Wu Fengguang wrote:
Hi Nick,
On Thu, Nov 10, 2005 at 10:31:09AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
Does this cache add much performance compared with simple repeated
lookups? If the access patterns are highly local, the top of the
radix tree should be in cache.
It just guarantees constant lookup time for small/large files.
My context based read-ahead code has been quite tricky just to avoid many radix
tree lookups. I made it much simple and robust in the recent versions by just
scanning through the cache. With the help of look-aside cache, the performance
remains comparable with the tricky one. Sorry, the oprofile log was overwrote.
But if you do need some numbers about the cache, I'll make one.
But it isn't *really* constant time lookups? I mean you'll
always have the O(logn) lookup. Amortised I guess that
becomes insignificant?
Briefly: is there a reason why you couldn't use gang lookups
instead? (Sorry I haven't been able to read and understand your
actual readahead code).
Do you think you could provide a simple 'use case' for an overview
of how you use the cache and what calls to make?
Ok, here it is:
void func() {
+ struct radix_tree_cache cache;
+
+ radix_tree_cache_init(&cache);
read_lock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock);
for(;;) {
- page = radix_tree_lookup(&mapping->page_tree, index);
+ page = radix_tree_cache_lookup(&mapping->page_tree, &cache, index);
}
read_unlock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock);
}
OK, I guess that seems reasonable.
You have introduced some other APIs as well...
Profile numbers would be great for the cached / non-cached cases.
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