From 306fb0979443419288594446a348155a8027dcf2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Mason Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 10:47:55 -0400 Subject: aio: bump i_count instead of using igrab The aio batching code is using igrab to get an extra reference on the inode so it can safely batch. igrab will go ahead and take the global inode spinlock, which can be a bottleneck on large machines doing lots of AIO. In this case, igrab isn't required because we already have a reference on the file handle. It is safe to just bump the i_count directly on the inode. Benchmarking shows this patch brings IOP/s on tons of flash up by about 2.5X. Signed-off-by: Chris Mason --- fs/aio.c | 15 ++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'fs/aio.c') diff --git a/fs/aio.c b/fs/aio.c index 250b0a73c8a8..9e319a04780e 100644 --- a/fs/aio.c +++ b/fs/aio.c @@ -1543,7 +1543,20 @@ static void aio_batch_add(struct address_space *mapping, } abe = mempool_alloc(abe_pool, GFP_KERNEL); - BUG_ON(!igrab(mapping->host)); + + /* + * we should be using igrab here, but + * we don't want to hammer on the global + * inode spinlock just to take an extra + * reference on a file that we must already + * have a reference to. + * + * When we're called, we always have a reference + * on the file, so we must always have a reference + * on the inode, so igrab must always just + * bump the count and move on. + */ + atomic_inc(&mapping->host->i_count); abe->mapping = mapping; hlist_add_head(&abe->list, &batch_hash[bucket]); return; -- cgit v1.2.2