Hey, On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 02:07:42AM -0700, Kent Overstreet wrote: > > > + __this_cpu_dec(*pcpu_count); > > > + else > > > + ret = atomic_dec_and_test(&ref->count); > > > + > > > + preempt_enable(); > > > + > > > + return ret; > > > > With likely() added, I think the compiler should be able to recognize > > that the branch on pcpu_count should exclude later branch in the > > caller to test for the final put in most cases but I'm a bit worried > > whether that would always be the case and wonder whether ->release > > based interface would be better. Another concern is that the above > > interface is likely to encourage its users to put the release > > implementation in the same function. e.g. > > I... don't follow what you mean hear at all - what exactly would the > compiler do differently? and how would passing a release function > matter? So, on the fast path, there should be one branch on the percpu pointer; however, given the above code, especially without likely(), the compiler may well choose to emit two branches which are shared by both hot and cold paths - the first one on the percpu pointer, the second on whether ref->count reached zero. It just isn't clear to the compiler whether duplicated preempt_enable() or an extra branch would be cheaper. > > void my_put(my_obj) > > { > > if (!percpu_ref_put(&my_obj->ref)) > > return; > > destroy my_obj; > > free my_obj; > > } > > > > Which in turn is likely to nudge the developer or compiler towards not > > inlining the fast path. > > I'm kind of skeptical partial inlining would be worth it for just an > atomic_dec_and_test()... Ooh, you can do the slow path inline too but I *suspect* we probably need a bit more logic in the slowpath anyway if we wanna take care of the bias overflow and maybe the release callback, and it really doesn't matter a bit whether you have a call for slowpath, so... > > So, while I do like the simplicity of put() returning %true on the > > final put, I suspect it's more likely to slowing down fast paths due > > to its interface compared to having separate ->release function > > combined with void put(). Any ideas? > > Oh, you mean having one branch instead of two when we're in percpu mode. > Yeah, that is a good point. Yeap, heh, I should have read to the end before repling. :) > I bet with the likely() added the compiler is going to generate the same > code either way, but I suppose I can have a look at what gcc actually > does... Yeah, with likely(), I *think* gcc should get it right most of the time. There might be some edge cases tho. Thanks. -- tejun -- 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