| Philipp Reisner | b411b36 | 2009-09-25 16:07:19 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* | 
|  | 2 | lru_cache.c | 
|  | 3 |  | 
|  | 4 | This file is part of DRBD by Philipp Reisner and Lars Ellenberg. | 
|  | 5 |  | 
|  | 6 | Copyright (C) 2003-2008, LINBIT Information Technologies GmbH. | 
|  | 7 | Copyright (C) 2003-2008, Philipp Reisner <philipp.reisner@linbit.com>. | 
|  | 8 | Copyright (C) 2003-2008, Lars Ellenberg <lars.ellenberg@linbit.com>. | 
|  | 9 |  | 
|  | 10 | drbd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | 
|  | 11 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | 
|  | 12 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) | 
|  | 13 | any later version. | 
|  | 14 |  | 
|  | 15 | drbd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | 
|  | 16 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | 
|  | 17 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the | 
|  | 18 | GNU General Public License for more details. | 
|  | 19 |  | 
|  | 20 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | 
|  | 21 | along with drbd; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to | 
|  | 22 | the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. | 
|  | 23 |  | 
|  | 24 | */ | 
|  | 25 |  | 
|  | 26 | #ifndef LRU_CACHE_H | 
|  | 27 | #define LRU_CACHE_H | 
|  | 28 |  | 
|  | 29 | #include <linux/list.h> | 
|  | 30 | #include <linux/slab.h> | 
|  | 31 | #include <linux/bitops.h> | 
|  | 32 | #include <linux/string.h> /* for memset */ | 
|  | 33 | #include <linux/seq_file.h> | 
|  | 34 |  | 
|  | 35 | /* | 
|  | 36 | This header file (and its .c file; kernel-doc of functions see there) | 
|  | 37 | define a helper framework to easily keep track of index:label associations, | 
|  | 38 | and changes to an "active set" of objects, as well as pending transactions, | 
|  | 39 | to persistently record those changes. | 
|  | 40 |  | 
|  | 41 | We use an LRU policy if it is necessary to "cool down" a region currently in | 
|  | 42 | the active set before we can "heat" a previously unused region. | 
|  | 43 |  | 
|  | 44 | Because of this later property, it is called "lru_cache". | 
|  | 45 | As it actually Tracks Objects in an Active SeT, we could also call it | 
|  | 46 | toast (incidentally that is what may happen to the data on the | 
|  | 47 | backend storage uppon next resync, if we don't get it right). | 
|  | 48 |  | 
|  | 49 | What for? | 
|  | 50 |  | 
|  | 51 | We replicate IO (more or less synchronously) to local and remote disk. | 
|  | 52 |  | 
|  | 53 | For crash recovery after replication node failure, | 
|  | 54 | we need to resync all regions that have been target of in-flight WRITE IO | 
|  | 55 | (in use, or "hot", regions), as we don't know wether or not those WRITEs have | 
|  | 56 | made it to stable storage. | 
|  | 57 |  | 
|  | 58 | To avoid a "full resync", we need to persistently track these regions. | 
|  | 59 |  | 
|  | 60 | This is known as "write intent log", and can be implemented as on-disk | 
|  | 61 | (coarse or fine grained) bitmap, or other meta data. | 
|  | 62 |  | 
|  | 63 | To avoid the overhead of frequent extra writes to this meta data area, | 
|  | 64 | usually the condition is softened to regions that _may_ have been target of | 
|  | 65 | in-flight WRITE IO, e.g. by only lazily clearing the on-disk write-intent | 
|  | 66 | bitmap, trading frequency of meta data transactions against amount of | 
| Daniel Mack | 3ad2f3f | 2010-02-03 08:01:28 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 67 | (possibly unnecessary) resync traffic. | 
| Philipp Reisner | b411b36 | 2009-09-25 16:07:19 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 68 |  | 
|  | 69 | If we set a hard limit on the area that may be "hot" at any given time, we | 
|  | 70 | limit the amount of resync traffic needed for crash recovery. | 
|  | 71 |  | 
|  | 72 | For recovery after replication link failure, | 
|  | 73 | we need to resync all blocks that have been changed on the other replica | 
|  | 74 | in the mean time, or, if both replica have been changed independently [*], | 
|  | 75 | all blocks that have been changed on either replica in the mean time. | 
|  | 76 | [*] usually as a result of a cluster split-brain and insufficient protection. | 
|  | 77 | but there are valid use cases to do this on purpose. | 
|  | 78 |  | 
|  | 79 | Tracking those blocks can be implemented as "dirty bitmap". | 
|  | 80 | Having it fine-grained reduces the amount of resync traffic. | 
|  | 81 | It should also be persistent, to allow for reboots (or crashes) | 
|  | 82 | while the replication link is down. | 
|  | 83 |  | 
|  | 84 | There are various possible implementations for persistently storing | 
|  | 85 | write intent log information, three of which are mentioned here. | 
|  | 86 |  | 
|  | 87 | "Chunk dirtying" | 
|  | 88 | The on-disk "dirty bitmap" may be re-used as "write-intent" bitmap as well. | 
|  | 89 | To reduce the frequency of bitmap updates for write-intent log purposes, | 
|  | 90 | one could dirty "chunks" (of some size) at a time of the (fine grained) | 
|  | 91 | on-disk bitmap, while keeping the in-memory "dirty" bitmap as clean as | 
|  | 92 | possible, flushing it to disk again when a previously "hot" (and on-disk | 
|  | 93 | dirtied as full chunk) area "cools down" again (no IO in flight anymore, | 
|  | 94 | and none expected in the near future either). | 
|  | 95 |  | 
|  | 96 | "Explicit (coarse) write intent bitmap" | 
|  | 97 | An other implementation could chose a (probably coarse) explicit bitmap, | 
|  | 98 | for write-intent log purposes, additionally to the fine grained dirty bitmap. | 
|  | 99 |  | 
|  | 100 | "Activity log" | 
|  | 101 | Yet an other implementation may keep track of the hot regions, by starting | 
|  | 102 | with an empty set, and writing down a journal of region numbers that have | 
|  | 103 | become "hot", or have "cooled down" again. | 
|  | 104 |  | 
|  | 105 | To be able to use a ring buffer for this journal of changes to the active | 
|  | 106 | set, we not only record the actual changes to that set, but also record the | 
|  | 107 | not changing members of the set in a round robin fashion. To do so, we use a | 
|  | 108 | fixed (but configurable) number of slots which we can identify by index, and | 
|  | 109 | associate region numbers (labels) with these indices. | 
|  | 110 | For each transaction recording a change to the active set, we record the | 
|  | 111 | change itself (index: -old_label, +new_label), and which index is associated | 
|  | 112 | with which label (index: current_label) within a certain sliding window that | 
|  | 113 | is moved further over the available indices with each such transaction. | 
|  | 114 |  | 
|  | 115 | Thus, for crash recovery, if the ringbuffer is sufficiently large, we can | 
|  | 116 | accurately reconstruct the active set. | 
|  | 117 |  | 
|  | 118 | Sufficiently large depends only on maximum number of active objects, and the | 
|  | 119 | size of the sliding window recording "index: current_label" associations within | 
|  | 120 | each transaction. | 
|  | 121 |  | 
|  | 122 | This is what we call the "activity log". | 
|  | 123 |  | 
|  | 124 | Currently we need one activity log transaction per single label change, which | 
|  | 125 | does not give much benefit over the "dirty chunks of bitmap" approach, other | 
|  | 126 | than potentially less seeks. | 
|  | 127 |  | 
|  | 128 | We plan to change the transaction format to support multiple changes per | 
|  | 129 | transaction, which then would reduce several (disjoint, "random") updates to | 
|  | 130 | the bitmap into one transaction to the activity log ring buffer. | 
|  | 131 | */ | 
|  | 132 |  | 
|  | 133 | /* this defines an element in a tracked set | 
|  | 134 | * .colision is for hash table lookup. | 
|  | 135 | * When we process a new IO request, we know its sector, thus can deduce the | 
|  | 136 | * region number (label) easily.  To do the label -> object lookup without a | 
|  | 137 | * full list walk, we use a simple hash table. | 
|  | 138 | * | 
|  | 139 | * .list is on one of three lists: | 
|  | 140 | *  in_use: currently in use (refcnt > 0, lc_number != LC_FREE) | 
|  | 141 | *     lru: unused but ready to be reused or recycled | 
|  | 142 | *          (ts_refcnt == 0, lc_number != LC_FREE), | 
|  | 143 | *    free: unused but ready to be recycled | 
|  | 144 | *          (ts_refcnt == 0, lc_number == LC_FREE), | 
|  | 145 | * | 
|  | 146 | * an element is said to be "in the active set", | 
|  | 147 | * if either on "in_use" or "lru", i.e. lc_number != LC_FREE. | 
|  | 148 | * | 
|  | 149 | * DRBD currently (May 2009) only uses 61 elements on the resync lru_cache | 
|  | 150 | * (total memory usage 2 pages), and up to 3833 elements on the act_log | 
|  | 151 | * lru_cache, totalling ~215 kB for 64bit architechture, ~53 pages. | 
|  | 152 | * | 
|  | 153 | * We usually do not actually free these objects again, but only "recycle" | 
|  | 154 | * them, as the change "index: -old_label, +LC_FREE" would need a transaction | 
|  | 155 | * as well.  Which also means that using a kmem_cache to allocate the objects | 
|  | 156 | * from wastes some resources. | 
|  | 157 | * But it avoids high order page allocations in kmalloc. | 
|  | 158 | */ | 
|  | 159 | struct lc_element { | 
|  | 160 | struct hlist_node colision; | 
|  | 161 | struct list_head list;		 /* LRU list or free list */ | 
|  | 162 | unsigned refcnt; | 
|  | 163 | /* back "pointer" into ts_cache->element[index], | 
|  | 164 | * for paranoia, and for "ts_element_to_index" */ | 
|  | 165 | unsigned lc_index; | 
|  | 166 | /* if we want to track a larger set of objects, | 
|  | 167 | * it needs to become arch independend u64 */ | 
|  | 168 | unsigned lc_number; | 
|  | 169 |  | 
|  | 170 | /* special label when on free list */ | 
|  | 171 | #define LC_FREE (~0U) | 
|  | 172 | }; | 
|  | 173 |  | 
|  | 174 | struct lru_cache { | 
|  | 175 | /* the least recently used item is kept at lru->prev */ | 
|  | 176 | struct list_head lru; | 
|  | 177 | struct list_head free; | 
|  | 178 | struct list_head in_use; | 
|  | 179 |  | 
|  | 180 | /* the pre-created kmem cache to allocate the objects from */ | 
|  | 181 | struct kmem_cache *lc_cache; | 
|  | 182 |  | 
|  | 183 | /* size of tracked objects, used to memset(,0,) them in lc_reset */ | 
|  | 184 | size_t element_size; | 
|  | 185 | /* offset of struct lc_element member in the tracked object */ | 
|  | 186 | size_t element_off; | 
|  | 187 |  | 
|  | 188 | /* number of elements (indices) */ | 
|  | 189 | unsigned int  nr_elements; | 
|  | 190 | /* Arbitrary limit on maximum tracked objects. Practical limit is much | 
|  | 191 | * lower due to allocation failures, probably. For typical use cases, | 
|  | 192 | * nr_elements should be a few thousand at most. | 
|  | 193 | * This also limits the maximum value of ts_element.ts_index, allowing the | 
|  | 194 | * 8 high bits of .ts_index to be overloaded with flags in the future. */ | 
|  | 195 | #define LC_MAX_ACTIVE	(1<<24) | 
|  | 196 |  | 
|  | 197 | /* statistics */ | 
|  | 198 | unsigned used; /* number of lelements currently on in_use list */ | 
|  | 199 | unsigned long hits, misses, starving, dirty, changed; | 
|  | 200 |  | 
|  | 201 | /* see below: flag-bits for lru_cache */ | 
|  | 202 | unsigned long flags; | 
|  | 203 |  | 
|  | 204 | /* when changing the label of an index element */ | 
|  | 205 | unsigned int  new_number; | 
|  | 206 |  | 
|  | 207 | /* for paranoia when changing the label of an index element */ | 
|  | 208 | struct lc_element *changing_element; | 
|  | 209 |  | 
|  | 210 | void  *lc_private; | 
|  | 211 | const char *name; | 
|  | 212 |  | 
|  | 213 | /* nr_elements there */ | 
|  | 214 | struct hlist_head *lc_slot; | 
|  | 215 | struct lc_element **lc_element; | 
|  | 216 | }; | 
|  | 217 |  | 
|  | 218 |  | 
|  | 219 | /* flag-bits for lru_cache */ | 
|  | 220 | enum { | 
|  | 221 | /* debugging aid, to catch concurrent access early. | 
|  | 222 | * user needs to guarantee exclusive access by proper locking! */ | 
|  | 223 | __LC_PARANOIA, | 
|  | 224 | /* if we need to change the set, but currently there is a changing | 
|  | 225 | * transaction pending, we are "dirty", and must deferr further | 
|  | 226 | * changing requests */ | 
|  | 227 | __LC_DIRTY, | 
|  | 228 | /* if we need to change the set, but currently there is no free nor | 
|  | 229 | * unused element available, we are "starving", and must not give out | 
|  | 230 | * further references, to guarantee that eventually some refcnt will | 
|  | 231 | * drop to zero and we will be able to make progress again, changing | 
|  | 232 | * the set, writing the transaction. | 
|  | 233 | * if the statistics say we are frequently starving, | 
|  | 234 | * nr_elements is too small. */ | 
|  | 235 | __LC_STARVING, | 
|  | 236 | }; | 
|  | 237 | #define LC_PARANOIA (1<<__LC_PARANOIA) | 
|  | 238 | #define LC_DIRTY    (1<<__LC_DIRTY) | 
|  | 239 | #define LC_STARVING (1<<__LC_STARVING) | 
|  | 240 |  | 
|  | 241 | extern struct lru_cache *lc_create(const char *name, struct kmem_cache *cache, | 
|  | 242 | unsigned e_count, size_t e_size, size_t e_off); | 
|  | 243 | extern void lc_reset(struct lru_cache *lc); | 
|  | 244 | extern void lc_destroy(struct lru_cache *lc); | 
|  | 245 | extern void lc_set(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned int enr, int index); | 
|  | 246 | extern void lc_del(struct lru_cache *lc, struct lc_element *element); | 
|  | 247 |  | 
|  | 248 | extern struct lc_element *lc_try_get(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned int enr); | 
|  | 249 | extern struct lc_element *lc_find(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned int enr); | 
|  | 250 | extern struct lc_element *lc_get(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned int enr); | 
|  | 251 | extern unsigned int lc_put(struct lru_cache *lc, struct lc_element *e); | 
|  | 252 | extern void lc_changed(struct lru_cache *lc, struct lc_element *e); | 
|  | 253 |  | 
|  | 254 | struct seq_file; | 
|  | 255 | extern size_t lc_seq_printf_stats(struct seq_file *seq, struct lru_cache *lc); | 
|  | 256 |  | 
|  | 257 | extern void lc_seq_dump_details(struct seq_file *seq, struct lru_cache *lc, char *utext, | 
|  | 258 | void (*detail) (struct seq_file *, struct lc_element *)); | 
|  | 259 |  | 
|  | 260 | /** | 
|  | 261 | * lc_try_lock - can be used to stop lc_get() from changing the tracked set | 
|  | 262 | * @lc: the lru cache to operate on | 
|  | 263 | * | 
|  | 264 | * Note that the reference counts and order on the active and lru lists may | 
|  | 265 | * still change.  Returns true if we aquired the lock. | 
|  | 266 | */ | 
|  | 267 | static inline int lc_try_lock(struct lru_cache *lc) | 
|  | 268 | { | 
|  | 269 | return !test_and_set_bit(__LC_DIRTY, &lc->flags); | 
|  | 270 | } | 
|  | 271 |  | 
|  | 272 | /** | 
|  | 273 | * lc_unlock - unlock @lc, allow lc_get() to change the set again | 
|  | 274 | * @lc: the lru cache to operate on | 
|  | 275 | */ | 
|  | 276 | static inline void lc_unlock(struct lru_cache *lc) | 
|  | 277 | { | 
|  | 278 | clear_bit(__LC_DIRTY, &lc->flags); | 
|  | 279 | smp_mb__after_clear_bit(); | 
|  | 280 | } | 
|  | 281 |  | 
|  | 282 | static inline int lc_is_used(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned int enr) | 
|  | 283 | { | 
|  | 284 | struct lc_element *e = lc_find(lc, enr); | 
|  | 285 | return e && e->refcnt; | 
|  | 286 | } | 
|  | 287 |  | 
|  | 288 | #define lc_entry(ptr, type, member) \ | 
|  | 289 | container_of(ptr, type, member) | 
|  | 290 |  | 
|  | 291 | extern struct lc_element *lc_element_by_index(struct lru_cache *lc, unsigned i); | 
|  | 292 | extern unsigned int lc_index_of(struct lru_cache *lc, struct lc_element *e); | 
|  | 293 |  | 
|  | 294 | #endif |