On Sat, Apr 25, 2009 at 05:18:29AM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > However, files_lock part 2 looks very dubious - if nothing else, I would > expect that you'll get *more* cross-CPU traffic that way, since the CPU > where final fput() runs will correlate only weakly (if at all) with one > where open() had been done. So you are getting more cachelines bouncing. > I want to see the numbers for this one, and on different kinds of loads, > but as it is I've very sceptical. BTW, could you try to collect stats > along the lines of "CPU #i has done N_{i,j} removals from sb list for > files that had been in list #j"? > > Splitting files_lock on per-sb basis might be an interesting variant, too. We should just kill files_lock and s_files completely. The remaining user are may remount r/o checks, and with counters in place not only on the vfsmount but also on the superblock we can kill fs_may_remount_ro in it's current form. The only interesting bit left after that is mark_files_ro which is so buggy that I'd prefer to kill it including the underlying functionality. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html