mirror_zfs/.github/workflows/scripts/qemu-1-setup.sh
Tino Reichardt 34537bd9c7 ZTS: Optimize Kernel Same-page Merging (KSM)
Kernel same-page Merging (KSM) allows KVM guests to share identical
memory pages. These shared pages are usually common libraries or other
identical, high-use data.

The current configuration was a bit to lazy - so KSM didn't work very
well. With the new configuration I could run 3 Linux VMs in parralel.

FreeBSD can't benefit from it. But FreeBSD is not so memory hungry in
general, so there is no need for it ;)

Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes #16641
2024-11-05 11:09:22 -08:00

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
######################################################################
# 1) setup qemu instance on action runner
######################################################################
set -eu
# install needed packages
export DEBIAN_FRONTEND="noninteractive"
sudo apt-get -y update
sudo apt-get install -y axel cloud-image-utils daemonize guestfs-tools \
ksmtuned virt-manager linux-modules-extra-$(uname -r) zfsutils-linux
# generate ssh keys
rm -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 -q -N ""
# we expect RAM shortage
cat << EOF | sudo tee /etc/ksmtuned.conf > /dev/null
# /etc/ksmtuned.conf - Configuration file for ksmtuned
# https://docs.redhat.com/en/documentation/red_hat_enterprise_linux/7/html/virtualization_tuning_and_optimization_guide/chap-ksm
KSM_MONITOR_INTERVAL=60
# Millisecond sleep between ksm scans for 16Gb server.
# Smaller servers sleep more, bigger sleep less.
KSM_SLEEP_MSEC=30
KSM_NPAGES_BOOST=0
KSM_NPAGES_DECAY=0
KSM_NPAGES_MIN=1000
KSM_NPAGES_MAX=25000
KSM_THRES_COEF=80
KSM_THRES_CONST=8192
LOGFILE=/var/log/ksmtuned.log
DEBUG=1
EOF
sudo systemctl restart ksm
sudo systemctl restart ksmtuned
# not needed
sudo systemctl stop docker.socket
sudo systemctl stop multipathd.socket
# remove default swapfile and /mnt
sudo swapoff -a
sudo umount -l /mnt
DISK="/dev/disk/cloud/azure_resource-part1"
sudo sed -e "s|^$DISK.*||g" -i /etc/fstab
sudo wipefs -aq $DISK
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo modprobe loop
sudo modprobe zfs
# partition the disk as needed
DISK="/dev/disk/cloud/azure_resource"
sudo sgdisk --zap-all $DISK
sudo sgdisk -p \
-n 1:0:+16G -c 1:"swap" \
-n 2:0:0 -c 2:"tests" \
$DISK
sync
sleep 1
# swap with same size as RAM
sudo mkswap $DISK-part1
sudo swapon $DISK-part1
# 60GB data disk
SSD1="$DISK-part2"
# 10GB data disk on ext4
sudo fallocate -l 10G /test.ssd1
SSD2=$(sudo losetup -b 4096 -f /test.ssd1 --show)
# adjust zfs module parameter and create pool
exec 1>/dev/null
ARC_MIN=$((1024*1024*256))
ARC_MAX=$((1024*1024*512))
echo $ARC_MIN | sudo tee /sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_arc_min
echo $ARC_MAX | sudo tee /sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_arc_max
echo 1 | sudo tee /sys/module/zfs/parameters/zvol_use_blk_mq
sudo zpool create -f -o ashift=12 zpool $SSD1 $SSD2 \
-O relatime=off -O atime=off -O xattr=sa -O compression=lz4 \
-O mountpoint=/mnt/tests
# no need for some scheduler
for i in /sys/block/s*/queue/scheduler; do
echo "none" | sudo tee $i > /dev/null
done