On Thu 25-10-18 09:58:51, Josef Bacik wrote: > On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 03:22:30PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: > > On Thu 18-10-18 16:23:18, Josef Bacik wrote: > > > ->page_mkwrite is extremely expensive in btrfs. We have to reserve > > > space, which can take 6 lifetimes, and we could possibly have to wait on > > > writeback on the page, another several lifetimes. To avoid this simply > > > drop the mmap_sem if we didn't have the cached page and do all of our > > > work and return the appropriate retry error. If we have the cached page > > > we know we did all the right things to set this page up and we can just > > > carry on. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > ... > > > @@ -8828,6 +8830,29 @@ vm_fault_t btrfs_page_mkwrite(struct vm_fault *vmf) > > > > > > reserved_space = PAGE_SIZE; > > > > > > + /* > > > + * We have our cached page from a previous mkwrite, check it to make > > > + * sure it's still dirty and our file size matches when we ran mkwrite > > > + * the last time. If everything is OK then return VM_FAULT_LOCKED, > > > + * otherwise do the mkwrite again. > > > + */ > > > + if (vmf->flags & FAULT_FLAG_USED_CACHED) { > > > + lock_page(page); > > > + if (vmf->cached_size == i_size_read(inode) && > > > + PageDirty(page)) > > > + return VM_FAULT_LOCKED; > > > + unlock_page(page); > > > + } > > > > I guess this is similar to Dave's comment: Why is i_size so special? What > > makes sure that file didn't get modified between time you've prepared > > cached_page and now such that you need to do the preparation again? > > And if indeed metadata prepared for a page cannot change, what's so special > > about it being that particular cached_page? > > > > Maybe to phrase my objections differently: Your preparations in > > btrfs_page_mkwrite() are obviously related to your filesystem metadata. So > > why cannot you infer from that metadata (extent tree, whatever - I'd use > > extent status tree in ext4) whether that particular file+offset is already > > prepared for writing and just bail out with success in that case? > > > > I was just being overly paranoid, I was afraid of the case where we would > truncate and then extend in between, but now that I actually think about it that > would end up with the page not being on the mapping anymore so we would catch > that case. I've dropped this part from my current version. I'm getting some > testing on these patches in production and I'll post them sometime next week > once I'm happy with them. Thanks, OK, but do you still need the vmf->cached_page stuff? Because I don't see why even that is necessary... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR