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authorIsrael Rukshin <israelr@mellanox.com>2019-11-24 18:38:31 +0200
committerKeith Busch <kbusch@kernel.org>2019-11-27 02:14:01 +0900
commitb1ae1a238900474a9f51431c0f7f169ade1faa19 (patch)
tree64451d3a747ecfe0e757d5a49b2f29953a1680d2 /drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
parentnvme-rdma: Avoid preallocating big SGL for data (diff)
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nvme-fc: Avoid preallocating big SGL for data
nvme_fc_create_io_queues() preallocates a big buffer for the IO SGL based on SG_CHUNK_SIZE. Modern DMA engines are often capable of dealing with very big segments so the SG_CHUNK_SIZE is often too big. SG_CHUNK_SIZE results in a static 4KB SGL allocation per command. If a controller has lots of deep queues, preallocation for the sg list can consume substantial amounts of memory. For nvme-fc, nr_hw_queues can be 128 and each queue's depth 128. This means the resulting preallocation for the data SGL is 128*128*4K = 64MB per controller. Switch to runtime allocation for SGL for lists longer than 2 entries. This is the approach used by NVMe PCI so it should be reasonable for NVMeOF as well. Runtime SGL allocation has always been the case for the legacy I/O path so this is nothing new. Reviewed-by: Max Gurtovoy <maxg@mellanox.com> Reviewed-by: James Smart <james.smart@broadcom.com> Signed-off-by: Israel Rukshin <israelr@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Keith Busch <kbusch@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/nvme/target/loop.c')
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