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From: Edward Shishkin <edward.shishkin@gmail.com>
To: Ivan Shapovalov <intelfx100@gmail.com>
Cc: reiserfs-devel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: reiser4: discard support
Date: Fri, 02 May 2014 20:10:16 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <5363DF88.7060904@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4594794.KsdUPSo0Ac@intelfx-laptop>

On 05/02/2014 04:32 PM, Ivan Shapovalov wrote:
> On Friday 02 May 2014 at 16:07:21, Edward Shishkin wrote:	
>> On 05/02/2014 03:36 PM, Ivan Shapovalov wrote:
>>> On Friday 02 May 2014 at 13:48:28, Edward Shishkin wrote:
>>>> On 05/02/2014 01:51 AM, Ivan Shapovalov wrote:
>>>>> On Wednesday 30 April 2014 at 19:51:03, Edward Shishkin wrote:
>>>>>> On 04/30/2014 05:04 PM, Ivan Shapovalov wrote:
>>>>>> [...]
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> There is a ready implementation of rb-trees in the kernel (see
>>>>>>>> ./lib/rbtree.c,
>>>>>>>> ./lib/rbtree_test.c). Could you please take a look at this?
>>>>>>> I've checked it already. Well, in case of trees:
>>>>>>> - combined extent insertion+adjacent extent merge complexity is
>>>>>>> O(n*log(n))
>>>>>> Actually, this is:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1) Add n extents one-by-one to empty tree:
>>>>>> log(1) + log(2) + ... + log(n-1)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2) Merge 2 trees of n extents:
>>>>>> log(n) + log(n+1) + ... + log(2n-1)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Total: log(1*2*...*2n-1) = log((2n-1)!)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> in accordance with Stirling's formula:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> log((2n)!) = log(((2n)^(1/2))*(2n/e)^n) =
>>>>>> = (1/2)*log(2n) + n*log(2n/e) < n + n*log(n)
>>>>> Hm.
>>>>>
>>>>> Consider we fill two data structures with N extents each, then merge
>>>>> these
>>>>> two data structures and prepare the resulting one for traversal (for
>>>>> lists it will be sorting, for trees that's no-op).
>>>>>
>>>>> For trees:
>>>>> 1) Adding
>>>>> 2*log((n-1)!)
>>>> Why "2*" ?
>>>> I suppose they are filled in parallel...
>>>> Total complexity (when everything is serialized) is not interesting ;)
>>> Oh why? Everything is still serialized by the physical CPU, for that
>>> matter. So less complexity -> less CPU time...
>> We can perfectly populate different "discard trees" in parallel on
>> different CPUs.
>> As to sorting the list: I don't know how to perform it in parallel :)
>> Default assumptions, that everything is serialized, usually lead to various
>> bad-scalable solutions...
> Ah, now I understand what do you mean. If that's about doing less work under
> the tmgr mutex,


No. This is about minimizing real time.
We don't know about mutexes. We want to decide, what is preferable:
populating trees, or sorting the list. There is a chance that the first will
be faster in systems with many CPUs, so I suggest to use trees.
That's all!


>   then yes, trees are better than lists.
>
> BTW, I've seen that reiser4 releases atom lock before allocating another node
> for a blocknr_set, and that leads to a "do { } while (ret == -E_REPEAT)" loop
> around the blocknr_set_add_extent() calls. Is this the preferred way of
> attaching a dynamic data structure to an atom?


TBH, I have never looked at the deallocation paths in reiser4: everything
worked fine there.. BTW, why not to use atom's delete_set to discard things?
Could you please take a look?


>>>>> 2) Merging
>>>>> log((2n-1)!/(n-1)!)
>>>>>
>>>>> 3) Sorting
>>>>> none
>>>>>
>>>>> Total:
>>>>> log((2n-1)!) + log((n-1)!)
>>>>>
>>>>> For lists:
>>>>> 1) Adding
>>>>> 2N
>>>>>
>>>>> 2) Merging
>>>>> constant
>>>>>
>>>>> 3) Sorting
>>>>> 2N*log(2N)
>>>>>
>>>>> Total:
>>>>> 2N+2N*log(2N)
>>>>>
>>>>> Quick testing in WolframAlpha shows that, if these estimations are
>>>>> correct,
>>>>> lists tend to have lesser complexity starting with approx. N=160.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Since atoms can be merged in parallel, we have that
>>>>>> trees work better than lists. Also tree of extents has
>>>>>> better memory consumption because of merging extents.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>     against O(n+n*log(n)) in lists;
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> - joining two trees is not less than O(log(n)) against O(1) in lists.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> So I can't see any benefit in using trees, and join performance is a
>>>>>>> downside of these. Am I missing something?
>>>>>> [...]
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Why after reiser4_invalidate_list()? I thought that it should be
>>>>>>> called between reiser4_write_logs(), but before
>>>>>>> reiser4_invalidate_list().
>>>>>> OK, insert before. I think, it doesn't matter, since we don't look
>>>>>> at this list when issuing discard requests, no? :)
>>>>> I just don't understand what implications does that function have. It
>>>>> seems to mess with jnodes, and I can imagine that this leads to races
>>>>> with somebody modifying the bitmaps while issue_discard_requests() tries
>>>>> to read them to check discard extents...
>>>> "somebody modifying the bitmaps" will wait for commit_mutex.
>>>> Have you found where the bitmaps are modified? This is
>>>> pre_commit_hook_bitmap().
>>> Yes, but I was not sure this is the only place where the bitmaps are
>>> touched...
>>>
>>>>>     Again, for me, internals of reiser4 still mostly look
>>>>>
>>>>> like heavy wizardry. :)
>>>> This is because the technical level of reiser4 is very high.
>>>> Many very strong scientists contributed to reiser4.
>>>>
>>>> I also don't understand in details how some reiser4 subsystems work.
>>>> Once I need details, I open the respective code and read it with the
>>>> comments.
>>>> The most important thing is general understanding of how it works.
>>>> Nobody is able to grok this only by reading reiser4 code before
>>>> sleeping. You need to implement at least one feature by your hands.
>>>> Yes, it is not easy, and not for everyone. Like every high-level research
>>>> in the science...
>>>>
>>>> Edward.
>>> ...and nobody to this point had written an explanation of that, or some
>>> piece of documentation except the design document...
>> what explanation do you mean?
>>
>> Edward.
> A general explanation of how does it work :)


I think this is because of historical reasons.
Such good explanation costs a lot of time and efforts.
Namesys was a small company, we couldn't afford to have a technical writer.
Hans insisted on good comments in the source code..



  reply	other threads:[~2014-05-02 18:10 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 19+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2014-04-30  7:43 reiser4: discard support Ivan Shapovalov
2014-04-30 14:11 ` Edward Shishkin
     [not found] ` <1B07908E-B768-407D-ADFA-B3C539FABB49@gmail.com>
     [not found]   ` <53613807.7090605@gmail.com>
2014-05-01 23:51     ` Ivan Shapovalov
     [not found]       ` <CAJZSrNK4=o9vocDfSM=4W5ZgtqZ6RVpmU66sGCu6HFsdN47OHw@mail.gmail.com>
2014-05-02 11:06         ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-02 11:48       ` Edward Shishkin
2014-05-02 12:44         ` Edward Shishkin
2014-05-02 13:47           ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-02 13:36         ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-02 14:07           ` Edward Shishkin
2014-05-02 14:32             ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-02 18:10               ` Edward Shishkin [this message]
2014-05-03 18:48                 ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-03 20:21                   ` Edward Shishkin
2014-05-03 20:32                     ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-06  8:58                       ` Edward Shishkin
2014-05-07  7:35                         ` Ivan Shapovalov
2014-05-07 21:04                           ` Edward Shishkin
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2014-04-30 17:55 Edward Shishkin
2014-04-30 18:53 ` Edward Shishkin

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