Re: [RFC PATCH linux 2/2] fs/proc: use a hash table for the directory entries

From: Stephen Hemminger
Date: Thu Oct 02 2014 - 17:27:23 EST


On Thu, 02 Oct 2014 14:07:37 -0700
ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx (Eric W. Biederman) wrote:

> Alexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
>
> > On Thu, Oct 02, 2014 at 11:01:50AM -0700, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> >> Nicolas Dichtel <nicolas.dichtel@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
> >>
> >> > From: Thierry Herbelot <thierry.herbelot@xxxxxxxxx>
> >> >
> >> > The current implementation for the directories in /proc is using a single
> >> > linked list. This is slow when handling directories with large numbers of
> >> > entries (eg netdevice-related entries when lots of tunnels are opened).
> >> >
> >> > This patch enables multiple linked lists. A hash based on the entry name is
> >> > used to select the linked list for one given entry.
> >> >
> >> > The speed creation of netdevices is faster as shorter linked lists must be
> >> > scanned when adding a new netdevice.
> >>
> >> Is the directory of primary concern /proc/net/dev/snmp6 ?
> >>
> >> Unless I have configured my networking stack weird by mistake that
> >> is the only directory under /proc/net that grows when we add an
> >> interface.
> >>
> >> I just want to make certain I am seeing the same things that you are
> >> seeing.
> >>
> >> I feel silly for overlooking this directory when the rest of the
> >> scalability work was done.
> >
> > Slowdown comes from "duplicate name" check:
> >
> > for (tmp = dir->subdir; tmp; tmp = tmp->next)
> > if (strcmp(tmp->name, dp->name) == 0) {
> > WARN(1, "proc_dir_entry '%s/%s' already registered\n",
> > dir->name, dp->name);
> > break;
> > }
> >
> > Removal can be made O(1) after switching to doubly-linked list.
>
> Yes. There is the however unfortunate fact that proc directories exist
> to be used. If we don't switch to a better data structure than a linked
> list the actual use will then opening of the files under
> /proc/net/dev/snmp6/ will become O(N^2). Which doesn't help much
> (assuming those files are good for something).
>
> If those files aren't actually useful we should just make registering
> them a config option. Deprecate them strongly and let only people who
> need extreme backwards compatibility enable them.

Net-snmp uses them (agent/mibgroup/mibII/kernel_linux.c)

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