On Wed, Oct 09, 2013 at 11:16:31AM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Tue, Oct 08, 2013 at 05:56:56PM -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 06:15:22PM -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote: > > > On Fri, Oct 04, 2013 at 06:12:16PM -0400, bfields wrote: > > > > On Wed, Oct 02, 2013 at 05:28:14PM -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote: > > > > > @@ -268,6 +268,16 @@ static int get_name(const struct path *path, char *name, struct dentry *child) > > > > > if (!dir->i_fop) > > > > > goto out; > > > > > /* > > > > > + * inode->i_ino is unsigned long, kstat->ino is u64, so the > > > > > + * former would be insufficient on 32-bit hosts when the > > > > > + * filesystem supports 64-bit inode numbers. So we need to > > > > > + * actually call ->getattr, not just read i_ino: > > > > > + */ > > > > > + error = vfs_getattr_nosec(path, &stat); > > > > > > > > Doh, "path" here is for the parent.... The following works better! > > > > > > By the way, I'm testing this with: > > > > > > - create a bunch of nested subdirectories, use > > > name_to_fhandle_at to get a handle for the bottom directory. > > > - echo 2 >/proc/sys/vm/drop_caches > > > - open_by_fhandle_at on the filehandle > > > > > > But this only actually exercises the reconnect path on the first run > > > after boot. Is there something obvious I'm missing here? > > > > Looking at the code.... OK, most of the work of drop_caches is done by > > shrink_slab_node, which doesn't actually try to free every single thing > > that it could free--in particular, it won't try to free anything if it > > thinks there are less than shrinker->batch_size (1024 in the > > super_block->s_shrink case) objects to free. (Oops, sorry, that should have been "less than half of shrinker->batch_size", see below.) > That's not quite right. Yes, the shrinker won't be called if the > calculated scan count is less than the batch size, but the left over > is added back the shrinker scan count to carry over to the next call > to the shrinker. Hence if you repeated call the shrinker on a small > cache with a large batch size, it will eventually aggregate the scan > counts to over the batch size and trim the cache.... No, in shrink_slab_count, we do this: if (total_scan > max_pass * 2) total_scan = max_pass * 2; while (total_scan >= batch_size) { ... } where max_pass is the value returned from count_objects. So as long as count_objects returns less than half batch_size, nothing ever happens. (I wonder if that check's correct? The "forever" in the comment above it seems wrong at least.) --b. -- 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