Re: [PATCH 02/16] DRBD: lru_cache

From: Lars Ellenberg
Date: Sat May 02 2009 - 14:14:28 EST


On Sat, May 02, 2009 at 10:58:23AM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Sat, 2 May 2009 17:26:20 +0200 Lars Ellenberg <lars.ellenberg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > in memory structure is
> >
> > struct lru_cache {
> > struct list_head active;
> > struct list_head quiet;
> > struct list_head free;
> > size_t element_size; <-- parameter to "lc_alloc"
> > unsigned int nr_elements; <-- parameter to "lc_alloc"
> > unsigned int new_number;
> >
> > unsigned int used;
> > unsigned long flags;
> > unsigned long hits, misses, starving, dirty, changed;
> >
> > struct lc_element *changing_element; /* just for paranoia */
> >
> > const char *name;
> >
> > struct hlist_head slot[0];
> > /* hash colision chains here, then element storage. */
> > };
> >
> > so we have fixed size list heads,
> > size of a single such "element", to allow the user
> > to add small payload;
> > number of hash slots and "elements" following this header;
> > some counters;
> > hlist_slot[0];
> > }
> > following:
> > struct hlist_head[nr_elements];
> > array of element_size blobs[nr_elements];
> >
> > these "blobs" start with the struct lru_element,
> > possibly followed by some user payload.
> >
> > the "index" you are asking about later is
> > index into that "blob" array,
> > and is used primarily to initialize the state of this thing
> > from an on-disk representation (the "activity log", "AL"),
> > for crash recovery purposes.
> >
> > the typecasting is necessary to get from the slot[0] to the "elements"
> > skipping the hash slots.
> > using "container of" or something like that would obscure the fact that,
> > as currently implemented, the "lru_element" _must_ be the first member
> > of any payload structure.
>
> I still don't see why the lru_element must be the first member of the
> user's outer, containing structure.


ok, arguably one could also record the offset_of beneath the element_size,
and add that in when doing the lc_element *e = blob[index] + offset.
would not make it much more appealing, though.

Lars
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