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authorJosef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>2009-07-14 03:29:25 +0200
committerChris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>2009-07-24 15:23:30 +0200
commit963030817060e4f109be1993b9ae8f81dbf5e11a (patch)
tree7d81121b7e68d3d5b3317afba53d36bc1bf8221a /fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h
parentBtrfs: Fix crash on read failures at mount (diff)
downloadlinux-963030817060e4f109be1993b9ae8f81dbf5e11a.tar.xz
linux-963030817060e4f109be1993b9ae8f81dbf5e11a.zip
Btrfs: use hybrid extents+bitmap rb tree for free space
Currently btrfs has a problem where it can use a ridiculous amount of RAM simply tracking free space. As free space gets fragmented, we end up with thousands of entries on an rb-tree per block group, which usually spans 1 gig of area. Since we currently don't ever flush free space cache back to disk this gets to be a bit unweildly on large fs's with lots of fragmentation. This patch solves this problem by using PAGE_SIZE bitmaps for parts of the free space cache. Initially we calculate a threshold of extent entries we can handle, which is however many extent entries we can cram into 16k of ram. The maximum amount of RAM that should ever be used to track 1 gigabyte of diskspace will be 32k of RAM, which scales much better than we did before. Once we pass the extent threshold, we start adding bitmaps and using those instead for tracking the free space. This patch also makes it so that any free space thats less than 4 * sectorsize we go ahead and put into a bitmap. This is nice since we try and allocate out of the front of a block group, so if the front of a block group is heavily fragmented and then has a huge chunk of free space at the end, we go ahead and add the fragmented areas to bitmaps and use a normal extent entry to track the big chunk at the back of the block group. I've also taken the opportunity to revamp how we search for free space. Previously we indexed free space via an offset indexed rb tree and a bytes indexed rb tree. I've dropped the bytes indexed rb tree and use only the offset indexed rb tree. This cuts the number of tree operations we were doing previously down by half, and gives us a little bit of a better allocation pattern since we will always start from a specific offset and search forward from there, instead of searching for the size we need and try and get it as close as possible to the offset we want. I've given this a healthy amount of testing pre-new format stuff, as well as post-new format stuff. I've booted up my fedora box which is installed on btrfs with this patch and ran with it for a few days without issues. I've not seen any performance regressions in any of my tests. Since the last patch Yan Zheng fixed a problem where we could have overlapping entries, so updating their offset inline would cause problems. Thanks, Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h')
-rw-r--r--fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h8
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h b/fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h
index 266fb8764054..890a8e79011b 100644
--- a/fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h
+++ b/fs/btrfs/free-space-cache.h
@@ -19,6 +19,14 @@
#ifndef __BTRFS_FREE_SPACE_CACHE
#define __BTRFS_FREE_SPACE_CACHE
+struct btrfs_free_space {
+ struct rb_node offset_index;
+ u64 offset;
+ u64 bytes;
+ unsigned long *bitmap;
+ struct list_head list;
+};
+
int btrfs_add_free_space(struct btrfs_block_group_cache *block_group,
u64 bytenr, u64 size);
int btrfs_remove_free_space(struct btrfs_block_group_cache *block_group,