Re: [00/41] Large Blocksize Support V7 (adds memmap support)

From: JÃrn Engel
Date: Sun Sep 23 2007 - 13:49:06 EST


On Sun, 16 September 2007 11:44:09 -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Sun, 16 Sep 2007, JÃrn Engel wrote:
> >
> > My approach is to have one for mount points and ramfs/tmpfs/sysfs/etc.
> > which are pinned for their entire lifetime and another for regular
> > files/inodes. One could take a three-way approach and have
> > always-pinned, often-pinned and rarely-pinned.
> >
> > We won't get never-pinned that way.
>
> That sounds pretty good. The problem, of course, is that most of the time,
> the actual dentry allocation itself is done before you really know which
> case the dentry will be in, and the natural place for actually giving the
> dentry lifetime hint is *not* at "d_alloc()", but when we "instantiate"
> it with d_add() or d_instantiate().
>
> [...]
>
> And yes, you'd end up with the reallocation overhead quite often, but at
> least it would now happen only when filling in a dentry, not in the
> (*much* more critical) cached lookup path.

There may be another approach. We could create a never-pinned cache,
without trying hard to keep it full. Instead of moving a hot dentry at
dput() time, we move a cold one from the end of lru. And if the lru
list is short, we just chicken out.

Our definition of "short lru list" can either be based on a ratio of
pinned to unpinned dentries or on a metric of cache hits vs. cache
misses. I tend to dislike the cache hit metric, because updatedb would
cause tons of misses and result in the same mess we have right now.

With this double cache, we have a source of slabs to cheaply reap under
memory pressure, but still have a performance advantage (memcpy beats
disk io by orders of magnitude).

JÃrn

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