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authorChris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>2009-09-02 16:24:52 -0400
committerChris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>2009-09-11 13:31:05 -0400
commit890871be854b5f5e43e7ba2475f706209906cc24 (patch)
tree9d087adf7a28bb910992d07d93ea2a992e394110 /fs/btrfs/file.c
parent57fd5a5ff8b48b99e90b22fc143082aba755c6c0 (diff)
downloadlinux-890871be854b5f5e43e7ba2475f706209906cc24.tar.bz2
Btrfs: switch extent_map to a rw lock
There are two main users of the extent_map tree. The first is regular file inodes, where it is evenly spread between readers and writers. The second is the chunk allocation tree, which maps blocks from logical addresses to phyiscal ones, and it is 99.99% reads. The mapping tree is a point of lock contention during heavy IO workloads, so this commit switches things to a rw lock. Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/btrfs/file.c')
-rw-r--r--fs/btrfs/file.c8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/file.c b/fs/btrfs/file.c
index a760d97279ac..8a9c76aecdf3 100644
--- a/fs/btrfs/file.c
+++ b/fs/btrfs/file.c
@@ -188,15 +188,15 @@ int btrfs_drop_extent_cache(struct inode *inode, u64 start, u64 end,
if (!split2)
split2 = alloc_extent_map(GFP_NOFS);
- spin_lock(&em_tree->lock);
+ write_lock(&em_tree->lock);
em = lookup_extent_mapping(em_tree, start, len);
if (!em) {
- spin_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
+ write_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
break;
}
flags = em->flags;
if (skip_pinned && test_bit(EXTENT_FLAG_PINNED, &em->flags)) {
- spin_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
+ write_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
if (em->start <= start &&
(!testend || em->start + em->len >= start + len)) {
free_extent_map(em);
@@ -259,7 +259,7 @@ int btrfs_drop_extent_cache(struct inode *inode, u64 start, u64 end,
free_extent_map(split);
split = NULL;
}
- spin_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
+ write_unlock(&em_tree->lock);
/* once for us */
free_extent_map(em);