diff --git a/lib/libdevstat/devstat.c b/lib/libdevstat/devstat.c index ade87388c8e8..d52332bd5931 100644 --- a/lib/libdevstat/devstat.c +++ b/lib/libdevstat/devstat.c @@ -1487,22 +1487,9 @@ devstat_compute_statistics(struct devstat *current, struct devstat *previous, *destld = 0.0; break; /* - * This calculation is somewhat bogus. It simply divides - * the elapsed time by the total number of transactions - * completed. While that does give the caller a good - * picture of the average rate of transaction completion, - * it doesn't necessarily give the caller a good view of - * how long transactions took to complete on average. - * Those two numbers will be different for a device that - * can handle more than one transaction at a time. e.g. - * SCSI disks doing tagged queueing. - * - * The only way to accurately determine the real average - * time per transaction would be to compute and store the - * time on a per-transaction basis. That currently isn't - * done in the kernel, and would only be desireable if it - * could be implemented in a somewhat non-intrusive and high - * performance way. + * Some devstat callers update the duration and some don't. + * So this will only be accurate if they provide the + * duration. */ case DSM_MS_PER_TRANSACTION: if (totaltransfers > 0) { @@ -1512,11 +1499,6 @@ devstat_compute_statistics(struct devstat *current, struct devstat *previous, } else *destld = 0.0; break; - /* - * As above, these next two really only give the average - * rate of completion for read and write transactions, not - * the average time the transaction took to complete. - */ case DSM_MS_PER_TRANSACTION_READ: if (totaltransfersread > 0) { *destld = totaldurationread;