Re: linux-2.4.10-pre5

From: Andreas Dilger (adilger@turbolabs.com)
Date: Sun Sep 09 2001 - 01:17:15 EST


On Sep 08, 2001 21:54 -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> On Sat, 8 Sep 2001, Andreas Dilger wrote:
> > So basically - when we move block devices to the page cache, get rid of
> > buffer cache usage in the filesystems as well? Ext2 is nearly there at
> > least. One alternative is as Daniel Phillips did in the indexed-ext2-
> > directory patch, where he kept the "bread" interface, but backed it
> > with the page cache, so it required relatively little change to the
> > filesystem.
>
> This might be a really easy solution. We might just make sure that the
> buffer manipulation interfaces we export to filesystems (and there aren't
> actually all that many of them - it's mainly bread and getblk) always end
> up using the page cache, and just return the buffer head that is embedded
> inside the page cache.
>
> That way we don't have any new aliasing issues _at_all_. The user-mode
> accesses to the block devices would always end up using the same buffers
> that the low-level filesystem does.

> Andrea(s) - interested in pursuing this particular approach? In fact,
> since "bread()" uses "getblk()", it is almost sufficient to just make
> getblk() use the page cache, and the rest will follow... You can even get
> rid of the buffer hash etc, and make the buffer head noticeably smaller.
>
> [ Yeah, I'm being a bit optimistic - you also end up having to re-write
> "get_hash_table()" to use a page cache lookup etc. So it's definitely
> some major surgery in fs/buffer.c, but "major" might actually be just a
> couple of hundred lines ]

Well, Daniel probably has the best handle on the state of this code (it
may be that he has already done 90% of the work). I've CC'd him on this
to get him in the loop.

> And no filesystem should ever notice. They can still access the buffer
> head as if it was just a buffer head, and wouldn't care about the fact
> that it happens to be part of a mapping.
>
> Any pitfalls?
>
> [ I can see at least one already: __invalidate_buffers() and
> set_blocksize() would both have to be re-done, probably along the lines
> of "invalidate_inode_pages()" and "fsync+truncate_inode_pages()"
> respectively. ]
>
> Comments?

I think this fits in with your overall strategy as well - remove the buffer
as a "cache" object, and only use it as an I/O object, right? With this
change, all of the cache functionality is in the page cache, and the buffers
are only used as handles for I/O.

Cheers, Andreas

-- 
Andreas Dilger  \ "If a man ate a pound of pasta and a pound of antipasto,
                 \  would they cancel out, leaving him still hungry?"
http://www-mddsp.enel.ucalgary.ca/People/adilger/               -- Dogbert

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