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authorNick Piggin <npiggin@kernel.dk>2011-01-07 17:49:56 +1100
committerNick Piggin <npiggin@kernel.dk>2011-01-07 17:50:28 +1100
commit44a7d7a878c9cbb74f236ea755b25b6b2e26a9a9 (patch)
treed4630a38c0d683a7e1b8823d7971753719b8a54d /fs/coda
parentfb045adb99d9b7c562dc7fef834857f78249daa1 (diff)
downloadlinux-44a7d7a878c9cbb74f236ea755b25b6b2e26a9a9.tar.bz2
fs: cache optimise dentry and inode for rcu-walk
Put dentry and inode fields into top of data structure. This allows RCU path traversal to perform an RCU dentry lookup in a path walk by touching only the first 56 bytes of the dentry. We also fit in 8 bytes of inline name in the first 64 bytes, so for short names, only 64 bytes needs to be touched to perform the lookup. We should get rid of the hash->prev pointer from the first 64 bytes, and fit 16 bytes of name in there, which will take care of 81% rather than 32% of the kernel tree. inode is also rearranged so that RCU lookup will only touch a single cacheline in the inode, plus one in the i_ops structure. This is important for directory component lookups in RCU path walking. In the kernel source, directory names average is around 6 chars, so this works. When we reach the last element of the lookup, we need to lock it and take its refcount which requires another cacheline access. Align dentry and inode operations structs, so members will be at predictable offsets and we can group common operations into head of structure. Signed-off-by: Nick Piggin <npiggin@kernel.dk>
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