Skip to content

Multiple page asynchronous I/O requests

The I/O unit size in InnoDB is only one page, even if the server doing read ahead. A 16KB I/O unit size is too small for sequential reads, and less efficient than a larger I/O unit size. InnoDB uses Linux asynchronous I/O (aio) by default. By submitting multiple, consecutive 16KB read requests at the same time, Linux internally merges the requests and reads more efficiently.

This feature is able to submit multiple page I/O requests and works in the background. You can manage the feature with the linear read-ahead technique. This technique adds pages to the buffer pool based on the buffer pool pages being accessed sequentially. The [innodb_read_ahead_threshold] configuration parameter controls this operation.

On a HDD RAID 1+0 environment, more than 1000MB/s disk reads can be achieved by submitting 64 consecutive pages requests at once, while only 160MB/s disk reads is shown by submitting single page request.

Status variables

Innodb_buffered_aio_submitted

Option Description
Scope: Global
Data type: Numeric

This variable shows the number of submitted buffered asynchronous I/O requests.

Other reading

Get expert help

If you need assistance, visit the community forum for comprehensive and free database knowledge, or contact our Percona Database Experts for professional support and services.


Last update: 2024-12-18