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authorChuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>2021-09-20 15:25:21 -0400
committerJ. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>2021-09-21 18:21:34 -0400
commit8847ecc9274a14114385d1cb4030326baa0766eb (patch)
tree8a51bdf2118934c4ce3503f1618b65d19a7479cb
parentnfs: reexport documentation (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-8847ecc9274a14114385d1cb4030326baa0766eb.tar.xz
linux-dev-8847ecc9274a14114385d1cb4030326baa0766eb.zip
NFSD: Optimize DRC bucket pruning
DRC bucket pruning is done by nfsd_cache_lookup(), which is part of every NFSv2 and NFSv3 dispatch (ie, it's done while the client is waiting). I added a trace_printk() in prune_bucket() to see just how long it takes to prune. Here are two ends of the spectrum: prune_bucket: Scanned 1 and freed 0 in 90 ns, 62 entries remaining prune_bucket: Scanned 2 and freed 1 in 716 ns, 63 entries remaining ... prune_bucket: Scanned 75 and freed 74 in 34149 ns, 1 entries remaining Pruning latency is noticeable on fast transports with fast storage. By noticeable, I mean that the latency measured here in the worst case is the same order of magnitude as the round trip time for cached server operations. We could do something like moving expired entries to an expired list and then free them later instead of freeing them right in prune_bucket(). But simply limiting the number of entries that can be pruned by a lookup is simple and retains more entries in the cache, making the DRC somewhat more effective. Comparison with a 70/30 fio 8KB 12 thread direct I/O test: Before: write: IOPS=61.6k, BW=481MiB/s (505MB/s)(14.1GiB/30001msec); 0 zone resets WRITE: 1848726 ops (30%) avg bytes sent per op: 8340 avg bytes received per op: 136 backlog wait: 0.635158 RTT: 0.128525 total execute time: 0.827242 (milliseconds) After: write: IOPS=63.0k, BW=492MiB/s (516MB/s)(14.4GiB/30001msec); 0 zone resets WRITE: 1891144 ops (30%) avg bytes sent per op: 8340 avg bytes received per op: 136 backlog wait: 0.616114 RTT: 0.126842 total execute time: 0.805348 (milliseconds) Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r--fs/nfsd/nfscache.c17
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/fs/nfsd/nfscache.c b/fs/nfsd/nfscache.c
index 96cdf77925f3..6e0b6f3148dc 100644
--- a/fs/nfsd/nfscache.c
+++ b/fs/nfsd/nfscache.c
@@ -241,8 +241,8 @@ lru_put_end(struct nfsd_drc_bucket *b, struct svc_cacherep *rp)
list_move_tail(&rp->c_lru, &b->lru_head);
}
-static long
-prune_bucket(struct nfsd_drc_bucket *b, struct nfsd_net *nn)
+static long prune_bucket(struct nfsd_drc_bucket *b, struct nfsd_net *nn,
+ unsigned int max)
{
struct svc_cacherep *rp, *tmp;
long freed = 0;
@@ -258,11 +258,17 @@ prune_bucket(struct nfsd_drc_bucket *b, struct nfsd_net *nn)
time_before(jiffies, rp->c_timestamp + RC_EXPIRE))
break;
nfsd_reply_cache_free_locked(b, rp, nn);
- freed++;
+ if (max && freed++ > max)
+ break;
}
return freed;
}
+static long nfsd_prune_bucket(struct nfsd_drc_bucket *b, struct nfsd_net *nn)
+{
+ return prune_bucket(b, nn, 3);
+}
+
/*
* Walk the LRU list and prune off entries that are older than RC_EXPIRE.
* Also prune the oldest ones when the total exceeds the max number of entries.
@@ -279,7 +285,7 @@ prune_cache_entries(struct nfsd_net *nn)
if (list_empty(&b->lru_head))
continue;
spin_lock(&b->cache_lock);
- freed += prune_bucket(b, nn);
+ freed += prune_bucket(b, nn, 0);
spin_unlock(&b->cache_lock);
}
return freed;
@@ -453,8 +459,7 @@ int nfsd_cache_lookup(struct svc_rqst *rqstp)
atomic_inc(&nn->num_drc_entries);
nfsd_stats_drc_mem_usage_add(nn, sizeof(*rp));
- /* go ahead and prune the cache */
- prune_bucket(b, nn);
+ nfsd_prune_bucket(b, nn);
out_unlock:
spin_unlock(&b->cache_lock);