Shaohua Li | 5a6265f | 2017-01-30 15:47:49 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | RAID5 cache |
| 2 | |
| 3 | Raid 4/5/6 could include an extra disk for data cache besides normal RAID |
| 4 | disks. The role of RAID disks isn't changed with the cache disk. The cache disk |
| 5 | caches data to the RAID disks. The cache can be in write-through (supported |
| 6 | since 4.4) or write-back mode (supported since 4.10). mdadm (supported since |
| 7 | 3.4) has a new option '--write-journal' to create array with cache. Please |
| 8 | refer to mdadm manual for details. By default (RAID array starts), the cache is |
| 9 | in write-through mode. A user can switch it to write-back mode by: |
| 10 | |
| 11 | echo "write-back" > /sys/block/md0/md/journal_mode |
| 12 | |
| 13 | And switch it back to write-through mode by: |
| 14 | |
| 15 | echo "write-through" > /sys/block/md0/md/journal_mode |
| 16 | |
| 17 | In both modes, all writes to the array will hit cache disk first. This means |
| 18 | the cache disk must be fast and sustainable. |
| 19 | |
| 20 | ------------------------------------- |
| 21 | write-through mode: |
| 22 | |
| 23 | This mode mainly fixes the 'write hole' issue. For RAID 4/5/6 array, an unclean |
| 24 | shutdown can cause data in some stripes to not be in consistent state, eg, data |
| 25 | and parity don't match. The reason is that a stripe write involves several RAID |
| 26 | disks and it's possible the writes don't hit all RAID disks yet before the |
| 27 | unclean shutdown. We call an array degraded if it has inconsistent data. MD |
| 28 | tries to resync the array to bring it back to normal state. But before the |
| 29 | resync completes, any system crash will expose the chance of real data |
| 30 | corruption in the RAID array. This problem is called 'write hole'. |
| 31 | |
| 32 | The write-through cache will cache all data on cache disk first. After the data |
| 33 | is safe on the cache disk, the data will be flushed onto RAID disks. The |
| 34 | two-step write will guarantee MD can recover correct data after unclean |
| 35 | shutdown even the array is degraded. Thus the cache can close the 'write hole'. |
| 36 | |
| 37 | In write-through mode, MD reports IO completion to upper layer (usually |
| 38 | filesystems) after the data is safe on RAID disks, so cache disk failure |
| 39 | doesn't cause data loss. Of course cache disk failure means the array is |
| 40 | exposed to 'write hole' again. |
| 41 | |
| 42 | In write-through mode, the cache disk isn't required to be big. Several |
| 43 | hundreds megabytes are enough. |
| 44 | |
| 45 | -------------------------------------- |
| 46 | write-back mode: |
| 47 | |
| 48 | write-back mode fixes the 'write hole' issue too, since all write data is |
| 49 | cached on cache disk. But the main goal of 'write-back' cache is to speed up |
| 50 | write. If a write crosses all RAID disks of a stripe, we call it full-stripe |
| 51 | write. For non-full-stripe writes, MD must read old data before the new parity |
| 52 | can be calculated. These synchronous reads hurt write throughput. Some writes |
| 53 | which are sequential but not dispatched in the same time will suffer from this |
| 54 | overhead too. Write-back cache will aggregate the data and flush the data to |
| 55 | RAID disks only after the data becomes a full stripe write. This will |
| 56 | completely avoid the overhead, so it's very helpful for some workloads. A |
| 57 | typical workload which does sequential write followed by fsync is an example. |
| 58 | |
| 59 | In write-back mode, MD reports IO completion to upper layer (usually |
| 60 | filesystems) right after the data hits cache disk. The data is flushed to raid |
| 61 | disks later after specific conditions met. So cache disk failure will cause |
| 62 | data loss. |
| 63 | |
| 64 | In write-back mode, MD also caches data in memory. The memory cache includes |
| 65 | the same data stored on cache disk, so a power loss doesn't cause data loss. |
| 66 | The memory cache size has performance impact for the array. It's recommended |
| 67 | the size is big. A user can configure the size by: |
| 68 | |
| 69 | echo "2048" > /sys/block/md0/md/stripe_cache_size |
| 70 | |
| 71 | Too small cache disk will make the write aggregation less efficient in this |
| 72 | mode depending on the workloads. It's recommended to use a cache disk with at |
| 73 | least several gigabytes size in write-back mode. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | -------------------------------------- |
| 76 | The implementation: |
| 77 | |
| 78 | The write-through and write-back cache use the same disk format. The cache disk |
| 79 | is organized as a simple write log. The log consists of 'meta data' and 'data' |
| 80 | pairs. The meta data describes the data. It also includes checksum and sequence |
| 81 | ID for recovery identification. Data can be IO data and parity data. Data is |
| 82 | checksumed too. The checksum is stored in the meta data ahead of the data. The |
| 83 | checksum is an optimization because MD can write meta and data freely without |
| 84 | worry about the order. MD superblock has a field pointed to the valid meta data |
| 85 | of log head. |
| 86 | |
| 87 | The log implementation is pretty straightforward. The difficult part is the |
| 88 | order in which MD writes data to cache disk and RAID disks. Specifically, in |
| 89 | write-through mode, MD calculates parity for IO data, writes both IO data and |
| 90 | parity to the log, writes the data and parity to RAID disks after the data and |
| 91 | parity is settled down in log and finally the IO is finished. Read just reads |
| 92 | from raid disks as usual. |
| 93 | |
| 94 | In write-back mode, MD writes IO data to the log and reports IO completion. The |
| 95 | data is also fully cached in memory at that time, which means read must query |
| 96 | memory cache. If some conditions are met, MD will flush the data to RAID disks. |
| 97 | MD will calculate parity for the data and write parity into the log. After this |
| 98 | is finished, MD will write both data and parity into RAID disks, then MD can |
| 99 | release the memory cache. The flush conditions could be stripe becomes a full |
| 100 | stripe write, free cache disk space is low or free in-kernel memory cache space |
| 101 | is low. |
| 102 | |
| 103 | After an unclean shutdown, MD does recovery. MD reads all meta data and data |
| 104 | from the log. The sequence ID and checksum will help us detect corrupted meta |
| 105 | data and data. If MD finds a stripe with data and valid parities (1 parity for |
| 106 | raid4/5 and 2 for raid6), MD will write the data and parities to RAID disks. If |
| 107 | parities are incompleted, they are discarded. If part of data is corrupted, |
| 108 | they are discarded too. MD then loads valid data and writes them to RAID disks |
| 109 | in normal way. |