show/hide this revision's text 4 shorten title, update re sync()

How can I stop bursty Bursty writes to SD/USB stalling my time-critical apps on embedded Linux?

I'm working on an embedded Linux project that interfaces an ARM9 to a hardware video encoder chip, and writes the video out to SD card or USB stick. The software architecture involves a kernel driver that reads data into a pool of buffers, and a userland app that writes the data to a file on the mounted removable device.

I am finding that above a certain data rate (around 750kbyte/sec) I start to see the userland video-writing app stalling for maybe half a second, about every 5 seconds. This is enough to cause the kernel driver to run out of buffers - and even if I could increase the number of buffers, the video data has to be synchronised (ideally within 40ms) with other things that are going on in real time. Between these 5 second "lag spikes", the writes complete well within 40ms (as far as the app is concerned - I appreciate they're buffered by the OS)

I think this lag spike is to do with the way Linux is flushing data out to disk - I note that pdflush is designed to wake up every 5s, my understanding is that this would be what does the writing. As soon as the stall is over the userland app is able to quickly service and write the backlog of buffers (that didn't overflow).

I think the device I'm writing to has reasonable ultimate throughput: copying a 15MB file from a memory fs and waiting for sync to complete (and the usb stick's light to stop flashing) gave me a write speed of around 2.7MBytes/sec.

I'm looking for two kinds of clues:

  1. How can I stop the bursty writing from stalling my app - perhaps process priorities, realtime patches, or tuning the filesystem code to write continuously rather than burstily?

  2. How can I make my app(s) aware of what is going on with the filesystem in terms of write backlog and throughput to the card/stick? I have the ability to change the video bitrate in the hardware codec on the fly which would be much better than dropping frames, or imposing an artificial cap on maximum allowed bitrate.

Some more info: this is a 200MHz ARM9 currently running a Montavista 2.6.10-based kernel.

Updates:

  • Mounting the filesystem SYNC causes throughput to be much too poor.
  • The removable media is FAT/FAT32 formatted and must be as the purpose of the design is that the media can be plugged into any Windows PC and read.
  • I did briefly experiment with fsync()/sync(
  • Regularly calling sync() calls but not at high frequency. I will again (but it seems like a kludgeor fsync() say, every second causes regular stalls and unacceptably poor throughput
  • I am using write() and open(O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC) rather than fopen() etc.
  • I can't immediately find anything online about the mentioned "Linux realtime filesystems". Links?

I hope this makes sense. First embedded Linux question on stackoverflow? :)

show/hide this revision's text 3 update re open() etc

I'm working on an embedded Linux project that interfaces an ARM9 to a hardware video encoder chip, and writes the video out to SD card or USB stick. The software architecture involves a kernel driver that reads data into a pool of buffers, and a userland app that writes the data to a file on the mounted removable device.

I am finding that above a certain data rate (around 750kbyte/sec) I start to see the userland video-writing app stalling for maybe half a second, about every 5 seconds. This is enough to cause the kernel driver to run out of buffers - and even if I could increase the number of buffers, the video data has to be synchronised (ideally within 40ms) with other things that are going on in real time. Between these 5 second "lag spikes", the writes complete well within 40ms (as far as the app is concerned - I appreciate they're buffered by the OS)

I think this lag spike is to do with the way Linux is flushing data out to disk - I note that pdflush is designed to wake up every 5s, my understanding is that this would be what does the writing. As soon as the stall is over the userland app is able to quickly service and write the backlog of buffers (that didn't overflow).

I think the device I'm writing to has reasonable ultimate throughput: copying a 15MB file from a memory fs and waiting for sync to complete (and the usb stick's light to stop flashing) gave me a write speed of around 2.7MBytes/sec.

I'm looking for two kinds of clues:

  1. How can I stop the bursty writing from stalling my app - perhaps process priorities, realtime patches, or tuning the filesystem code to write continuously rather than burstily?

  2. How can I make my app(s) aware of what is going on with the filesystem in terms of write backlog and throughput to the card/stick? I have the ability to change the video bitrate in the hardware codec on the fly which would be much better than dropping frames, or imposing an artificial cap on maximum allowed bitrate.

Some more info: this is a 200MHz ARM9 currently running a Montavista 2.6.10-based kernel.

More more info @17/9 0925 BST

Updates:

  • Mounting the filesystem SYNC causes throughput to be much too poor.
  • The removable media is FAT/FAT32 formatted and must be as the purpose of the design is that the media can be plugged into any Windows PC and read.
  • I did briefly experiment with fsync()/sync() calls but not at high frequency. I will again (but it seems like a kludge)
  • I will also look into the f* vs open etc. file access methods am using write() and report back.open(O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC) rather than fopen() etc.
  • I can't immediately find anything online about "Linux realtime filesystems". Links?

I hope this makes sense. First embedded Linux question on stackoverflow? :)

show/hide this revision's text 2 Add more info and initial responses

I'm working on an embedded Linux project that interfaces an ARM9 to a hardware video encoder chip, and writes the video out to SD card or USB stick. The software architecture involves a kernel driver that reads data into a pool of buffers, and a userland app that writes the data to a file on the mounted removable device.

I am finding that above a certain data rate (around 750kbyte/sec) I start to see the userland video-writing app stalling for maybe half a second, about every 5 seconds. This is enough to cause the kernel driver to run out of buffers - and even if I could increase the number of buffers, the video data has to be synchronised (ideally within 40ms) with other things that are going on in real time. Between these 5 second "lag spikes", the writes complete well within 40ms (as far as the app is concerned - I appreciate they're buffered by the OS)

I think this lag spike is to do with the way Linux is flushing data out to disk - I note that pdflush is designed to wake up every 5s, my understanding is that this would be what does the writing. As soon as the stall is over the userland app is able to quickly service and write the backlog of buffers (that didn't overflow).

I think the device I'm writing to has reasonable ultimate throughput: copying a 15MB file from a memory fs and waiting for sync to complete (and the usb stick's light to stop flashing) gave me a write speed of around 2.7MBytes/sec.

I'm looking for two kinds of clues:

  1. How can I stop the bursty writing from stalling my app - perhaps process priorities, realtime patches, or tuning the filesystem code to write continuously rather than burstily?

  2. How can I make my app(s) aware of what is going on with the filesystem in terms of write backlog and throughput to the card/stick? I have the ability to change the video bitrate in the hardware codec on the fly which would be much better than dropping frames, or imposing an artificial cap on maximum allowed bitrate.

Some more info: this is a 200MHz ARM9 currently running a Montavista 2.6.10-based kernel.

More more info @17/9 0925 BST:

  • Mounting the filesystem SYNC causes throughput to be much too poor.
  • The removable media is FAT/FAT32 formatted and must be as the purpose of the design is that the media can be plugged into any Windows PC and read.
  • I did briefly experiment with fsync()/sync() calls but not at high frequency. I will again (but it seems like a kludge)
  • I will also look into the f* vs open etc. file access methods and report back..
  • I can't immediately find anything online about "Linux realtime filesystems". Links?

I hope this makes sense. First embedded Linux question on stackoverflow? :)

show/hide this revision's text 1