before this reactivation, i.e., it must
1547 * be set to the value of the remaining budget when bfqq was
1548 * expired. Along the same line, timestamps need to be assigned the
1549 * value they had the last time bfqq was selected for service, i.e.,
1550 * before last expiration. Thus timestamps need to be back-shifted
1551 * with respect to their normal computation (see [1] for more details
1552 * on this tricky aspect).
1553 *
1554 * Secondly, to allow the process to recover the hole, the in-service
1555 * queue must be expired too, to give bfqq the chance to preempt it
1556 * immediately. In fact, if bfqq has to wait for a full budget of the
1557 * in-service queue to be completed, then it may become impossible to
1558 * let the process recover the hole, even if the back-shifted
1559 * timestamps of bfqq are lower than those of the in-service queue. If
1560 * this happens for most or all of the holes, then the process may not
1561 * receive its reserved bandwidth. In this respect, it is worth noting
1562 * that, being the service of outstanding requests unpreemptible, a
1563 * little fraction of the holes may however be unrecoverable, thereby
1564 * causing a little loss of bandwidth.
1565 *
1566 * The last important point is detecting whether bfqq does need this
1567 * bandwidth recovery. In this respect, the next function deems the
1568 * process associated with bfqq greedy, and thus allows it to recover
1569 * the hole, if: 1) the process is waiting for the arrival of a new
1570 * request (which implies that bfqq expired for one of the above two
1571 * reasons), and 2) such a request has arrived soon. The first
1572 * condition is controlled through the flag non_blocking_wait_rq,
1573 * while the second through the flag arrived_in_time. If both
1574 * conditions hold, then the function computes the budget in the
1575 * above-described special way, and signals that the in-service queue
1576 * should be expired. Timestamp back-shifting is done later in
1577 * __bfq_activate_entity.
44e44a1b
PV
1578 *
1579 * 2. Reduce latency. Even if timestamps are not backshifted to let
1580 * the process associated with bfqq recover a service hole, bfqq may
1581 * however happen to have, after being (re)activated, a lower finish
1582 * timestamp than the in-service queue. That is, the next budget of
1583 * bfqq may have to be completed before the one of the in-service
1584 * queue. If this is the case, then preempting the in-service queue
1585 * allows this goal to be achieved, apart from the unpreemptible,
1586 * outstanding requests mentioned above.
1587 *
1588 * Unfortunately, regardless of which of the above two goals one wants
1589 * to achieve, service trees need first to be updated to know whether
1590 * the in-service queue must be preempted. To have service trees
1591 * correctly updated, the in-service queue must be expired and
1592 * rescheduled, and bfqq must be scheduled too. This is one of the
1593 * most costly operations (in future versions, the scheduling
1594 * mechanism may be re-designed in such a way to make it possible to
1595 * know whether preemption is needed without needing to update service
1596 * trees). In addition, queue preemptions almost always cause random
96a291c3
PV
1597 * I/O, which may in turn cause loss of throughput. Finally, there may
1598 * even be no in-service queue when the next function is invoked (so,
1599 * no queue to compare timestamps with). Because of these facts, the
1600 * next function adopts the following simple scheme to avoid costly
1601 * operations, too frequent preemptions and too many dependencies on
1602 * the state of the scheduler: it requests the expiration of the
1603 * in-service queue (unconditionally) only for queues that need to
1604 * recover a hole. Then it delegates to other parts of the code the
1605 * responsibility of handling the above case 2.
aee69d78
PV
1606 */
1607static bool bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1608 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
96a291c3 1609 bool arrived_in_time)
aee69d78
PV
1610{
1611 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
1612
218cb897
PV
1613 /*
1614 * In the next compound condition, we check also whether there
1615 * is some budget left, because otherwise there is no point in
1616 * trying to go on serving bfqq with this same budget: bfqq
1617 * would be expired immediately after being selected for
1618 * service. This would only cause useless overhead.
1619 */
1620 if (bfq_bfqq_non_blocking_wait_rq(bfqq) && arrived_in_time &&
1621 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq) > 0) {
aee69d78
PV
1622 /*
1623 * We do not clear the flag non_blocking_wait_rq here, as
1624 * the latter is used in bfq_activate_bfqq to signal
1625 * that timestamps need to be back-shifted (and is
1626 * cleared right after).
1627 */
1628
1629 /*
1630 * In next assignment we rely on that either
1631 * entity->service or entity->budget are not updated
1632 * on expiration if bfqq is empty (see
1633 * __bfq_bfqq_recalc_budget). Thus both quantities
1634 * remain unchanged after such an expiration, and the
1635 * following statement therefore assigns to
1636 * entity->budget the remaining budget on such an
9fae8dd5 1637 * expiration.
aee69d78
PV
1638 */
1639 entity->budget = min_t(unsigned long,
1640 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq),
1641 bfqq->max_budget);
1642
9fae8dd5
PV
1643 /*
1644 * At this point, we have used entity->service to get
1645 * the budget left (needed for updating
1646 * entity->budget). Thus we finally can, and have to,
1647 * reset entity->service. The latter must be reset
1648 * because bfqq would otherwise be charged again for
1649 * the service it has received during its previous
1650 * service slot(s).
1651 */
1652 entity->service = 0;
1653
aee69d78
PV
1654 return true;
1655 }
1656
9fae8dd5
PV
1657 /*
1658 * We can finally complete expiration, by setting service to 0.
1659 */
1660 entity->service = 0;
aee69d78
PV
1661 entity->budget = max_t(unsigned long, bfqq->max_budget,
1662 bfq_serv_to_charge(bfqq->next_rq, bfqq));
1663 bfq_clear_bfqq_non_blocking_wait_rq(bfqq);
96a291c3 1664 return false;
44e44a1b
PV
1665}
1666
4baa8bb1
PV
1667/*
1668 * Return the farthest past time instant according to jiffies
1669 * macros.
1670 */
1671static unsigned long bfq_smallest_from_now(void)
1672{
1673 return jiffies - MAX_JIFFY_OFFSET;
1674}
1675
44e44a1b
PV
1676static void bfq_update_bfqq_wr_on_rq_arrival(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1677 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
1678 unsigned int old_wr_coeff,
1679 bool wr_or_deserves_wr,
77b7dcea 1680 bool interactive,
e1b2324d 1681 bool in_burst,
77b7dcea 1682 bool soft_rt)
44e44a1b
PV
1683{
1684 if (old_wr_coeff == 1 && wr_or_deserves_wr) {
1685 /* start a weight-raising period */
77b7dcea 1686 if (interactive) {
8a8747dc 1687 bfqq->service_from_wr = 0;
77b7dcea
PV
1688 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
1689 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqd);
1690 } else {
4baa8bb1
PV
1691 /*
1692 * No interactive weight raising in progress
1693 * here: assign minus infinity to
1694 * wr_start_at_switch_to_srt, to make sure
1695 * that, at the end of the soft-real-time
1696 * weight raising periods that is starting
1697 * now, no interactive weight-raising period
1698 * may be wrongly considered as still in
1699 * progress (and thus actually started by
1700 * mistake).
1701 */
1702 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt =
1703 bfq_smallest_from_now();
77b7dcea
PV
1704 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff *
1705 BFQ_SOFTRT_WEIGHT_FACTOR;
1706 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time =
1707 bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time;
1708 }
44e44a1b
PV
1709
1710 /*
1711 * If needed, further reduce budget to make sure it is
1712 * close to bfqq's backlog, so as to reduce the
1713 * scheduling-error component due to a too large
1714 * budget. Do not care about throughput consequences,
1715 * but only about latency. Finally, do not assign a
1716 * too small budget either, to avoid increasing
1717 * latency by causing too frequent expirations.
1718 */
1719 bfqq->entity.budget = min_t(unsigned long,
1720 bfqq->entity.budget,
1721 2 * bfq_min_budget(bfqd));
1722 } else if (old_wr_coeff > 1) {
77b7dcea
PV
1723 if (interactive) { /* update wr coeff and duration */
1724 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
1725 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqd);
e1b2324d
AA
1726 } else if (in_burst)
1727 bfqq->wr_coeff = 1;
1728 else if (soft_rt) {
77b7dcea
PV
1729 /*
1730 * The application is now or still meeting the
1731 * requirements for being deemed soft rt. We
1732 * can then correctly and safely (re)charge
1733 * the weight-raising duration for the
1734 * application with the weight-raising
1735 * duration for soft rt applications.
1736 *
1737 * In particular, doing this recharge now, i.e.,
1738 * before the weight-raising period for the
1739 * application finishes, reduces the probability
1740 * of the following negative scenario:
1741 * 1) the weight of a soft rt application is
1742 * raised at startup (as for any newly
1743 * created application),
1744 * 2) since the application is not interactive,
1745 * at a certain time weight-raising is
1746 * stopped for the application,
1747 * 3) at that time the application happens to
1748 * still have pending requests, and hence
1749 * is destined to not have a chance to be
1750 * deemed soft rt before these requests are
1751 * completed (see the comments to the
1752 * function bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start()
1753 * for details on soft rt detection),
1754 * 4) these pending requests experience a high
1755 * latency because the application is not
1756 * weight-raised while they are pending.
1757 */
1758 if (bfqq->wr_cur_max_time !=
1759 bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time) {
1760 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt =
1761 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish;
1762
1763 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time =
1764 bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time;
1765 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff *
1766 BFQ_SOFTRT_WEIGHT_FACTOR;
1767 }
1768 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
1769 }
44e44a1b
PV
1770 }
1771}
1772
1773static bool bfq_bfqq_idle_for_long_time(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1774 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1775{
1776 return bfqq->dispatched == 0 &&
1777 time_is_before_jiffies(
1778 bfqq->budget_timeout +
1779 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_idle_time);
aee69d78
PV
1780}
1781
96a291c3
PV
1782
1783/*
1784 * Return true if bfqq is in a higher priority class, or has a higher
1785 * weight than the in-service queue.
1786 */
1787static bool bfq_bfqq_higher_class_or_weight(struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
1788 struct bfq_queue *in_serv_bfqq)
1789{
1790 int bfqq_weight, in_serv_weight;
1791
1792 if (bfqq->ioprio_class < in_serv_bfqq->ioprio_class)
1793 return true;
1794
1795 if (in_serv_bfqq->entity.parent == bfqq->entity.parent) {
1796 bfqq_weight = bfqq->entity.weight;
1797 in_serv_weight = in_serv_bfqq->entity.weight;
1798 } else {
1799 if (bfqq->entity.parent)
1800 bfqq_weight = bfqq->entity.parent->weight;
1801 else
1802 bfqq_weight = bfqq->entity.weight;
1803 if (in_serv_bfqq->entity.parent)
1804 in_serv_weight = in_serv_bfqq->entity.parent->weight;
1805 else
1806 in_serv_weight = in_serv_bfqq->entity.weight;
1807 }
1808
1809 return bfqq_weight > in_serv_weight;
1810}
1811
7f1995c2
PV
1812static bool bfq_better_to_idle(struct bfq_queue *bfqq);
1813
aee69d78
PV
1814static void bfq_bfqq_handle_idle_busy_switch(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1815 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
44e44a1b
PV
1816 int old_wr_coeff,
1817 struct request *rq,
1818 bool *interactive)
aee69d78 1819{
e1b2324d
AA
1820 bool soft_rt, in_burst, wr_or_deserves_wr,
1821 bfqq_wants_to_preempt,
44e44a1b 1822 idle_for_long_time = bfq_bfqq_idle_for_long_time(bfqd, bfqq),
aee69d78
PV
1823 /*
1824 * See the comments on
1825 * bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation for
1826 * details on the usage of the next variable.
1827 */
1828 arrived_in_time = ktime_get_ns() <=
1829 bfqq->ttime.last_end_request +
1830 bfqd->bfq_slice_idle * 3;
1831
e21b7a0b 1832
aee69d78 1833 /*
44e44a1b
PV
1834 * bfqq deserves to be weight-raised if:
1835 * - it is sync,
e1b2324d 1836 * - it does not belong to a large burst,
36eca894 1837 * - it has been idle for enough time or is soft real-time,
91b896f6
PV
1838 * - is linked to a bfq_io_cq (it is not shared in any sense),
1839 * - has a default weight (otherwise we assume the user wanted
1840 * to control its weight explicitly)
44e44a1b 1841 */
e1b2324d 1842 in_burst = bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
77b7dcea 1843 soft_rt = bfqd->bfq_wr_max_softrt_rate > 0 &&
7074f076 1844 !BFQQ_TOTALLY_SEEKY(bfqq) &&
e1b2324d 1845 !in_burst &&
f6c3ca0e 1846 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->soft_rt_next_start) &&
91b896f6
PV
1847 bfqq->dispatched == 0 &&
1848 bfqq->entity.new_weight == 40;
1849 *interactive = !in_burst && idle_for_long_time &&
1850 bfqq->entity.new_weight == 40;
511a2699
PV
1851 /*
1852 * Merged bfq_queues are kept out of weight-raising
1853 * (low-latency) mechanisms. The reason is that these queues
1854 * are usually created for non-interactive and
1855 * non-soft-real-time tasks. Yet this is not the case for
1856 * stably-merged queues. These queues are merged just because
1857 * they are created shortly after each other. So they may
1858 * easily serve the I/O of an interactive or soft-real time
1859 * application, if the application happens to spawn multiple
1860 * processes. So let also stably-merged queued enjoy weight
1861 * raising.
1862 */
44e44a1b
PV
1863 wr_or_deserves_wr = bfqd->low_latency &&
1864 (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 ||
36eca894 1865 (bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) &&
511a2699
PV
1866 (bfqq->bic || RQ_BIC(rq)->stably_merged) &&
1867 (*interactive || soft_rt)));
44e44a1b
PV
1868
1869 /*
1870 * Using the last flag, update budget and check whether bfqq
1871 * may want to preempt the in-service queue.
aee69d78
PV
1872 */
1873 bfqq_wants_to_preempt =
1874 bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation(bfqd, bfqq,
96a291c3 1875 arrived_in_time);
aee69d78 1876
e1b2324d
AA
1877 /*
1878 * If bfqq happened to be activated in a burst, but has been
1879 * idle for much more than an interactive queue, then we
1880 * assume that, in the overall I/O initiated in the burst, the
1881 * I/O associated with bfqq is finished. So bfqq does not need
1882 * to be treated as a queue belonging to a burst
1883 * anymore. Accordingly, we reset bfqq's in_large_burst flag
1884 * if set, and remove bfqq from the burst list if it's
1885 * there. We do not decrement burst_size, because the fact
1886 * that bfqq does not need to belong to the burst list any
1887 * more does not invalidate the fact that bfqq was created in
1888 * a burst.
1889 */
1890 if (likely(!bfq_bfqq_just_created(bfqq)) &&
1891 idle_for_long_time &&
1892 time_is_before_jiffies(
1893 bfqq->budget_timeout +
1894 msecs_to_jiffies(10000))) {
1895 hlist_del_init(&bfqq->burst_list_node);
1896 bfq_clear_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
1897 }
1898
1899 bfq_clear_bfqq_just_created(bfqq);
1900
44e44a1b 1901 if (bfqd->low_latency) {
36eca894
AA
1902 if (unlikely(time_is_after_jiffies(bfqq->split_time)))
1903 /* wraparound */
1904 bfqq->split_time =
1905 jiffies - bfqd->bfq_wr_min_idle_time - 1;
1906
1907 if (time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->split_time +
1908 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_idle_time)) {
1909 bfq_update_bfqq_wr_on_rq_arrival(bfqd, bfqq,
1910 old_wr_coeff,
1911 wr_or_deserves_wr,
1912 *interactive,
e1b2324d 1913 in_burst,
36eca894
AA
1914 soft_rt);
1915
1916 if (old_wr_coeff != bfqq->wr_coeff)
1917 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
1918 }
44e44a1b
PV
1919 }
1920
77b7dcea
PV
1921 bfqq->last_idle_bklogged = jiffies;
1922 bfqq->service_from_backlogged = 0;
1923 bfq_clear_bfqq_softrt_update(bfqq);
1924
aee69d78
PV
1925 bfq_add_bfqq_busy(bfqd, bfqq);
1926
1927 /*
7f1995c2
PV
1928 * Expire in-service queue if preemption may be needed for
1929 * guarantees or throughput. As for guarantees, we care
1930 * explicitly about two cases. The first is that bfqq has to
1931 * recover a service hole, as explained in the comments on
96a291c3
PV
1932 * bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation(), i.e., that
1933 * bfqq_wants_to_preempt is true. However, if bfqq does not
1934 * carry time-critical I/O, then bfqq's bandwidth is less
1935 * important than that of queues that carry time-critical I/O.
1936 * So, as a further constraint, we consider this case only if
1937 * bfqq is at least as weight-raised, i.e., at least as time
1938 * critical, as the in-service queue.
1939 *
1940 * The second case is that bfqq is in a higher priority class,
1941 * or has a higher weight than the in-service queue. If this
1942 * condition does not hold, we don't care because, even if
1943 * bfqq does not start to be served immediately, the resulting
1944 * delay for bfqq's I/O is however lower or much lower than
1945 * the ideal completion time to be guaranteed to bfqq's I/O.
1946 *
1947 * In both cases, preemption is needed only if, according to
1948 * the timestamps of both bfqq and of the in-service queue,
1949 * bfqq actually is the next queue to serve. So, to reduce
1950 * useless preemptions, the return value of
1951 * next_queue_may_preempt() is considered in the next compound
1952 * condition too. Yet next_queue_may_preempt() just checks a
1953 * simple, necessary condition for bfqq to be the next queue
1954 * to serve. In fact, to evaluate a sufficient condition, the
1955 * timestamps of the in-service queue would need to be
1956 * updated, and this operation is quite costly (see the
1957 * comments on bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation()).
7f1995c2
PV
1958 *
1959 * As for throughput, we ask bfq_better_to_idle() whether we
1960 * still need to plug I/O dispatching. If bfq_better_to_idle()
1961 * says no, then plugging is not needed any longer, either to
1962 * boost throughput or to perserve service guarantees. Then
1963 * the best option is to stop plugging I/O, as not doing so
1964 * would certainly lower throughput. We may end up in this
1965 * case if: (1) upon a dispatch attempt, we detected that it
1966 * was better to plug I/O dispatch, and to wait for a new
1967 * request to arrive for the currently in-service queue, but
1968 * (2) this switch of bfqq to busy changes the scenario.
aee69d78 1969 */
96a291c3
PV
1970 if (bfqd->in_service_queue &&
1971 ((bfqq_wants_to_preempt &&
1972 bfqq->wr_coeff >= bfqd->in_service_queue->wr_coeff) ||
7f1995c2
PV
1973 bfq_bfqq_higher_class_or_weight(bfqq, bfqd->in_service_queue) ||
1974 !bfq_better_to_idle(bfqd->in_service_queue)) &&
aee69d78
PV
1975 next_queue_may_preempt(bfqd))
1976 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqd->in_service_queue,
1977 false, BFQQE_PREEMPTED);
1978}
1979
766d6141
PV
1980static void bfq_reset_inject_limit(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
1981 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
1982{
1983 /* invalidate baseline total service time */
1984 bfqq->last_serv_time_ns = 0;
1985
1986 /*
1987 * Reset pointer in case we are waiting for
1988 * some request completion.
1989 */
1990 bfqd->waited_rq = NULL;
1991
1992 /*
1993 * If bfqq has a short think time, then start by setting the
1994 * inject limit to 0 prudentially, because the service time of
1995 * an injected I/O request may be higher than the think time
1996 * of bfqq, and therefore, if one request was injected when
1997 * bfqq remains empty, this injected request might delay the
1998 * service of the next I/O request for bfqq significantly. In
1999 * case bfqq can actually tolerate some injection, then the
2000 * adaptive update will however raise the limit soon. This
2001 * lucky circumstance holds exactly because bfqq has a short
2002 * think time, and thus, after remaining empty, is likely to
2003 * get new I/O enqueued---and then completed---before being
2004 * expired. This is the very pattern that gives the
2005 * limit-update algorithm the chance to measure the effect of
2006 * injection on request service times, and then to update the
2007 * limit accordingly.
2008 *
2009 * However, in the following special case, the inject limit is
2010 * left to 1 even if the think time is short: bfqq's I/O is
2011 * synchronized with that of some other queue, i.e., bfqq may
2012 * receive new I/O only after the I/O of the other queue is
2013 * completed. Keeping the inject limit to 1 allows the
2014 * blocking I/O to be served while bfqq is in service. And
2015 * this is very convenient both for bfqq and for overall
2016 * throughput, as explained in detail in the comments in
2017 * bfq_update_has_short_ttime().
2018 *
2019 * On the opposite end, if bfqq has a long think time, then
2020 * start directly by 1, because:
2021 * a) on the bright side, keeping at most one request in
2022 * service in the drive is unlikely to cause any harm to the
2023 * latency of bfqq's requests, as the service time of a single
2024 * request is likely to be lower than the think time of bfqq;
2025 * b) on the downside, after becoming empty, bfqq is likely to
2026 * expire before getting its next request. With this request
2027 * arrival pattern, it is very hard to sample total service
2028 * times and update the inject limit accordingly (see comments
2029 * on bfq_update_inject_limit()). So the limit is likely to be
2030 * never, or at least seldom, updated. As a consequence, by
2031 * setting the limit to 1, we avoid that no injection ever
2032 * occurs with bfqq. On the downside, this proactive step
2033 * further reduces chances to actually compute the baseline
2034 * total service time. Thus it reduces chances to execute the
2035 * limit-update algorithm and possibly raise the limit to more
2036 * than 1.
2037 */
2038 if (bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq))
2039 bfqq->inject_limit = 0;
2040 else
2041 bfqq->inject_limit = 1;
2042
2043 bfqq->decrease_time_jif = jiffies;
2044}
2045
eb2fd80f
PV
2046static void bfq_update_io_intensity(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, u64 now_ns)
2047{
2048 u64 tot_io_time = now_ns - bfqq->io_start_time;
2049
2050 if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) && bfqq->dispatched == 0)
2051 bfqq->tot_idle_time +=
2052 now_ns - bfqq->ttime.last_end_request;
2053
2054 if (unlikely(bfq_bfqq_just_created(bfqq)))
2055 return;
2056
2057 /*
2058 * Must be busy for at least about 80% of the time to be
2059 * considered I/O bound.
2060 */
2061 if (bfqq->tot_idle_time * 5 > tot_io_time)
2062 bfq_clear_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
2063 else
2064 bfq_mark_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
2065
2066 /*
2067 * Keep an observation window of at most 200 ms in the past
2068 * from now.
2069 */
2070 if (tot_io_time > 200 * NSEC_PER_MSEC) {
2071 bfqq->io_start_time = now_ns - (tot_io_time>>1);
2072 bfqq->tot_idle_time >>= 1;
2073 }
2074}
2075
71217df3
PV
2076/*
2077 * Detect whether bfqq's I/O seems synchronized with that of some
2078 * other queue, i.e., whether bfqq, after remaining empty, happens to
2079 * receive new I/O only right after some I/O request of the other
2080 * queue has been completed. We call waker queue the other queue, and
2081 * we assume, for simplicity, that bfqq may have at most one waker
2082 * queue.
2083 *
2084 * A remarkable throughput boost can be reached by unconditionally
2085 * injecting the I/O of the waker queue, every time a new
2086 * bfq_dispatch_request happens to be invoked while I/O is being
2087 * plugged for bfqq. In addition to boosting throughput, this
2088 * unblocks bfqq's I/O, thereby improving bandwidth and latency for
2089 * bfqq. Note that these same results may be achieved with the general
2090 * injection mechanism, but less effectively. For details on this
2091 * aspect, see the comments on the choice of the queue for injection
2092 * in bfq_select_queue().
2093 *
1f18b700
JK
2094 * Turning back to the detection of a waker queue, a queue Q is deemed as a
2095 * waker queue for bfqq if, for three consecutive times, bfqq happens to become
2096 * non empty right after a request of Q has been completed within given
2097 * timeout. In this respect, even if bfqq is empty, we do not check for a waker
2098 * if it still has some in-flight I/O. In fact, in this case bfqq is actually
2099 * still being served by the drive, and may receive new I/O on the completion
2100 * of some of the in-flight requests. In particular, on the first time, Q is
2101 * tentatively set as a candidate waker queue, while on the third consecutive
2102 * time that Q is detected, the field waker_bfqq is set to Q, to confirm that Q
2103 * is a waker queue for bfqq. These detection steps are performed only if bfqq
2104 * has a long think time, so as to make it more likely that bfqq's I/O is
2105 * actually being blocked by a synchronization. This last filter, plus the
2106 * above three-times requirement and time limit for detection, make false
efc72524 2107 * positives less likely.
71217df3
PV
2108 *
2109 * NOTE
2110 *
2111 * The sooner a waker queue is detected, the sooner throughput can be
2112 * boosted by injecting I/O from the waker queue. Fortunately,
2113 * detection is likely to be actually fast, for the following
2114 * reasons. While blocked by synchronization, bfqq has a long think
2115 * time. This implies that bfqq's inject limit is at least equal to 1
2116 * (see the comments in bfq_update_inject_limit()). So, thanks to
2117 * injection, the waker queue is likely to be served during the very
2118 * first I/O-plugging time interval for bfqq. This triggers the first
2119 * step of the detection mechanism. Thanks again to injection, the
2120 * candidate waker queue is then likely to be confirmed no later than
2121 * during the next I/O-plugging interval for bfqq.
2122 *
2123 * ISSUE
2124 *
2125 * On queue merging all waker information is lost.
2126 */
a5bf0a92
JA
2127static void bfq_check_waker(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
2128 u64 now_ns)
71217df3
PV
2129{
2130 if (!bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq ||
2131 bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq == bfqq ||
2132 bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq) ||
efc72524 2133 bfqq->dispatched > 0 ||
71217df3
PV
2134 now_ns - bfqd->last_completion >= 4 * NSEC_PER_MSEC ||
2135 bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq == bfqq->waker_bfqq)
2136 return;
2137
1f18b700
JK
2138 /*
2139 * We reset waker detection logic also if too much time has passed
2140 * since the first detection. If wakeups are rare, pointless idling
2141 * doesn't hurt throughput that much. The condition below makes sure
2142 * we do not uselessly idle blocking waker in more than 1/64 cases.
2143 */
71217df3 2144 if (bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq !=
1f18b700
JK
2145 bfqq->tentative_waker_bfqq ||
2146 now_ns > bfqq->waker_detection_started +
2147 128 * (u64)bfqd->bfq_slice_idle) {
71217df3
PV
2148 /*
2149 * First synchronization detected with a
2150 * candidate waker queue, or with a different
2151 * candidate waker queue from the current one.
2152 */
2153 bfqq->tentative_waker_bfqq =
2154 bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq;
2155 bfqq->num_waker_detections = 1;
1f18b700 2156 bfqq->waker_detection_started = now_ns;
71217df3
PV
2157 } else /* Same tentative waker queue detected again */
2158 bfqq->num_waker_detections++;
2159
2160 if (bfqq->num_waker_detections == 3) {
2161 bfqq->waker_bfqq = bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq;
2162 bfqq->tentative_waker_bfqq = NULL;
2163
2164 /*
2165 * If the waker queue disappears, then
2166 * bfqq->waker_bfqq must be reset. To
2167 * this goal, we maintain in each
2168 * waker queue a list, woken_list, of
2169 * all the queues that reference the
2170 * waker queue through their
2171 * waker_bfqq pointer. When the waker
2172 * queue exits, the waker_bfqq pointer
2173 * of all the queues in the woken_list
2174 * is reset.
2175 *
2176 * In addition, if bfqq is already in
2177 * the woken_list of a waker queue,
2178 * then, before being inserted into
2179 * the woken_list of a new waker
2180 * queue, bfqq must be removed from
2181 * the woken_list of the old waker
2182 * queue.
2183 */
2184 if (!hlist_unhashed(&bfqq->woken_list_node))
2185 hlist_del_init(&bfqq->woken_list_node);
2186 hlist_add_head(&bfqq->woken_list_node,
2187 &bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq->woken_list);
2188 }
2189}
2190
aee69d78
PV
2191static void bfq_add_request(struct request *rq)
2192{
2193 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
2194 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
2195 struct request *next_rq, *prev;
44e44a1b
PV
2196 unsigned int old_wr_coeff = bfqq->wr_coeff;
2197 bool interactive = false;
eb2fd80f 2198 u64 now_ns = ktime_get_ns();
aee69d78
PV
2199
2200 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "add_request %d", rq_is_sync(rq));
2201 bfqq->queued[rq_is_sync(rq)]++;
2202 bfqd->queued++;
2203
2341d662 2204 if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) && bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq)) {
71217df3 2205 bfq_check_waker(bfqd, bfqq, now_ns);
13a857a4 2206
2341d662
PV
2207 /*
2208 * Periodically reset inject limit, to make sure that
2209 * the latter eventually drops in case workload
2210 * changes, see step (3) in the comments on
2211 * bfq_update_inject_limit().
2212 */
2213 if (time_is_before_eq_jiffies(bfqq->decrease_time_jif +
766d6141
PV
2214 msecs_to_jiffies(1000)))
2215 bfq_reset_inject_limit(bfqd, bfqq);
2341d662
PV
2216
2217 /*
2218 * The following conditions must hold to setup a new
2219 * sampling of total service time, and then a new
2220 * update of the inject limit:
2221 * - bfqq is in service, because the total service
2222 * time is evaluated only for the I/O requests of
2223 * the queues in service;
2224 * - this is the right occasion to compute or to
2225 * lower the baseline total service time, because
2226 * there are actually no requests in the drive,
2227 * or
2228 * the baseline total service time is available, and
2229 * this is the right occasion to compute the other
2230 * quantity needed to update the inject limit, i.e.,
2231 * the total service time caused by the amount of
2232 * injection allowed by the current value of the
2233 * limit. It is the right occasion because injection
2234 * has actually been performed during the service
2235 * hole, and there are still in-flight requests,
2236 * which are very likely to be exactly the injected
2237 * requests, or part of them;
2238 * - the minimum interval for sampling the total
2239 * service time and updating the inject limit has
2240 * elapsed.
2241 */
2242 if (bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue &&
2243 (bfqd->rq_in_driver == 0 ||
2244 (bfqq->last_serv_time_ns > 0 &&
2245 bfqd->rqs_injected && bfqd->rq_in_driver > 0)) &&
2246 time_is_before_eq_jiffies(bfqq->decrease_time_jif +
17c3d266 2247 msecs_to_jiffies(10))) {
2341d662
PV
2248 bfqd->last_empty_occupied_ns = ktime_get_ns();
2249 /*
2250 * Start the state machine for measuring the
2251 * total service time of rq: setting
2252 * wait_dispatch will cause bfqd->waited_rq to
2253 * be set when rq will be dispatched.
2254 */
2255 bfqd->wait_dispatch = true;
23ed570a
PV
2256 /*
2257 * If there is no I/O in service in the drive,
2258 * then possible injection occurred before the
2259 * arrival of rq will not affect the total
2260 * service time of rq. So the injection limit
2261 * must not be updated as a function of such
2262 * total service time, unless new injection
2263 * occurs before rq is completed. To have the
2264 * injection limit updated only in the latter
2265 * case, reset rqs_injected here (rqs_injected
2266 * will be set in case injection is performed
2267 * on bfqq before rq is completed).
2268 */
2269 if (bfqd->rq_in_driver == 0)
2270 bfqd->rqs_injected = false;
2341d662
PV
2271 }
2272 }
2273
eb2fd80f
PV
2274 if (bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq))
2275 bfq_update_io_intensity(bfqq, now_ns);
2276
aee69d78
PV
2277 elv_rb_add(&bfqq->sort_list, rq);
2278
2279 /*
2280 * Check if this request is a better next-serve candidate.
2281 */
2282 prev = bfqq->next_rq;
2283 next_rq = bfq_choose_req(bfqd, bfqq->next_rq, rq, bfqd->last_position);
2284 bfqq->next_rq = next_rq;
2285
36eca894
AA
2286 /*
2287 * Adjust priority tree position, if next_rq changes.
8cacc5ab 2288 * See comments on bfq_pos_tree_add_move() for the unlikely().
36eca894 2289 */
8cacc5ab 2290 if (unlikely(!bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing && prev != bfqq->next_rq))
36eca894
AA
2291 bfq_pos_tree_add_move(bfqd, bfqq);
2292
aee69d78 2293 if (!bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq)) /* switching to busy ... */
44e44a1b
PV
2294 bfq_bfqq_handle_idle_busy_switch(bfqd, bfqq, old_wr_coeff,
2295 rq, &interactive);
2296 else {
2297 if (bfqd->low_latency && old_wr_coeff == 1 && !rq_is_sync(rq) &&
2298 time_is_before_jiffies(
2299 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish +
2300 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_inter_arr_async)) {
2301 bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
2302 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqd);
2303
cfd69712 2304 bfqd->wr_busy_queues++;
44e44a1b
PV
2305 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
2306 }
2307 if (prev != bfqq->next_rq)
2308 bfq_updated_next_req(bfqd, bfqq);
2309 }
2310
2311 /*
2312 * Assign jiffies to last_wr_start_finish in the following
2313 * cases:
2314 *
2315 * . if bfqq is not going to be weight-raised, because, for
2316 * non weight-raised queues, last_wr_start_finish stores the
2317 * arrival time of the last request; as of now, this piece
2318 * of information is used only for deciding whether to
2319 * weight-raise async queues
2320 *
2321 * . if bfqq is not weight-raised, because, if bfqq is now
2322 * switching to weight-raised, then last_wr_start_finish
2323 * stores the time when weight-raising starts
2324 *
2325 * . if bfqq is interactive, because, regardless of whether
2326 * bfqq is currently weight-raised, the weight-raising
2327 * period must start or restart (this case is considered
2328 * separately because it is not detected by the above
2329 * conditions, if bfqq is already weight-raised)
77b7dcea
PV
2330 *
2331 * last_wr_start_finish has to be updated also if bfqq is soft
2332 * real-time, because the weight-raising period is constantly
2333 * restarted on idle-to-busy transitions for these queues, but
2334 * this is already done in bfq_bfqq_handle_idle_busy_switch if
2335 * needed.
44e44a1b
PV
2336 */
2337 if (bfqd->low_latency &&
2338 (old_wr_coeff == 1 || bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 || interactive))
2339 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
aee69d78
PV
2340}
2341
2342static struct request *bfq_find_rq_fmerge(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2343 struct bio *bio,
2344 struct request_queue *q)
2345{
2346 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfqd->bio_bfqq;
2347
2348
2349 if (bfqq)
2350 return elv_rb_find(&bfqq->sort_list, bio_end_sector(bio));
2351
2352 return NULL;
2353}
2354
ab0e43e9
PV
2355static sector_t get_sdist(sector_t last_pos, struct request *rq)
2356{
2357 if (last_pos)
2358 return abs(blk_rq_pos(rq) - last_pos);
2359
2360 return 0;
2361}
2362
aee69d78
PV
2363#if 0 /* Still not clear if we can do without next two functions */
2364static void bfq_activate_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
2365{
2366 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
2367
2368 bfqd->rq_in_driver++;
aee69d78
PV
2369}
2370
2371static void bfq_deactivate_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
2372{
2373 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
2374
2375 bfqd->rq_in_driver--;
2376}
2377#endif
2378
2379static void bfq_remove_request(struct request_queue *q,
2380 struct request *rq)
2381{
2382 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
2383 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
2384 const int sync = rq_is_sync(rq);
2385
2386 if (bfqq->next_rq == rq) {
2387 bfqq->next_rq = bfq_find_next_rq(bfqd, bfqq, rq);
2388 bfq_updated_next_req(bfqd, bfqq);
2389 }
2390
2391 if (rq->queuelist.prev != &rq->queuelist)
2392 list_del_init(&rq->queuelist);
2393 bfqq->queued[sync]--;
2394 bfqd->queued--;
2395 elv_rb_del(&bfqq->sort_list, rq);
2396
2397 elv_rqhash_del(q, rq);
2398 if (q->last_merge == rq)
2399 q->last_merge = NULL;
2400
2401 if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list)) {
2402 bfqq->next_rq = NULL;
2403
2404 if (bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq) && bfqq != bfqd->in_service_queue) {
e21b7a0b 2405 bfq_del_bfqq_busy(bfqd, bfqq, false);
aee69d78
PV
2406 /*
2407 * bfqq emptied. In normal operation, when
2408 * bfqq is empty, bfqq->entity.service and
2409 * bfqq->entity.budget must contain,
2410 * respectively, the service received and the
2411 * budget used last time bfqq emptied. These
2412 * facts do not hold in this case, as at least
2413 * this last removal occurred while bfqq is
2414 * not in service. To avoid inconsistencies,
2415 * reset both bfqq->entity.service and
2416 * bfqq->entity.budget, if bfqq has still a
2417 * process that may issue I/O requests to it.
2418 */
2419 bfqq->entity.budget = bfqq->entity.service = 0;
2420 }
36eca894
AA
2421
2422 /*
2423 * Remove queue from request-position tree as it is empty.
2424 */
2425 if (bfqq->pos_root) {
2426 rb_erase(&bfqq->pos_node, bfqq->pos_root);
2427 bfqq->pos_root = NULL;
2428 }
05e90283 2429 } else {
8cacc5ab
PV
2430 /* see comments on bfq_pos_tree_add_move() for the unlikely() */
2431 if (unlikely(!bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing))
2432 bfq_pos_tree_add_move(bfqd, bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
2433 }
2434
2435 if (rq->cmd_flags & REQ_META)
2436 bfqq->meta_pending--;
e21b7a0b 2437
aee69d78
PV
2438}
2439
efed9a33 2440static bool bfq_bio_merge(struct request_queue *q, struct bio *bio,
14ccb66b 2441 unsigned int nr_segs)
aee69d78 2442{
aee69d78
PV
2443 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
2444 struct request *free = NULL;
2445 /*
2446 * bfq_bic_lookup grabs the queue_lock: invoke it now and
2447 * store its return value for later use, to avoid nesting
2448 * queue_lock inside the bfqd->lock. We assume that the bic
2449 * returned by bfq_bic_lookup does not go away before
2450 * bfqd->lock is taken.
2451 */
2452 struct bfq_io_cq *bic = bfq_bic_lookup(bfqd, current->io_context, q);
2453 bool ret;
2454
2455 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
2456
2457 if (bic)
2458 bfqd->bio_bfqq = bic_to_bfqq(bic, op_is_sync(bio->bi_opf));
2459 else
2460 bfqd->bio_bfqq = NULL;
2461 bfqd->bio_bic = bic;
2462
14ccb66b 2463 ret = blk_mq_sched_try_merge(q, bio, nr_segs, &free);
aee69d78 2464
fd2ef39c 2465 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
aee69d78
PV
2466 if (free)
2467 blk_mq_free_request(free);
aee69d78
PV
2468
2469 return ret;
2470}
2471
2472static int bfq_request_merge(struct request_queue *q, struct request **req,
2473 struct bio *bio)
2474{
2475 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
2476 struct request *__rq;
2477
2478 __rq = bfq_find_rq_fmerge(bfqd, bio, q);
2479 if (__rq && elv_bio_merge_ok(__rq, bio)) {
2480 *req = __rq;
866663b7
ML
2481
2482 if (blk_discard_mergable(__rq))
2483 return ELEVATOR_DISCARD_MERGE;
aee69d78
PV
2484 return ELEVATOR_FRONT_MERGE;
2485 }
2486
2487 return ELEVATOR_NO_MERGE;
2488}
2489
18e5a57d
PV
2490static struct bfq_queue *bfq_init_rq(struct request *rq);
2491
aee69d78
PV
2492static void bfq_request_merged(struct request_queue *q, struct request *req,
2493 enum elv_merge type)
2494{
2495 if (type == ELEVATOR_FRONT_MERGE &&
2496 rb_prev(&req->rb_node) &&
2497 blk_rq_pos(req) <
2498 blk_rq_pos(container_of(rb_prev(&req->rb_node),
2499 struct request, rb_node))) {
18e5a57d 2500 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfq_init_rq(req);
fd03177c 2501 struct bfq_data *bfqd;
aee69d78
PV
2502 struct request *prev, *next_rq;
2503
fd03177c
PV
2504 if (!bfqq)
2505 return;
2506
2507 bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
2508
aee69d78
PV
2509 /* Reposition request in its sort_list */
2510 elv_rb_del(&bfqq->sort_list, req);
2511 elv_rb_add(&bfqq->sort_list, req);
2512
2513 /* Choose next request to be served for bfqq */
2514 prev = bfqq->next_rq;
2515 next_rq = bfq_choose_req(bfqd, bfqq->next_rq, req,
2516 bfqd->last_position);
2517 bfqq->next_rq = next_rq;
2518 /*
36eca894
AA
2519 * If next_rq changes, update both the queue's budget to
2520 * fit the new request and the queue's position in its
2521 * rq_pos_tree.
aee69d78 2522 */
36eca894 2523 if (prev != bfqq->next_rq) {
aee69d78 2524 bfq_updated_next_req(bfqd, bfqq);
8cacc5ab
PV
2525 /*
2526 * See comments on bfq_pos_tree_add_move() for
2527 * the unlikely().
2528 */
2529 if (unlikely(!bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing))
2530 bfq_pos_tree_add_move(bfqd, bfqq);
36eca894 2531 }
aee69d78
PV
2532 }
2533}
2534
8abfa4d6
PV
2535/*
2536 * This function is called to notify the scheduler that the requests
2537 * rq and 'next' have been merged, with 'next' going away. BFQ
2538 * exploits this hook to address the following issue: if 'next' has a
2539 * fifo_time lower that rq, then the fifo_time of rq must be set to
2540 * the value of 'next', to not forget the greater age of 'next'.
8abfa4d6
PV
2541 *
2542 * NOTE: in this function we assume that rq is in a bfq_queue, basing
2543 * on that rq is picked from the hash table q->elevator->hash, which,
2544 * in its turn, is filled only with I/O requests present in
2545 * bfq_queues, while BFQ is in use for the request queue q. In fact,
2546 * the function that fills this hash table (elv_rqhash_add) is called
2547 * only by bfq_insert_request.
2548 */
aee69d78
PV
2549static void bfq_requests_merged(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq,
2550 struct request *next)
2551{
18e5a57d
PV
2552 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfq_init_rq(rq),
2553 *next_bfqq = bfq_init_rq(next);
aee69d78 2554
fd03177c 2555 if (!bfqq)
a921c655 2556 goto remove;
fd03177c 2557
aee69d78
PV
2558 /*
2559 * If next and rq belong to the same bfq_queue and next is older
2560 * than rq, then reposition rq in the fifo (by substituting next
2561 * with rq). Otherwise, if next and rq belong to different
2562 * bfq_queues, never reposition rq: in fact, we would have to
2563 * reposition it with respect to next's position in its own fifo,
2564 * which would most certainly be too expensive with respect to
2565 * the benefits.
2566 */
2567 if (bfqq == next_bfqq &&
2568 !list_empty(&rq->queuelist) && !list_empty(&next->queuelist) &&
2569 next->fifo_time < rq->fifo_time) {
2570 list_del_init(&rq->queuelist);
2571 list_replace_init(&next->queuelist, &rq->queuelist);
2572 rq->fifo_time = next->fifo_time;
2573 }
2574
2575 if (bfqq->next_rq == next)
2576 bfqq->next_rq = rq;
2577
e21b7a0b 2578 bfqg_stats_update_io_merged(bfqq_group(bfqq), next->cmd_flags);
a921c655
JK
2579remove:
2580 /* Merged request may be in the IO scheduler. Remove it. */
2581 if (!RB_EMPTY_NODE(&next->rb_node)) {
2582 bfq_remove_request(next->q, next);
2583 if (next_bfqq)
2584 bfqg_stats_update_io_remove(bfqq_group(next_bfqq),
2585 next->cmd_flags);
2586 }
aee69d78
PV
2587}
2588
44e44a1b
PV
2589/* Must be called with bfqq != NULL */
2590static void bfq_bfqq_end_wr(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
2591{
3c337690
PV
2592 /*
2593 * If bfqq has been enjoying interactive weight-raising, then
2594 * reset soft_rt_next_start. We do it for the following
2595 * reason. bfqq may have been conveying the I/O needed to load
2596 * a soft real-time application. Such an application actually
2597 * exhibits a soft real-time I/O pattern after it finishes
2598 * loading, and finally starts doing its job. But, if bfqq has
2599 * been receiving a lot of bandwidth so far (likely to happen
2600 * on a fast device), then soft_rt_next_start now contains a
2601 * high value that. So, without this reset, bfqq would be
2602 * prevented from being possibly considered as soft_rt for a
2603 * very long time.
2604 */
2605
2606 if (bfqq->wr_cur_max_time !=
2607 bfqq->bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time)
2608 bfqq->soft_rt_next_start = jiffies;
2609
cfd69712
PV
2610 if (bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq))
2611 bfqq->bfqd->wr_busy_queues--;
44e44a1b
PV
2612 bfqq->wr_coeff = 1;
2613 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = 0;
77b7dcea 2614 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
44e44a1b
PV
2615 /*
2616 * Trigger a weight change on the next invocation of
2617 * __bfq_entity_update_weight_prio.
2618 */
2619 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
2620}
2621
ea25da48
PV
2622void bfq_end_wr_async_queues(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2623 struct bfq_group *bfqg)
44e44a1b
PV
2624{
2625 int i, j;
2626
2627 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
202bc942 2628 for (j = 0; j < IOPRIO_NR_LEVELS; j++)
44e44a1b
PV
2629 if (bfqg->async_bfqq[i][j])
2630 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqg->async_bfqq[i][j]);
2631 if (bfqg->async_idle_bfqq)
2632 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqg->async_idle_bfqq);
2633}
2634
2635static void bfq_end_wr(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
2636{
2637 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
2638
2639 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
2640
2641 list_for_each_entry(bfqq, &bfqd->active_list, bfqq_list)
2642 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
2643 list_for_each_entry(bfqq, &bfqd->idle_list, bfqq_list)
2644 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
2645 bfq_end_wr_async(bfqd);
2646
2647 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
2648}
2649
36eca894
AA
2650static sector_t bfq_io_struct_pos(void *io_struct, bool request)
2651{
2652 if (request)
2653 return blk_rq_pos(io_struct);
2654 else
2655 return ((struct bio *)io_struct)->bi_iter.bi_sector;
2656}
2657
2658static int bfq_rq_close_to_sector(void *io_struct, bool request,
2659 sector_t sector)
2660{
2661 return abs(bfq_io_struct_pos(io_struct, request) - sector) <=
2662 BFQQ_CLOSE_THR;
2663}
2664
2665static struct bfq_queue *bfqq_find_close(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2666 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
2667 sector_t sector)
2668{
2669 struct rb_root *root = &bfq_bfqq_to_bfqg(bfqq)->rq_pos_tree;
2670 struct rb_node *parent, *node;
2671 struct bfq_queue *__bfqq;
2672
2673 if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(root))
2674 return NULL;
2675
2676 /*
2677 * First, if we find a request starting at the end of the last
2678 * request, choose it.
2679 */
2680 __bfqq = bfq_rq_pos_tree_lookup(bfqd, root, sector, &parent, NULL);
2681 if (__bfqq)
2682 return __bfqq;
2683
2684 /*
2685 * If the exact sector wasn't found, the parent of the NULL leaf
2686 * will contain the closest sector (rq_pos_tree sorted by
2687 * next_request position).
2688 */
2689 __bfqq = rb_entry(parent, struct bfq_queue, pos_node);
2690 if (bfq_rq_close_to_sector(__bfqq->next_rq, true, sector))
2691 return __bfqq;
2692
2693 if (blk_rq_pos(__bfqq->next_rq) < sector)
2694 node = rb_next(&__bfqq->pos_node);
2695 else
2696 node = rb_prev(&__bfqq->pos_node);
2697 if (!node)
2698 return NULL;
2699
2700 __bfqq = rb_entry(node, struct bfq_queue, pos_node);
2701 if (bfq_rq_close_to_sector(__bfqq->next_rq, true, sector))
2702 return __bfqq;
2703
2704 return NULL;
2705}
2706
2707static struct bfq_queue *bfq_find_close_cooperator(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2708 struct bfq_queue *cur_bfqq,
2709 sector_t sector)
2710{
2711 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
2712
2713 /*
2714 * We shall notice if some of the queues are cooperating,
2715 * e.g., working closely on the same area of the device. In
2716 * that case, we can group them together and: 1) don't waste
2717 * time idling, and 2) serve the union of their requests in
2718 * the best possible order for throughput.
2719 */
2720 bfqq = bfqq_find_close(bfqd, cur_bfqq, sector);
2721 if (!bfqq || bfqq == cur_bfqq)
2722 return NULL;
2723
2724 return bfqq;
2725}
2726
2727static struct bfq_queue *
2728bfq_setup_merge(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq)
2729{
2730 int process_refs, new_process_refs;
2731 struct bfq_queue *__bfqq;
2732
2733 /*
2734 * If there are no process references on the new_bfqq, then it is
2735 * unsafe to follow the ->new_bfqq chain as other bfqq's in the chain
2736 * may have dropped their last reference (not just their last process
2737 * reference).
2738 */
2739 if (!bfqq_process_refs(new_bfqq))
2740 return NULL;
2741
2742 /* Avoid a circular list and skip interim queue merges. */
2743 while ((__bfqq = new_bfqq->new_bfqq)) {
2744 if (__bfqq == bfqq)
2745 return NULL;
2746 new_bfqq = __bfqq;
2747 }
2748
2749 process_refs = bfqq_process_refs(bfqq);
2750 new_process_refs = bfqq_process_refs(new_bfqq);
2751 /*
2752 * If the process for the bfqq has gone away, there is no
2753 * sense in merging the queues.
2754 */
2755 if (process_refs == 0 || new_process_refs == 0)
2756 return NULL;
2757
2758 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq, "scheduling merge with queue %d",
2759 new_bfqq->pid);
2760
2761 /*
2762 * Merging is just a redirection: the requests of the process
2763 * owning one of the two queues are redirected to the other queue.
2764 * The latter queue, in its turn, is set as shared if this is the
2765 * first time that the requests of some process are redirected to
2766 * it.
2767 *
6fa3e8d3
PV
2768 * We redirect bfqq to new_bfqq and not the opposite, because
2769 * we are in the context of the process owning bfqq, thus we
2770 * have the io_cq of this process. So we can immediately
2771 * configure this io_cq to redirect the requests of the
2772 * process to new_bfqq. In contrast, the io_cq of new_bfqq is
2773 * not available any more (new_bfqq->bic == NULL).
36eca894 2774 *
6fa3e8d3
PV
2775 * Anyway, even in case new_bfqq coincides with the in-service
2776 * queue, redirecting requests the in-service queue is the
2777 * best option, as we feed the in-service queue with new
2778 * requests close to the last request served and, by doing so,
2779 * are likely to increase the throughput.
36eca894
AA
2780 */
2781 bfqq->new_bfqq = new_bfqq;
2782 new_bfqq->ref += process_refs;
2783 return new_bfqq;
2784}
2785
2786static bool bfq_may_be_close_cooperator(struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
2787 struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq)
2788{
7b8fa3b9
PV
2789 if (bfq_too_late_for_merging(new_bfqq))
2790 return false;
2791
36eca894
AA
2792 if (bfq_class_idle(bfqq) || bfq_class_idle(new_bfqq) ||
2793 (bfqq->ioprio_class != new_bfqq->ioprio_class))
2794 return false;
2795
2796 /*
2797 * If either of the queues has already been detected as seeky,
2798 * then merging it with the other queue is unlikely to lead to
2799 * sequential I/O.
2800 */
2801 if (BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq) || BFQQ_SEEKY(new_bfqq))
2802 return false;
2803
2804 /*
2805 * Interleaved I/O is known to be done by (some) applications
2806 * only for reads, so it does not make sense to merge async
2807 * queues.
2808 */
2809 if (!bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) || !bfq_bfqq_sync(new_bfqq))
2810 return false;
2811
2812 return true;
2813}
2814
430a67f9
PV
2815static bool idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
2816 struct bfq_queue *bfqq);
2817
36eca894
AA
2818/*
2819 * Attempt to schedule a merge of bfqq with the currently in-service
2820 * queue or with a close queue among the scheduled queues. Return
2821 * NULL if no merge was scheduled, a pointer to the shared bfq_queue
2822 * structure otherwise.
2823 *
2824 * The OOM queue is not allowed to participate to cooperation: in fact, since
2825 * the requests temporarily redirected to the OOM queue could be redirected
2826 * again to dedicated queues at any time, the state needed to correctly
2827 * handle merging with the OOM queue would be quite complex and expensive
2828 * to maintain. Besides, in such a critical condition as an out of memory,
2829 * the benefits of queue merging may be little relevant, or even negligible.
2830 *
36eca894
AA
2831 * WARNING: queue merging may impair fairness among non-weight raised
2832 * queues, for at least two reasons: 1) the original weight of a
2833 * merged queue may change during the merged state, 2) even being the
2834 * weight the same, a merged queue may be bloated with many more
2835 * requests than the ones produced by its originally-associated
2836 * process.
2837 */
2838static struct bfq_queue *
2839bfq_setup_cooperator(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
430a67f9 2840 void *io_struct, bool request, struct bfq_io_cq *bic)
36eca894
AA
2841{
2842 struct bfq_queue *in_service_bfqq, *new_bfqq;
2843
430a67f9
PV
2844 /*
2845 * Check delayed stable merge for rotational or non-queueing
2846 * devs. For this branch to be executed, bfqq must not be
2847 * currently merged with some other queue (i.e., bfqq->bic
2848 * must be non null). If we considered also merged queues,
2849 * then we should also check whether bfqq has already been
2850 * merged with bic->stable_merge_bfqq. But this would be
2851 * costly and complicated.
2852 */
2853 if (unlikely(!bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing)) {
bd3664b3
PV
2854 /*
2855 * Make sure also that bfqq is sync, because
2856 * bic->stable_merge_bfqq may point to some queue (for
2857 * stable merging) also if bic is associated with a
2858 * sync queue, but this bfqq is async
2859 */
2860 if (bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) && bic->stable_merge_bfqq &&
430a67f9 2861 !bfq_bfqq_just_created(bfqq) &&
e03f2ab7 2862 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->split_time +
7812472f 2863 msecs_to_jiffies(bfq_late_stable_merging)) &&
d4f49983 2864 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->creation_time +
7812472f 2865 msecs_to_jiffies(bfq_late_stable_merging))) {
430a67f9
PV
2866 struct bfq_queue *stable_merge_bfqq =
2867 bic->stable_merge_bfqq;
2868 int proc_ref = min(bfqq_process_refs(bfqq),
2869 bfqq_process_refs(stable_merge_bfqq));
2870
2871 /* deschedule stable merge, because done or aborted here */
2872 bfq_put_stable_ref(stable_merge_bfqq);
2873
2874 bic->stable_merge_bfqq = NULL;
2875
2876 if (!idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(bfqd, bfqq) &&
2877 proc_ref > 0) {
2878 /* next function will take at least one ref */
2879 struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq =
2880 bfq_setup_merge(bfqq, stable_merge_bfqq);
2881
2882 bic->stably_merged = true;
2883 if (new_bfqq && new_bfqq->bic)
2884 new_bfqq->bic->stably_merged = true;
2885 return new_bfqq;
2886 } else
2887 return NULL;
2888 }
2889 }
2890
8cacc5ab
PV
2891 /*
2892 * Do not perform queue merging if the device is non
2893 * rotational and performs internal queueing. In fact, such a
2894 * device reaches a high speed through internal parallelism
2895 * and pipelining. This means that, to reach a high
2896 * throughput, it must have many requests enqueued at the same
2897 * time. But, in this configuration, the internal scheduling
2898 * algorithm of the device does exactly the job of queue
2899 * merging: it reorders requests so as to obtain as much as
2900 * possible a sequential I/O pattern. As a consequence, with
2901 * the workload generated by processes doing interleaved I/O,
2902 * the throughput reached by the device is likely to be the
2903 * same, with and without queue merging.
2904 *
2905 * Disabling merging also provides a remarkable benefit in
2906 * terms of throughput. Merging tends to make many workloads
2907 * artificially more uneven, because of shared queues
2908 * remaining non empty for incomparably more time than
2909 * non-merged queues. This may accentuate workload
2910 * asymmetries. For example, if one of the queues in a set of
2911 * merged queues has a higher weight than a normal queue, then
2912 * the shared queue may inherit such a high weight and, by
2913 * staying almost always active, may force BFQ to perform I/O
2914 * plugging most of the time. This evidently makes it harder
2915 * for BFQ to let the device reach a high throughput.
2916 *
2917 * Finally, the likely() macro below is not used because one
2918 * of the two branches is more likely than the other, but to
2919 * have the code path after the following if() executed as
2920 * fast as possible for the case of a non rotational device
2921 * with queueing. We want it because this is the fastest kind
2922 * of device. On the opposite end, the likely() may lengthen
2923 * the execution time of BFQ for the case of slower devices
2924 * (rotational or at least without queueing). But in this case
2925 * the execution time of BFQ matters very little, if not at
2926 * all.
2927 */
2928 if (likely(bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing))
2929 return NULL;
2930
7b8fa3b9
PV
2931 /*
2932 * Prevent bfqq from being merged if it has been created too
2933 * long ago. The idea is that true cooperating processes, and
2934 * thus their associated bfq_queues, are supposed to be
2935 * created shortly after each other. This is the case, e.g.,
2936 * for KVM/QEMU and dump I/O threads. Basing on this
2937 * assumption, the following filtering greatly reduces the
2938 * probability that two non-cooperating processes, which just
2939 * happen to do close I/O for some short time interval, have
2940 * their queues merged by mistake.
2941 */
2942 if (bfq_too_late_for_merging(bfqq))
2943 return NULL;
2944
ebc69e89
JA
2945 if (bfqq->new_bfqq)
2946 return bfqq->new_bfqq;
2947
4403e4e4 2948 if (!io_struct || unlikely(bfqq == &bfqd->oom_bfqq))
36eca894
AA
2949 return NULL;
2950
2951 /* If there is only one backlogged queue, don't search. */
73d58118 2952 if (bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) == 1)
36eca894
AA
2953 return NULL;
2954
2955 in_service_bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
2956
4403e4e4
AR
2957 if (in_service_bfqq && in_service_bfqq != bfqq &&
2958 likely(in_service_bfqq != &bfqd->oom_bfqq) &&
058fdecc
PV
2959 bfq_rq_close_to_sector(io_struct, request,
2960 bfqd->in_serv_last_pos) &&
36eca894
AA
2961 bfqq->entity.parent == in_service_bfqq->entity.parent &&
2962 bfq_may_be_close_cooperator(bfqq, in_service_bfqq)) {
2963 new_bfqq = bfq_setup_merge(bfqq, in_service_bfqq);
2964 if (new_bfqq)
2965 return new_bfqq;
2966 }
2967 /*
2968 * Check whether there is a cooperator among currently scheduled
2969 * queues. The only thing we need is that the bio/request is not
2970 * NULL, as we need it to establish whether a cooperator exists.
2971 */
36eca894
AA
2972 new_bfqq = bfq_find_close_cooperator(bfqd, bfqq,
2973 bfq_io_struct_pos(io_struct, request));
2974
4403e4e4 2975 if (new_bfqq && likely(new_bfqq != &bfqd->oom_bfqq) &&
36eca894
AA
2976 bfq_may_be_close_cooperator(bfqq, new_bfqq))
2977 return bfq_setup_merge(bfqq, new_bfqq);
2978
2979 return NULL;
2980}
2981
2982static void bfq_bfqq_save_state(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
2983{
2984 struct bfq_io_cq *bic = bfqq->bic;
2985
2986 /*
2987 * If !bfqq->bic, the queue is already shared or its requests
2988 * have already been redirected to a shared queue; both idle window
2989 * and weight raising state have already been saved. Do nothing.
2990 */
2991 if (!bic)
2992 return;
2993
5a5436b9
PV
2994 bic->saved_last_serv_time_ns = bfqq->last_serv_time_ns;
2995 bic->saved_inject_limit = bfqq->inject_limit;
2996 bic->saved_decrease_time_jif = bfqq->decrease_time_jif;
2997
fffca087 2998 bic->saved_weight = bfqq->entity.orig_weight;
36eca894 2999 bic->saved_ttime = bfqq->ttime;
d5be3fef 3000 bic->saved_has_short_ttime = bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
36eca894 3001 bic->saved_IO_bound = bfq_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
eb2fd80f
PV
3002 bic->saved_io_start_time = bfqq->io_start_time;
3003 bic->saved_tot_idle_time = bfqq->tot_idle_time;
e1b2324d
AA
3004 bic->saved_in_large_burst = bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
3005 bic->was_in_burst_list = !hlist_unhashed(&bfqq->burst_list_node);
894df937 3006 if (unlikely(bfq_bfqq_just_created(bfqq) &&
1be6e8a9
AR
3007 !bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq) &&
3008 bfqq->bfqd->low_latency)) {
894df937
PV
3009 /*
3010 * bfqq being merged right after being created: bfqq
3011 * would have deserved interactive weight raising, but
3012 * did not make it to be set in a weight-raised state,
3013 * because of this early merge. Store directly the
3014 * weight-raising state that would have been assigned
3015 * to bfqq, so that to avoid that bfqq unjustly fails
3016 * to enjoy weight raising if split soon.
3017 */
3018 bic->saved_wr_coeff = bfqq->bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff;
2b50f230 3019 bic->saved_wr_start_at_switch_to_srt = bfq_smallest_from_now();
894df937
PV
3020 bic->saved_wr_cur_max_time = bfq_wr_duration(bfqq->bfqd);
3021 bic->saved_last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
3022 } else {
3023 bic->saved_wr_coeff = bfqq->wr_coeff;
3024 bic->saved_wr_start_at_switch_to_srt =
3025 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt;
e673914d 3026 bic->saved_service_from_wr = bfqq->service_from_wr;
894df937
PV
3027 bic->saved_last_wr_start_finish = bfqq->last_wr_start_finish;
3028 bic->saved_wr_cur_max_time = bfqq->wr_cur_max_time;
3029 }
36eca894
AA
3030}
3031
430a67f9
PV
3032
3033static void
3034bfq_reassign_last_bfqq(struct bfq_queue *cur_bfqq, struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq)
3035{
3036 if (cur_bfqq->entity.parent &&
3037 cur_bfqq->entity.parent->last_bfqq_created == cur_bfqq)
3038 cur_bfqq->entity.parent->last_bfqq_created = new_bfqq;
3039 else if (cur_bfqq->bfqd && cur_bfqq->bfqd->last_bfqq_created == cur_bfqq)
3040 cur_bfqq->bfqd->last_bfqq_created = new_bfqq;
3041}
3042
478de338
PV
3043void bfq_release_process_ref(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
3044{
3045 /*
3046 * To prevent bfqq's service guarantees from being violated,
3047 * bfqq may be left busy, i.e., queued for service, even if
3048 * empty (see comments in __bfq_bfqq_expire() for
3049 * details). But, if no process will send requests to bfqq any
3050 * longer, then there is no point in keeping bfqq queued for
3051 * service. In addition, keeping bfqq queued for service, but
3052 * with no process ref any longer, may have caused bfqq to be
3053 * freed when dequeued from service. But this is assumed to
3054 * never happen.
3055 */
3056 if (bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq) && RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) &&
3057 bfqq != bfqd->in_service_queue)
3058 bfq_del_bfqq_busy(bfqd, bfqq, false);
3059
430a67f9
PV
3060 bfq_reassign_last_bfqq(bfqq, NULL);
3061
478de338
PV
3062 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
3063}
3064
36eca894
AA
3065static void
3066bfq_merge_bfqqs(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_io_cq *bic,
3067 struct bfq_queue *bfqq, struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq)
3068{
3069 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "merging with queue %lu",
3070 (unsigned long)new_bfqq->pid);
3071 /* Save weight raising and idle window of the merged queues */
3072 bfq_bfqq_save_state(bfqq);
3073 bfq_bfqq_save_state(new_bfqq);
3074 if (bfq_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq))
3075 bfq_mark_bfqq_IO_bound(new_bfqq);
3076 bfq_clear_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
3077
8ef3fc3a
PV
3078 /*
3079 * The processes associated with bfqq are cooperators of the
3080 * processes associated with new_bfqq. So, if bfqq has a
3081 * waker, then assume that all these processes will be happy
3082 * to let bfqq's waker freely inject I/O when they have no
3083 * I/O.
3084 */
3085 if (bfqq->waker_bfqq && !new_bfqq->waker_bfqq &&
3086 bfqq->waker_bfqq != new_bfqq) {
3087 new_bfqq->waker_bfqq = bfqq->waker_bfqq;
3088 new_bfqq->tentative_waker_bfqq = NULL;
3089
3090 /*
3091 * If the waker queue disappears, then
3092 * new_bfqq->waker_bfqq must be reset. So insert
3093 * new_bfqq into the woken_list of the waker. See
3094 * bfq_check_waker for details.
3095 */
3096 hlist_add_head(&new_bfqq->woken_list_node,
3097 &new_bfqq->waker_bfqq->woken_list);
3098
3099 }
3100
36eca894
AA
3101 /*
3102 * If bfqq is weight-raised, then let new_bfqq inherit
3103 * weight-raising. To reduce false positives, neglect the case
3104 * where bfqq has just been created, but has not yet made it
3105 * to be weight-raised (which may happen because EQM may merge
3106 * bfqq even before bfq_add_request is executed for the first
e1b2324d
AA
3107 * time for bfqq). Handling this case would however be very
3108 * easy, thanks to the flag just_created.
36eca894
AA
3109 */
3110 if (new_bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 && bfqq->wr_coeff > 1) {
3111 new_bfqq->wr_coeff = bfqq->wr_coeff;
3112 new_bfqq->wr_cur_max_time = bfqq->wr_cur_max_time;
3113 new_bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = bfqq->last_wr_start_finish;
3114 new_bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt =
3115 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt;
3116 if (bfq_bfqq_busy(new_bfqq))
3117 bfqd->wr_busy_queues++;
3118 new_bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
3119 }
3120
3121 if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1) { /* bfqq has given its wr to new_bfqq */
3122 bfqq->wr_coeff = 1;
3123 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
3124 if (bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq))
3125 bfqd->wr_busy_queues--;
3126 }
3127
3128 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, new_bfqq, "merge_bfqqs: wr_busy %d",
3129 bfqd->wr_busy_queues);
3130
36eca894
AA
3131 /*
3132 * Merge queues (that is, let bic redirect its requests to new_bfqq)
3133 */
3134 bic_set_bfqq(bic, new_bfqq, 1);
3135 bfq_mark_bfqq_coop(new_bfqq);
3136 /*
3137 * new_bfqq now belongs to at least two bics (it is a shared queue):
3138 * set new_bfqq->bic to NULL. bfqq either:
3139 * - does not belong to any bic any more, and hence bfqq->bic must
3140 * be set to NULL, or
3141 * - is a queue whose owning bics have already been redirected to a
3142 * different queue, hence the queue is destined to not belong to
3143 * any bic soon and bfqq->bic is already NULL (therefore the next
3144 * assignment causes no harm).
3145 */
3146 new_bfqq->bic = NULL;
1e66413c
FP
3147 /*
3148 * If the queue is shared, the pid is the pid of one of the associated
3149 * processes. Which pid depends on the exact sequence of merge events
3150 * the queue underwent. So printing such a pid is useless and confusing
3151 * because it reports a random pid between those of the associated
3152 * processes.
3153 * We mark such a queue with a pid -1, and then print SHARED instead of
3154 * a pid in logging messages.
3155 */
3156 new_bfqq->pid = -1;
36eca894 3157 bfqq->bic = NULL;
430a67f9
PV
3158
3159 bfq_reassign_last_bfqq(bfqq, new_bfqq);
3160
478de338 3161 bfq_release_process_ref(bfqd, bfqq);
36eca894
AA
3162}
3163
aee69d78
PV
3164static bool bfq_allow_bio_merge(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq,
3165 struct bio *bio)
3166{
3167 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
3168 bool is_sync = op_is_sync(bio->bi_opf);
36eca894 3169 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfqd->bio_bfqq, *new_bfqq;
aee69d78
PV
3170
3171 /*
3172 * Disallow merge of a sync bio into an async request.
3173 */
3174 if (is_sync && !rq_is_sync(rq))
3175 return false;
3176
3177 /*
3178 * Lookup the bfqq that this bio will be queued with. Allow
3179 * merge only if rq is queued there.
3180 */
3181 if (!bfqq)
3182 return false;
3183
36eca894
AA
3184 /*
3185 * We take advantage of this function to perform an early merge
3186 * of the queues of possible cooperating processes.
3187 */
430a67f9 3188 new_bfqq = bfq_setup_cooperator(bfqd, bfqq, bio, false, bfqd->bio_bic);
36eca894
AA
3189 if (new_bfqq) {
3190 /*
3191 * bic still points to bfqq, then it has not yet been
3192 * redirected to some other bfq_queue, and a queue
636b8fe8
AR
3193 * merge between bfqq and new_bfqq can be safely
3194 * fulfilled, i.e., bic can be redirected to new_bfqq
36eca894
AA
3195 * and bfqq can be put.
3196 */
3197 bfq_merge_bfqqs(bfqd, bfqd->bio_bic, bfqq,
3198 new_bfqq);
3199 /*
3200 * If we get here, bio will be queued into new_queue,
3201 * so use new_bfqq to decide whether bio and rq can be
3202 * merged.
3203 */
3204 bfqq = new_bfqq;
3205
3206 /*
3207 * Change also bqfd->bio_bfqq, as
3208 * bfqd->bio_bic now points to new_bfqq, and
3209 * this function may be invoked again (and then may
3210 * use again bqfd->bio_bfqq).
3211 */
3212 bfqd->bio_bfqq = bfqq;
3213 }
3214
aee69d78
PV
3215 return bfqq == RQ_BFQQ(rq);
3216}
3217
44e44a1b
PV
3218/*
3219 * Set the maximum time for the in-service queue to consume its
3220 * budget. This prevents seeky processes from lowering the throughput.
3221 * In practice, a time-slice service scheme is used with seeky
3222 * processes.
3223 */
3224static void bfq_set_budget_timeout(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
3225 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
3226{
77b7dcea
PV
3227 unsigned int timeout_coeff;
3228
3229 if (bfqq->wr_cur_max_time == bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time)
3230 timeout_coeff = 1;
3231 else
3232 timeout_coeff = bfqq->entity.weight / bfqq->entity.orig_weight;
3233
44e44a1b
PV
3234 bfqd->last_budget_start = ktime_get();
3235
3236 bfqq->budget_timeout = jiffies +
77b7dcea 3237 bfqd->bfq_timeout * timeout_coeff;
44e44a1b
PV
3238}
3239
aee69d78
PV
3240static void __bfq_set_in_service_queue(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
3241 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
3242{
3243 if (bfqq) {
aee69d78
PV
3244 bfq_clear_bfqq_fifo_expire(bfqq);
3245
3246 bfqd->budgets_assigned = (bfqd->budgets_assigned * 7 + 256) / 8;
3247
77b7dcea
PV
3248 if (time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->last_wr_start_finish) &&
3249 bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 &&
3250 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time == bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time &&
3251 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->budget_timeout)) {
3252 /*
3253 * For soft real-time queues, move the start
3254 * of the weight-raising period forward by the
3255 * time the queue has not received any
3256 * service. Otherwise, a relatively long
3257 * service delay is likely to cause the
3258 * weight-raising period of the queue to end,
3259 * because of the short duration of the
3260 * weight-raising period of a soft real-time
3261 * queue. It is worth noting that this move
3262 * is not so dangerous for the other queues,
3263 * because soft real-time queues are not
3264 * greedy.
3265 *
3266 * To not add a further variable, we use the
3267 * overloaded field budget_timeout to
3268 * determine for how long the queue has not
3269 * received service, i.e., how much time has
3270 * elapsed since the queue expired. However,
3271 * this is a little imprecise, because
3272 * budget_timeout is set to jiffies if bfqq
3273 * not only expires, but also remains with no
3274 * request.
3275 */
3276 if (time_after(bfqq->budget_timeout,
3277 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish))
3278 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish +=
3279 jiffies - bfqq->budget_timeout;
3280 else
3281 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
3282 }
3283
44e44a1b 3284 bfq_set_budget_timeout(bfqd, bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
3285 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq,
3286 "set_in_service_queue, cur-budget = %d",
3287 bfqq->entity.budget);
3288 }
3289
3290 bfqd->in_service_queue = bfqq;
41e76c85 3291 bfqd->in_serv_last_pos = 0;
aee69d78
PV
3292}
3293
3294/*
3295 * Get and set a new queue for service.
3296 */
3297static struct bfq_queue *bfq_set_in_service_queue(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
3298{
3299 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfq_get_next_queue(bfqd);
3300
3301 __bfq_set_in_service_queue(bfqd, bfqq);
3302 return bfqq;
3303}
3304
aee69d78
PV
3305static void bfq_arm_slice_timer(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
3306{
3307 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
aee69d78
PV
3308 u32 sl;
3309
aee69d78
PV
3310 bfq_mark_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
3311
3312 /*
3313 * We don't want to idle for seeks, but we do want to allow
3314 * fair distribution of slice time for a process doing back-to-back
3315 * seeks. So allow a little bit of time for him to submit a new rq.
3316 */
3317 sl = bfqd->bfq_slice_idle;
3318 /*
1de0c4cd
AA
3319 * Unless the queue is being weight-raised or the scenario is
3320 * asymmetric, grant only minimum idle time if the queue
3321 * is seeky. A long idling is preserved for a weight-raised
3322 * queue, or, more in general, in an asymmetric scenario,
3323 * because a long idling is needed for guaranteeing to a queue
3324 * its reserved share of the throughput (in particular, it is
3325 * needed if the queue has a higher weight than some other
3326 * queue).
aee69d78 3327 */
1de0c4cd 3328 if (BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq) && bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 &&
fb53ac6c 3329 !bfq_asymmetric_scenario(bfqd, bfqq))
aee69d78 3330 sl = min_t(u64, sl, BFQ_MIN_TT);
778c02a2
PV
3331 else if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1)
3332 sl = max_t(u32, sl, 20ULL * NSEC_PER_MSEC);
aee69d78
PV
3333
3334 bfqd->last_idling_start = ktime_get();
2341d662
PV
3335 bfqd->last_idling_start_jiffies = jiffies;
3336
aee69d78
PV
3337 hrtimer_start(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer, ns_to_ktime(sl),
3338 HRTIMER_MODE_REL);
e21b7a0b 3339 bfqg_stats_set_start_idle_time(bfqq_group(bfqq));
aee69d78
PV
3340}
3341
ab0e43e9
PV
3342/*
3343 * In autotuning mode, max_budget is dynamically recomputed as the
3344 * amount of sectors transferred in timeout at the estimated peak
3345 * rate. This enables BFQ to utilize a full timeslice with a full
3346 * budget, even if the in-service queue is served at peak rate. And
3347 * this maximises throughput with sequential workloads.
3348 */
3349static unsigned long bfq_calc_max_budget(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
3350{
3351 return (u64)bfqd->peak_rate * USEC_PER_MSEC *
3352 jiffies_to_msecs(bfqd->bfq_timeout)>>BFQ_RATE_SHIFT;
3353}
3354
44e44a1b
PV
3355/*
3356 * Update parameters related to throughput and responsiveness, as a
3357 * function of the estimated peak rate. See comments on
e24f1c24 3358 * bfq_calc_max_budget(), and on the ref_wr_duration array.
44e44a1b
PV
3359 */
3360static void update_thr_responsiveness_params(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
3361{
e24f1c24 3362 if (bfqd->bfq_user_max_budget == 0) {
44e44a1b
PV
3363 bfqd->bfq_max_budget =
3364 bfq_calc_max_budget(bfqd);
e24f1c24 3365 bfq_log(bfqd, "new max_budget = %d", bfqd->bfq_max_budget);
44e44a1b 3366 }
44e44a1b
PV
3367}
3368
ab0e43e9
PV
3369static void bfq_reset_rate_computation(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
3370 struct request *rq)
3371{
3372 if (rq != NULL) { /* new rq dispatch now, reset accordingly */
3373 bfqd->last_dispatch = bfqd->first_dispatch = ktime_get_ns();
3374 bfqd->peak_rate_samples = 1;
3375 bfqd->sequential_samples = 0;
3376 bfqd->tot_sectors_dispatched = bfqd->last_rq_max_size =
3377 blk_rq_sectors(rq);
3378 } else /* no new rq dispatched, just reset the number of samples */
3379 bfqd->peak_rate_samples = 0; /* full re-init on next disp. */
3380
3381 bfq_log(bfqd,
3382 "reset_rate_computation at end, sample %u/%u tot_sects %llu",
3383 bfqd->peak_rate_samples, bfqd->sequential_samples,
3384 bfqd->tot_sectors_dispatched);
3385}
3386
3387static void bfq_update_rate_reset(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct request *rq)
3388{
3389 u32 rate, weight, divisor;
3390
3391 /*
3392 * For the convergence property to hold (see comments on
3393 * bfq_update_peak_rate()) and for the assessment to be
3394 * reliable, a minimum number of samples must be present, and
3395 * a minimum amount of time must have elapsed. If not so, do
3396 * not compute new rate. Just reset parameters, to get ready
3397 * for a new evaluation attempt.
3398 */
3399 if (bfqd->peak_rate_samples < BFQ_RATE_MIN_SAMPLES ||
3400 bfqd->delta_from_first < BFQ_RATE_MIN_INTERVAL)
3401 goto reset_computation;
3402
3403 /*
3404 * If a new request completion has occurred after last
3405 * dispatch, then, to approximate the rate at which requests
3406 * have been served by the device, it is more precise to
3407 * extend the observation interval to the last completion.
3408 */
3409 bfqd->delta_from_first =
3410 max_t(u64, bfqd->delta_from_first,
3411 bfqd->last_completion - bfqd->first_dispatch);
3412
3413 /*
3414 * Rate computed in sects/usec, and not sects/nsec, for
3415 * precision issues.
3416 */
3417 rate = div64_ul(bfqd->tot_sectors_dispatched<<BFQ_RATE_SHIFT,
3418 div_u64(bfqd->delta_from_first, NSEC_PER_USEC));
3419
3420 /*
3421 * Peak rate not updated if:
3422 * - the percentage of sequential dispatches is below 3/4 of the
3423 * total, and rate is below the current estimated peak rate
3424 * - rate is unreasonably high (> 20M sectors/sec)
3425 */
3426 if ((bfqd->sequential_samples < (3 * bfqd->peak_rate_samples)>>2 &&
3427 rate <= bfqd->peak_rate) ||
3428 rate > 20<<BFQ_RATE_SHIFT)
3429 goto reset_computation;
3430
3431 /*
3432 * We have to update the peak rate, at last! To this purpose,
3433 * we use a low-pass filter. We compute the smoothing constant
3434 * of the filter as a function of the 'weight' of the new
3435 * measured rate.
3436 *
3437 * As can be seen in next formulas, we define this weight as a
3438 * quantity proportional to how sequential the workload is,
3439 * and to how long the observation time interval is.
3440 *
3441 * The weight runs from 0 to 8. The maximum value of the
3442 * weight, 8, yields the minimum value for the smoothing
3443 * constant. At this minimum value for the smoothing constant,
3444 * the measured rate contributes for half of the next value of
3445 * the estimated peak rate.
3446 *
3447 * So, the first step is to compute the weight as a function
3448 * of how sequential the workload is. Note that the weight
3449 * cannot reach 9, because bfqd->sequential_samples cannot
3450 * become equal to bfqd->peak_rate_samples, which, in its
3451 * turn, holds true because bfqd->sequential_samples is not
3452 * incremented for the first sample.
3453 */
3454 weight = (9 * bfqd->sequential_samples) / bfqd->peak_rate_samples;
3455
3456 /*
3457 * Second step: further refine the weight as a function of the
3458 * duration of the observation interval.
3459 */
3460 weight = min_t(u32, 8,
3461 div_u64(weight * bfqd->delta_from_first,
3462 BFQ_RATE_REF_INTERVAL));
3463
3464 /*
3465 * Divisor ranging from 10, for minimum weight, to 2, for
3466 * maximum weight.
3467 */
3468 divisor = 10 - weight;
3469
3470 /*
3471 * Finally, update peak rate:
3472 *
3473 * peak_rate = peak_rate * (divisor-1) / divisor + rate / divisor
3474 */
3475 bfqd->peak_rate *= divisor-1;
3476 bfqd->peak_rate /= divisor;
3477 rate /= divisor; /* smoothing constant alpha = 1/divisor */
3478
3479 bfqd->peak_rate += rate;
bc56e2ca
PV
3480
3481 /*
3482 * For a very slow device, bfqd->peak_rate can reach 0 (see
3483 * the minimum representable values reported in the comments
3484 * on BFQ_RATE_SHIFT). Push to 1 if this happens, to avoid
3485 * divisions by zero where bfqd->peak_rate is used as a
3486 * divisor.
3487 */
3488 bfqd->peak_rate = max_t(u32, 1, bfqd->peak_rate);
3489
44e44a1b 3490 update_thr_responsiveness_params(bfqd);
ab0e43e9
PV
3491
3492reset_computation:
3493 bfq_reset_rate_computation(bfqd, rq);
3494}
3495
3496/*
3497 * Update the read/write peak rate (the main quantity used for
3498 * auto-tuning, see update_thr_responsiveness_params()).
3499 *
3500 * It is not trivial to estimate the peak rate (correctly): because of
3501 * the presence of sw and hw queues between the scheduler and the
3502 * device components that finally serve I/O requests, it is hard to
3503 * say exactly when a given dispatched request is served inside the
3504 * device, and for how long. As a consequence, it is hard to know
3505 * precisely at what rate a given set of requests is actually served
3506 * by the device.
3507 *
3508 * On the opposite end, the dispatch time of any request is trivially
3509 * available, and, from this piece of information, the "dispatch rate"
3510 * of requests can be immediately computed. So, the idea in the next
3511 * function is to use what is known, namely request dispatch times
3512 * (plus, when useful, request completion times), to estimate what is
3513 * unknown, namely in-device request service rate.
3514 *
3515 * The main issue is that, because of the above facts, the rate at
3516 * which a certain set of requests is dispatched over a certain time
3517 * interval can vary greatly with respect to the rate at which the
3518 * same requests are then served. But, since the size of any
3519 * intermediate queue is limited, and the service scheme is lossless
3520 * (no request is silently dropped), the following obvious convergence
3521 * property holds: the number of requests dispatched MUST become
3522 * closer and closer to the number of requests completed as the
3523 * observation interval grows. This is the key property used in
3524 * the next function to estimate the peak service rate as a function
3525 * of the observed dispatch rate. The function assumes to be invoked
3526 * on every request dispatch.
3527 */
3528static void bfq_update_peak_rate(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct request *rq)
3529{
3530 u64 now_ns = ktime_get_ns();
3531
3532 if (bfqd->peak_rate_samples == 0) { /* first dispatch */
3533 bfq_log(bfqd, "update_peak_rate: goto reset, samples %d",
3534 bfqd->peak_rate_samples);
3535 bfq_reset_rate_computation(bfqd, rq);
3536 goto update_last_values; /* will add one sample */
3537 }
3538
3539 /*
3540 * Device idle for very long: the observation interval lasting
3541 * up to this dispatch cannot be a valid observation interval
3542 * for computing a new peak rate (similarly to the late-
3543 * completion event in bfq_completed_request()). Go to
3544 * update_rate_and_reset to have the following three steps
3545 * taken:
3546 * - close the observation interval at the last (previous)
3547 * request dispatch or completion
3548 * - compute rate, if possible, for that observation interval
3549 * - start a new observation interval with this dispatch
3550 */
3551 if (now_ns - bfqd->last_dispatch > 100*NSEC_PER_MSEC &&
3552 bfqd->rq_in_driver == 0)
3553 goto update_rate_and_reset;
3554
3555 /* Update sampling information */
3556 bfqd->peak_rate_samples++;
3557
3558 if ((bfqd->rq_in_driver > 0 ||
3559 now_ns - bfqd->last_completion < BFQ_MIN_TT)
d87447d8 3560 && !BFQ_RQ_SEEKY(bfqd, bfqd->last_position, rq))
ab0e43e9
PV
3561 bfqd->sequential_samples++;
3562
3563 bfqd->tot_sectors_dispatched += blk_rq_sectors(rq);
3564
3565 /* Reset max observed rq size every 32 dispatches */
3566 if (likely(bfqd->peak_rate_samples % 32))
3567 bfqd->last_rq_max_size =
3568 max_t(u32, blk_rq_sectors(rq), bfqd->last_rq_max_size);
3569 else
3570 bfqd->last_rq_max_size = blk_rq_sectors(rq);
3571
3572 bfqd->delta_from_first = now_ns - bfqd->first_dispatch;
3573
3574 /* Target observation interval not yet reached, go on sampling */
3575 if (bfqd->delta_from_first < BFQ_RATE_REF_INTERVAL)
3576 goto update_last_values;
3577
3578update_rate_and_reset:
3579 bfq_update_rate_reset(bfqd, rq);
3580update_last_values:
3581 bfqd->last_position = blk_rq_pos(rq) + blk_rq_sectors(rq);
058fdecc
PV
3582 if (RQ_BFQQ(rq) == bfqd->in_service_queue)
3583 bfqd->in_serv_last_pos = bfqd->last_position;
ab0e43e9
PV
3584 bfqd->last_dispatch = now_ns;
3585}
3586
aee69d78
PV
3587/*
3588 * Remove request from internal lists.
3589 */
3590static void bfq_dispatch_remove(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
3591{
3592 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
3593
3594 /*
3595 * For consistency, the next instruction should have been
3596 * executed after removing the request from the queue and
3597 * dispatching it. We execute instead this instruction before
3598 * bfq_remove_request() (and hence introduce a temporary
3599 * inconsistency), for efficiency. In fact, should this
3600 * dispatch occur for a non in-service bfqq, this anticipated
3601 * increment prevents two counters related to bfqq->dispatched
3602 * from risking to be, first, uselessly decremented, and then
3603 * incremented again when the (new) value of bfqq->dispatched
3604 * happens to be taken into account.
3605 */
3606 bfqq->dispatched++;
ab0e43e9 3607 bfq_update_peak_rate(q->elevator->elevator_data, rq);
aee69d78
PV
3608
3609 bfq_remove_request(q, rq);
3610}
3611
3726112e
PV
3612/*
3613 * There is a case where idling does not have to be performed for
3614 * throughput concerns, but to preserve the throughput share of
3615 * the process associated with bfqq.
3616 *
3617 * To introduce this case, we can note that allowing the drive
3618 * to enqueue more than one request at a time, and hence
3619 * delegating de facto final scheduling decisions to the
3620 * drive's internal scheduler, entails loss of control on the
3621 * actual request service order. In particular, the critical
3622 * situation is when requests from different processes happen
3623 * to be present, at the same time, in the internal queue(s)
3624 * of the drive. In such a situation, the drive, by deciding
3625 * the service order of the internally-queued requests, does
3626 * determine also the actual throughput distribution among
3627 * these processes. But the drive typically has no notion or
3628 * concern about per-process throughput distribution, and
3629 * makes its decisions only on a per-request basis. Therefore,
3630 * the service distribution enforced by the drive's internal
3631 * scheduler is likely to coincide with the desired throughput
3632 * distribution only in a completely symmetric, or favorably
3633 * skewed scenario where:
3634 * (i-a) each of these processes must get the same throughput as
3635 * the others,
3636 * (i-b) in case (i-a) does not hold, it holds that the process
3637 * associated with bfqq must receive a lower or equal
3638 * throughput than any of the other processes;
3639 * (ii) the I/O of each process has the same properties, in
3640 * terms of locality (sequential or random), direction
3641 * (reads or writes), request sizes, greediness
3642 * (from I/O-bound to sporadic), and so on;
3643
3644 * In fact, in such a scenario, the drive tends to treat the requests
3645 * of each process in about the same way as the requests of the
3646 * others, and thus to provide each of these processes with about the
3647 * same throughput. This is exactly the desired throughput
3648 * distribution if (i-a) holds, or, if (i-b) holds instead, this is an
3649 * even more convenient distribution for (the process associated with)
3650 * bfqq.
3651 *
3652 * In contrast, in any asymmetric or unfavorable scenario, device
3653 * idling (I/O-dispatch plugging) is certainly needed to guarantee
3654 * that bfqq receives its assigned fraction of the device throughput
3655 * (see [1] for details).
3656 *
3657 * The problem is that idling may significantly reduce throughput with
3658 * certain combinations of types of I/O and devices. An important
3659 * example is sync random I/O on flash storage with command
3660 * queueing. So, unless bfqq falls in cases where idling also boosts
3661 * throughput, it is important to check conditions (i-a), i(-b) and
3662 * (ii) accurately, so as to avoid idling when not strictly needed for
3663 * service guarantees.
3664 *
3665 * Unfortunately, it is extremely difficult to thoroughly check
3666 * condition (ii). And, in case there are active groups, it becomes
3667 * very difficult to check conditions (i-a) and (i-b) too. In fact,
3668 * if there are active groups, then, for conditions (i-a) or (i-b) to
3669 * become false 'indirectly', it is enough that an active group
3670 * contains more active processes or sub-groups than some other active
3671 * group. More precisely, for conditions (i-a) or (i-b) to become
3672 * false because of such a group, it is not even necessary that the
3673 * group is (still) active: it is sufficient that, even if the group
3674 * has become inactive, some of its descendant processes still have
3675 * some request already dispatched but still waiting for
3676 * completion. In fact, requests have still to be guaranteed their
3677 * share of the throughput even after being dispatched. In this
3678 * respect, it is easy to show that, if a group frequently becomes
3679 * inactive while still having in-flight requests, and if, when this
3680 * happens, the group is not considered in the calculation of whether
3681 * the scenario is asymmetric, then the group may fail to be
3682 * guaranteed its fair share of the throughput (basically because
3683 * idling may not be performed for the descendant processes of the
3684 * group, but it had to be). We address this issue with the following
3685 * bi-modal behavior, implemented in the function
3686 * bfq_asymmetric_scenario().
3687 *
3688 * If there are groups with requests waiting for completion
3689 * (as commented above, some of these groups may even be
3690 * already inactive), then the scenario is tagged as
3691 * asymmetric, conservatively, without checking any of the
3692 * conditions (i-a), (i-b) or (ii). So the device is idled for bfqq.
3693 * This behavior matches also the fact that groups are created
3694 * exactly if controlling I/O is a primary concern (to
3695 * preserve bandwidth and latency guarantees).
3696 *
3697 * On the opposite end, if there are no groups with requests waiting
3698 * for completion, then only conditions (i-a) and (i-b) are actually
3699 * controlled, i.e., provided that conditions (i-a) or (i-b) holds,
3700 * idling is not performed, regardless of whether condition (ii)
3701 * holds. In other words, only if conditions (i-a) and (i-b) do not
3702 * hold, then idling is allowed, and the device tends to be prevented
3703 * from queueing many requests, possibly of several processes. Since
3704 * there are no groups with requests waiting for completion, then, to
3705 * control conditions (i-a) and (i-b) it is enough to check just
3706 * whether all the queues with requests waiting for completion also
3707 * have the same weight.
3708 *
3709 * Not checking condition (ii) evidently exposes bfqq to the
3710 * risk of getting less throughput than its fair share.
3711 * However, for queues with the same weight, a further
3712 * mechanism, preemption, mitigates or even eliminates this
3713 * problem. And it does so without consequences on overall
3714 * throughput. This mechanism and its benefits are explained
3715 * in the next three paragraphs.
3716 *
3717 * Even if a queue, say Q, is expired when it remains idle, Q
3718 * can still preempt the new in-service queue if the next
3719 * request of Q arrives soon (see the comments on
3720 * bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation). If all queues and
3721 * groups have the same weight, this form of preemption,
3722 * combined with the hole-recovery heuristic described in the
3723 * comments on function bfq_bfqq_update_budg_for_activation,
3724 * are enough to preserve a correct bandwidth distribution in
3725 * the mid term, even without idling. In fact, even if not
3726 * idling allows the internal queues of the device to contain
3727 * many requests, and thus to reorder requests, we can rather
3728 * safely assume that the internal scheduler still preserves a
3729 * minimum of mid-term fairness.
3730 *
3731 * More precisely, this preemption-based, idleless approach
3732 * provides fairness in terms of IOPS, and not sectors per
3733 * second. This can be seen with a simple example. Suppose
3734 * that there are two queues with the same weight, but that
3735 * the first queue receives requests of 8 sectors, while the
3736 * second queue receives requests of 1024 sectors. In
3737 * addition, suppose that each of the two queues contains at
3738 * most one request at a time, which implies that each queue
3739 * always remains idle after it is served. Finally, after
3740 * remaining idle, each queue receives very quickly a new
3741 * request. It follows that the two queues are served
3742 * alternatively, preempting each other if needed. This
3743 * implies that, although both queues have the same weight,
3744 * the queue with large requests receives a service that is
3745 * 1024/8 times as high as the service received by the other
3746 * queue.
3747 *
3748 * The motivation for using preemption instead of idling (for
3749 * queues with the same weight) is that, by not idling,
3750 * service guarantees are preserved (completely or at least in
3751 * part) without minimally sacrificing throughput. And, if
3752 * there is no active group, then the primary expectation for
3753 * this device is probably a high throughput.
3754 *
b5e02b48
PV
3755 * We are now left only with explaining the two sub-conditions in the
3756 * additional compound condition that is checked below for deciding
3757 * whether the scenario is asymmetric. To explain the first
3758 * sub-condition, we need to add that the function
3726112e 3759 * bfq_asymmetric_scenario checks the weights of only
b5e02b48
PV
3760 * non-weight-raised queues, for efficiency reasons (see comments on
3761 * bfq_weights_tree_add()). Then the fact that bfqq is weight-raised
3762 * is checked explicitly here. More precisely, the compound condition
3763 * below takes into account also the fact that, even if bfqq is being
3764 * weight-raised, the scenario is still symmetric if all queues with
3765 * requests waiting for completion happen to be
3766 * weight-raised. Actually, we should be even more precise here, and
3767 * differentiate between interactive weight raising and soft real-time
3768 * weight raising.
3769 *
3770 * The second sub-condition checked in the compound condition is
3771 * whether there is a fair amount of already in-flight I/O not
3772 * belonging to bfqq. If so, I/O dispatching is to be plugged, for the
3773 * following reason. The drive may decide to serve in-flight
3774 * non-bfqq's I/O requests before bfqq's ones, thereby delaying the
3775 * arrival of new I/O requests for bfqq (recall that bfqq is sync). If
3776 * I/O-dispatching is not plugged, then, while bfqq remains empty, a
3777 * basically uncontrolled amount of I/O from other queues may be
3778 * dispatched too, possibly causing the service of bfqq's I/O to be
3779 * delayed even longer in the drive. This problem gets more and more
3780 * serious as the speed and the queue depth of the drive grow,
3781 * because, as these two quantities grow, the probability to find no
3782 * queue busy but many requests in flight grows too. By contrast,
3783 * plugging I/O dispatching minimizes the delay induced by already
3784 * in-flight I/O, and enables bfqq to recover the bandwidth it may
3785 * lose because of this delay.
3726112e
PV
3786 *
3787 * As a side note, it is worth considering that the above
b5e02b48
PV
3788 * device-idling countermeasures may however fail in the following
3789 * unlucky scenario: if I/O-dispatch plugging is (correctly) disabled
3790 * in a time period during which all symmetry sub-conditions hold, and
3791 * therefore the device is allowed to enqueue many requests, but at
3792 * some later point in time some sub-condition stops to hold, then it
3793 * may become impossible to make requests be served in the desired
3794 * order until all the requests already queued in the device have been
3795 * served. The last sub-condition commented above somewhat mitigates
3796 * this problem for weight-raised queues.
2391d13e
PV
3797 *
3798 * However, as an additional mitigation for this problem, we preserve
3799 * plugging for a special symmetric case that may suddenly turn into
3800 * asymmetric: the case where only bfqq is busy. In this case, not
3801 * expiring bfqq does not cause any harm to any other queues in terms
3802 * of service guarantees. In contrast, it avoids the following unlucky
3803 * sequence of events: (1) bfqq is expired, (2) a new queue with a
3804 * lower weight than bfqq becomes busy (or more queues), (3) the new
3805 * queue is served until a new request arrives for bfqq, (4) when bfqq
3806 * is finally served, there are so many requests of the new queue in
3807 * the drive that the pending requests for bfqq take a lot of time to
3808 * be served. In particular, event (2) may case even already
3809 * dispatched requests of bfqq to be delayed, inside the drive. So, to
3810 * avoid this series of events, the scenario is preventively declared
3811 * as asymmetric also if bfqq is the only busy queues
3726112e
PV
3812 */
3813static bool idling_needed_for_service_guarantees(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
3814 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
3815{
2391d13e
PV
3816 int tot_busy_queues = bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd);
3817
f718b093
PV
3818 /* No point in idling for bfqq if it won't get requests any longer */
3819 if (unlikely(!bfqq_process_refs(bfqq)))
3820 return false;
3821
3726112e 3822 return (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 &&
b5e02b48 3823 (bfqd->wr_busy_queues <
2391d13e 3824 tot_busy_queues ||
b5e02b48
PV
3825 bfqd->rq_in_driver >=
3826 bfqq->dispatched + 4)) ||
2391d13e
PV
3827 bfq_asymmetric_scenario(bfqd, bfqq) ||
3828 tot_busy_queues == 1;
3726112e
PV
3829}
3830
3831static bool __bfq_bfqq_expire(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
3832 enum bfqq_expiration reason)
aee69d78 3833{
36eca894
AA
3834 /*
3835 * If this bfqq is shared between multiple processes, check
3836 * to make sure that those processes are still issuing I/Os
3837 * within the mean seek distance. If not, it may be time to
3838 * break the queues apart again.
3839 */
3840 if (bfq_bfqq_coop(bfqq) && BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq))
3841 bfq_mark_bfqq_split_coop(bfqq);
3842
3726112e
PV
3843 /*
3844 * Consider queues with a higher finish virtual time than
3845 * bfqq. If idling_needed_for_service_guarantees(bfqq) returns
3846 * true, then bfqq's bandwidth would be violated if an
3847 * uncontrolled amount of I/O from these queues were
3848 * dispatched while bfqq is waiting for its new I/O to
3849 * arrive. This is exactly what may happen if this is a forced
3850 * expiration caused by a preemption attempt, and if bfqq is
3851 * not re-scheduled. To prevent this from happening, re-queue
3852 * bfqq if it needs I/O-dispatch plugging, even if it is
3853 * empty. By doing so, bfqq is granted to be served before the
3854 * above queues (provided that bfqq is of course eligible).
3855 */
3856 if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) &&
3857 !(reason == BFQQE_PREEMPTED &&
3858 idling_needed_for_service_guarantees(bfqd, bfqq))) {
44e44a1b
PV
3859 if (bfqq->dispatched == 0)
3860 /*
3861 * Overloading budget_timeout field to store
3862 * the time at which the queue remains with no
3863 * backlog and no outstanding request; used by
3864 * the weight-raising mechanism.
3865 */
3866 bfqq->budget_timeout = jiffies;
3867
e21b7a0b 3868 bfq_del_bfqq_busy(bfqd, bfqq, true);
36eca894 3869 } else {
80294c3b 3870 bfq_requeue_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, true);
36eca894
AA
3871 /*
3872 * Resort priority tree of potential close cooperators.
8cacc5ab 3873 * See comments on bfq_pos_tree_add_move() for the unlikely().
36eca894 3874 */
3726112e
PV
3875 if (unlikely(!bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing &&
3876 !RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list)))
8cacc5ab 3877 bfq_pos_tree_add_move(bfqd, bfqq);
36eca894 3878 }
e21b7a0b
AA
3879
3880 /*
3881 * All in-service entities must have been properly deactivated
3882 * or requeued before executing the next function, which
eed47d19
PV
3883 * resets all in-service entities as no more in service. This
3884 * may cause bfqq to be freed. If this happens, the next
3885 * function returns true.
e21b7a0b 3886 */
eed47d19 3887 return __bfq_bfqd_reset_in_service(bfqd);
aee69d78
PV
3888}
3889
3890/**
3891 * __bfq_bfqq_recalc_budget - try to adapt the budget to the @bfqq behavior.
3892 * @bfqd: device data.
3893 * @bfqq: queue to update.
3894 * @reason: reason for expiration.
3895 *
3896 * Handle the feedback on @bfqq budget at queue expiration.
3897 * See the body for detailed comments.
3898 */
3899static void __bfq_bfqq_recalc_budget(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
3900 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
3901 enum bfqq_expiration reason)
3902{
3903 struct request *next_rq;
3904 int budget, min_budget;
3905
aee69d78
PV
3906 min_budget = bfq_min_budget(bfqd);
3907
44e44a1b
PV
3908 if (bfqq->wr_coeff == 1)
3909 budget = bfqq->max_budget;
3910 else /*
3911 * Use a constant, low budget for weight-raised queues,
3912 * to help achieve a low latency. Keep it slightly higher
3913 * than the minimum possible budget, to cause a little
3914 * bit fewer expirations.
3915 */
3916 budget = 2 * min_budget;
3917
aee69d78
PV
3918 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "recalc_budg: last budg %d, budg left %d",
3919 bfqq->entity.budget, bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq));
3920 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "recalc_budg: last max_budg %d, min budg %d",
3921 budget, bfq_min_budget(bfqd));
3922 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "recalc_budg: sync %d, seeky %d",
3923 bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq), BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqd->in_service_queue));
3924
44e44a1b 3925 if (bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) && bfqq->wr_coeff == 1) {
aee69d78
PV
3926 switch (reason) {
3927 /*
3928 * Caveat: in all the following cases we trade latency
3929 * for throughput.
3930 */
3931 case BFQQE_TOO_IDLE:
54b60456
PV
3932 /*
3933 * This is the only case where we may reduce
3934 * the budget: if there is no request of the
3935 * process still waiting for completion, then
3936 * we assume (tentatively) that the timer has
3937 * expired because the batch of requests of
3938 * the process could have been served with a
3939 * smaller budget. Hence, betting that
3940 * process will behave in the same way when it
3941 * becomes backlogged again, we reduce its
3942 * next budget. As long as we guess right,
3943 * this budget cut reduces the latency
3944 * experienced by the process.
3945 *
3946 * However, if there are still outstanding
3947 * requests, then the process may have not yet
3948 * issued its next request just because it is
3949 * still waiting for the completion of some of
3950 * the still outstanding ones. So in this
3951 * subcase we do not reduce its budget, on the
3952 * contrary we increase it to possibly boost
3953 * the throughput, as discussed in the
3954 * comments to the BUDGET_TIMEOUT case.
3955 */
3956 if (bfqq->dispatched > 0) /* still outstanding reqs */
3957 budget = min(budget * 2, bfqd->bfq_max_budget);
3958 else {
3959 if (budget > 5 * min_budget)
3960 budget -= 4 * min_budget;
3961 else
3962 budget = min_budget;
3963 }
aee69d78
PV
3964 break;
3965 case BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT:
54b60456
PV
3966 /*
3967 * We double the budget here because it gives
3968 * the chance to boost the throughput if this
3969 * is not a seeky process (and has bumped into
3970 * this timeout because of, e.g., ZBR).
3971 */
3972 budget = min(budget * 2, bfqd->bfq_max_budget);
aee69d78
PV
3973 break;
3974 case BFQQE_BUDGET_EXHAUSTED:
3975 /*
3976 * The process still has backlog, and did not
3977 * let either the budget timeout or the disk
3978 * idling timeout expire. Hence it is not
3979 * seeky, has a short thinktime and may be
3980 * happy with a higher budget too. So
3981 * definitely increase the budget of this good
3982 * candidate to boost the disk throughput.
3983 */
54b60456 3984 budget = min(budget * 4, bfqd->bfq_max_budget);
aee69d78
PV
3985 break;
3986 case BFQQE_NO_MORE_REQUESTS:
3987 /*
3988 * For queues that expire for this reason, it
3989 * is particularly important to keep the
3990 * budget close to the actual service they
3991 * need. Doing so reduces the timestamp
3992 * misalignment problem described in the
3993 * comments in the body of
3994 * __bfq_activate_entity. In fact, suppose
3995 * that a queue systematically expires for
3996 * BFQQE_NO_MORE_REQUESTS and presents a
3997 * new request in time to enjoy timestamp
3998 * back-shifting. The larger the budget of the
3999 * queue is with respect to the service the
4000 * queue actually requests in each service
4001 * slot, the more times the queue can be
4002 * reactivated with the same virtual finish
4003 * time. It follows that, even if this finish
4004 * time is pushed to the system virtual time
4005 * to reduce the consequent timestamp
4006 * misalignment, the queue unjustly enjoys for
4007 * many re-activations a lower finish time
4008 * than all newly activated queues.
4009 *
4010 * The service needed by bfqq is measured
4011 * quite precisely by bfqq->entity.service.
4012 * Since bfqq does not enjoy device idling,
4013 * bfqq->entity.service is equal to the number
4014 * of sectors that the process associated with
4015 * bfqq requested to read/write before waiting
4016 * for request completions, or blocking for
4017 * other reasons.
4018 */
4019 budget = max_t(int, bfqq->entity.service, min_budget);
4020 break;
4021 default:
4022 return;
4023 }
44e44a1b 4024 } else if (!bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq)) {
aee69d78
PV
4025 /*
4026 * Async queues get always the maximum possible
4027 * budget, as for them we do not care about latency
4028 * (in addition, their ability to dispatch is limited
4029 * by the charging factor).
4030 */
4031 budget = bfqd->bfq_max_budget;
4032 }
4033
4034 bfqq->max_budget = budget;
4035
4036 if (bfqd->budgets_assigned >= bfq_stats_min_budgets &&
4037 !bfqd->bfq_user_max_budget)
4038 bfqq->max_budget = min(bfqq->max_budget, bfqd->bfq_max_budget);
4039
4040 /*
4041 * If there is still backlog, then assign a new budget, making
4042 * sure that it is large enough for the next request. Since
4043 * the finish time of bfqq must be kept in sync with the
4044 * budget, be sure to call __bfq_bfqq_expire() *after* this
4045 * update.
4046 *
4047 * If there is no backlog, then no need to update the budget;
4048 * it will be updated on the arrival of a new request.
4049 */
4050 next_rq = bfqq->next_rq;
4051 if (next_rq)
4052 bfqq->entity.budget = max_t(unsigned long, bfqq->max_budget,
4053 bfq_serv_to_charge(next_rq, bfqq));
4054
4055 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "head sect: %u, new budget %d",
4056 next_rq ? blk_rq_sectors(next_rq) : 0,
4057 bfqq->entity.budget);
4058}
4059
aee69d78 4060/*
ab0e43e9
PV
4061 * Return true if the process associated with bfqq is "slow". The slow
4062 * flag is used, in addition to the budget timeout, to reduce the
4063 * amount of service provided to seeky processes, and thus reduce
4064 * their chances to lower the throughput. More details in the comments
4065 * on the function bfq_bfqq_expire().
4066 *
4067 * An important observation is in order: as discussed in the comments
4068 * on the function bfq_update_peak_rate(), with devices with internal
4069 * queues, it is hard if ever possible to know when and for how long
4070 * an I/O request is processed by the device (apart from the trivial
4071 * I/O pattern where a new request is dispatched only after the
4072 * previous one has been completed). This makes it hard to evaluate
4073 * the real rate at which the I/O requests of each bfq_queue are
4074 * served. In fact, for an I/O scheduler like BFQ, serving a
4075 * bfq_queue means just dispatching its requests during its service
4076 * slot (i.e., until the budget of the queue is exhausted, or the
4077 * queue remains idle, or, finally, a timeout fires). But, during the
4078 * service slot of a bfq_queue, around 100 ms at most, the device may
4079 * be even still processing requests of bfq_queues served in previous
4080 * service slots. On the opposite end, the requests of the in-service
4081 * bfq_queue may be completed after the service slot of the queue
4082 * finishes.
4083 *
4084 * Anyway, unless more sophisticated solutions are used
4085 * (where possible), the sum of the sizes of the requests dispatched
4086 * during the service slot of a bfq_queue is probably the only
4087 * approximation available for the service received by the bfq_queue
4088 * during its service slot. And this sum is the quantity used in this
4089 * function to evaluate the I/O speed of a process.
aee69d78 4090 */
ab0e43e9
PV
4091static bool bfq_bfqq_is_slow(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
4092 bool compensate, enum bfqq_expiration reason,
4093 unsigned long *delta_ms)
aee69d78 4094{
ab0e43e9
PV
4095 ktime_t delta_ktime;
4096 u32 delta_usecs;
4097 bool slow = BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq); /* if delta too short, use seekyness */
aee69d78 4098
ab0e43e9 4099 if (!bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq))
aee69d78
PV
4100 return false;
4101
4102 if (compensate)
ab0e43e9 4103 delta_ktime = bfqd->last_idling_start;
aee69d78 4104 else
ab0e43e9
PV
4105 delta_ktime = ktime_get();
4106 delta_ktime = ktime_sub(delta_ktime, bfqd->last_budget_start);
4107 delta_usecs = ktime_to_us(delta_ktime);
aee69d78
PV
4108
4109 /* don't use too short time intervals */
ab0e43e9
PV
4110 if (delta_usecs < 1000) {
4111 if (blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue))
4112 /*
4113 * give same worst-case guarantees as idling
4114 * for seeky
4115 */
4116 *delta_ms = BFQ_MIN_TT / NSEC_PER_MSEC;
4117 else /* charge at least one seek */
4118 *delta_ms = bfq_slice_idle / NSEC_PER_MSEC;
4119
4120 return slow;
4121 }
aee69d78 4122
ab0e43e9 4123 *delta_ms = delta_usecs / USEC_PER_MSEC;
aee69d78
PV
4124
4125 /*
ab0e43e9
PV
4126 * Use only long (> 20ms) intervals to filter out excessive
4127 * spikes in service rate estimation.
aee69d78 4128 */
ab0e43e9
PV
4129 if (delta_usecs > 20000) {
4130 /*
4131 * Caveat for rotational devices: processes doing I/O
4132 * in the slower disk zones tend to be slow(er) even
4133 * if not seeky. In this respect, the estimated peak
4134 * rate is likely to be an average over the disk
4135 * surface. Accordingly, to not be too harsh with
4136 * unlucky processes, a process is deemed slow only if
4137 * its rate has been lower than half of the estimated
4138 * peak rate.
4139 */
4140 slow = bfqq->entity.service < bfqd->bfq_max_budget / 2;
aee69d78
PV
4141 }
4142
ab0e43e9 4143 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "bfq_bfqq_is_slow: slow %d", slow);
aee69d78 4144
ab0e43e9 4145 return slow;
aee69d78
PV
4146}
4147
77b7dcea
PV
4148/*
4149 * To be deemed as soft real-time, an application must meet two
4150 * requirements. First, the application must not require an average
4151 * bandwidth higher than the approximate bandwidth required to playback or
4152 * record a compressed high-definition video.
4153 * The next function is invoked on the completion of the last request of a
4154 * batch, to compute the next-start time instant, soft_rt_next_start, such
4155 * that, if the next request of the application does not arrive before
4156 * soft_rt_next_start, then the above requirement on the bandwidth is met.
4157 *
4158 * The second requirement is that the request pattern of the application is
4159 * isochronous, i.e., that, after issuing a request or a batch of requests,
4160 * the application stops issuing new requests until all its pending requests
4161 * have been completed. After that, the application may issue a new batch,
4162 * and so on.
4163 * For this reason the next function is invoked to compute
4164 * soft_rt_next_start only for applications that meet this requirement,
4165 * whereas soft_rt_next_start is set to infinity for applications that do
4166 * not.
4167 *
a34b0244
PV
4168 * Unfortunately, even a greedy (i.e., I/O-bound) application may
4169 * happen to meet, occasionally or systematically, both the above
4170 * bandwidth and isochrony requirements. This may happen at least in
4171 * the following circumstances. First, if the CPU load is high. The
4172 * application may stop issuing requests while the CPUs are busy
4173 * serving other processes, then restart, then stop again for a while,
4174 * and so on. The other circumstances are related to the storage
4175 * device: the storage device is highly loaded or reaches a low-enough
4176 * throughput with the I/O of the application (e.g., because the I/O
4177 * is random and/or the device is slow). In all these cases, the
4178 * I/O of the application may be simply slowed down enough to meet
4179 * the bandwidth and isochrony requirements. To reduce the probability
4180 * that greedy applications are deemed as soft real-time in these
4181 * corner cases, a further rule is used in the computation of
4182 * soft_rt_next_start: the return value of this function is forced to
4183 * be higher than the maximum between the following two quantities.
4184 *
4185 * (a) Current time plus: (1) the maximum time for which the arrival
4186 * of a request is waited for when a sync queue becomes idle,
4187 * namely bfqd->bfq_slice_idle, and (2) a few extra jiffies. We
4188 * postpone for a moment the reason for adding a few extra
4189 * jiffies; we get back to it after next item (b). Lower-bounding
4190 * the return value of this function with the current time plus
4191 * bfqd->bfq_slice_idle tends to filter out greedy applications,
4192 * because the latter issue their next request as soon as possible
4193 * after the last one has been completed. In contrast, a soft
4194 * real-time application spends some time processing data, after a
4195 * batch of its requests has been completed.
4196 *
4197 * (b) Current value of bfqq->soft_rt_next_start. As pointed out
4198 * above, greedy applications may happen to meet both the
4199 * bandwidth and isochrony requirements under heavy CPU or
4200 * storage-device load. In more detail, in these scenarios, these
4201 * applications happen, only for limited time periods, to do I/O
4202 * slowly enough to meet all the requirements described so far,
4203 * including the filtering in above item (a). These slow-speed
4204 * time intervals are usually interspersed between other time
4205 * intervals during which these applications do I/O at a very high
4206 * speed. Fortunately, exactly because of the high speed of the
4207 * I/O in the high-speed intervals, the values returned by this
4208 * function happen to be so high, near the end of any such
4209 * high-speed interval, to be likely to fall *after* the end of
4210 * the low-speed time interval that follows. These high values are
4211 * stored in bfqq->soft_rt_next_start after each invocation of
4212 * this function. As a consequence, if the last value of
4213 * bfqq->soft_rt_next_start is constantly used to lower-bound the
4214 * next value that this function may return, then, from the very
4215 * beginning of a low-speed interval, bfqq->soft_rt_next_start is
4216 * likely to be constantly kept so high that any I/O request
4217 * issued during the low-speed interval is considered as arriving
4218 * to soon for the application to be deemed as soft
4219 * real-time. Then, in the high-speed interval that follows, the
4220 * application will not be deemed as soft real-time, just because
4221 * it will do I/O at a high speed. And so on.
4222 *
4223 * Getting back to the filtering in item (a), in the following two
4224 * cases this filtering might be easily passed by a greedy
4225 * application, if the reference quantity was just
4226 * bfqd->bfq_slice_idle:
4227 * 1) HZ is so low that the duration of a jiffy is comparable to or
4228 * higher than bfqd->bfq_slice_idle. This happens, e.g., on slow
4229 * devices with HZ=100. The time granularity may be so coarse
4230 * that the approximation, in jiffies, of bfqd->bfq_slice_idle
4231 * is rather lower than the exact value.
77b7dcea
PV
4232 * 2) jiffies, instead of increasing at a constant rate, may stop increasing
4233 * for a while, then suddenly 'jump' by several units to recover the lost
4234 * increments. This seems to happen, e.g., inside virtual machines.
a34b0244
PV
4235 * To address this issue, in the filtering in (a) we do not use as a
4236 * reference time interval just bfqd->bfq_slice_idle, but
4237 * bfqd->bfq_slice_idle plus a few jiffies. In particular, we add the
4238 * minimum number of jiffies for which the filter seems to be quite
4239 * precise also in embedded systems and KVM/QEMU virtual machines.
77b7dcea
PV
4240 */
4241static unsigned long bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
4242 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4243{
a34b0244
PV
4244 return max3(bfqq->soft_rt_next_start,
4245 bfqq->last_idle_bklogged +
4246 HZ * bfqq->service_from_backlogged /
4247 bfqd->bfq_wr_max_softrt_rate,
4248 jiffies + nsecs_to_jiffies(bfqq->bfqd->bfq_slice_idle) + 4);
77b7dcea
PV
4249}
4250
aee69d78
PV
4251/**
4252 * bfq_bfqq_expire - expire a queue.
4253 * @bfqd: device owning the queue.
4254 * @bfqq: the queue to expire.
4255 * @compensate: if true, compensate for the time spent idling.
4256 * @reason: the reason causing the expiration.
4257 *
c074170e
PV
4258 * If the process associated with bfqq does slow I/O (e.g., because it
4259 * issues random requests), we charge bfqq with the time it has been
4260 * in service instead of the service it has received (see
4261 * bfq_bfqq_charge_time for details on how this goal is achieved). As
4262 * a consequence, bfqq will typically get higher timestamps upon
4263 * reactivation, and hence it will be rescheduled as if it had
4264 * received more service than what it has actually received. In the
4265 * end, bfqq receives less service in proportion to how slowly its
4266 * associated process consumes its budgets (and hence how seriously it
4267 * tends to lower the throughput). In addition, this time-charging
4268 * strategy guarantees time fairness among slow processes. In
4269 * contrast, if the process associated with bfqq is not slow, we
4270 * charge bfqq exactly with the service it has received.
aee69d78 4271 *
c074170e
PV
4272 * Charging time to the first type of queues and the exact service to
4273 * the other has the effect of using the WF2Q+ policy to schedule the
4274 * former on a timeslice basis, without violating service domain
4275 * guarantees among the latter.
aee69d78 4276 */
ea25da48
PV
4277void bfq_bfqq_expire(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
4278 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
4279 bool compensate,
4280 enum bfqq_expiration reason)
aee69d78
PV
4281{
4282 bool slow;
ab0e43e9
PV
4283 unsigned long delta = 0;
4284 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
aee69d78
PV
4285
4286 /*
ab0e43e9 4287 * Check whether the process is slow (see bfq_bfqq_is_slow).
aee69d78 4288 */
ab0e43e9 4289 slow = bfq_bfqq_is_slow(bfqd, bfqq, compensate, reason, &delta);
aee69d78
PV
4290
4291 /*
c074170e
PV
4292 * As above explained, charge slow (typically seeky) and
4293 * timed-out queues with the time and not the service
4294 * received, to favor sequential workloads.
4295 *
4296 * Processes doing I/O in the slower disk zones will tend to
4297 * be slow(er) even if not seeky. Therefore, since the
4298 * estimated peak rate is actually an average over the disk
4299 * surface, these processes may timeout just for bad luck. To
4300 * avoid punishing them, do not charge time to processes that
4301 * succeeded in consuming at least 2/3 of their budget. This
4302 * allows BFQ to preserve enough elasticity to still perform
4303 * bandwidth, and not time, distribution with little unlucky
4304 * or quasi-sequential processes.
aee69d78 4305 */
44e44a1b
PV
4306 if (bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 &&
4307 (slow ||
4308 (reason == BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT &&
4309 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq) >= entity->budget / 3)))
c074170e 4310 bfq_bfqq_charge_time(bfqd, bfqq, delta);
aee69d78 4311
44e44a1b
PV
4312 if (bfqd->low_latency && bfqq->wr_coeff == 1)
4313 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
4314
77b7dcea
PV
4315 if (bfqd->low_latency && bfqd->bfq_wr_max_softrt_rate > 0 &&
4316 RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list)) {
4317 /*
4318 * If we get here, and there are no outstanding
4319 * requests, then the request pattern is isochronous
4320 * (see the comments on the function
3c337690
PV
4321 * bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start()). Therefore we can
4322 * compute soft_rt_next_start.
20cd3245
PV
4323 *
4324 * If, instead, the queue still has outstanding
4325 * requests, then we have to wait for the completion
4326 * of all the outstanding requests to discover whether
4327 * the request pattern is actually isochronous.
77b7dcea 4328 */
3c337690 4329 if (bfqq->dispatched == 0)
77b7dcea
PV
4330 bfqq->soft_rt_next_start =
4331 bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start(bfqd, bfqq);
20cd3245 4332 else if (bfqq->dispatched > 0) {
77b7dcea
PV
4333 /*
4334 * Schedule an update of soft_rt_next_start to when
4335 * the task may be discovered to be isochronous.
4336 */
4337 bfq_mark_bfqq_softrt_update(bfqq);
4338 }
4339 }
4340
aee69d78 4341 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq,
d5be3fef
PV
4342 "expire (%d, slow %d, num_disp %d, short_ttime %d)", reason,
4343 slow, bfqq->dispatched, bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq));
aee69d78 4344
2341d662
PV
4345 /*
4346 * bfqq expired, so no total service time needs to be computed
4347 * any longer: reset state machine for measuring total service
4348 * times.
4349 */
4350 bfqd->rqs_injected = bfqd->wait_dispatch = false;
4351 bfqd->waited_rq = NULL;
4352
aee69d78
PV
4353 /*
4354 * Increase, decrease or leave budget unchanged according to
4355 * reason.
4356 */
4357 __bfq_bfqq_recalc_budget(bfqd, bfqq, reason);
3726112e 4358 if (__bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, reason))
eed47d19 4359 /* bfqq is gone, no more actions on it */
9fae8dd5
PV
4360 return;
4361
aee69d78 4362 /* mark bfqq as waiting a request only if a bic still points to it */
9fae8dd5 4363 if (!bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq) &&
aee69d78 4364 reason != BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT &&
9fae8dd5 4365 reason != BFQQE_BUDGET_EXHAUSTED) {
aee69d78 4366 bfq_mark_bfqq_non_blocking_wait_rq(bfqq);
9fae8dd5
PV
4367 /*
4368 * Not setting service to 0, because, if the next rq
4369 * arrives in time, the queue will go on receiving
4370 * service with this same budget (as if it never expired)
4371 */
4372 } else
4373 entity->service = 0;
8a511ba5
PV
4374
4375 /*
4376 * Reset the received-service counter for every parent entity.
4377 * Differently from what happens with bfqq->entity.service,
4378 * the resetting of this counter never needs to be postponed
4379 * for parent entities. In fact, in case bfqq may have a
4380 * chance to go on being served using the last, partially
4381 * consumed budget, bfqq->entity.service needs to be kept,
4382 * because if bfqq then actually goes on being served using
4383 * the same budget, the last value of bfqq->entity.service is
4384 * needed to properly decrement bfqq->entity.budget by the
4385 * portion already consumed. In contrast, it is not necessary
4386 * to keep entity->service for parent entities too, because
4387 * the bubble up of the new value of bfqq->entity.budget will
4388 * make sure that the budgets of parent entities are correct,
4389 * even in case bfqq and thus parent entities go on receiving
4390 * service with the same budget.
4391 */
4392 entity = entity->parent;
4393 for_each_entity(entity)
4394 entity->service = 0;
aee69d78
PV
4395}
4396
4397/*
4398 * Budget timeout is not implemented through a dedicated timer, but
4399 * just checked on request arrivals and completions, as well as on
4400 * idle timer expirations.
4401 */
4402static bool bfq_bfqq_budget_timeout(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4403{
44e44a1b 4404 return time_is_before_eq_jiffies(bfqq->budget_timeout);
aee69d78
PV
4405}
4406
4407/*
4408 * If we expire a queue that is actively waiting (i.e., with the
4409 * device idled) for the arrival of a new request, then we may incur
4410 * the timestamp misalignment problem described in the body of the
4411 * function __bfq_activate_entity. Hence we return true only if this
4412 * condition does not hold, or if the queue is slow enough to deserve
4413 * only to be kicked off for preserving a high throughput.
4414 */
4415static bool bfq_may_expire_for_budg_timeout(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4416{
4417 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq,
4418 "may_budget_timeout: wait_request %d left %d timeout %d",
4419 bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq),
4420 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq) >= bfqq->entity.budget / 3,
4421 bfq_bfqq_budget_timeout(bfqq));
4422
4423 return (!bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq) ||
4424 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq) >= bfqq->entity.budget / 3)
4425 &&
4426 bfq_bfqq_budget_timeout(bfqq);
4427}
4428
05c2f5c3
PV
4429static bool idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
4430 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
aee69d78 4431{
edaf9428
PV
4432 bool rot_without_queueing =
4433 !blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue) && !bfqd->hw_tag,
4434 bfqq_sequential_and_IO_bound,
05c2f5c3 4435 idling_boosts_thr;
d5be3fef 4436
f718b093
PV
4437 /* No point in idling for bfqq if it won't get requests any longer */
4438 if (unlikely(!bfqq_process_refs(bfqq)))
4439 return false;
4440
edaf9428
PV
4441 bfqq_sequential_and_IO_bound = !BFQQ_SEEKY(bfqq) &&
4442 bfq_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq) && bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
4443
aee69d78 4444 /*
44e44a1b
PV
4445 * The next variable takes into account the cases where idling
4446 * boosts the throughput.
4447 *
e01eff01
PV
4448 * The value of the variable is computed considering, first, that
4449 * idling is virtually always beneficial for the throughput if:
edaf9428
PV
4450 * (a) the device is not NCQ-capable and rotational, or
4451 * (b) regardless of the presence of NCQ, the device is rotational and
4452 * the request pattern for bfqq is I/O-bound and sequential, or
4453 * (c) regardless of whether it is rotational, the device is
4454 * not NCQ-capable and the request pattern for bfqq is
4455 * I/O-bound and sequential.
bf2b79e7
PV
4456 *
4457 * Secondly, and in contrast to the above item (b), idling an
4458 * NCQ-capable flash-based device would not boost the
e01eff01 4459 * throughput even with sequential I/O; rather it would lower
bf2b79e7
PV
4460 * the throughput in proportion to how fast the device
4461 * is. Accordingly, the next variable is true if any of the
edaf9428
PV
4462 * above conditions (a), (b) or (c) is true, and, in
4463 * particular, happens to be false if bfqd is an NCQ-capable
4464 * flash-based device.
aee69d78 4465 */
edaf9428
PV
4466 idling_boosts_thr = rot_without_queueing ||
4467 ((!blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue) || !bfqd->hw_tag) &&
4468 bfqq_sequential_and_IO_bound);
aee69d78 4469
cfd69712 4470 /*
05c2f5c3 4471 * The return value of this function is equal to that of
cfd69712
PV
4472 * idling_boosts_thr, unless a special case holds. In this
4473 * special case, described below, idling may cause problems to
4474 * weight-raised queues.
4475 *
4476 * When the request pool is saturated (e.g., in the presence
4477 * of write hogs), if the processes associated with
4478 * non-weight-raised queues ask for requests at a lower rate,
4479 * then processes associated with weight-raised queues have a
4480 * higher probability to get a request from the pool
4481 * immediately (or at least soon) when they need one. Thus
4482 * they have a higher probability to actually get a fraction
4483 * of the device throughput proportional to their high
4484 * weight. This is especially true with NCQ-capable drives,
4485 * which enqueue several requests in advance, and further
4486 * reorder internally-queued requests.
4487 *
05c2f5c3
PV
4488 * For this reason, we force to false the return value if
4489 * there are weight-raised busy queues. In this case, and if
4490 * bfqq is not weight-raised, this guarantees that the device
4491 * is not idled for bfqq (if, instead, bfqq is weight-raised,
4492 * then idling will be guaranteed by another variable, see
4493 * below). Combined with the timestamping rules of BFQ (see
4494 * [1] for details), this behavior causes bfqq, and hence any
4495 * sync non-weight-raised queue, to get a lower number of
4496 * requests served, and thus to ask for a lower number of
4497 * requests from the request pool, before the busy
4498 * weight-raised queues get served again. This often mitigates
4499 * starvation problems in the presence of heavy write
4500 * workloads and NCQ, thereby guaranteeing a higher
4501 * application and system responsiveness in these hostile
4502 * scenarios.
4503 */
4504 return idling_boosts_thr &&
cfd69712 4505 bfqd->wr_busy_queues == 0;
05c2f5c3 4506}
cfd69712 4507
05c2f5c3
PV
4508/*
4509 * For a queue that becomes empty, device idling is allowed only if
4510 * this function returns true for that queue. As a consequence, since
4511 * device idling plays a critical role for both throughput boosting
4512 * and service guarantees, the return value of this function plays a
4513 * critical role as well.
4514 *
4515 * In a nutshell, this function returns true only if idling is
4516 * beneficial for throughput or, even if detrimental for throughput,
4517 * idling is however necessary to preserve service guarantees (low
4518 * latency, desired throughput distribution, ...). In particular, on
4519 * NCQ-capable devices, this function tries to return false, so as to
4520 * help keep the drives' internal queues full, whenever this helps the
4521 * device boost the throughput without causing any service-guarantee
4522 * issue.
4523 *
4524 * Most of the issues taken into account to get the return value of
4525 * this function are not trivial. We discuss these issues in the two
4526 * functions providing the main pieces of information needed by this
4527 * function.
4528 */
4529static bool bfq_better_to_idle(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4530{
4531 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
4532 bool idling_boosts_thr_with_no_issue, idling_needed_for_service_guar;
4533
f718b093
PV
4534 /* No point in idling for bfqq if it won't get requests any longer */
4535 if (unlikely(!bfqq_process_refs(bfqq)))
4536 return false;
4537
05c2f5c3
PV
4538 if (unlikely(bfqd->strict_guarantees))
4539 return true;
4540
4541 /*
4542 * Idling is performed only if slice_idle > 0. In addition, we
4543 * do not idle if
4544 * (a) bfqq is async
4545 * (b) bfqq is in the idle io prio class: in this case we do
4546 * not idle because we want to minimize the bandwidth that
4547 * queues in this class can steal to higher-priority queues
4548 */
4549 if (bfqd->bfq_slice_idle == 0 || !bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) ||
4550 bfq_class_idle(bfqq))
4551 return false;
4552
4553 idling_boosts_thr_with_no_issue =
4554 idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(bfqd, bfqq);
4555
4556 idling_needed_for_service_guar =
4557 idling_needed_for_service_guarantees(bfqd, bfqq);
e1b2324d 4558
44e44a1b 4559 /*
05c2f5c3 4560 * We have now the two components we need to compute the
d5be3fef
PV
4561 * return value of the function, which is true only if idling
4562 * either boosts the throughput (without issues), or is
4563 * necessary to preserve service guarantees.
aee69d78 4564 */
05c2f5c3
PV
4565 return idling_boosts_thr_with_no_issue ||
4566 idling_needed_for_service_guar;
aee69d78
PV
4567}
4568
4569/*
277a4a9b 4570 * If the in-service queue is empty but the function bfq_better_to_idle
aee69d78
PV
4571 * returns true, then:
4572 * 1) the queue must remain in service and cannot be expired, and
4573 * 2) the device must be idled to wait for the possible arrival of a new
4574 * request for the queue.
277a4a9b 4575 * See the comments on the function bfq_better_to_idle for the reasons
aee69d78 4576 * why performing device idling is the best choice to boost the throughput
277a4a9b 4577 * and preserve service guarantees when bfq_better_to_idle itself
aee69d78
PV
4578 * returns true.
4579 */
4580static bool bfq_bfqq_must_idle(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4581{
277a4a9b 4582 return RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) && bfq_better_to_idle(bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
4583}
4584
2341d662
PV
4585/*
4586 * This function chooses the queue from which to pick the next extra
4587 * I/O request to inject, if it finds a compatible queue. See the
4588 * comments on bfq_update_inject_limit() for details on the injection
4589 * mechanism, and for the definitions of the quantities mentioned
4590 * below.
4591 */
4592static struct bfq_queue *
4593bfq_choose_bfqq_for_injection(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
d0edc247 4594{
2341d662
PV
4595 struct bfq_queue *bfqq, *in_serv_bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
4596 unsigned int limit = in_serv_bfqq->inject_limit;
4597 /*
4598 * If
4599 * - bfqq is not weight-raised and therefore does not carry
4600 * time-critical I/O,
4601 * or
4602 * - regardless of whether bfqq is weight-raised, bfqq has
4603 * however a long think time, during which it can absorb the
4604 * effect of an appropriate number of extra I/O requests
4605 * from other queues (see bfq_update_inject_limit for
4606 * details on the computation of this number);
4607 * then injection can be performed without restrictions.
4608 */
4609 bool in_serv_always_inject = in_serv_bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 ||
4610 !bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(in_serv_bfqq);
d0edc247
PV
4611
4612 /*
2341d662
PV
4613 * If
4614 * - the baseline total service time could not be sampled yet,
4615 * so the inject limit happens to be still 0, and
4616 * - a lot of time has elapsed since the plugging of I/O
4617 * dispatching started, so drive speed is being wasted
4618 * significantly;
4619 * then temporarily raise inject limit to one request.
4620 */
4621 if (limit == 0 && in_serv_bfqq->last_serv_time_ns == 0 &&
4622 bfq_bfqq_wait_request(in_serv_bfqq) &&
4623 time_is_before_eq_jiffies(bfqd->last_idling_start_jiffies +
4624 bfqd->bfq_slice_idle)
4625 )
4626 limit = 1;
4627
4628 if (bfqd->rq_in_driver >= limit)
4629 return NULL;
4630
4631 /*
4632 * Linear search of the source queue for injection; but, with
4633 * a high probability, very few steps are needed to find a
4634 * candidate queue, i.e., a queue with enough budget left for
4635 * its next request. In fact:
d0edc247
PV
4636 * - BFQ dynamically updates the budget of every queue so as
4637 * to accommodate the expected backlog of the queue;
4638 * - if a queue gets all its requests dispatched as injected
4639 * service, then the queue is removed from the active list
2341d662
PV
4640 * (and re-added only if it gets new requests, but then it
4641 * is assigned again enough budget for its new backlog).
d0edc247
PV
4642 */
4643 list_for_each_entry(bfqq, &bfqd->active_list, bfqq_list)
4644 if (!RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) &&
2341d662 4645 (in_serv_always_inject || bfqq->wr_coeff > 1) &&
d0edc247 4646 bfq_serv_to_charge(bfqq->next_rq, bfqq) <=
2341d662
PV
4647 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq)) {
4648 /*
4649 * Allow for only one large in-flight request
4650 * on non-rotational devices, for the
4651 * following reason. On non-rotationl drives,
4652 * large requests take much longer than
4653 * smaller requests to be served. In addition,
4654 * the drive prefers to serve large requests
4655 * w.r.t. to small ones, if it can choose. So,
4656 * having more than one large requests queued
4657 * in the drive may easily make the next first
4658 * request of the in-service queue wait for so
4659 * long to break bfqq's service guarantees. On
4660 * the bright side, large requests let the
4661 * drive reach a very high throughput, even if
4662 * there is only one in-flight large request
4663 * at a time.
4664 */
4665 if (blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue) &&
4666 blk_rq_sectors(bfqq->next_rq) >=
4667 BFQQ_SECT_THR_NONROT)
4668 limit = min_t(unsigned int, 1, limit);
4669 else
4670 limit = in_serv_bfqq->inject_limit;
4671
4672 if (bfqd->rq_in_driver < limit) {
4673 bfqd->rqs_injected = true;
4674 return bfqq;
4675 }
4676 }
d0edc247
PV
4677
4678 return NULL;
4679}
4680
aee69d78
PV
4681/*
4682 * Select a queue for service. If we have a current queue in service,
4683 * check whether to continue servicing it, or retrieve and set a new one.
4684 */
4685static struct bfq_queue *bfq_select_queue(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
4686{
4687 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
4688 struct request *next_rq;
4689 enum bfqq_expiration reason = BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT;
4690
4691 bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
4692 if (!bfqq)
4693 goto new_queue;
4694
4695 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "select_queue: already in-service queue");
4696
4420b095
PV
4697 /*
4698 * Do not expire bfqq for budget timeout if bfqq may be about
4699 * to enjoy device idling. The reason why, in this case, we
4700 * prevent bfqq from expiring is the same as in the comments
4701 * on the case where bfq_bfqq_must_idle() returns true, in
4702 * bfq_completed_request().
4703 */
aee69d78 4704 if (bfq_may_expire_for_budg_timeout(bfqq) &&
aee69d78
PV
4705 !bfq_bfqq_must_idle(bfqq))
4706 goto expire;
4707
4708check_queue:
4709 /*
4710 * This loop is rarely executed more than once. Even when it
4711 * happens, it is much more convenient to re-execute this loop
4712 * than to return NULL and trigger a new dispatch to get a
4713 * request served.
4714 */
4715 next_rq = bfqq->next_rq;
4716 /*
4717 * If bfqq has requests queued and it has enough budget left to
4718 * serve them, keep the queue, otherwise expire it.
4719 */
4720 if (next_rq) {
4721 if (bfq_serv_to_charge(next_rq, bfqq) >
4722 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq)) {
4723 /*
4724 * Expire the queue for budget exhaustion,
4725 * which makes sure that the next budget is
4726 * enough to serve the next request, even if
4727 * it comes from the fifo expired path.
4728 */
4729 reason = BFQQE_BUDGET_EXHAUSTED;
4730 goto expire;
4731 } else {
4732 /*
4733 * The idle timer may be pending because we may
4734 * not disable disk idling even when a new request
4735 * arrives.
4736 */
4737 if (bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq)) {
4738 /*
4739 * If we get here: 1) at least a new request
4740 * has arrived but we have not disabled the
4741 * timer because the request was too small,
4742 * 2) then the block layer has unplugged
4743 * the device, causing the dispatch to be
4744 * invoked.
4745 *
4746 * Since the device is unplugged, now the
4747 * requests are probably large enough to
4748 * provide a reasonable throughput.
4749 * So we disable idling.
4750 */
4751 bfq_clear_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
4752 hrtimer_try_to_cancel(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer);
4753 }
4754 goto keep_queue;
4755 }
4756 }
4757
4758 /*
4759 * No requests pending. However, if the in-service queue is idling
4760 * for a new request, or has requests waiting for a completion and
4761 * may idle after their completion, then keep it anyway.
d0edc247 4762 *
2341d662
PV
4763 * Yet, inject service from other queues if it boosts
4764 * throughput and is possible.
aee69d78
PV
4765 */
4766 if (bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq) ||
277a4a9b 4767 (bfqq->dispatched != 0 && bfq_better_to_idle(bfqq))) {
2341d662
PV
4768 struct bfq_queue *async_bfqq =
4769 bfqq->bic && bfqq->bic->bfqq[0] &&
3726112e
PV
4770 bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq->bic->bfqq[0]) &&
4771 bfqq->bic->bfqq[0]->next_rq ?
2341d662 4772 bfqq->bic->bfqq[0] : NULL;
2ec5a5c4
PV
4773 struct bfq_queue *blocked_bfqq =
4774 !hlist_empty(&bfqq->woken_list) ?
4775 container_of(bfqq->woken_list.first,
4776 struct bfq_queue,
4777 woken_list_node)
4778 : NULL;
2341d662
PV
4779
4780 /*
2ec5a5c4 4781 * The next four mutually-exclusive ifs decide
13a857a4
PV
4782 * whether to try injection, and choose the queue to
4783 * pick an I/O request from.
4784 *
4785 * The first if checks whether the process associated
4786 * with bfqq has also async I/O pending. If so, it
4787 * injects such I/O unconditionally. Injecting async
4788 * I/O from the same process can cause no harm to the
4789 * process. On the contrary, it can only increase
4790 * bandwidth and reduce latency for the process.
4791 *
4792 * The second if checks whether there happens to be a
4793 * non-empty waker queue for bfqq, i.e., a queue whose
4794 * I/O needs to be completed for bfqq to receive new
4795 * I/O. This happens, e.g., if bfqq is associated with
4796 * a process that does some sync. A sync generates
4797 * extra blocking I/O, which must be completed before
4798 * the process associated with bfqq can go on with its
4799 * I/O. If the I/O of the waker queue is not served,
4800 * then bfqq remains empty, and no I/O is dispatched,
4801 * until the idle timeout fires for bfqq. This is
4802 * likely to result in lower bandwidth and higher
4803 * latencies for bfqq, and in a severe loss of total
4804 * throughput. The best action to take is therefore to
4805 * serve the waker queue as soon as possible. So do it
4806 * (without relying on the third alternative below for
4807 * eventually serving waker_bfqq's I/O; see the last
4808 * paragraph for further details). This systematic
4809 * injection of I/O from the waker queue does not
4810 * cause any delay to bfqq's I/O. On the contrary,
4811 * next bfqq's I/O is brought forward dramatically,
4812 * for it is not blocked for milliseconds.
4813 *
2ec5a5c4
PV
4814 * The third if checks whether there is a queue woken
4815 * by bfqq, and currently with pending I/O. Such a
4816 * woken queue does not steal bandwidth from bfqq,
4817 * because it remains soon without I/O if bfqq is not
4818 * served. So there is virtually no risk of loss of
4819 * bandwidth for bfqq if this woken queue has I/O
4820 * dispatched while bfqq is waiting for new I/O.
4821 *
4822 * The fourth if checks whether bfqq is a queue for
13a857a4
PV
4823 * which it is better to avoid injection. It is so if
4824 * bfqq delivers more throughput when served without
4825 * any further I/O from other queues in the middle, or
4826 * if the service times of bfqq's I/O requests both
4827 * count more than overall throughput, and may be
4828 * easily increased by injection (this happens if bfqq
4829 * has a short think time). If none of these
4830 * conditions holds, then a candidate queue for
4831 * injection is looked for through
4832 * bfq_choose_bfqq_for_injection(). Note that the
4833 * latter may return NULL (for example if the inject
4834 * limit for bfqq is currently 0).
4835 *
4836 * NOTE: motivation for the second alternative
4837 *
4838 * Thanks to the way the inject limit is updated in
4839 * bfq_update_has_short_ttime(), it is rather likely
4840 * that, if I/O is being plugged for bfqq and the
4841 * waker queue has pending I/O requests that are
2ec5a5c4 4842 * blocking bfqq's I/O, then the fourth alternative
13a857a4
PV
4843 * above lets the waker queue get served before the
4844 * I/O-plugging timeout fires. So one may deem the
4845 * second alternative superfluous. It is not, because
2ec5a5c4 4846 * the fourth alternative may be way less effective in
13a857a4
PV
4847 * case of a synchronization. For two main
4848 * reasons. First, throughput may be low because the
4849 * inject limit may be too low to guarantee the same
4850 * amount of injected I/O, from the waker queue or
4851 * other queues, that the second alternative
4852 * guarantees (the second alternative unconditionally
4853 * injects a pending I/O request of the waker queue
4854 * for each bfq_dispatch_request()). Second, with the
2ec5a5c4 4855 * fourth alternative, the duration of the plugging,
13a857a4
PV
4856 * i.e., the time before bfqq finally receives new I/O,
4857 * may not be minimized, because the waker queue may
4858 * happen to be served only after other queues.
2341d662
PV
4859 */
4860 if (async_bfqq &&
4861 icq_to_bic(async_bfqq->next_rq->elv.icq) == bfqq->bic &&
4862 bfq_serv_to_charge(async_bfqq->next_rq, async_bfqq) <=
4863 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(async_bfqq))
4864 bfqq = bfqq->bic->bfqq[0];
71217df3 4865 else if (bfqq->waker_bfqq &&
13a857a4 4866 bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq->waker_bfqq) &&
d4fc3640 4867 bfqq->waker_bfqq->next_rq &&
13a857a4
PV
4868 bfq_serv_to_charge(bfqq->waker_bfqq->next_rq,
4869 bfqq->waker_bfqq) <=
4870 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(bfqq->waker_bfqq)
4871 )
4872 bfqq = bfqq->waker_bfqq;
2ec5a5c4
PV
4873 else if (blocked_bfqq &&
4874 bfq_bfqq_busy(blocked_bfqq) &&
4875 blocked_bfqq->next_rq &&
4876 bfq_serv_to_charge(blocked_bfqq->next_rq,
4877 blocked_bfqq) <=
4878 bfq_bfqq_budget_left(blocked_bfqq)
4879 )
4880 bfqq = blocked_bfqq;
2341d662
PV
4881 else if (!idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(bfqd, bfqq) &&
4882 (bfqq->wr_coeff == 1 || bfqd->wr_busy_queues > 1 ||
4883 !bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq)))
d0edc247
PV
4884 bfqq = bfq_choose_bfqq_for_injection(bfqd);
4885 else
4886 bfqq = NULL;
4887
aee69d78
PV
4888 goto keep_queue;
4889 }
4890
4891 reason = BFQQE_NO_MORE_REQUESTS;
4892expire:
4893 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, false, reason);
4894new_queue:
4895 bfqq = bfq_set_in_service_queue(bfqd);
4896 if (bfqq) {
4897 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "select_queue: checking new queue");
4898 goto check_queue;
4899 }
4900keep_queue:
4901 if (bfqq)
4902 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "select_queue: returned this queue");
4903 else
4904 bfq_log(bfqd, "select_queue: no queue returned");
4905
4906 return bfqq;
4907}
4908
44e44a1b
PV
4909static void bfq_update_wr_data(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4910{
4911 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
4912
4913 if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1) { /* queue is being weight-raised */
4914 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq,
4915 "raising period dur %u/%u msec, old coeff %u, w %d(%d)",
4916 jiffies_to_msecs(jiffies - bfqq->last_wr_start_finish),
4917 jiffies_to_msecs(bfqq->wr_cur_max_time),
4918 bfqq->wr_coeff,
4919 bfqq->entity.weight, bfqq->entity.orig_weight);
4920
4921 if (entity->prio_changed)
4922 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "WARN: pending prio change");
4923
4924 /*
e1b2324d
AA
4925 * If the queue was activated in a burst, or too much
4926 * time has elapsed from the beginning of this
4927 * weight-raising period, then end weight raising.
44e44a1b 4928 */
e1b2324d
AA
4929 if (bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq))
4930 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
4931 else if (time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->last_wr_start_finish +
4932 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time)) {
77b7dcea
PV
4933 if (bfqq->wr_cur_max_time != bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time ||
4934 time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt +
3c337690
PV
4935 bfq_wr_duration(bfqd))) {
4936 /*
4937 * Either in interactive weight
4938 * raising, or in soft_rt weight
4939 * raising with the
4940 * interactive-weight-raising period
4941 * elapsed (so no switch back to
4942 * interactive weight raising).
4943 */
77b7dcea 4944 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
3c337690
PV
4945 } else { /*
4946 * soft_rt finishing while still in
4947 * interactive period, switch back to
4948 * interactive weight raising
4949 */
3e2bdd6d 4950 switch_back_to_interactive_wr(bfqq, bfqd);
77b7dcea
PV
4951 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
4952 }
44e44a1b 4953 }
8a8747dc
PV
4954 if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 &&
4955 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time != bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time &&
4956 bfqq->service_from_wr > max_service_from_wr) {
4957 /* see comments on max_service_from_wr */
4958 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
4959 }
44e44a1b 4960 }
431b17f9
PV
4961 /*
4962 * To improve latency (for this or other queues), immediately
4963 * update weight both if it must be raised and if it must be
4964 * lowered. Since, entity may be on some active tree here, and
4965 * might have a pending change of its ioprio class, invoke
4966 * next function with the last parameter unset (see the
4967 * comments on the function).
4968 */
44e44a1b 4969 if ((entity->weight > entity->orig_weight) != (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1))
431b17f9
PV
4970 __bfq_entity_update_weight_prio(bfq_entity_service_tree(entity),
4971 entity, false);
44e44a1b
PV
4972}
4973
aee69d78
PV
4974/*
4975 * Dispatch next request from bfqq.
4976 */
4977static struct request *bfq_dispatch_rq_from_bfqq(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
4978 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
4979{
4980 struct request *rq = bfqq->next_rq;
4981 unsigned long service_to_charge;
4982
4983 service_to_charge = bfq_serv_to_charge(rq, bfqq);
4984
4985 bfq_bfqq_served(bfqq, service_to_charge);
4986
2341d662
PV
4987 if (bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue && bfqd->wait_dispatch) {
4988 bfqd->wait_dispatch = false;
4989 bfqd->waited_rq = rq;
4990 }
aee69d78 4991
2341d662 4992 bfq_dispatch_remove(bfqd->queue, rq);
d0edc247 4993
2341d662 4994 if (bfqq != bfqd->in_service_queue)
d0edc247 4995 goto return_rq;
d0edc247 4996
44e44a1b
PV
4997 /*
4998 * If weight raising has to terminate for bfqq, then next
4999 * function causes an immediate update of bfqq's weight,
5000 * without waiting for next activation. As a consequence, on
5001 * expiration, bfqq will be timestamped as if has never been
5002 * weight-raised during this service slot, even if it has
5003 * received part or even most of the service as a
5004 * weight-raised queue. This inflates bfqq's timestamps, which
5005 * is beneficial, as bfqq is then more willing to leave the
5006 * device immediately to possible other weight-raised queues.
5007 */
5008 bfq_update_wr_data(bfqd, bfqq);
5009
aee69d78
PV
5010 /*
5011 * Expire bfqq, pretending that its budget expired, if bfqq
5012 * belongs to CLASS_IDLE and other queues are waiting for
5013 * service.
5014 */
73d58118 5015 if (!(bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) > 1 && bfq_class_idle(bfqq)))
d0edc247 5016 goto return_rq;
aee69d78 5017
aee69d78 5018 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, false, BFQQE_BUDGET_EXHAUSTED);
d0edc247
PV
5019
5020return_rq:
aee69d78
PV
5021 return rq;
5022}
5023
5024static bool bfq_has_work(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx)
5025{
5026 struct bfq_data *bfqd = hctx->queue->elevator->elevator_data;
5027
5028 /*
5029 * Avoiding lock: a race on bfqd->busy_queues should cause at
5030 * most a call to dispatch for nothing
5031 */
5032 return !list_empty_careful(&bfqd->dispatch) ||
73d58118 5033 bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) > 0;
aee69d78
PV
5034}
5035
5036static struct request *__bfq_dispatch_request(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx)
5037{
5038 struct bfq_data *bfqd = hctx->queue->elevator->elevator_data;
5039 struct request *rq = NULL;
5040 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = NULL;
5041
5042 if (!list_empty(&bfqd->dispatch)) {
5043 rq = list_first_entry(&bfqd->dispatch, struct request,
5044 queuelist);
5045 list_del_init(&rq->queuelist);
5046
5047 bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
5048
5049 if (bfqq) {
5050 /*
5051 * Increment counters here, because this
5052 * dispatch does not follow the standard
5053 * dispatch flow (where counters are
5054 * incremented)
5055 */
5056 bfqq->dispatched++;
5057
5058 goto inc_in_driver_start_rq;
5059 }
5060
5061 /*
a7877390
PV
5062 * We exploit the bfq_finish_requeue_request hook to
5063 * decrement rq_in_driver, but
5064 * bfq_finish_requeue_request will not be invoked on
5065 * this request. So, to avoid unbalance, just start
5066 * this request, without incrementing rq_in_driver. As
5067 * a negative consequence, rq_in_driver is deceptively
5068 * lower than it should be while this request is in
5069 * service. This may cause bfq_schedule_dispatch to be
5070 * invoked uselessly.
aee69d78
PV
5071 *
5072 * As for implementing an exact solution, the
a7877390
PV
5073 * bfq_finish_requeue_request hook, if defined, is
5074 * probably invoked also on this request. So, by
5075 * exploiting this hook, we could 1) increment
5076 * rq_in_driver here, and 2) decrement it in
5077 * bfq_finish_requeue_request. Such a solution would
5078 * let the value of the counter be always accurate,
5079 * but it would entail using an extra interface
5080 * function. This cost seems higher than the benefit,
5081 * being the frequency of non-elevator-private
aee69d78
PV
5082 * requests very low.
5083 */
5084 goto start_rq;
5085 }
5086
73d58118
PV
5087 bfq_log(bfqd, "dispatch requests: %d busy queues",
5088 bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd));
aee69d78 5089
73d58118 5090 if (bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) == 0)
aee69d78
PV
5091 goto exit;
5092
5093 /*
5094 * Force device to serve one request at a time if
5095 * strict_guarantees is true. Forcing this service scheme is
5096 * currently the ONLY way to guarantee that the request
5097 * service order enforced by the scheduler is respected by a
5098 * queueing device. Otherwise the device is free even to make
5099 * some unlucky request wait for as long as the device
5100 * wishes.
5101 *
f06678af 5102 * Of course, serving one request at a time may cause loss of
aee69d78
PV
5103 * throughput.
5104 */
5105 if (bfqd->strict_guarantees && bfqd->rq_in_driver > 0)
5106 goto exit;
5107
5108 bfqq = bfq_select_queue(bfqd);
5109 if (!bfqq)
5110 goto exit;
5111
5112 rq = bfq_dispatch_rq_from_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq);
5113
5114 if (rq) {
5115inc_in_driver_start_rq:
5116 bfqd->rq_in_driver++;
5117start_rq:
5118 rq->rq_flags |= RQF_STARTED;
5119 }
5120exit:
5121 return rq;
5122}
5123
8060c47b 5124#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_CGROUP_DEBUG
9b25bd03
PV
5125static void bfq_update_dispatch_stats(struct request_queue *q,
5126 struct request *rq,
5127 struct bfq_queue *in_serv_queue,
5128 bool idle_timer_disabled)
5129{
5130 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = rq ? RQ_BFQQ(rq) : NULL;
aee69d78 5131
24bfd19b 5132 if (!idle_timer_disabled && !bfqq)
9b25bd03 5133 return;
24bfd19b
PV
5134
5135 /*
5136 * rq and bfqq are guaranteed to exist until this function
5137 * ends, for the following reasons. First, rq can be
5138 * dispatched to the device, and then can be completed and
5139 * freed, only after this function ends. Second, rq cannot be
5140 * merged (and thus freed because of a merge) any longer,
5141 * because it has already started. Thus rq cannot be freed
5142 * before this function ends, and, since rq has a reference to
5143 * bfqq, the same guarantee holds for bfqq too.
5144 *
5145 * In addition, the following queue lock guarantees that
5146 * bfqq_group(bfqq) exists as well.
5147 */
0d945c1f 5148 spin_lock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
24bfd19b
PV
5149 if (idle_timer_disabled)
5150 /*
5151 * Since the idle timer has been disabled,
5152 * in_serv_queue contained some request when
5153 * __bfq_dispatch_request was invoked above, which
5154 * implies that rq was picked exactly from
5155 * in_serv_queue. Thus in_serv_queue == bfqq, and is
5156 * therefore guaranteed to exist because of the above
5157 * arguments.
5158 */
5159 bfqg_stats_update_idle_time(bfqq_group(in_serv_queue));
5160 if (bfqq) {
5161 struct bfq_group *bfqg = bfqq_group(bfqq);
5162
5163 bfqg_stats_update_avg_queue_size(bfqg);
5164 bfqg_stats_set_start_empty_time(bfqg);
5165 bfqg_stats_update_io_remove(bfqg, rq->cmd_flags);
5166 }
0d945c1f 5167 spin_unlock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
9b25bd03
PV
5168}
5169#else
5170static inline void bfq_update_dispatch_stats(struct request_queue *q,
5171 struct request *rq,
5172 struct bfq_queue *in_serv_queue,
5173 bool idle_timer_disabled) {}
8060c47b 5174#endif /* CONFIG_BFQ_CGROUP_DEBUG */
24bfd19b 5175
9b25bd03
PV
5176static struct request *bfq_dispatch_request(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx)
5177{
5178 struct bfq_data *bfqd = hctx->queue->elevator->elevator_data;
5179 struct request *rq;
5180 struct bfq_queue *in_serv_queue;
5181 bool waiting_rq, idle_timer_disabled;
5182
5183 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
5184
5185 in_serv_queue = bfqd->in_service_queue;
5186 waiting_rq = in_serv_queue && bfq_bfqq_wait_request(in_serv_queue);
5187
5188 rq = __bfq_dispatch_request(hctx);
5189
5190 idle_timer_disabled =
5191 waiting_rq && !bfq_bfqq_wait_request(in_serv_queue);
5192
5193 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
5194
5195 bfq_update_dispatch_stats(hctx->queue, rq, in_serv_queue,
5196 idle_timer_disabled);
5197
aee69d78
PV
5198 return rq;
5199}
5200
5201/*
5202 * Task holds one reference to the queue, dropped when task exits. Each rq
5203 * in-flight on this queue also holds a reference, dropped when rq is freed.
5204 *
5205 * Scheduler lock must be held here. Recall not to use bfqq after calling
5206 * this function on it.
5207 */
ea25da48 5208void bfq_put_queue(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
aee69d78 5209{
3f758e84
PV
5210 struct bfq_queue *item;
5211 struct hlist_node *n;
e21b7a0b 5212 struct bfq_group *bfqg = bfqq_group(bfqq);
e21b7a0b 5213
aee69d78
PV
5214 if (bfqq->bfqd)
5215 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq, "put_queue: %p %d",
5216 bfqq, bfqq->ref);
5217
5218 bfqq->ref--;
5219 if (bfqq->ref)
5220 return;
5221
99fead8d 5222 if (!hlist_unhashed(&bfqq->burst_list_node)) {
e1b2324d 5223 hlist_del_init(&bfqq->burst_list_node);
99fead8d
PV
5224 /*
5225 * Decrement also burst size after the removal, if the
5226 * process associated with bfqq is exiting, and thus
5227 * does not contribute to the burst any longer. This
5228 * decrement helps filter out false positives of large
5229 * bursts, when some short-lived process (often due to
5230 * the execution of commands by some service) happens
5231 * to start and exit while a complex application is
5232 * starting, and thus spawning several processes that
5233 * do I/O (and that *must not* be treated as a large
5234 * burst, see comments on bfq_handle_burst).
5235 *
5236 * In particular, the decrement is performed only if:
5237 * 1) bfqq is not a merged queue, because, if it is,
5238 * then this free of bfqq is not triggered by the exit
5239 * of the process bfqq is associated with, but exactly
5240 * by the fact that bfqq has just been merged.
5241 * 2) burst_size is greater than 0, to handle
5242 * unbalanced decrements. Unbalanced decrements may
5243 * happen in te following case: bfqq is inserted into
5244 * the current burst list--without incrementing
5245 * bust_size--because of a split, but the current
5246 * burst list is not the burst list bfqq belonged to
5247 * (see comments on the case of a split in
5248 * bfq_set_request).
5249 */
5250 if (bfqq->bic && bfqq->bfqd->burst_size > 0)
5251 bfqq->bfqd->burst_size--;
7cb04004 5252 }
e21b7a0b 5253
3f758e84
PV
5254 /*
5255 * bfqq does not exist any longer, so it cannot be woken by
5256 * any other queue, and cannot wake any other queue. Then bfqq
5257 * must be removed from the woken list of its possible waker
5258 * queue, and all queues in the woken list of bfqq must stop
5259 * having a waker queue. Strictly speaking, these updates
5260 * should be performed when bfqq remains with no I/O source
5261 * attached to it, which happens before bfqq gets freed. In
5262 * particular, this happens when the last process associated
5263 * with bfqq exits or gets associated with a different
5264 * queue. However, both events lead to bfqq being freed soon,
5265 * and dangling references would come out only after bfqq gets
5266 * freed. So these updates are done here, as a simple and safe
5267 * way to handle all cases.
5268 */
5269 /* remove bfqq from woken list */
5270 if (!hlist_unhashed(&bfqq->woken_list_node))
5271 hlist_del_init(&bfqq->woken_list_node);
5272
5273 /* reset waker for all queues in woken list */
5274 hlist_for_each_entry_safe(item, n, &bfqq->woken_list,
5275 woken_list_node) {
5276 item->waker_bfqq = NULL;
3f758e84
PV
5277 hlist_del_init(&item->woken_list_node);
5278 }
5279
08d383a7
PV
5280 if (bfqq->bfqd && bfqq->bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq == bfqq)
5281 bfqq->bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq = NULL;
5282
aee69d78 5283 kmem_cache_free(bfq_pool, bfqq);
8f9bebc3 5284 bfqg_and_blkg_put(bfqg);
aee69d78
PV
5285}
5286
430a67f9
PV
5287static void bfq_put_stable_ref(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
5288{
5289 bfqq->stable_ref--;
5290 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
5291}
5292
36eca894
AA
5293static void bfq_put_cooperator(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
5294{
5295 struct bfq_queue *__bfqq, *next;
5296
5297 /*
5298 * If this queue was scheduled to merge with another queue, be
5299 * sure to drop the reference taken on that queue (and others in
5300 * the merge chain). See bfq_setup_merge and bfq_merge_bfqqs.
5301 */
5302 __bfqq = bfqq->new_bfqq;
5303 while (__bfqq) {
5304 if (__bfqq == bfqq)
5305 break;
5306 next = __bfqq->new_bfqq;
5307 bfq_put_queue(__bfqq);
5308 __bfqq = next;
5309 }
5310}
5311
aee69d78
PV
5312static void bfq_exit_bfqq(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
5313{
5314 if (bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue) {
3726112e 5315 __bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT);
aee69d78
PV
5316 bfq_schedule_dispatch(bfqd);
5317 }
5318
5319 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "exit_bfqq: %p, %d", bfqq, bfqq->ref);
5320
36eca894
AA
5321 bfq_put_cooperator(bfqq);
5322
478de338 5323 bfq_release_process_ref(bfqd, bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
5324}
5325
5326static void bfq_exit_icq_bfqq(struct bfq_io_cq *bic, bool is_sync)
5327{
5328 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bic_to_bfqq(bic, is_sync);
5329 struct bfq_data *bfqd;
5330
5331 if (bfqq)
5332 bfqd = bfqq->bfqd; /* NULL if scheduler already exited */
5333
5334 if (bfqq && bfqd) {
5335 unsigned long flags;
5336
5337 spin_lock_irqsave(&bfqd->lock, flags);
dbc3117d 5338 bfqq->bic = NULL;
aee69d78
PV
5339 bfq_exit_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq);
5340 bic_set_bfqq(bic, NULL, is_sync);
6fa3e8d3 5341 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bfqd->lock, flags);
aee69d78
PV
5342 }
5343}
5344
5345static void bfq_exit_icq(struct io_cq *icq)
5346{
5347 struct bfq_io_cq *bic = icq_to_bic(icq);
5348
430a67f9
PV
5349 if (bic->stable_merge_bfqq) {
5350 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bic->stable_merge_bfqq->bfqd;
5351
5352 /*
5353 * bfqd is NULL if scheduler already exited, and in
5354 * that case this is the last time bfqq is accessed.
5355 */
5356 if (bfqd) {
5357 unsigned long flags;
5358
5359 spin_lock_irqsave(&bfqd->lock, flags);
5360 bfq_put_stable_ref(bic->stable_merge_bfqq);
5361 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bfqd->lock, flags);
5362 } else {
5363 bfq_put_stable_ref(bic->stable_merge_bfqq);
5364 }
5365 }
5366
aee69d78
PV
5367 bfq_exit_icq_bfqq(bic, true);
5368 bfq_exit_icq_bfqq(bic, false);
5369}
5370
5371/*
5372 * Update the entity prio values; note that the new values will not
5373 * be used until the next (re)activation.
5374 */
5375static void
5376bfq_set_next_ioprio_data(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, struct bfq_io_cq *bic)
5377{
5378 struct task_struct *tsk = current;
5379 int ioprio_class;
5380 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
5381
5382 if (!bfqd)
5383 return;
5384
5385 ioprio_class = IOPRIO_PRIO_CLASS(bic->ioprio);
5386 switch (ioprio_class) {
5387 default:
d51cfc53 5388 pr_err("bdi %s: bfq: bad prio class %d\n",
d152c682 5389 bdi_dev_name(bfqq->bfqd->queue->disk->bdi),
edb0872f 5390 ioprio_class);
df561f66 5391 fallthrough;
aee69d78
PV
5392 case IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE:
5393 /*
5394 * No prio set, inherit CPU scheduling settings.
5395 */
5396 bfqq->new_ioprio = task_nice_ioprio(tsk);
5397 bfqq->new_ioprio_class = task_nice_ioclass(tsk);
5398 break;
5399 case IOPRIO_CLASS_RT:
5400 bfqq->new_ioprio = IOPRIO_PRIO_DATA(bic->ioprio);
5401 bfqq->new_ioprio_class = IOPRIO_CLASS_RT;
5402 break;
5403 case IOPRIO_CLASS_BE:
5404 bfqq->new_ioprio = IOPRIO_PRIO_DATA(bic->ioprio);
5405 bfqq->new_ioprio_class = IOPRIO_CLASS_BE;
5406 break;
5407 case IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE:
5408 bfqq->new_ioprio_class = IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE;
5409 bfqq->new_ioprio = 7;
aee69d78
PV
5410 break;
5411 }
5412
202bc942 5413 if (bfqq->new_ioprio >= IOPRIO_NR_LEVELS) {
aee69d78
PV
5414 pr_crit("bfq_set_next_ioprio_data: new_ioprio %d\n",
5415 bfqq->new_ioprio);
202bc942 5416 bfqq->new_ioprio = IOPRIO_NR_LEVELS - 1;
aee69d78
PV
5417 }
5418
5419 bfqq->entity.new_weight = bfq_ioprio_to_weight(bfqq->new_ioprio);
3c337690
PV
5420 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "new_ioprio %d new_weight %d",
5421 bfqq->new_ioprio, bfqq->entity.new_weight);
aee69d78
PV
5422 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
5423}
5424
ea25da48
PV
5425static struct bfq_queue *bfq_get_queue(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
5426 struct bio *bio, bool is_sync,
430a67f9
PV
5427 struct bfq_io_cq *bic,
5428 bool respawn);
ea25da48 5429
aee69d78
PV
5430static void bfq_check_ioprio_change(struct bfq_io_cq *bic, struct bio *bio)
5431{
5432 struct bfq_data *bfqd = bic_to_bfqd(bic);
5433 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
5434 int ioprio = bic->icq.ioc->ioprio;
5435
5436 /*
5437 * This condition may trigger on a newly created bic, be sure to
5438 * drop the lock before returning.
5439 */
5440 if (unlikely(!bfqd) || likely(bic->ioprio == ioprio))
5441 return;
5442
5443 bic->ioprio = ioprio;
5444
5445 bfqq = bic_to_bfqq(bic, false);
5446 if (bfqq) {
478de338 5447 bfq_release_process_ref(bfqd, bfqq);
430a67f9 5448 bfqq = bfq_get_queue(bfqd, bio, BLK_RW_ASYNC, bic, true);
aee69d78
PV
5449 bic_set_bfqq(bic, bfqq, false);
5450 }
5451
5452 bfqq = bic_to_bfqq(bic, true);
5453 if (bfqq)
5454 bfq_set_next_ioprio_data(bfqq, bic);
5455}
5456
5457static void bfq_init_bfqq(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5458 struct bfq_io_cq *bic, pid_t pid, int is_sync)
5459{
eb2fd80f
PV
5460 u64 now_ns = ktime_get_ns();
5461
aee69d78
PV
5462 RB_CLEAR_NODE(&bfqq->entity.rb_node);
5463 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bfqq->fifo);
e1b2324d 5464 INIT_HLIST_NODE(&bfqq->burst_list_node);
13a857a4
PV
5465 INIT_HLIST_NODE(&bfqq->woken_list_node);
5466 INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&bfqq->woken_list);
aee69d78
PV
5467
5468 bfqq->ref = 0;
5469 bfqq->bfqd = bfqd;
5470
5471 if (bic)
5472 bfq_set_next_ioprio_data(bfqq, bic);
5473
5474 if (is_sync) {
d5be3fef
PV
5475 /*
5476 * No need to mark as has_short_ttime if in
5477 * idle_class, because no device idling is performed
5478 * for queues in idle class
5479 */
aee69d78 5480 if (!bfq_class_idle(bfqq))
d5be3fef
PV
5481 /* tentatively mark as has_short_ttime */
5482 bfq_mark_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
aee69d78 5483 bfq_mark_bfqq_sync(bfqq);
e1b2324d 5484 bfq_mark_bfqq_just_created(bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
5485 } else
5486 bfq_clear_bfqq_sync(bfqq);
5487
5488 /* set end request to minus infinity from now */
eb2fd80f
PV
5489 bfqq->ttime.last_end_request = now_ns + 1;
5490
430a67f9
PV
5491 bfqq->creation_time = jiffies;
5492
eb2fd80f 5493 bfqq->io_start_time = now_ns;
aee69d78
PV
5494
5495 bfq_mark_bfqq_IO_bound(bfqq);
5496
5497 bfqq->pid = pid;
5498
5499 /* Tentative initial value to trade off between thr and lat */
54b60456 5500 bfqq->max_budget = (2 * bfq_max_budget(bfqd)) / 3;
aee69d78 5501 bfqq->budget_timeout = bfq_smallest_from_now();
aee69d78 5502
44e44a1b 5503 bfqq->wr_coeff = 1;
36eca894 5504 bfqq->last_wr_start_finish = jiffies;
77b7dcea 5505 bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt = bfq_smallest_from_now();
36eca894 5506 bfqq->split_time = bfq_smallest_from_now();
77b7dcea
PV
5507
5508 /*
a34b0244
PV
5509 * To not forget the possibly high bandwidth consumed by a
5510 * process/queue in the recent past,
5511 * bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start() returns a value at least equal
5512 * to the current value of bfqq->soft_rt_next_start (see
5513 * comments on bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start). Set
5514 * soft_rt_next_start to now, to mean that bfqq has consumed
5515 * no bandwidth so far.
77b7dcea 5516 */
a34b0244 5517 bfqq->soft_rt_next_start = jiffies;
44e44a1b 5518
aee69d78
PV
5519 /* first request is almost certainly seeky */
5520 bfqq->seek_history = 1;
5521}
5522
5523static struct bfq_queue **bfq_async_queue_prio(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
e21b7a0b 5524 struct bfq_group *bfqg,
aee69d78
PV
5525 int ioprio_class, int ioprio)
5526{
5527 switch (ioprio_class) {
5528 case IOPRIO_CLASS_RT:
e21b7a0b 5529 return &bfqg->async_bfqq[0][ioprio];
aee69d78 5530 case IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE:
e70344c0 5531 ioprio = IOPRIO_BE_NORM;
df561f66 5532 fallthrough;
aee69d78 5533 case IOPRIO_CLASS_BE:
e21b7a0b 5534 return &bfqg->async_bfqq[1][ioprio];
aee69d78 5535 case IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE:
e21b7a0b 5536 return &bfqg->async_idle_bfqq;
aee69d78
PV
5537 default:
5538 return NULL;
5539 }
5540}
5541
430a67f9
PV
5542static struct bfq_queue *
5543bfq_do_early_stable_merge(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5544 struct bfq_io_cq *bic,
5545 struct bfq_queue *last_bfqq_created)
5546{
5547 struct bfq_queue *new_bfqq =
5548 bfq_setup_merge(bfqq, last_bfqq_created);
5549
5550 if (!new_bfqq)
5551 return bfqq;
5552
5553 if (new_bfqq->bic)
5554 new_bfqq->bic->stably_merged = true;
5555 bic->stably_merged = true;
5556
5557 /*
5558 * Reusing merge functions. This implies that
5559 * bfqq->bic must be set too, for
5560 * bfq_merge_bfqqs to correctly save bfqq's
5561 * state before killing it.
5562 */
5563 bfqq->bic = bic;
5564 bfq_merge_bfqqs(bfqd, bic, bfqq, new_bfqq);
5565
5566 return new_bfqq;
5567}
5568
5569/*
5570 * Many throughput-sensitive workloads are made of several parallel
5571 * I/O flows, with all flows generated by the same application, or
5572 * more generically by the same task (e.g., system boot). The most
5573 * counterproductive action with these workloads is plugging I/O
5574 * dispatch when one of the bfq_queues associated with these flows
5575 * remains temporarily empty.
5576 *
5577 * To avoid this plugging, BFQ has been using a burst-handling
5578 * mechanism for years now. This mechanism has proven effective for
5579 * throughput, and not detrimental for service guarantees. The
5580 * following function pushes this mechanism a little bit further,
5581 * basing on the following two facts.
5582 *
5583 * First, all the I/O flows of a the same application or task
5584 * contribute to the execution/completion of that common application
5585 * or task. So the performance figures that matter are total
5586 * throughput of the flows and task-wide I/O latency. In particular,
5587 * these flows do not need to be protected from each other, in terms
5588 * of individual bandwidth or latency.
5589 *
5590 * Second, the above fact holds regardless of the number of flows.
5591 *
5592 * Putting these two facts together, this commits merges stably the
5593 * bfq_queues associated with these I/O flows, i.e., with the
5594 * processes that generate these IO/ flows, regardless of how many the
5595 * involved processes are.
5596 *
5597 * To decide whether a set of bfq_queues is actually associated with
5598 * the I/O flows of a common application or task, and to merge these
5599 * queues stably, this function operates as follows: given a bfq_queue,
5600 * say Q2, currently being created, and the last bfq_queue, say Q1,
5601 * created before Q2, Q2 is merged stably with Q1 if
5602 * - very little time has elapsed since when Q1 was created
5603 * - Q2 has the same ioprio as Q1
5604 * - Q2 belongs to the same group as Q1
5605 *
5606 * Merging bfq_queues also reduces scheduling overhead. A fio test
5607 * with ten random readers on /dev/nullb shows a throughput boost of
5608 * 40%, with a quadcore. Since BFQ's execution time amounts to ~50% of
5609 * the total per-request processing time, the above throughput boost
5610 * implies that BFQ's overhead is reduced by more than 50%.
5611 *
5612 * This new mechanism most certainly obsoletes the current
5613 * burst-handling heuristics. We keep those heuristics for the moment.
5614 */
5615static struct bfq_queue *bfq_do_or_sched_stable_merge(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
5616 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5617 struct bfq_io_cq *bic)
5618{
5619 struct bfq_queue **source_bfqq = bfqq->entity.parent ?
5620 &bfqq->entity.parent->last_bfqq_created :
5621 &bfqd->last_bfqq_created;
5622
5623 struct bfq_queue *last_bfqq_created = *source_bfqq;
5624
5625 /*
5626 * If last_bfqq_created has not been set yet, then init it. If
5627 * it has been set already, but too long ago, then move it
5628 * forward to bfqq. Finally, move also if bfqq belongs to a
5629 * different group than last_bfqq_created, or if bfqq has a
5630 * different ioprio or ioprio_class. If none of these
5631 * conditions holds true, then try an early stable merge or
5632 * schedule a delayed stable merge.
5633 *
5634 * A delayed merge is scheduled (instead of performing an
5635 * early merge), in case bfqq might soon prove to be more
5636 * throughput-beneficial if not merged. Currently this is
5637 * possible only if bfqd is rotational with no queueing. For
5638 * such a drive, not merging bfqq is better for throughput if
5639 * bfqq happens to contain sequential I/O. So, we wait a
5640 * little bit for enough I/O to flow through bfqq. After that,
5641 * if such an I/O is sequential, then the merge is
5642 * canceled. Otherwise the merge is finally performed.
5643 */
5644 if (!last_bfqq_created ||
5645 time_before(last_bfqq_created->creation_time +
7812472f 5646 msecs_to_jiffies(bfq_activation_stable_merging),
430a67f9
PV
5647 bfqq->creation_time) ||
5648 bfqq->entity.parent != last_bfqq_created->entity.parent ||
5649 bfqq->ioprio != last_bfqq_created->ioprio ||
5650 bfqq->ioprio_class != last_bfqq_created->ioprio_class)
5651 *source_bfqq = bfqq;
5652 else if (time_after_eq(last_bfqq_created->creation_time +
5653 bfqd->bfq_burst_interval,
5654 bfqq->creation_time)) {
5655 if (likely(bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing))
5656 /*
5657 * With this type of drive, leaving
5658 * bfqq alone may provide no
5659 * throughput benefits compared with
5660 * merging bfqq. So merge bfqq now.
5661 */
5662 bfqq = bfq_do_early_stable_merge(bfqd, bfqq,
5663 bic,
5664 last_bfqq_created);
5665 else { /* schedule tentative stable merge */
5666 /*
5667 * get reference on last_bfqq_created,
5668 * to prevent it from being freed,
5669 * until we decide whether to merge
5670 */
5671 last_bfqq_created->ref++;
5672 /*
5673 * need to keep track of stable refs, to
5674 * compute process refs correctly
5675 */
5676 last_bfqq_created->stable_ref++;
5677 /*
5678 * Record the bfqq to merge to.
5679 */
5680 bic->stable_merge_bfqq = last_bfqq_created;
5681 }
5682 }
5683
5684 return bfqq;
5685}
5686
5687
aee69d78
PV
5688static struct bfq_queue *bfq_get_queue(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
5689 struct bio *bio, bool is_sync,
430a67f9
PV
5690 struct bfq_io_cq *bic,
5691 bool respawn)
aee69d78
PV
5692{
5693 const int ioprio = IOPRIO_PRIO_DATA(bic->ioprio);
5694 const int ioprio_class = IOPRIO_PRIO_CLASS(bic->ioprio);
5695 struct bfq_queue **async_bfqq = NULL;
5696 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
e21b7a0b 5697 struct bfq_group *bfqg;
aee69d78
PV
5698
5699 rcu_read_lock();
5700
0fe061b9 5701 bfqg = bfq_find_set_group(bfqd, __bio_blkcg(bio));
e21b7a0b
AA
5702 if (!bfqg) {
5703 bfqq = &bfqd->oom_bfqq;
5704 goto out;
5705 }
5706
aee69d78 5707 if (!is_sync) {
e21b7a0b 5708 async_bfqq = bfq_async_queue_prio(bfqd, bfqg, ioprio_class,
aee69d78
PV
5709 ioprio);
5710 bfqq = *async_bfqq;
5711 if (bfqq)
5712 goto out;
5713 }
5714
5715 bfqq = kmem_cache_alloc_node(bfq_pool,
5716 GFP_NOWAIT | __GFP_ZERO | __GFP_NOWARN,
5717 bfqd->queue->node);
5718
5719 if (bfqq) {
5720 bfq_init_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, bic, current->pid,
5721 is_sync);
e21b7a0b 5722 bfq_init_entity(&bfqq->entity, bfqg);
aee69d78
PV
5723 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "allocated");
5724 } else {
5725 bfqq = &bfqd->oom_bfqq;
5726 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "using oom bfqq");
5727 goto out;
5728 }
5729
5730 /*
5731 * Pin the queue now that it's allocated, scheduler exit will
5732 * prune it.
5733 */
5734 if (async_bfqq) {
e21b7a0b
AA
5735 bfqq->ref++; /*
5736 * Extra group reference, w.r.t. sync
5737 * queue. This extra reference is removed
5738 * only if bfqq->bfqg disappears, to
5739 * guarantee that this queue is not freed
5740 * until its group goes away.
5741 */
5742 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "get_queue, bfqq not in async: %p, %d",
aee69d78
PV
5743 bfqq, bfqq->ref);
5744 *async_bfqq = bfqq;
5745 }
5746
5747out:
5748 bfqq->ref++; /* get a process reference to this queue */
430a67f9
PV
5749
5750 if (bfqq != &bfqd->oom_bfqq && is_sync && !respawn)
5751 bfqq = bfq_do_or_sched_stable_merge(bfqd, bfqq, bic);
5752
aee69d78
PV
5753 rcu_read_unlock();
5754 return bfqq;
5755}
5756
5757static void bfq_update_io_thinktime(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
5758 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
5759{
5760 struct bfq_ttime *ttime = &bfqq->ttime;
7684fbde 5761 u64 elapsed;
aee69d78 5762
7684fbde
JK
5763 /*
5764 * We are really interested in how long it takes for the queue to
5765 * become busy when there is no outstanding IO for this queue. So
5766 * ignore cases when the bfq queue has already IO queued.
5767 */
5768 if (bfqq->dispatched || bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq))
5769 return;
5770 elapsed = ktime_get_ns() - bfqq->ttime.last_end_request;
aee69d78
PV
5771 elapsed = min_t(u64, elapsed, 2ULL * bfqd->bfq_slice_idle);
5772
28c6def0 5773 ttime->ttime_samples = (7*ttime->ttime_samples + 256) / 8;
aee69d78
PV
5774 ttime->ttime_total = div_u64(7*ttime->ttime_total + 256*elapsed, 8);
5775 ttime->ttime_mean = div64_ul(ttime->ttime_total + 128,
5776 ttime->ttime_samples);
5777}
5778
5779static void
5780bfq_update_io_seektime(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5781 struct request *rq)
5782{
aee69d78 5783 bfqq->seek_history <<= 1;
d87447d8 5784 bfqq->seek_history |= BFQ_RQ_SEEKY(bfqd, bfqq->last_request_pos, rq);
7074f076
PV
5785
5786 if (bfqq->wr_coeff > 1 &&
5787 bfqq->wr_cur_max_time == bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time &&
d1f600fa
PV
5788 BFQQ_TOTALLY_SEEKY(bfqq)) {
5789 if (time_is_before_jiffies(bfqq->wr_start_at_switch_to_srt +
5790 bfq_wr_duration(bfqd))) {
5791 /*
5792 * In soft_rt weight raising with the
5793 * interactive-weight-raising period
5794 * elapsed (so no switch back to
5795 * interactive weight raising).
5796 */
5797 bfq_bfqq_end_wr(bfqq);
5798 } else { /*
5799 * stopping soft_rt weight raising
5800 * while still in interactive period,
5801 * switch back to interactive weight
5802 * raising
5803 */
5804 switch_back_to_interactive_wr(bfqq, bfqd);
5805 bfqq->entity.prio_changed = 1;
5806 }
5807 }
aee69d78
PV
5808}
5809
d5be3fef
PV
5810static void bfq_update_has_short_ttime(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
5811 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5812 struct bfq_io_cq *bic)
aee69d78 5813{
766d6141 5814 bool has_short_ttime = true, state_changed;
aee69d78 5815
d5be3fef
PV
5816 /*
5817 * No need to update has_short_ttime if bfqq is async or in
5818 * idle io prio class, or if bfq_slice_idle is zero, because
5819 * no device idling is performed for bfqq in this case.
5820 */
5821 if (!bfq_bfqq_sync(bfqq) || bfq_class_idle(bfqq) ||
5822 bfqd->bfq_slice_idle == 0)
aee69d78
PV
5823 return;
5824
36eca894
AA
5825 /* Idle window just restored, statistics are meaningless. */
5826 if (time_is_after_eq_jiffies(bfqq->split_time +
5827 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_idle_time))
5828 return;
5829
d5be3fef 5830 /* Think time is infinite if no process is linked to
b5f74eca
PV
5831 * bfqq. Otherwise check average think time to decide whether
5832 * to mark as has_short_ttime. To this goal, compare average
5833 * think time with half the I/O-plugging timeout.
d5be3fef 5834 */
aee69d78 5835 if (atomic_read(&bic->icq.ioc->active_ref) == 0 ||
d5be3fef 5836 (bfq_sample_valid(bfqq->ttime.ttime_samples) &&
b5f74eca 5837 bfqq->ttime.ttime_mean > bfqd->bfq_slice_idle>>1))
d5be3fef
PV
5838 has_short_ttime = false;
5839
766d6141 5840 state_changed = has_short_ttime != bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
aee69d78 5841
d5be3fef
PV
5842 if (has_short_ttime)
5843 bfq_mark_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
aee69d78 5844 else
d5be3fef 5845 bfq_clear_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq);
766d6141
PV
5846
5847 /*
5848 * Until the base value for the total service time gets
5849 * finally computed for bfqq, the inject limit does depend on
5850 * the think-time state (short|long). In particular, the limit
5851 * is 0 or 1 if the think time is deemed, respectively, as
5852 * short or long (details in the comments in
5853 * bfq_update_inject_limit()). Accordingly, the next
5854 * instructions reset the inject limit if the think-time state
5855 * has changed and the above base value is still to be
5856 * computed.
5857 *
5858 * However, the reset is performed only if more than 100 ms
5859 * have elapsed since the last update of the inject limit, or
5860 * (inclusive) if the change is from short to long think
5861 * time. The reason for this waiting is as follows.
5862 *
5863 * bfqq may have a long think time because of a
5864 * synchronization with some other queue, i.e., because the
5865 * I/O of some other queue may need to be completed for bfqq
13a857a4
PV
5866 * to receive new I/O. Details in the comments on the choice
5867 * of the queue for injection in bfq_select_queue().
766d6141 5868 *
13a857a4
PV
5869 * As stressed in those comments, if such a synchronization is
5870 * actually in place, then, without injection on bfqq, the
5871 * blocking I/O cannot happen to served while bfqq is in
5872 * service. As a consequence, if bfqq is granted
5873 * I/O-dispatch-plugging, then bfqq remains empty, and no I/O
5874 * is dispatched, until the idle timeout fires. This is likely
5875 * to result in lower bandwidth and higher latencies for bfqq,
5876 * and in a severe loss of total throughput.
766d6141
PV
5877 *
5878 * On the opposite end, a non-zero inject limit may allow the
5879 * I/O that blocks bfqq to be executed soon, and therefore
13a857a4
PV
5880 * bfqq to receive new I/O soon.
5881 *
5882 * But, if the blocking gets actually eliminated, then the
5883 * next think-time sample for bfqq may be very low. This in
5884 * turn may cause bfqq's think time to be deemed
5885 * short. Without the 100 ms barrier, this new state change
5886 * would cause the body of the next if to be executed
766d6141
PV
5887 * immediately. But this would set to 0 the inject
5888 * limit. Without injection, the blocking I/O would cause the
5889 * think time of bfqq to become long again, and therefore the
5890 * inject limit to be raised again, and so on. The only effect
5891 * of such a steady oscillation between the two think-time
5892 * states would be to prevent effective injection on bfqq.
5893 *
5894 * In contrast, if the inject limit is not reset during such a
5895 * long time interval as 100 ms, then the number of short
5896 * think time samples can grow significantly before the reset
13a857a4
PV
5897 * is performed. As a consequence, the think time state can
5898 * become stable before the reset. Therefore there will be no
5899 * state change when the 100 ms elapse, and no reset of the
5900 * inject limit. The inject limit remains steadily equal to 1
5901 * both during and after the 100 ms. So injection can be
766d6141
PV
5902 * performed at all times, and throughput gets boosted.
5903 *
5904 * An inject limit equal to 1 is however in conflict, in
5905 * general, with the fact that the think time of bfqq is
5906 * short, because injection may be likely to delay bfqq's I/O
5907 * (as explained in the comments in
5908 * bfq_update_inject_limit()). But this does not happen in
5909 * this special case, because bfqq's low think time is due to
5910 * an effective handling of a synchronization, through
5911 * injection. In this special case, bfqq's I/O does not get
5912 * delayed by injection; on the contrary, bfqq's I/O is
5913 * brought forward, because it is not blocked for
5914 * milliseconds.
5915 *
13a857a4
PV
5916 * In addition, serving the blocking I/O much sooner, and much
5917 * more frequently than once per I/O-plugging timeout, makes
5918 * it much quicker to detect a waker queue (the concept of
5919 * waker queue is defined in the comments in
5920 * bfq_add_request()). This makes it possible to start sooner
5921 * to boost throughput more effectively, by injecting the I/O
5922 * of the waker queue unconditionally on every
5923 * bfq_dispatch_request().
5924 *
5925 * One last, important benefit of not resetting the inject
5926 * limit before 100 ms is that, during this time interval, the
5927 * base value for the total service time is likely to get
5928 * finally computed for bfqq, freeing the inject limit from
5929 * its relation with the think time.
766d6141
PV
5930 */
5931 if (state_changed && bfqq->last_serv_time_ns == 0 &&
5932 (time_is_before_eq_jiffies(bfqq->decrease_time_jif +
5933 msecs_to_jiffies(100)) ||
5934 !has_short_ttime))
5935 bfq_reset_inject_limit(bfqd, bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
5936}
5937
5938/*
5939 * Called when a new fs request (rq) is added to bfqq. Check if there's
5940 * something we should do about it.
5941 */
5942static void bfq_rq_enqueued(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
5943 struct request *rq)
5944{
aee69d78
PV
5945 if (rq->cmd_flags & REQ_META)
5946 bfqq->meta_pending++;
5947
aee69d78
PV
5948 bfqq->last_request_pos = blk_rq_pos(rq) + blk_rq_sectors(rq);
5949
5950 if (bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue && bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq)) {
5951 bool small_req = bfqq->queued[rq_is_sync(rq)] == 1 &&
5952 blk_rq_sectors(rq) < 32;
5953 bool budget_timeout = bfq_bfqq_budget_timeout(bfqq);
5954
5955 /*
ac8b0cb4
PV
5956 * There is just this request queued: if
5957 * - the request is small, and
5958 * - we are idling to boost throughput, and
5959 * - the queue is not to be expired,
5960 * then just exit.
aee69d78
PV
5961 *
5962 * In this way, if the device is being idled to wait
5963 * for a new request from the in-service queue, we
5964 * avoid unplugging the device and committing the
ac8b0cb4
PV
5965 * device to serve just a small request. In contrast
5966 * we wait for the block layer to decide when to
5967 * unplug the device: hopefully, new requests will be
5968 * merged to this one quickly, then the device will be
5969 * unplugged and larger requests will be dispatched.
aee69d78 5970 */
ac8b0cb4
PV
5971 if (small_req && idling_boosts_thr_without_issues(bfqd, bfqq) &&
5972 !budget_timeout)
aee69d78
PV
5973 return;
5974
5975 /*
ac8b0cb4
PV
5976 * A large enough request arrived, or idling is being
5977 * performed to preserve service guarantees, or
5978 * finally the queue is to be expired: in all these
5979 * cases disk idling is to be stopped, so clear
5980 * wait_request flag and reset timer.
aee69d78
PV
5981 */
5982 bfq_clear_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
5983 hrtimer_try_to_cancel(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer);
5984
5985 /*
5986 * The queue is not empty, because a new request just
5987 * arrived. Hence we can safely expire the queue, in
5988 * case of budget timeout, without risking that the
5989 * timestamps of the queue are not updated correctly.
5990 * See [1] for more details.
5991 */
5992 if (budget_timeout)
5993 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, false,
5994 BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT);
5995 }
5996}
5997
98f04499
JK
5998static void bfqq_request_allocated(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
5999{
6000 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
6001
6002 for_each_entity(entity)
6003 entity->allocated++;
6004}
6005
6006static void bfqq_request_freed(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
6007{
6008 struct bfq_entity *entity = &bfqq->entity;
6009
6010 for_each_entity(entity)
6011 entity->allocated--;
6012}
6013
24bfd19b
PV
6014/* returns true if it causes the idle timer to be disabled */
6015static bool __bfq_insert_request(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct request *rq)
aee69d78 6016{
36eca894 6017 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq),
430a67f9
PV
6018 *new_bfqq = bfq_setup_cooperator(bfqd, bfqq, rq, true,
6019 RQ_BIC(rq));
24bfd19b 6020 bool waiting, idle_timer_disabled = false;
36eca894
AA
6021
6022 if (new_bfqq) {
36eca894
AA
6023 /*
6024 * Release the request's reference to the old bfqq
6025 * and make sure one is taken to the shared queue.
6026 */
98f04499
JK
6027 bfqq_request_allocated(new_bfqq);
6028 bfqq_request_freed(bfqq);
36eca894
AA
6029 new_bfqq->ref++;
6030 /*
6031 * If the bic associated with the process
6032 * issuing this request still points to bfqq
6033 * (and thus has not been already redirected
6034 * to new_bfqq or even some other bfq_queue),
6035 * then complete the merge and redirect it to
6036 * new_bfqq.
6037 */
6038 if (bic_to_bfqq(RQ_BIC(rq), 1) == bfqq)
6039 bfq_merge_bfqqs(bfqd, RQ_BIC(rq),
6040 bfqq, new_bfqq);
894df937
PV
6041
6042 bfq_clear_bfqq_just_created(bfqq);
36eca894
AA
6043 /*
6044 * rq is about to be enqueued into new_bfqq,
6045 * release rq reference on bfqq
6046 */
6047 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
6048 rq->elv.priv[1] = new_bfqq;
6049 bfqq = new_bfqq;
6050 }
aee69d78 6051
a3f9bce3
PV
6052 bfq_update_io_thinktime(bfqd, bfqq);
6053 bfq_update_has_short_ttime(bfqd, bfqq, RQ_BIC(rq));
6054 bfq_update_io_seektime(bfqd, bfqq, rq);
6055
24bfd19b 6056 waiting = bfqq && bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
aee69d78 6057 bfq_add_request(rq);
24bfd19b 6058 idle_timer_disabled = waiting && !bfq_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
6059
6060 rq->fifo_time = ktime_get_ns() + bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[rq_is_sync(rq)];
6061 list_add_tail(&rq->queuelist, &bfqq->fifo);
6062
6063 bfq_rq_enqueued(bfqd, bfqq, rq);
24bfd19b
PV
6064
6065 return idle_timer_disabled;
aee69d78
PV
6066}
6067
8060c47b 6068#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_CGROUP_DEBUG
9b25bd03
PV
6069static void bfq_update_insert_stats(struct request_queue *q,
6070 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
6071 bool idle_timer_disabled,
6072 unsigned int cmd_flags)
6073{
6074 if (!bfqq)
6075 return;
6076
6077 /*
6078 * bfqq still exists, because it can disappear only after
6079 * either it is merged with another queue, or the process it
6080 * is associated with exits. But both actions must be taken by
6081 * the same process currently executing this flow of
6082 * instructions.
6083 *
6084 * In addition, the following queue lock guarantees that
6085 * bfqq_group(bfqq) exists as well.
6086 */
0d945c1f 6087 spin_lock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
9b25bd03
PV
6088 bfqg_stats_update_io_add(bfqq_group(bfqq), bfqq, cmd_flags);
6089 if (idle_timer_disabled)
6090 bfqg_stats_update_idle_time(bfqq_group(bfqq));
0d945c1f 6091 spin_unlock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
9b25bd03
PV
6092}
6093#else
6094static inline void bfq_update_insert_stats(struct request_queue *q,
6095 struct bfq_queue *bfqq,
6096 bool idle_timer_disabled,
6097 unsigned int cmd_flags) {}
8060c47b 6098#endif /* CONFIG_BFQ_CGROUP_DEBUG */
9b25bd03 6099
aee69d78
PV
6100static void bfq_insert_request(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, struct request *rq,
6101 bool at_head)
6102{
6103 struct request_queue *q = hctx->queue;
6104 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
18e5a57d 6105 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
24bfd19b
PV
6106 bool idle_timer_disabled = false;
6107 unsigned int cmd_flags;
fd2ef39c 6108 LIST_HEAD(free);
aee69d78 6109
fd41e603
TH
6110#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
6111 if (!cgroup_subsys_on_dfl(io_cgrp_subsys) && rq->bio)
6112 bfqg_stats_update_legacy_io(q, rq);
6113#endif
aee69d78 6114 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
fd2ef39c 6115 if (blk_mq_sched_try_insert_merge(q, rq, &free)) {
aee69d78 6116 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
fd2ef39c 6117 blk_mq_free_requests(&free);
aee69d78
PV
6118 return;
6119 }
6120
6121 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
6122
b357e4a6 6123 trace_block_rq_insert(rq);
aee69d78
PV
6124
6125 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
18e5a57d 6126 bfqq = bfq_init_rq(rq);
7cc4ffc5
PV
6127
6128 /*
6129 * Reqs with at_head or passthrough flags set are to be put
6130 * directly into dispatch list. Additional case for putting rq
6131 * directly into the dispatch queue: the only active
6132 * bfq_queues are bfqq and either its waker bfq_queue or one
6133 * of its woken bfq_queues. The rationale behind this
6134 * additional condition is as follows:
6135 * - consider a bfq_queue, say Q1, detected as a waker of
6136 * another bfq_queue, say Q2
6137 * - by definition of a waker, Q1 blocks the I/O of Q2, i.e.,
6138 * some I/O of Q1 needs to be completed for new I/O of Q2
6139 * to arrive. A notable example of waker is journald
6140 * - so, Q1 and Q2 are in any respect the queues of two
6141 * cooperating processes (or of two cooperating sets of
6142 * processes): the goal of Q1's I/O is doing what needs to
6143 * be done so that new Q2's I/O can finally be
6144 * issued. Therefore, if the service of Q1's I/O is delayed,
6145 * then Q2's I/O is delayed too. Conversely, if Q2's I/O is
6146 * delayed, the goal of Q1's I/O is hindered.
6147 * - as a consequence, if some I/O of Q1/Q2 arrives while
6148 * Q2/Q1 is the only queue in service, there is absolutely
6149 * no point in delaying the service of such an I/O. The
6150 * only possible result is a throughput loss
6151 * - so, when the above condition holds, the best option is to
6152 * have the new I/O dispatched as soon as possible
6153 * - the most effective and efficient way to attain the above
6154 * goal is to put the new I/O directly in the dispatch
6155 * list
6156 * - as an additional restriction, Q1 and Q2 must be the only
6157 * busy queues for this commit to put the I/O of Q2/Q1 in
6158 * the dispatch list. This is necessary, because, if also
6159 * other queues are waiting for service, then putting new
6160 * I/O directly in the dispatch list may evidently cause a
6161 * violation of service guarantees for the other queues
6162 */
6163 if (!bfqq ||
6164 (bfqq != bfqd->in_service_queue &&
6165 bfqd->in_service_queue != NULL &&
6166 bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) == 1 + bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq) &&
6167 (bfqq->waker_bfqq == bfqd->in_service_queue ||
7687b38a 6168 bfqd->in_service_queue->waker_bfqq == bfqq)) || at_head) {
aee69d78
PV
6169 if (at_head)
6170 list_add(&rq->queuelist, &bfqd->dispatch);
6171 else
6172 list_add_tail(&rq->queuelist, &bfqd->dispatch);
fd03177c 6173 } else {
24bfd19b 6174 idle_timer_disabled = __bfq_insert_request(bfqd, rq);
614822f8
LM
6175 /*
6176 * Update bfqq, because, if a queue merge has occurred
6177 * in __bfq_insert_request, then rq has been
6178 * redirected into a new queue.
6179 */
6180 bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
aee69d78
PV
6181
6182 if (rq_mergeable(rq)) {
6183 elv_rqhash_add(q, rq);
6184 if (!q->last_merge)
6185 q->last_merge = rq;
6186 }
6187 }
6188
24bfd19b
PV
6189 /*
6190 * Cache cmd_flags before releasing scheduler lock, because rq
6191 * may disappear afterwards (for example, because of a request
6192 * merge).
6193 */
6194 cmd_flags = rq->cmd_flags;
9b25bd03 6195
6fa3e8d3 6196 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
24bfd19b 6197
9b25bd03
PV
6198 bfq_update_insert_stats(q, bfqq, idle_timer_disabled,
6199 cmd_flags);
aee69d78
PV
6200}
6201
6202static void bfq_insert_requests(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx,
6203 struct list_head *list, bool at_head)
6204{
6205 while (!list_empty(list)) {
6206 struct request *rq;
6207
6208 rq = list_first_entry(list, struct request, queuelist);
6209 list_del_init(&rq->queuelist);
6210 bfq_insert_request(hctx, rq, at_head);
6211 }
6212}
6213
6214static void bfq_update_hw_tag(struct bfq_data *bfqd)
6215{
b3c34981
PV
6216 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
6217
aee69d78
PV
6218 bfqd->max_rq_in_driver = max_t(int, bfqd->max_rq_in_driver,
6219 bfqd->rq_in_driver);
6220
6221 if (bfqd->hw_tag == 1)
6222 return;
6223
6224 /*
6225 * This sample is valid if the number of outstanding requests
6226 * is large enough to allow a queueing behavior. Note that the
6227 * sum is not exact, as it's not taking into account deactivated
6228 * requests.
6229 */
a3c92560 6230 if (bfqd->rq_in_driver + bfqd->queued <= BFQ_HW_QUEUE_THRESHOLD)
aee69d78
PV
6231 return;
6232
b3c34981
PV
6233 /*
6234 * If active queue hasn't enough requests and can idle, bfq might not
6235 * dispatch sufficient requests to hardware. Don't zero hw_tag in this
6236 * case
6237 */
6238 if (bfqq && bfq_bfqq_has_short_ttime(bfqq) &&
6239 bfqq->dispatched + bfqq->queued[0] + bfqq->queued[1] <
6240 BFQ_HW_QUEUE_THRESHOLD &&
6241 bfqd->rq_in_driver < BFQ_HW_QUEUE_THRESHOLD)
6242 return;
6243
aee69d78
PV
6244 if (bfqd->hw_tag_samples++ < BFQ_HW_QUEUE_SAMPLES)
6245 return;
6246
6247 bfqd->hw_tag = bfqd->max_rq_in_driver > BFQ_HW_QUEUE_THRESHOLD;
6248 bfqd->max_rq_in_driver = 0;
6249 bfqd->hw_tag_samples = 0;
8cacc5ab
PV
6250
6251 bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing =
6252 blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue) && bfqd->hw_tag;
aee69d78
PV
6253}
6254
6255static void bfq_completed_request(struct bfq_queue *bfqq, struct bfq_data *bfqd)
6256{
ab0e43e9
PV
6257 u64 now_ns;
6258 u32 delta_us;
6259
aee69d78
PV
6260 bfq_update_hw_tag(bfqd);
6261
6262 bfqd->rq_in_driver--;
6263 bfqq->dispatched--;
6264
44e44a1b
PV
6265 if (!bfqq->dispatched && !bfq_bfqq_busy(bfqq)) {
6266 /*
6267 * Set budget_timeout (which we overload to store the
6268 * time at which the queue remains with no backlog and
6269 * no outstanding request; used by the weight-raising
6270 * mechanism).
6271 */
6272 bfqq->budget_timeout = jiffies;
1de0c4cd 6273
0471559c 6274 bfq_weights_tree_remove(bfqd, bfqq);
44e44a1b
PV
6275 }
6276
ab0e43e9
PV
6277 now_ns = ktime_get_ns();
6278
6279 bfqq->ttime.last_end_request = now_ns;
6280
6281 /*
6282 * Using us instead of ns, to get a reasonable precision in
6283 * computing rate in next check.
6284 */
6285 delta_us = div_u64(now_ns - bfqd->last_completion, NSEC_PER_USEC);
6286
6287 /*
6288 * If the request took rather long to complete, and, according
6289 * to the maximum request size recorded, this completion latency
6290 * implies that the request was certainly served at a very low
6291 * rate (less than 1M sectors/sec), then the whole observation
6292 * interval that lasts up to this time instant cannot be a
6293 * valid time interval for computing a new peak rate. Invoke
6294 * bfq_update_rate_reset to have the following three steps
6295 * taken:
6296 * - close the observation interval at the last (previous)
6297 * request dispatch or completion
6298 * - compute rate, if possible, for that observation interval
6299 * - reset to zero samples, which will trigger a proper
6300 * re-initialization of the observation interval on next
6301 * dispatch
6302 */
6303 if (delta_us > BFQ_MIN_TT/NSEC_PER_USEC &&
6304 (bfqd->last_rq_max_size<<BFQ_RATE_SHIFT)/delta_us <
6305 1UL<<(BFQ_RATE_SHIFT - 10))
6306 bfq_update_rate_reset(bfqd, NULL);
6307 bfqd->last_completion = now_ns;
85686d0d
PV
6308 /*
6309 * Shared queues are likely to receive I/O at a high
6310 * rate. This may deceptively let them be considered as wakers
6311 * of other queues. But a false waker will unjustly steal
6312 * bandwidth to its supposedly woken queue. So considering
6313 * also shared queues in the waking mechanism may cause more
9a2ac41b
PV
6314 * control troubles than throughput benefits. Then reset
6315 * last_completed_rq_bfqq if bfqq is a shared queue.
85686d0d
PV
6316 */
6317 if (!bfq_bfqq_coop(bfqq))
6318 bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq = bfqq;
9a2ac41b
PV
6319 else
6320 bfqd->last_completed_rq_bfqq = NULL;
aee69d78 6321
77b7dcea
PV
6322 /*
6323 * If we are waiting to discover whether the request pattern
6324 * of the task associated with the queue is actually
6325 * isochronous, and both requisites for this condition to hold
6326 * are now satisfied, then compute soft_rt_next_start (see the
6327 * comments on the function bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start()). We
20cd3245
PV
6328 * do not compute soft_rt_next_start if bfqq is in interactive
6329 * weight raising (see the comments in bfq_bfqq_expire() for
6330 * an explanation). We schedule this delayed update when bfqq
6331 * expires, if it still has in-flight requests.
77b7dcea
PV
6332 */
6333 if (bfq_bfqq_softrt_update(bfqq) && bfqq->dispatched == 0 &&
20cd3245
PV
6334 RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) &&
6335 bfqq->wr_coeff != bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff)
77b7dcea
PV
6336 bfqq->soft_rt_next_start =
6337 bfq_bfqq_softrt_next_start(bfqd, bfqq);
6338
aee69d78
PV
6339 /*
6340 * If this is the in-service queue, check if it needs to be expired,
6341 * or if we want to idle in case it has no pending requests.
6342 */
6343 if (bfqd->in_service_queue == bfqq) {
4420b095
PV
6344 if (bfq_bfqq_must_idle(bfqq)) {
6345 if (bfqq->dispatched == 0)
6346 bfq_arm_slice_timer(bfqd);
6347 /*
6348 * If we get here, we do not expire bfqq, even
6349 * if bfqq was in budget timeout or had no
6350 * more requests (as controlled in the next
6351 * conditional instructions). The reason for
6352 * not expiring bfqq is as follows.
6353 *
6354 * Here bfqq->dispatched > 0 holds, but
6355 * bfq_bfqq_must_idle() returned true. This
6356 * implies that, even if no request arrives
6357 * for bfqq before bfqq->dispatched reaches 0,
6358 * bfqq will, however, not be expired on the
6359 * completion event that causes bfqq->dispatch
6360 * to reach zero. In contrast, on this event,
6361 * bfqq will start enjoying device idling
6362 * (I/O-dispatch plugging).
6363 *
6364 * But, if we expired bfqq here, bfqq would
6365 * not have the chance to enjoy device idling
6366 * when bfqq->dispatched finally reaches
6367 * zero. This would expose bfqq to violation
6368 * of its reserved service guarantees.
6369 */
aee69d78
PV
6370 return;
6371 } else if (bfq_may_expire_for_budg_timeout(bfqq))
6372 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, false,
6373 BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT);
6374 else if (RB_EMPTY_ROOT(&bfqq->sort_list) &&
6375 (bfqq->dispatched == 0 ||
277a4a9b 6376 !bfq_better_to_idle(bfqq)))
aee69d78
PV
6377 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, false,
6378 BFQQE_NO_MORE_REQUESTS);
6379 }
3f7cb4f4
HT
6380
6381 if (!bfqd->rq_in_driver)
6382 bfq_schedule_dispatch(bfqd);
aee69d78
PV
6383}
6384
a7877390 6385static void bfq_finish_requeue_request_body(struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
aee69d78 6386{
98f04499 6387 bfqq_request_freed(bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
6388 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
6389}
6390
2341d662
PV
6391/*
6392 * The processes associated with bfqq may happen to generate their
6393 * cumulative I/O at a lower rate than the rate at which the device
6394 * could serve the same I/O. This is rather probable, e.g., if only
6395 * one process is associated with bfqq and the device is an SSD. It
6396 * results in bfqq becoming often empty while in service. In this
6397 * respect, if BFQ is allowed to switch to another queue when bfqq
6398 * remains empty, then the device goes on being fed with I/O requests,
6399 * and the throughput is not affected. In contrast, if BFQ is not
6400 * allowed to switch to another queue---because bfqq is sync and
6401 * I/O-dispatch needs to be plugged while bfqq is temporarily
6402 * empty---then, during the service of bfqq, there will be frequent
6403 * "service holes", i.e., time intervals during which bfqq gets empty
6404 * and the device can only consume the I/O already queued in its
6405 * hardware queues. During service holes, the device may even get to
6406 * remaining idle. In the end, during the service of bfqq, the device
6407 * is driven at a lower speed than the one it can reach with the kind
6408 * of I/O flowing through bfqq.
6409 *
6410 * To counter this loss of throughput, BFQ implements a "request
6411 * injection mechanism", which tries to fill the above service holes
6412 * with I/O requests taken from other queues. The hard part in this
6413 * mechanism is finding the right amount of I/O to inject, so as to
6414 * both boost throughput and not break bfqq's bandwidth and latency
6415 * guarantees. In this respect, the mechanism maintains a per-queue
6416 * inject limit, computed as below. While bfqq is empty, the injection
6417 * mechanism dispatches extra I/O requests only until the total number
6418 * of I/O requests in flight---i.e., already dispatched but not yet
6419 * completed---remains lower than this limit.
6420 *
6421 * A first definition comes in handy to introduce the algorithm by
6422 * which the inject limit is computed. We define as first request for
6423 * bfqq, an I/O request for bfqq that arrives while bfqq is in
6424 * service, and causes bfqq to switch from empty to non-empty. The
6425 * algorithm updates the limit as a function of the effect of
6426 * injection on the service times of only the first requests of
6427 * bfqq. The reason for this restriction is that these are the
6428 * requests whose service time is affected most, because they are the
6429 * first to arrive after injection possibly occurred.
6430 *
6431 * To evaluate the effect of injection, the algorithm measures the
6432 * "total service time" of first requests. We define as total service
6433 * time of an I/O request, the time that elapses since when the
6434 * request is enqueued into bfqq, to when it is completed. This
6435 * quantity allows the whole effect of injection to be measured. It is
6436 * easy to see why. Suppose that some requests of other queues are
6437 * actually injected while bfqq is empty, and that a new request R
6438 * then arrives for bfqq. If the device does start to serve all or
6439 * part of the injected requests during the service hole, then,
6440 * because of this extra service, it may delay the next invocation of
6441 * the dispatch hook of BFQ. Then, even after R gets eventually
6442 * dispatched, the device may delay the actual service of R if it is
6443 * still busy serving the extra requests, or if it decides to serve,
6444 * before R, some extra request still present in its queues. As a
6445 * conclusion, the cumulative extra delay caused by injection can be
6446 * easily evaluated by just comparing the total service time of first
6447 * requests with and without injection.
6448 *
6449 * The limit-update algorithm works as follows. On the arrival of a
6450 * first request of bfqq, the algorithm measures the total time of the
6451 * request only if one of the three cases below holds, and, for each
6452 * case, it updates the limit as described below:
6453 *
6454 * (1) If there is no in-flight request. This gives a baseline for the
6455 * total service time of the requests of bfqq. If the baseline has
6456 * not been computed yet, then, after computing it, the limit is
6457 * set to 1, to start boosting throughput, and to prepare the
6458 * ground for the next case. If the baseline has already been
6459 * computed, then it is updated, in case it results to be lower
6460 * than the previous value.
6461 *
6462 * (2) If the limit is higher than 0 and there are in-flight
6463 * requests. By comparing the total service time in this case with
6464 * the above baseline, it is possible to know at which extent the
6465 * current value of the limit is inflating the total service
6466 * time. If the inflation is below a certain threshold, then bfqq
6467 * is assumed to be suffering from no perceivable loss of its
6468 * service guarantees, and the limit is even tentatively
6469 * increased. If the inflation is above the threshold, then the
6470 * limit is decreased. Due to the lack of any hysteresis, this
6471 * logic makes the limit oscillate even in steady workload
6472 * conditions. Yet we opted for it, because it is fast in reaching
6473 * the best value for the limit, as a function of the current I/O
6474 * workload. To reduce oscillations, this step is disabled for a
6475 * short time interval after the limit happens to be decreased.
6476 *
6477 * (3) Periodically, after resetting the limit, to make sure that the
6478 * limit eventually drops in case the workload changes. This is
6479 * needed because, after the limit has gone safely up for a
6480 * certain workload, it is impossible to guess whether the
6481 * baseline total service time may have changed, without measuring
6482 * it again without injection. A more effective version of this
6483 * step might be to just sample the baseline, by interrupting
6484 * injection only once, and then to reset/lower the limit only if
6485 * the total service time with the current limit does happen to be
6486 * too large.
6487 *
6488 * More details on each step are provided in the comments on the
6489 * pieces of code that implement these steps: the branch handling the
6490 * transition from empty to non empty in bfq_add_request(), the branch
6491 * handling injection in bfq_select_queue(), and the function
6492 * bfq_choose_bfqq_for_injection(). These comments also explain some
6493 * exceptions, made by the injection mechanism in some special cases.
6494 */
6495static void bfq_update_inject_limit(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
6496 struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
6497{
6498 u64 tot_time_ns = ktime_get_ns() - bfqd->last_empty_occupied_ns;
6499 unsigned int old_limit = bfqq->inject_limit;
6500
23ed570a 6501 if (bfqq->last_serv_time_ns > 0 && bfqd->rqs_injected) {
2341d662
PV
6502 u64 threshold = (bfqq->last_serv_time_ns * 3)>>1;
6503
6504 if (tot_time_ns >= threshold && old_limit > 0) {
6505 bfqq->inject_limit--;
6506 bfqq->decrease_time_jif = jiffies;
6507 } else if (tot_time_ns < threshold &&
c1e0a182 6508 old_limit <= bfqd->max_rq_in_driver)
2341d662
PV
6509 bfqq->inject_limit++;
6510 }
6511
6512 /*
6513 * Either we still have to compute the base value for the
6514 * total service time, and there seem to be the right
6515 * conditions to do it, or we can lower the last base value
6516 * computed.
db599f9e
PV
6517 *
6518 * NOTE: (bfqd->rq_in_driver == 1) means that there is no I/O
6519 * request in flight, because this function is in the code
6520 * path that handles the completion of a request of bfqq, and,
6521 * in particular, this function is executed before
6522 * bfqd->rq_in_driver is decremented in such a code path.
2341d662 6523 */
db599f9e 6524 if ((bfqq->last_serv_time_ns == 0 && bfqd->rq_in_driver == 1) ||
2341d662 6525 tot_time_ns < bfqq->last_serv_time_ns) {
58494c98
PV
6526 if (bfqq->last_serv_time_ns == 0) {
6527 /*
6528 * Now we certainly have a base value: make sure we
6529 * start trying injection.
6530 */
6531 bfqq->inject_limit = max_t(unsigned int, 1, old_limit);
6532 }
2341d662 6533 bfqq->last_serv_time_ns = tot_time_ns;
24792ad0
PV
6534 } else if (!bfqd->rqs_injected && bfqd->rq_in_driver == 1)
6535 /*
6536 * No I/O injected and no request still in service in
6537 * the drive: these are the exact conditions for
6538 * computing the base value of the total service time
6539 * for bfqq. So let's update this value, because it is
6540 * rather variable. For example, it varies if the size
6541 * or the spatial locality of the I/O requests in bfqq
6542 * change.
6543 */
6544 bfqq->last_serv_time_ns = tot_time_ns;
6545
2341d662
PV
6546
6547 /* update complete, not waiting for any request completion any longer */
6548 bfqd->waited_rq = NULL;
23ed570a 6549 bfqd->rqs_injected = false;
2341d662
PV
6550}
6551
a7877390
PV
6552/*
6553 * Handle either a requeue or a finish for rq. The things to do are
6554 * the same in both cases: all references to rq are to be dropped. In
6555 * particular, rq is considered completed from the point of view of
6556 * the scheduler.
6557 */
6558static void bfq_finish_requeue_request(struct request *rq)
aee69d78 6559{
a7877390 6560 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = RQ_BFQQ(rq);
5bbf4e5a 6561 struct bfq_data *bfqd;
a921c655 6562 unsigned long flags;
5bbf4e5a 6563
a7877390
PV
6564 /*
6565 * rq either is not associated with any icq, or is an already
6566 * requeued request that has not (yet) been re-inserted into
6567 * a bfq_queue.
6568 */
6569 if (!rq->elv.icq || !bfqq)
5bbf4e5a
CH
6570 return;
6571
5bbf4e5a 6572 bfqd = bfqq->bfqd;
aee69d78 6573
e21b7a0b
AA
6574 if (rq->rq_flags & RQF_STARTED)
6575 bfqg_stats_update_completion(bfqq_group(bfqq),
522a7775
OS
6576 rq->start_time_ns,
6577 rq->io_start_time_ns,
e21b7a0b 6578 rq->cmd_flags);
aee69d78 6579
a921c655 6580 spin_lock_irqsave(&bfqd->lock, flags);
aee69d78 6581 if (likely(rq->rq_flags & RQF_STARTED)) {
2341d662
PV
6582 if (rq == bfqd->waited_rq)
6583 bfq_update_inject_limit(bfqd, bfqq);
6584
aee69d78 6585 bfq_completed_request(bfqq, bfqd);
aee69d78 6586 }
a921c655
JK
6587 bfq_finish_requeue_request_body(bfqq);
6588 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bfqd->lock, flags);
aee69d78 6589
a7877390
PV
6590 /*
6591 * Reset private fields. In case of a requeue, this allows
6592 * this function to correctly do nothing if it is spuriously
6593 * invoked again on this same request (see the check at the
6594 * beginning of the function). Probably, a better general
6595 * design would be to prevent blk-mq from invoking the requeue
6596 * or finish hooks of an elevator, for a request that is not
6597 * referred by that elevator.
6598 *
6599 * Resetting the following fields would break the
6600 * request-insertion logic if rq is re-inserted into a bfq
6601 * internal queue, without a re-preparation. Here we assume
6602 * that re-insertions of requeued requests, without
6603 * re-preparation, can happen only for pass_through or at_head
6604 * requests (which are not re-inserted into bfq internal
6605 * queues).
6606 */
aee69d78
PV
6607 rq->elv.priv[0] = NULL;
6608 rq->elv.priv[1] = NULL;
6609}
6610
36eca894 6611/*
c92bddee
PV
6612 * Removes the association between the current task and bfqq, assuming
6613 * that bic points to the bfq iocontext of the task.
36eca894
AA
6614 * Returns NULL if a new bfqq should be allocated, or the old bfqq if this
6615 * was the last process referring to that bfqq.
6616 */
6617static struct bfq_queue *
6618bfq_split_bfqq(struct bfq_io_cq *bic, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
6619{
6620 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq, "splitting queue");
6621
6622 if (bfqq_process_refs(bfqq) == 1) {
6623 bfqq->pid = current->pid;
6624 bfq_clear_bfqq_coop(bfqq);
6625 bfq_clear_bfqq_split_coop(bfqq);
6626 return bfqq;
6627 }
6628
6629 bic_set_bfqq(bic, NULL, 1);
6630
6631 bfq_put_cooperator(bfqq);
6632
478de338 6633 bfq_release_process_ref(bfqq->bfqd, bfqq);
36eca894
AA
6634 return NULL;
6635}
6636
6637static struct bfq_queue *bfq_get_bfqq_handle_split(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
6638 struct bfq_io_cq *bic,
6639 struct bio *bio,
6640 bool split, bool is_sync,
6641 bool *new_queue)
6642{
6643 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bic_to_bfqq(bic, is_sync);
6644
6645 if (likely(bfqq && bfqq != &bfqd->oom_bfqq))
6646 return bfqq;
6647
6648 if (new_queue)
6649 *new_queue = true;
6650
6651 if (bfqq)
6652 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
430a67f9 6653 bfqq = bfq_get_queue(bfqd, bio, is_sync, bic, split);
36eca894
AA
6654
6655 bic_set_bfqq(bic, bfqq, is_sync);
e1b2324d
AA
6656 if (split && is_sync) {
6657 if ((bic->was_in_burst_list && bfqd->large_burst) ||
6658 bic->saved_in_large_burst)
6659 bfq_mark_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
6660 else {
6661 bfq_clear_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq);
6662 if (bic->was_in_burst_list)
99fead8d
PV
6663 /*
6664 * If bfqq was in the current
6665 * burst list before being
6666 * merged, then we have to add
6667 * it back. And we do not need
6668 * to increase burst_size, as
6669 * we did not decrement
6670 * burst_size when we removed
6671 * bfqq from the burst list as
6672 * a consequence of a merge
6673 * (see comments in
6674 * bfq_put_queue). In this
6675 * respect, it would be rather
6676 * costly to know whether the
6677 * current burst list is still
6678 * the same burst list from
6679 * which bfqq was removed on
6680 * the merge. To avoid this
6681 * cost, if bfqq was in a
6682 * burst list, then we add
6683 * bfqq to the current burst
6684 * list without any further
6685 * check. This can cause
6686 * inappropriate insertions,
6687 * but rarely enough to not
6688 * harm the detection of large
6689 * bursts significantly.
6690 */
e1b2324d
AA
6691 hlist_add_head(&bfqq->burst_list_node,
6692 &bfqd->burst_list);
6693 }
36eca894 6694 bfqq->split_time = jiffies;
e1b2324d 6695 }
36eca894
AA
6696
6697 return bfqq;
6698}
6699
aee69d78 6700/*
18e5a57d
PV
6701 * Only reset private fields. The actual request preparation will be
6702 * performed by bfq_init_rq, when rq is either inserted or merged. See
6703 * comments on bfq_init_rq for the reason behind this delayed
6704 * preparation.
aee69d78 6705 */
5d9c305b 6706static void bfq_prepare_request(struct request *rq)
18e5a57d 6707{
5a9d041b
JA
6708 blk_mq_sched_assign_ioc(rq);
6709
18e5a57d
PV
6710 /*
6711 * Regardless of whether we have an icq attached, we have to
6712 * clear the scheduler pointers, as they might point to
6713 * previously allocated bic/bfqq structs.
6714 */
6715 rq->elv.priv[0] = rq->elv.priv[1] = NULL;
6716}
6717
6718/*
6719 * If needed, init rq, allocate bfq data structures associated with
6720 * rq, and increment reference counters in the destination bfq_queue
6721 * for rq. Return the destination bfq_queue for rq, or NULL is rq is
6722 * not associated with any bfq_queue.
6723 *
6724 * This function is invoked by the functions that perform rq insertion
6725 * or merging. One may have expected the above preparation operations
6726 * to be performed in bfq_prepare_request, and not delayed to when rq
6727 * is inserted or merged. The rationale behind this delayed
6728 * preparation is that, after the prepare_request hook is invoked for
6729 * rq, rq may still be transformed into a request with no icq, i.e., a
6730 * request not associated with any queue. No bfq hook is invoked to
636b8fe8 6731 * signal this transformation. As a consequence, should these
18e5a57d
PV
6732 * preparation operations be performed when the prepare_request hook
6733 * is invoked, and should rq be transformed one moment later, bfq
6734 * would end up in an inconsistent state, because it would have
6735 * incremented some queue counters for an rq destined to
6736 * transformation, without any chance to correctly lower these
6737 * counters back. In contrast, no transformation can still happen for
6738 * rq after rq has been inserted or merged. So, it is safe to execute
6739 * these preparation operations when rq is finally inserted or merged.
6740 */
6741static struct bfq_queue *bfq_init_rq(struct request *rq)
aee69d78 6742{
5bbf4e5a 6743 struct request_queue *q = rq->q;
18e5a57d 6744 struct bio *bio = rq->bio;
aee69d78 6745 struct bfq_data *bfqd = q->elevator->elevator_data;
9f210738 6746 struct bfq_io_cq *bic;
aee69d78
PV
6747 const int is_sync = rq_is_sync(rq);
6748 struct bfq_queue *bfqq;
36eca894 6749 bool new_queue = false;
13c931bd 6750 bool bfqq_already_existing = false, split = false;
aee69d78 6751
18e5a57d
PV
6752 if (unlikely(!rq->elv.icq))
6753 return NULL;
6754
72961c4e 6755 /*
18e5a57d
PV
6756 * Assuming that elv.priv[1] is set only if everything is set
6757 * for this rq. This holds true, because this function is
6758 * invoked only for insertion or merging, and, after such
6759 * events, a request cannot be manipulated any longer before
6760 * being removed from bfq.
72961c4e 6761 */
18e5a57d
PV
6762 if (rq->elv.priv[1])
6763 return rq->elv.priv[1];
72961c4e 6764
9f210738 6765 bic = icq_to_bic(rq->elv.icq);
aee69d78 6766
8c9ff1ad
CIK
6767 bfq_check_ioprio_change(bic, bio);
6768
e21b7a0b
AA
6769 bfq_bic_update_cgroup(bic, bio);
6770
36eca894
AA
6771 bfqq = bfq_get_bfqq_handle_split(bfqd, bic, bio, false, is_sync,
6772 &new_queue);
6773
6774 if (likely(!new_queue)) {
6775 /* If the queue was seeky for too long, break it apart. */
430a67f9
PV
6776 if (bfq_bfqq_coop(bfqq) && bfq_bfqq_split_coop(bfqq) &&
6777 !bic->stably_merged) {
8ef3fc3a 6778 struct bfq_queue *old_bfqq = bfqq;
e1b2324d
AA
6779
6780 /* Update bic before losing reference to bfqq */
6781 if (bfq_bfqq_in_large_burst(bfqq))
6782 bic->saved_in_large_burst = true;
6783
36eca894 6784 bfqq = bfq_split_bfqq(bic, bfqq);
6fa3e8d3 6785 split = true;
36eca894 6786
8ef3fc3a 6787 if (!bfqq) {
36eca894
AA
6788 bfqq = bfq_get_bfqq_handle_split(bfqd, bic, bio,
6789 true, is_sync,
6790 NULL);
8ef3fc3a
PV
6791 bfqq->waker_bfqq = old_bfqq->waker_bfqq;
6792 bfqq->tentative_waker_bfqq = NULL;
6793
6794 /*
6795 * If the waker queue disappears, then
6796 * new_bfqq->waker_bfqq must be
6797 * reset. So insert new_bfqq into the
6798 * woken_list of the waker. See
6799 * bfq_check_waker for details.
6800 */
6801 if (bfqq->waker_bfqq)
6802 hlist_add_head(&bfqq->woken_list_node,
6803 &bfqq->waker_bfqq->woken_list);
6804 } else
13c931bd 6805 bfqq_already_existing = true;
36eca894 6806 }
aee69d78
PV
6807 }
6808
98f04499 6809 bfqq_request_allocated(bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
6810 bfqq->ref++;
6811 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "get_request %p: bfqq %p, %d",
6812 rq, bfqq, bfqq->ref);
6813
6814 rq->elv.priv[0] = bic;
6815 rq->elv.priv[1] = bfqq;
6816
36eca894
AA
6817 /*
6818 * If a bfq_queue has only one process reference, it is owned
6819 * by only this bic: we can then set bfqq->bic = bic. in
6820 * addition, if the queue has also just been split, we have to
6821 * resume its state.
6822 */
6823 if (likely(bfqq != &bfqd->oom_bfqq) && bfqq_process_refs(bfqq) == 1) {
6824 bfqq->bic = bic;
6fa3e8d3 6825 if (split) {
36eca894
AA
6826 /*
6827 * The queue has just been split from a shared
6828 * queue: restore the idle window and the
6829 * possible weight raising period.
6830 */
13c931bd
PV
6831 bfq_bfqq_resume_state(bfqq, bfqd, bic,
6832 bfqq_already_existing);
36eca894
AA
6833 }
6834 }
6835
84a74689
PV
6836 /*
6837 * Consider bfqq as possibly belonging to a burst of newly
6838 * created queues only if:
6839 * 1) A burst is actually happening (bfqd->burst_size > 0)
6840 * or
6841 * 2) There is no other active queue. In fact, if, in
6842 * contrast, there are active queues not belonging to the
6843 * possible burst bfqq may belong to, then there is no gain
6844 * in considering bfqq as belonging to a burst, and
6845 * therefore in not weight-raising bfqq. See comments on
6846 * bfq_handle_burst().
6847 *
6848 * This filtering also helps eliminating false positives,
6849 * occurring when bfqq does not belong to an actual large
6850 * burst, but some background task (e.g., a service) happens
6851 * to trigger the creation of new queues very close to when
6852 * bfqq and its possible companion queues are created. See
6853 * comments on bfq_handle_burst() for further details also on
6854 * this issue.
6855 */
6856 if (unlikely(bfq_bfqq_just_created(bfqq) &&
6857 (bfqd->burst_size > 0 ||
6858 bfq_tot_busy_queues(bfqd) == 0)))
e1b2324d
AA
6859 bfq_handle_burst(bfqd, bfqq);
6860
18e5a57d 6861 return bfqq;
aee69d78
PV
6862}
6863
2f95fa5c
ZL
6864static void
6865bfq_idle_slice_timer_body(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_queue *bfqq)
aee69d78 6866{
aee69d78
PV
6867 enum bfqq_expiration reason;
6868 unsigned long flags;
6869
6870 spin_lock_irqsave(&bfqd->lock, flags);
aee69d78 6871
2f95fa5c
ZL
6872 /*
6873 * Considering that bfqq may be in race, we should firstly check
6874 * whether bfqq is in service before doing something on it. If
6875 * the bfqq in race is not in service, it has already been expired
6876 * through __bfq_bfqq_expire func and its wait_request flags has
6877 * been cleared in __bfq_bfqd_reset_in_service func.
6878 */
aee69d78
PV
6879 if (bfqq != bfqd->in_service_queue) {
6880 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bfqd->lock, flags);
6881 return;
6882 }
6883
2f95fa5c
ZL
6884 bfq_clear_bfqq_wait_request(bfqq);
6885
aee69d78
PV
6886 if (bfq_bfqq_budget_timeout(bfqq))
6887 /*
6888 * Also here the queue can be safely expired
6889 * for budget timeout without wasting
6890 * guarantees
6891 */
6892 reason = BFQQE_BUDGET_TIMEOUT;
6893 else if (bfqq->queued[0] == 0 && bfqq->queued[1] == 0)
6894 /*
6895 * The queue may not be empty upon timer expiration,
6896 * because we may not disable the timer when the
6897 * first request of the in-service queue arrives
6898 * during disk idling.
6899 */
6900 reason = BFQQE_TOO_IDLE;
6901 else
6902 goto schedule_dispatch;
6903
6904 bfq_bfqq_expire(bfqd, bfqq, true, reason);
6905
6906schedule_dispatch:
6fa3e8d3 6907 spin_unlock_irqrestore(&bfqd->lock, flags);
aee69d78
PV
6908 bfq_schedule_dispatch(bfqd);
6909}
6910
6911/*
6912 * Handler of the expiration of the timer running if the in-service queue
6913 * is idling inside its time slice.
6914 */
6915static enum hrtimer_restart bfq_idle_slice_timer(struct hrtimer *timer)
6916{
6917 struct bfq_data *bfqd = container_of(timer, struct bfq_data,
6918 idle_slice_timer);
6919 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = bfqd->in_service_queue;
6920
6921 /*
6922 * Theoretical race here: the in-service queue can be NULL or
6923 * different from the queue that was idling if a new request
6924 * arrives for the current queue and there is a full dispatch
6925 * cycle that changes the in-service queue. This can hardly
6926 * happen, but in the worst case we just expire a queue too
6927 * early.
6928 */
6929 if (bfqq)
2f95fa5c 6930 bfq_idle_slice_timer_body(bfqd, bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
6931
6932 return HRTIMER_NORESTART;
6933}
6934
6935static void __bfq_put_async_bfqq(struct bfq_data *bfqd,
6936 struct bfq_queue **bfqq_ptr)
6937{
6938 struct bfq_queue *bfqq = *bfqq_ptr;
6939
6940 bfq_log(bfqd, "put_async_bfqq: %p", bfqq);
6941 if (bfqq) {
e21b7a0b
AA
6942 bfq_bfqq_move(bfqd, bfqq, bfqd->root_group);
6943
aee69d78
PV
6944 bfq_log_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, "put_async_bfqq: putting %p, %d",
6945 bfqq, bfqq->ref);
6946 bfq_put_queue(bfqq);
6947 *bfqq_ptr = NULL;
6948 }
6949}
6950
6951/*
e21b7a0b
AA
6952 * Release all the bfqg references to its async queues. If we are
6953 * deallocating the group these queues may still contain requests, so
6954 * we reparent them to the root cgroup (i.e., the only one that will
6955 * exist for sure until all the requests on a device are gone).
aee69d78 6956 */
ea25da48 6957void bfq_put_async_queues(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct bfq_group *bfqg)
aee69d78
PV
6958{
6959 int i, j;
6960
6961 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
202bc942 6962 for (j = 0; j < IOPRIO_NR_LEVELS; j++)
e21b7a0b 6963 __bfq_put_async_bfqq(bfqd, &bfqg->async_bfqq[i][j]);
aee69d78 6964
e21b7a0b 6965 __bfq_put_async_bfqq(bfqd, &bfqg->async_idle_bfqq);
aee69d78
PV
6966}
6967
f0635b8a
JA
6968/*
6969 * See the comments on bfq_limit_depth for the purpose of
483b7bf2 6970 * the depths set in the function. Return minimum shallow depth we'll use.
f0635b8a 6971 */
76f1df88 6972static void bfq_update_depths(struct bfq_data *bfqd, struct sbitmap_queue *bt)
f0635b8a 6973{
44dfa279 6974 unsigned int depth = 1U << bt->sb.shift;
483b7bf2 6975
44dfa279 6976 bfqd->full_depth_shift = bt->sb.shift;
f0635b8a
JA
6977 /*
6978 * In-word depths if no bfq_queue is being weight-raised:
6979 * leaving 25% of tags only for sync reads.
6980 *
6981 * In next formulas, right-shift the value
bd7d4ef6
JA
6982 * (1U<<bt->sb.shift), instead of computing directly
6983 * (1U<<(bt->sb.shift - something)), to be robust against
6984 * any possible value of bt->sb.shift, without having to
f0635b8a
JA
6985 * limit 'something'.
6986 */
6987 /* no more than 50% of tags for async I/O */
44dfa279 6988 bfqd->word_depths[0][0] = max(depth >> 1, 1U);
f0635b8a
JA
6989 /*
6990 * no more than 75% of tags for sync writes (25% extra tags
6991 * w.r.t. async I/O, to prevent async I/O from starving sync
6992 * writes)
6993 */
44dfa279 6994 bfqd->word_depths[0][1] = max((depth * 3) >> 2, 1U);
f0635b8a
JA
6995
6996 /*
6997 * In-word depths in case some bfq_queue is being weight-
6998 * raised: leaving ~63% of tags for sync reads. This is the
6999 * highest percentage for which, in our tests, application
7000 * start-up times didn't suffer from any regression due to tag
7001 * shortage.
7002 */
7003 /* no more than ~18% of tags for async I/O */
44dfa279 7004 bfqd->word_depths[1][0] = max((depth * 3) >> 4, 1U);
f0635b8a 7005 /* no more than ~37% of tags for sync writes (~20% extra tags) */
44dfa279 7006 bfqd->word_depths[1][1] = max((depth * 6) >> 4, 1U);
f0635b8a
JA
7007}
7008
77f1e0a5 7009static void bfq_depth_updated(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx)
f0635b8a
JA
7010{
7011 struct bfq_data *bfqd = hctx->queue->elevator->elevator_data;
7012 struct blk_mq_tags *tags = hctx->sched_tags;
7013
76f1df88
JK
7014 bfq_update_depths(bfqd, &tags->bitmap_tags);
7015 sbitmap_queue_min_shallow_depth(&tags->bitmap_tags, 1);
77f1e0a5
JA
7016}
7017
7018static int bfq_init_hctx(struct blk_mq_hw_ctx *hctx, unsigned int index)
7019{
7020 bfq_depth_updated(hctx);
f0635b8a
JA
7021 return 0;
7022}
7023
aee69d78
PV
7024static void bfq_exit_queue(struct elevator_queue *e)
7025{
7026 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data;
7027 struct bfq_queue *bfqq, *n;
7028
7029 hrtimer_cancel(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer);
7030
7031 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
7032 list_for_each_entry_safe(bfqq, n, &bfqd->idle_list, bfqq_list)
e21b7a0b 7033 bfq_deactivate_bfqq(bfqd, bfqq, false, false);
aee69d78
PV
7034 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
7035
7036 hrtimer_cancel(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer);
7037
0d52af59
PV
7038 /* release oom-queue reference to root group */
7039 bfqg_and_blkg_put(bfqd->root_group);
7040
4d8340d0 7041#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
e21b7a0b
AA
7042 blkcg_deactivate_policy(bfqd->queue, &blkcg_policy_bfq);
7043#else
7044 spin_lock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
7045 bfq_put_async_queues(bfqd, bfqd->root_group);
7046 kfree(bfqd->root_group);
7047 spin_unlock_irq(&bfqd->lock);
7048#endif
7049
aee69d78
PV
7050 kfree(bfqd);
7051}
7052
e21b7a0b
AA
7053static void bfq_init_root_group(struct bfq_group *root_group,
7054 struct bfq_data *bfqd)
7055{
7056 int i;
7057
7058#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
7059 root_group->entity.parent = NULL;
7060 root_group->my_entity = NULL;
7061 root_group->bfqd = bfqd;
7062#endif
36eca894 7063 root_group->rq_pos_tree = RB_ROOT;
e21b7a0b
AA
7064 for (i = 0; i < BFQ_IOPRIO_CLASSES; i++)
7065 root_group->sched_data.service_tree[i] = BFQ_SERVICE_TREE_INIT;
7066 root_group->sched_data.bfq_class_idle_last_service = jiffies;
7067}
7068
aee69d78
PV
7069static int bfq_init_queue(struct request_queue *q, struct elevator_type *e)
7070{
7071 struct bfq_data *bfqd;
7072 struct elevator_queue *eq;
aee69d78
PV
7073
7074 eq = elevator_alloc(q, e);
7075 if (!eq)
7076 return -ENOMEM;
7077
7078 bfqd = kzalloc_node(sizeof(*bfqd), GFP_KERNEL, q->node);
7079 if (!bfqd) {
7080 kobject_put(&eq->kobj);
7081 return -ENOMEM;
7082 }
7083 eq->elevator_data = bfqd;
7084
0d945c1f 7085 spin_lock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
e21b7a0b 7086 q->elevator = eq;
0d945c1f 7087 spin_unlock_irq(&q->queue_lock);
e21b7a0b 7088
aee69d78
PV
7089 /*
7090 * Our fallback bfqq if bfq_find_alloc_queue() runs into OOM issues.
7091 * Grab a permanent reference to it, so that the normal code flow
7092 * will not attempt to free it.
7093 */
7094 bfq_init_bfqq(bfqd, &bfqd->oom_bfqq, NULL, 1, 0);
7095 bfqd->oom_bfqq.ref++;
7096 bfqd->oom_bfqq.new_ioprio = BFQ_DEFAULT_QUEUE_IOPRIO;
7097 bfqd->oom_bfqq.new_ioprio_class = IOPRIO_CLASS_BE;
7098 bfqd->oom_bfqq.entity.new_weight =
7099 bfq_ioprio_to_weight(bfqd->oom_bfqq.new_ioprio);
e1b2324d
AA
7100
7101 /* oom_bfqq does not participate to bursts */
7102 bfq_clear_bfqq_just_created(&bfqd->oom_bfqq);
7103
aee69d78
PV
7104 /*
7105 * Trigger weight initialization, according to ioprio, at the
7106 * oom_bfqq's first activation. The oom_bfqq's ioprio and ioprio
7107 * class won't be changed any more.
7108 */
7109 bfqd->oom_bfqq.entity.prio_changed = 1;
7110
7111 bfqd->queue = q;
7112
e21b7a0b 7113 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bfqd->dispatch);
aee69d78
PV
7114
7115 hrtimer_init(&bfqd->idle_slice_timer, CLOCK_MONOTONIC,
7116 HRTIMER_MODE_REL);
7117 bfqd->idle_slice_timer.function = bfq_idle_slice_timer;
7118
fb53ac6c 7119 bfqd->queue_weights_tree = RB_ROOT_CACHED;
ba7aeae5 7120 bfqd->num_groups_with_pending_reqs = 0;
1de0c4cd 7121
aee69d78
PV
7122 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bfqd->active_list);
7123 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&bfqd->idle_list);
e1b2324d 7124 INIT_HLIST_HEAD(&bfqd->burst_list);
aee69d78
PV
7125
7126 bfqd->hw_tag = -1;
8cacc5ab 7127 bfqd->nonrot_with_queueing = blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue);
aee69d78
PV
7128
7129 bfqd->bfq_max_budget = bfq_default_max_budget;
7130
7131 bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[0] = bfq_fifo_expire[0];
7132 bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[1] = bfq_fifo_expire[1];
7133 bfqd->bfq_back_max = bfq_back_max;
7134 bfqd->bfq_back_penalty = bfq_back_penalty;
7135 bfqd->bfq_slice_idle = bfq_slice_idle;
aee69d78
PV
7136 bfqd->bfq_timeout = bfq_timeout;
7137
e1b2324d
AA
7138 bfqd->bfq_large_burst_thresh = 8;
7139 bfqd->bfq_burst_interval = msecs_to_jiffies(180);
7140
44e44a1b
PV
7141 bfqd->low_latency = true;
7142
7143 /*
7144 * Trade-off between responsiveness and fairness.
7145 */
7146 bfqd->bfq_wr_coeff = 30;
77b7dcea 7147 bfqd->bfq_wr_rt_max_time = msecs_to_jiffies(300);
44e44a1b
PV
7148 bfqd->bfq_wr_max_time = 0;
7149 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_idle_time = msecs_to_jiffies(2000);
7150 bfqd->bfq_wr_min_inter_arr_async = msecs_to_jiffies(500);
77b7dcea
PV
7151 bfqd->bfq_wr_max_softrt_rate = 7000; /*
7152 * Approximate rate required
7153 * to playback or record a
7154 * high-definition compressed
7155 * video.
7156 */
cfd69712 7157 bfqd->wr_busy_queues = 0;
44e44a1b
PV
7158
7159 /*
e24f1c24
PV
7160 * Begin by assuming, optimistically, that the device peak
7161 * rate is equal to 2/3 of the highest reference rate.
44e44a1b 7162 */
e24f1c24
PV
7163 bfqd->rate_dur_prod = ref_rate[blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue)] *
7164 ref_wr_duration[blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue)];
7165 bfqd->peak_rate = ref_rate[blk_queue_nonrot(bfqd->queue)] * 2 / 3;
44e44a1b 7166
aee69d78 7167 spin_lock_init(&bfqd->lock);
aee69d78 7168
e21b7a0b
AA
7169 /*
7170 * The invocation of the next bfq_create_group_hierarchy
7171 * function is the head of a chain of function calls
7172 * (bfq_create_group_hierarchy->blkcg_activate_policy->
7173 * blk_mq_freeze_queue) that may lead to the invocation of the
7174 * has_work hook function. For this reason,
7175 * bfq_create_group_hierarchy is invoked only after all
7176 * scheduler data has been initialized, apart from the fields
7177 * that can be initialized only after invoking
7178 * bfq_create_group_hierarchy. This, in particular, enables
7179 * has_work to correctly return false. Of course, to avoid
7180 * other inconsistencies, the blk-mq stack must then refrain
7181 * from invoking further scheduler hooks before this init
7182 * function is finished.
7183 */
7184 bfqd->root_group = bfq_create_group_hierarchy(bfqd, q->node);
7185 if (!bfqd->root_group)
7186 goto out_free;
7187 bfq_init_root_group(bfqd->root_group, bfqd);
7188 bfq_init_entity(&bfqd->oom_bfqq.entity, bfqd->root_group);
7189
b5dc5d4d 7190 wbt_disable_default(q);
aee69d78 7191 return 0;
e21b7a0b
AA
7192
7193out_free:
7194 kfree(bfqd);
7195 kobject_put(&eq->kobj);
7196 return -ENOMEM;
aee69d78
PV
7197}
7198
7199static void bfq_slab_kill(void)
7200{
7201 kmem_cache_destroy(bfq_pool);
7202}
7203
7204static int __init bfq_slab_setup(void)
7205{
7206 bfq_pool = KMEM_CACHE(bfq_queue, 0);
7207 if (!bfq_pool)
7208 return -ENOMEM;
7209 return 0;
7210}
7211
7212static ssize_t bfq_var_show(unsigned int var, char *page)
7213{
7214 return sprintf(page, "%u\n", var);
7215}
7216
2f79136b 7217static int bfq_var_store(unsigned long *var, const char *page)
aee69d78
PV
7218{
7219 unsigned long new_val;
7220 int ret = kstrtoul(page, 10, &new_val);
7221
2f79136b
BVA
7222 if (ret)
7223 return ret;
7224 *var = new_val;
7225 return 0;
aee69d78
PV
7226}
7227
7228#define SHOW_FUNCTION(__FUNC, __VAR, __CONV) \
7229static ssize_t __FUNC(struct elevator_queue *e, char *page) \
7230{ \
7231 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data; \
7232 u64 __data = __VAR; \
7233 if (__CONV == 1) \
7234 __data = jiffies_to_msecs(__data); \
7235 else if (__CONV == 2) \
7236 __data = div_u64(__data, NSEC_PER_MSEC); \
7237 return bfq_var_show(__data, (page)); \
7238}
7239SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_fifo_expire_sync_show, bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[1], 2);
7240SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_fifo_expire_async_show, bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[0], 2);
7241SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_back_seek_max_show, bfqd->bfq_back_max, 0);
7242SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_back_seek_penalty_show, bfqd->bfq_back_penalty, 0);
7243SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_slice_idle_show, bfqd->bfq_slice_idle, 2);
7244SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_max_budget_show, bfqd->bfq_user_max_budget, 0);
7245SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_timeout_sync_show, bfqd->bfq_timeout, 1);
7246SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_strict_guarantees_show, bfqd->strict_guarantees, 0);
44e44a1b 7247SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_low_latency_show, bfqd->low_latency, 0);
aee69d78
PV
7248#undef SHOW_FUNCTION
7249
7250#define USEC_SHOW_FUNCTION(__FUNC, __VAR) \
7251static ssize_t __FUNC(struct elevator_queue *e, char *page) \
7252{ \
7253 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data; \
7254 u64 __data = __VAR; \
7255 __data = div_u64(__data, NSEC_PER_USEC); \
7256 return bfq_var_show(__data, (page)); \
7257}
7258USEC_SHOW_FUNCTION(bfq_slice_idle_us_show, bfqd->bfq_slice_idle);
7259#undef USEC_SHOW_FUNCTION
7260
7261#define STORE_FUNCTION(__FUNC, __PTR, MIN, MAX, __CONV) \
7262static ssize_t \
7263__FUNC(struct elevator_queue *e, const char *page, size_t count) \
7264{ \
7265 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data; \
1530486c 7266 unsigned long __data, __min = (MIN), __max = (MAX); \
2f79136b
BVA
7267 int ret; \
7268 \
7269 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page)); \
7270 if (ret) \
7271 return ret; \
1530486c
BVA
7272 if (__data < __min) \
7273 __data = __min; \
7274 else if (__data > __max) \
7275 __data = __max; \
aee69d78
PV
7276 if (__CONV == 1) \
7277 *(__PTR) = msecs_to_jiffies(__data); \
7278 else if (__CONV == 2) \
7279 *(__PTR) = (u64)__data * NSEC_PER_MSEC; \
7280 else \
7281 *(__PTR) = __data; \
235f8da1 7282 return count; \
aee69d78
PV
7283}
7284STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_fifo_expire_sync_store, &bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[1], 1,
7285 INT_MAX, 2);
7286STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_fifo_expire_async_store, &bfqd->bfq_fifo_expire[0], 1,
7287 INT_MAX, 2);
7288STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_back_seek_max_store, &bfqd->bfq_back_max, 0, INT_MAX, 0);
7289STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_back_seek_penalty_store, &bfqd->bfq_back_penalty, 1,
7290 INT_MAX, 0);
7291STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_slice_idle_store, &bfqd->bfq_slice_idle, 0, INT_MAX, 2);
7292#undef STORE_FUNCTION
7293
7294#define USEC_STORE_FUNCTION(__FUNC, __PTR, MIN, MAX) \
7295static ssize_t __FUNC(struct elevator_queue *e, const char *page, size_t count)\
7296{ \
7297 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data; \
1530486c 7298 unsigned long __data, __min = (MIN), __max = (MAX); \
2f79136b
BVA
7299 int ret; \
7300 \
7301 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page)); \
7302 if (ret) \
7303 return ret; \
1530486c
BVA
7304 if (__data < __min) \
7305 __data = __min; \
7306 else if (__data > __max) \
7307 __data = __max; \
aee69d78 7308 *(__PTR) = (u64)__data * NSEC_PER_USEC; \
235f8da1 7309 return count; \
aee69d78
PV
7310}
7311USEC_STORE_FUNCTION(bfq_slice_idle_us_store, &bfqd->bfq_slice_idle, 0,
7312 UINT_MAX);
7313#undef USEC_STORE_FUNCTION
7314
aee69d78
PV
7315static ssize_t bfq_max_budget_store(struct elevator_queue *e,
7316 const char *page, size_t count)
7317{
7318 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data;
2f79136b
BVA
7319 unsigned long __data;
7320 int ret;
235f8da1 7321
2f79136b
BVA
7322 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page));
7323 if (ret)
7324 return ret;
aee69d78
PV
7325
7326 if (__data == 0)
ab0e43e9 7327 bfqd->bfq_max_budget = bfq_calc_max_budget(bfqd);
aee69d78
PV
7328 else {
7329 if (__data > INT_MAX)
7330 __data = INT_MAX;
7331 bfqd->bfq_max_budget = __data;
7332 }
7333
7334 bfqd->bfq_user_max_budget = __data;
7335
235f8da1 7336 return count;
aee69d78
PV
7337}
7338
7339/*
7340 * Leaving this name to preserve name compatibility with cfq
7341 * parameters, but this timeout is used for both sync and async.
7342 */
7343static ssize_t bfq_timeout_sync_store(struct elevator_queue *e,
7344 const char *page, size_t count)
7345{
7346 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data;
2f79136b
BVA
7347 unsigned long __data;
7348 int ret;
235f8da1 7349
2f79136b
BVA
7350 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page));
7351 if (ret)
7352 return ret;
aee69d78
PV
7353
7354 if (__data < 1)
7355 __data = 1;
7356 else if (__data > INT_MAX)
7357 __data = INT_MAX;
7358
7359 bfqd->bfq_timeout = msecs_to_jiffies(__data);
7360 if (bfqd->bfq_user_max_budget == 0)
ab0e43e9 7361 bfqd->bfq_max_budget = bfq_calc_max_budget(bfqd);
aee69d78 7362
235f8da1 7363 return count;
aee69d78
PV
7364}
7365
7366static ssize_t bfq_strict_guarantees_store(struct elevator_queue *e,
7367 const char *page, size_t count)
7368{
7369 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data;
2f79136b
BVA
7370 unsigned long __data;
7371 int ret;
235f8da1 7372
2f79136b
BVA
7373 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page));
7374 if (ret)
7375 return ret;
aee69d78
PV
7376
7377 if (__data > 1)
7378 __data = 1;
7379 if (!bfqd->strict_guarantees && __data == 1
7380 && bfqd->bfq_slice_idle < 8 * NSEC_PER_MSEC)
7381 bfqd->bfq_slice_idle = 8 * NSEC_PER_MSEC;
7382
7383 bfqd->strict_guarantees = __data;
7384
235f8da1 7385 return count;
aee69d78
PV
7386}
7387
44e44a1b
PV
7388static ssize_t bfq_low_latency_store(struct elevator_queue *e,
7389 const char *page, size_t count)
7390{
7391 struct bfq_data *bfqd = e->elevator_data;
2f79136b
BVA
7392 unsigned long __data;
7393 int ret;
235f8da1 7394
2f79136b
BVA
7395 ret = bfq_var_store(&__data, (page));
7396 if (ret)
7397 return ret;
44e44a1b
PV
7398
7399 if (__data > 1)
7400 __data = 1;
7401 if (__data == 0 && bfqd->low_latency != 0)
7402 bfq_end_wr(bfqd);
7403 bfqd->low_latency = __data;
7404
235f8da1 7405 return count;
44e44a1b
PV
7406}
7407
aee69d78
PV
7408#define BFQ_ATTR(name) \
7409 __ATTR(name, 0644, bfq_##name##_show, bfq_##name##_store)
7410
7411static struct elv_fs_entry bfq_attrs[] = {
7412 BFQ_ATTR(fifo_expire_sync),
7413 BFQ_ATTR(fifo_expire_async),
7414 BFQ_ATTR(back_seek_max),
7415 BFQ_ATTR(back_seek_penalty),
7416 BFQ_ATTR(slice_idle),
7417 BFQ_ATTR(slice_idle_us),
7418 BFQ_ATTR(max_budget),
7419 BFQ_ATTR(timeout_sync),
7420 BFQ_ATTR(strict_guarantees),
44e44a1b 7421 BFQ_ATTR(low_latency),
aee69d78
PV
7422 __ATTR_NULL
7423};
7424
7425static struct elevator_type iosched_bfq_mq = {
f9cd4bfe 7426 .ops = {
a52a69ea 7427 .limit_depth = bfq_limit_depth,
5bbf4e5a 7428 .prepare_request = bfq_prepare_request,
a7877390
PV
7429 .requeue_request = bfq_finish_requeue_request,
7430 .finish_request = bfq_finish_requeue_request,
aee69d78
PV
7431 .exit_icq = bfq_exit_icq,
7432 .insert_requests = bfq_insert_requests,
7433 .dispatch_request = bfq_dispatch_request,
7434 .next_request = elv_rb_latter_request,
7435 .former_request = elv_rb_former_request,
7436 .allow_merge = bfq_allow_bio_merge,
7437 .bio_merge = bfq_bio_merge,
7438 .request_merge = bfq_request_merge,
7439 .requests_merged = bfq_requests_merged,
7440 .request_merged = bfq_request_merged,
7441 .has_work = bfq_has_work,
77f1e0a5 7442 .depth_updated = bfq_depth_updated,
f0635b8a 7443 .init_hctx = bfq_init_hctx,
aee69d78
PV
7444 .init_sched = bfq_init_queue,
7445 .exit_sched = bfq_exit_queue,
7446 },
7447
aee69d78
PV
7448 .icq_size = sizeof(struct bfq_io_cq),
7449 .icq_align = __alignof__(struct bfq_io_cq),
7450 .elevator_attrs = bfq_attrs,
7451 .elevator_name = "bfq",
7452 .elevator_owner = THIS_MODULE,
7453};
26b4cf24 7454MODULE_ALIAS("bfq-iosched");
aee69d78
PV
7455
7456static int __init bfq_init(void)
7457{
7458 int ret;
7459
e21b7a0b
AA
7460#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
7461 ret = blkcg_policy_register(&blkcg_policy_bfq);
7462 if (ret)
7463 return ret;
7464#endif
7465
aee69d78
PV
7466 ret = -ENOMEM;
7467 if (bfq_slab_setup())
7468 goto err_pol_unreg;
7469
44e44a1b
PV
7470 /*
7471 * Times to load large popular applications for the typical
7472 * systems installed on the reference devices (see the
e24f1c24
PV
7473 * comments before the definition of the next
7474 * array). Actually, we use slightly lower values, as the
44e44a1b
PV
7475 * estimated peak rate tends to be smaller than the actual
7476 * peak rate. The reason for this last fact is that estimates
7477 * are computed over much shorter time intervals than the long
7478 * intervals typically used for benchmarking. Why? First, to
7479 * adapt more quickly to variations. Second, because an I/O
7480 * scheduler cannot rely on a peak-rate-evaluation workload to
7481 * be run for a long time.
7482 */
e24f1c24
PV
7483 ref_wr_duration[0] = msecs_to_jiffies(7000); /* actually 8 sec */
7484 ref_wr_duration[1] = msecs_to_jiffies(2500); /* actually 3 sec */
44e44a1b 7485
aee69d78
PV
7486 ret = elv_register(&iosched_bfq_mq);
7487 if (ret)
37dcd657 7488 goto slab_kill;
aee69d78
PV
7489
7490 return 0;
7491
37dcd657 7492slab_kill:
7493 bfq_slab_kill();
aee69d78 7494err_pol_unreg:
e21b7a0b
AA
7495#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
7496 blkcg_policy_unregister(&blkcg_policy_bfq);
7497#endif
aee69d78
PV
7498 return ret;
7499}
7500
7501static void __exit bfq_exit(void)
7502{
7503 elv_unregister(&iosched_bfq_mq);
e21b7a0b
AA
7504#ifdef CONFIG_BFQ_GROUP_IOSCHED
7505 blkcg_policy_unregister(&blkcg_policy_bfq);
7506#endif
aee69d78
PV
7507 bfq_slab_kill();
7508}
7509
7510module_init(bfq_init);
7511module_exit(bfq_exit);
7512
7513MODULE_AUTHOR("Paolo Valente");
7514MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
7515MODULE_DESCRIPTION("MQ Budget Fair Queueing I/O Scheduler");