[Ocfs2-devel] cleancache followup from LSF10/MM summit

Balbir Singh balbir at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Tue Aug 24 07:27:18 PDT 2010


* dan.magenheimer at oracle.com <dan.magenheimer at oracle.com> [2010-08-20 08:14:59]:

> Hi Christophe (and others interested in cleancache progress) --
> 
> Thanks for taking some time to talk with me about cleancache
> at LSF summit!  You had some interesting thoughts and suggestions
> that I said I would investigate.  They are:
> 
> 1) use inode kva as key instead of i_ino
> 2) eliminate cleancache shim and call zcache directly
> 3) fs's requiring key > inode_t (e.g. 64-bit-fs on 32-bit-kernel)
> 4) eliminate fs-specific code entirely (e.g. "opt-in")
> 5) eliminate global variable
> 
> Here's my conclusions:
> 
> 1) You suggested using the inode kva as a "key" for cleancache.
>    I think your goal was to make it more fs-independent and also
>    to eliminate the need for using a per-fs enabler and "pool id".
>    I looked at this but it will not work because cleancache
>    retains page cache data pages persistently even when the
>    inode has been pruned from the inode_unused_list and only
>    flushes the data pages if the file gets removed/truncated.  If
>    cleancache used the inode kva, there would be coherency issues
>    when the inode kva is reused.  Alternately, if cleancache
>    flushed the pages when the inode kva was freed, much of
>    the value of cleancache would be lost because the cache
>    of pages in cleancache is potentially much larger than
>    the page cache and is most useful if the pages survive
>    inode cache removal.
> 
>    If I misunderstood your proposal or if you disagree, please
>    let me know.
> 
> 2) You suggested eliminating the cleancache shim layer and just
>    directly calling zcache, effectively eliminating Xen as
>    a user.  During and after LSF summit, I talked to developers
>    from Google who are interested in investigating the cleancache
>    interface for use with cgroups, an IBM developer who was
>    interested in cleancache for optimizing NUMA, and soon I
>    will be talking to HP Labs about using it as an interface
>    for "memory blades".  I also think Rik van Riel and Mel Gorman
>    were intrigued about its use for collecting better memory
>    utilization statistics to drive guest/host memory "rightsizing".
>    While it is true that none of these are current users yet, even
>    if you prefer to ignore Xen tmem as a user, it seems silly to
>    throw away the cleanly-layered generic cleancache interface now,
>    only to add it back later when more users are added.
> 
> 3) You re-emphasized the problem where cleancache's use of
>    the inode number as a key will cause problems on many 64-bit
>    filesystems especially running on a 32-bit kernel.  With
>    help from Andreas Dilger, I'm trying to work out a generic
>    solution for this using s_export_op->encode_fh which would
>    be used for any fs that provides it to guarantee a unique
>    multi-word key for a file, while preserving the
>    shorter i_ino as a key for fs's for which i_ino is unique.
> 
> 4) Though you were out of the room during the cleancache
>    lightning talk, other filesystem developers seemed OK
>    with the "opt-in" approach (as documented in lwn.net)...
>    one even asked "can't you just add a bit to the superblock?"
>    to which I answered "that's essentially what the one
>    line opt-in addition does".  Not sure if you are still
>    objecting to that, but especially given that the 64-bit-fs-on
>    32-bit-kernel issue above only affects some filesystems,
>    I'm still thinking it is necessary.
> 
> 5) You commented (before LSF) that the global variable should
>    be avoided which is certainly valid, and I will try Nitin's
>    suggestion to add a registration interface.
> 
> Did I miss anything?
> 
> I plan to submit a V4 for cleancache soon, and hope you will
> be inclined to ack this time.
>

Hi, Dan,

Sorry for commenting on your post so late. I've had some time to read
through your approach and compare it to my approach 
(http://www.linuxsymposium.org/2010/view_abstract.php?content_key=32)
and I had a few quick questions

1. Can't this be done at the MM layer - why the filesystem hooks? Is
it to enable faster block devices in the reclaim hierarchy?
2. I don't see a mention of slabcache in your approach, reclaim free
pages or freeing potentially free slab pages.

-- 
	Three Cheers,
	Balbir



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