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Message-Id: <20070924124233.9197d6b6.akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 12:42:33 -0700
From: Andrew Morton <akpm@...ux-foundation.org>
To: Dave Hansen <haveblue@...ibm.com>
Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@...radead.org>, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 24/25] r/o bind mounts: track number of mount writers
On Mon, 24 Sep 2007 12:28:11 -0700
Dave Hansen <haveblue@...ibm.com> wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-09-24 at 18:54 +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > As we already say in various messages the percpu counters in here
> > look rather fishy. I'd recomment to take a look at the per-cpu
> > superblock counters in XFS as they've been debugged quite well
> > now and could probably be lifted into a generic library for this
> > kind of think. The code is mostly in fs/xfs/xfs_mount.c can
> > can be spotted by beeing under #ifdef HAVE_PERCPU_SB.
> >
> > It also handles cases like hotplug cpu nicely that this code
> > seems to work around by always iterating over all possible cpus
> > which might not be nice on a dual core laptop with a distro kernel
> > that also has to support big iron.
>
> I'll take a look at xfs to see what I can get out of it.
And at include/linux/percpu_counter.h, please.
> There are basically two times when you have to do this
> for_each_possible_cpu() stuff:
> 1. when doing a r/w->r/o transition, which is rare, and
> certainly not a fast path
> 2. Where the per-cpu writer count underflows. This requires
> a _minimum_ of 1<<16 file opens (configurable) each of which
> is closed on a different cpu than it was opened on. Even
> if you were trying, I'm not sure you'd notice the overhead.
>
Sounds like what you're doing is more akin to the local_t-based module
refcounting. `grep local_ kernel/module.c'.
That code should be converted from NR_CPUS to for_each_possible_cpu()..
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