cvs commit: src/sys/ufs/ufs dirhash.h ufs_dirhash.c
David Malone
dwmalone at maths.tcd.ie
Fri Apr 11 11:45:09 UTC 2008
On Fri, Apr 11, 2008 at 09:48:12AM +0000, Jeff Roberson wrote:
> - Use a lockmgr lock rather than a mtx to protect dirhash. This lock
> may be held for the duration of the various dirhash operations which
> avoids many complex unlock/lock/revalidate sequences.
> - Permit shared locks on lookup. To protect the ip->i_dirhash pointer we
> use the vnode interlock in the shared case. Callers holding the
> exclusive vnode lock can run without fear of concurrent modification to
> i_dirhash.
> - Hold an exclusive dirhash lock when creating the dirhash structure for
> the first time or when re-creating a dirhash structure which has been
> recycled.
Hi Jeff,
I've been reading through this patch to understand it. I've a few
questions:
1) You initialise a chunk of the dir hash struct earlier
now, though it was previously left until we knew memory
allocation was successful. Is there a reason for that?
2) Is ufsdirhash_create() trying harder than before to
allocate a dirhash? It looks like it might be, but maybe
that's just a feature of the new locking.
3) You've added a dh_memreq member to the structure to
remember a value that's cheap to calculate from other
structure members and only required at allocation and free
time. I can understand why you'd want to avoid repeating
the code, but it would seem better to make it a macro rather
than storing it for the lifetime of the object?
4) You replaced an unlocked read with a locked read in
ufsdirhash_lookup. I think this is because you are now
locking the dh_score with the list mutex and are taking
advantage of the fact that the score is changed just below?
Won't this mean that for a sequence of operations on one
directory, we'll now need to lock the list mutex for each
lookup and get the lockmanager lock on the dirhash. At face
value, this would seems to be worse than the old situation
of only getting the dh mutex for each opteation?
In the case of multiple directories, I guess we'll have two
mutex locks replaced by one mutex and one lockmanager
(shared) lock? This is probably the usual case, which isn't
too bad.
5) It looks like the recycle policy (and locking thereof)
is now slightly different and I think it might do something
funny in some cases now. If we get the list lock in
ufsdirhash_recycle, but someone holds an exclusive lock on
some of the dirhashes, then we will walk over the locked
ones until we find an unlocked one and free it. We then
jump back to the start of the list and have to walk over
the locked ones again. I wonder if in a low memory situation
the locked nodes could be actually waiting for the list
lock in ufsdirhash_list_locked() and there could be some
sort of cascade where you end up freeing dirhashes that
should actually be kept. Actually, this probably isn't
possible because the list lock is dropped while we're doing
the free?
David.
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