Re: [PATCH 7/8] zswap: add to mm/
From: Seth Jennings
Date: Fri Jan 04 2013 - 10:42:47 EST
On 01/03/2013 04:33 PM, Dan Magenheimer wrote:
>> From: Seth Jennings [mailto:sjenning@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
>>
>> However, once the flushing code was introduced and could free an entry
>> from the zswap_fs_store() path, it became necessary to add a per-entry
>> refcount to make sure that the entry isn't freed while another code
>> path was operating on it.
>
> Hmmm... doesn't the refcount at least need to be an atomic_t?
An entry's refcount is only ever changed under the tree lock, so
making them atomic_t would be redundantly atomic.
I should add a comment to that effect though, including all elements
that are protected by the tree lock which include:
* the tree structure
* the lru list
* the per-entry refcounts
I'll put that change in the queue for v2.
> Also, how can you "free" any entry of an rbtree while another
> thread is walking the rbtree? (Deleting an entry from an rbtree
> causes rebalancing... afaik there is no equivalent RCU
> implementation for rbtrees... not that RCU would necessarily
> work well for this anyway.)
This also can't happen since a thread must obtain the tree lock before
accessing or changing the tree.
Regarding RCU, I saw that some work had been done on RCU aware rbtree
functions but they weren't ready yet.
> BTW, in case it appears otherwise, I'm trying to be helpful, not
> critical. In the end, I think we are in agreement that in-kernel
> compression is very important and that the frontswap (and/or
> cleancache) interface(s) are the right way to identify compressible
> data, and we are mostly arguing allocation and implementation details.
Yes. I'm always grateful for comments about the code :) At the very
least, it rehashes the justifications for design decisions.
Thanks,
Seth
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/