On Tue, Apr 03, 2018 at 10:22:53AM -0700, rao.shoaib@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:I have just familiarized myself with what IDR is by reading your article. If I am incorrect please correct me.
+++ b/mm/slab.hI think you might be better off with an IDR. The IDR can always
@@ -80,6 +80,29 @@ extern const struct kmalloc_info_struct {
unsigned long size;
} kmalloc_info[];
+#define RCU_MAX_ACCUMULATE_SIZE 25
+
+struct rcu_bulk_free_container {
+ struct rcu_head rbfc_rcu;
+ int rbfc_entries;
+ void *rbfc_data[RCU_MAX_ACCUMULATE_SIZE];
+ struct rcu_bulk_free *rbfc_rbf;
+};
+
+struct rcu_bulk_free {
+ struct rcu_head rbf_rcu; /* used to schedule monitor process */
+ spinlock_t rbf_lock;
+ struct rcu_bulk_free_container *rbf_container;
+ struct rcu_bulk_free_container *rbf_cached_container;
+ struct rcu_head *rbf_list_head;
+ int rbf_list_size;
+ int rbf_cpu;
+ int rbf_empty;
+ int rbf_polled;
+ bool rbf_init;
+ bool rbf_monitor;
+};
contain one entry, so there's no need for this 'rbf_list_head' or
__rcu_bulk_schedule_list. The IDR contains its first 64 entries in
an array (if that array can be allocated), so it's compatible with the
kfree_bulk() interface.