From: Chuck Lever <cel@monkey.org>
To: "Benjamin C.R. LaHaise" <blah@kvack.org>
Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@transmeta.com>, linux-mm@kvack.org
Subject: Re: [patch] mmap<->write deadlock fix, plus bug in block_write_zero_range
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 1999 10:58:33 -0500 (EST) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Pine.BSO.4.10.9912221046420.20066-100000@funky.monkey.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.3.96.991222103000.22064A-100000@kanga.kvack.org>
On Wed, 22 Dec 1999, Benjamin C.R. LaHaise wrote:
> On Wed, 22 Dec 1999, Chuck Lever wrote:
> > i've tried this before several times. i could never get the system to
> > perform as well under benchmark load using find_page_nolock as when using
> > find_get_page. the throughput difference was about 5%, if i recall. i
> > haven't explained this to myself yet.
> >
> > perhaps a better fix would be to take out some of the page lock complexity
> > from filemap_nopage? dunno.
>
> Well, there certainly is a lot of code in page_cache_read /
> do_generic_file_read / filemap_nopage that is duplicate, and our policies
> across them are inconsistent.
when i started looking at mmap read-ahead and madvise, i noticed that
there was a lot of inconsistent code duplication, and thought it would be
a good thing to fold this stuff together. that's one reason i created the
"read_cluster_nonblocking" and "page_cache_read" functions. for example,
you can remove 20-40 lines of do_generic_file_read by replacing them with
one call to page_cache_read. or you could easily try clustered reads
there.
but notice you want to do something slightly different in
generic_file_write, so that code will probably need to stay.
> Here's my hypothesis about why find_page_nolock vs find_get_page makes a
> difference: using find_page_nolock means that we'll never do a
> run_task_queue(&tq_disk); to get our async readahead requests run. So, in
> theory, doing that in filemap_nopage will restore performance.
sounds like a reasonable explanation to me, and easy enough to test, even.
i'll give that a shot later today.
> Isn't
> there a way that the choice of when to run tq_disk could be made a bit
> less arbitrary?
i suppose there's a more *efficient* way of doing it, but i think running
the queue while waiting for a page is probably a good idea. in other
words, running the queue in find_get_page seems like a good idea to me.
what did you have in mind?
- Chuck Lever
--
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The Linux Scalability project:
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~1999-12-22 15:58 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
1999-12-22 5:58 Benjamin C.R. LaHaise
1999-12-22 15:08 ` Chuck Lever
1999-12-22 15:43 ` Benjamin C.R. LaHaise
1999-12-22 15:58 ` Chuck Lever [this message]
1999-12-23 4:00 ` Chuck Lever
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