Re: dm-crypt aes sha512 and I/O performance

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On Mon, Jul 16 2007, David Brown wrote:
> On 7/14/07, David Brown <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I was forced to put full (almost) hard drive encryption on my laptop
>> so that all the Open Source Work I get paid to do will be protected in
>> case someone tries to steal it and so they won't find any personal
>> information about me if they get a hold of my laptop (because every
>> idiot keeps their entire life history on their computers).
>>
>> Besides the futility of the above statement I've been noticing some
>> oddities with how linux and dm-crypt handles I/O on the system.
>>
>> Now normally I get about 30Mb/s write speed I would expect some sort
>> of drop in performance due to the encryption but currently I'm getting
>> about 9Mb/s write speed and I'm kinda confused as to what the choke
>> point is and how to improve the write speed, if it can be.
>>
>> Currently both my swap and root are encrypted with the default debian
>> installer encryption and there's two kcryptd processes running. Now
>> from what I've noticed when I'm dumping data to disk they both seem to
>> be working, yet I'm not swapping or anything. So am I right to assume
>> that the two kcryptd processes are running in parallel encrypting the
>> data to the one root device? Also they only seem to be using 20% of
>> the processors they are running on, why isn't it 100%? I'm guessing
>> that the data isn't being either compressed or blown up when
>> encrypting using this encryption style (but I'm not an expert). Would
>> making more kcryptd threads increase the I/O speed (more processes
>> doing encrypting)? Is there a way to specify more threads of kcryptd?
>>
>> I'm kinda at a loss, so any help would be appreciated.
>> - David Brown
>>
>
> I should remember never to email the LKML during the weekend...
>
> Did anyone see this?
>
> I did some number crunching and with about 15Mb/s read and 9Mb/s write
> I end up copying files on the hard drive locally at about 3Mb/s
> (rounded). Which is really lame getting twice without encryption was
> much better.
>
> I'm using the ata_piix driver in the 2.6.22.1 kernel.

Try and blktrace the crypt device, perhaps? Do a simple dd from your
crypted device to /dev/null, and run blktrace on the device at the same
time. Just for a few seconds. Then check with blkparse if anything
obvious pops up.

-- 
Jens Axboe

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