Nick Piggin wrote on Monday, June 27, 2005 2:04 AM
> >> However I think for Oracle and others that use shared memory like
> >> this, they are probably not doing linear access, so that would be a
> >> net loss. I'm not completely sure (I don't have access to real loads
> >> at the moment), but I would have thought those guys would have looked
> >> into fault ahead if it were a possibility.
> >
> >
> > i thought those guys used O_DIRECT - in which case, wouldn't the page
> > cache not be used?
> >
>
> Well I think they do use O_DIRECT for their IO, but they need to
> use the Linux pagecache for their shared memory - that shared
> memory being the basis for their page cache. I think. Whatever
> the setup I believe they have issues with the tree_lock, which is
> why it was changed to an rwlock.
Typically shared memory is used as db buffer cache, and O_DIRECT is
performed on these buffer cache (hence O_DIRECT on the shared memory).
You must be thinking some other workload. Nevertheless, for OLTP type
of db workload, tree_lock hasn't been a problem so far.
- Ken
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