Re: [REPOST PATCH v4 0/5] kernfs: proposed locking and concurrency improvement

From: Greg Kroah-Hartman
Date: Fri May 28 2021 - 04:56:07 EST


On Fri, May 28, 2021 at 02:33:42PM +0800, Ian Kent wrote:
> There have been a few instances of contention on the kernfs_mutex during
> path walks, a case on very large IBM systems seen by myself, a report by
> Brice Goglin and followed up by Fox Chen, and I've since seen a couple
> of other reports by CoreOS users.
>
> The common thread is a large number of kernfs path walks leading to
> slowness of path walks due to kernfs_mutex contention.
>
> The problem being that changes to the VFS over some time have increased
> it's concurrency capabilities to an extent that kernfs's use of a mutex
> is no longer appropriate. There's also an issue of walks for non-existent
> paths causing contention if there are quite a few of them which is a less
> common problem.
>
> This patch series is relatively straight forward.
>
> All it does is add the ability to take advantage of VFS negative dentry
> caching to avoid needless dentry alloc/free cycles for lookups of paths
> that don't exit and change the kernfs_mutex to a read/write semaphore.
>
> The patch that tried to stay in VFS rcu-walk mode during path walks has
> been dropped for two reasons. First, it doesn't actually give very much
> improvement and, second, if there's a place where mistakes could go
> unnoticed it would be in that path. This makes the patch series simpler
> to review and reduces the likelihood of problems going unnoticed and
> popping up later.
>
> The patch to use a revision to identify if a directory has changed has
> also been dropped. If the directory has changed the dentry revision
> needs to be updated to avoid subsequent rb tree searches and after
> changing to use a read/write semaphore the update also requires a lock.
> But the d_lock is the only lock available at this point which might
> itself be contended.

Fox, can you take some time and test these to verify it all still works
properly with your benchmarks?

thanks,

greg k-h