xfs: reverse search directory freespace indexes

When a directory is growing rapidly, new blocks tend to get added at
the end of the directory. These end up at the end of the freespace
index, and when the directory gets large finding these new
freespaces gets expensive. The code does a linear search across the
frespace index from the first block in the directory to the last,
hence meaning the newly added space is the last index searched.

Instead, do a reverse order index search, starting from the last
block and index in the freespace index. This makes most lookups for
free space on rapidly growing directories O(1) instead of O(N), but
should not have any impact on random insert workloads because the
average search length is the same regardless of which end of the
array we start at.

The result is a major improvement in large directory grow rates:

		create time(sec) / rate (files/s)
 File count     vanilla             Prev commit		Patched
  10k	      0.41 / 24.3k	   0.42 / 23.8k       0.41 / 24.3k
  20k	      0.74 / 27.0k	   0.76 / 26.3k       0.75 / 26.7k
 100k	      3.81 / 26.4k	   3.47 / 28.8k       3.27 / 30.6k
 200k	      8.58 / 23.3k	   7.19 / 27.8k       6.71 / 29.8k
   1M	     85.69 / 11.7k	  48.53 / 20.6k      37.67 / 26.5k
   2M	    280.31 /  7.1k	 130.14 / 15.3k      79.55 / 25.2k
  10M	   3913.26 /  2.5k                          552.89 / 18.1k

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
This commit is contained in:
Dave Chinner 2019-08-29 09:04:08 -07:00 committed by Darrick J. Wong
parent 610125ab1e
commit 756c6f0f7e
1 changed files with 5 additions and 8 deletions

View File

@ -1745,10 +1745,11 @@ xfs_dir2_node_find_freeblk(
struct xfs_inode *dp = args->dp;
struct xfs_trans *tp = args->trans;
struct xfs_buf *fbp = NULL;
xfs_dir2_db_t firstfbno;
xfs_dir2_db_t lastfbno;
xfs_dir2_db_t ifbno = -1;
xfs_dir2_db_t dbno = -1;
xfs_dir2_db_t fbno = -1;
xfs_dir2_db_t fbno;
xfs_fileoff_t fo;
__be16 *bests = NULL;
int findex = 0;
@ -1780,7 +1781,6 @@ xfs_dir2_node_find_freeblk(
* We'll start at the beginning of the freespace entries.
*/
ifbno = fblk->blkno;
fbno = ifbno;
xfs_trans_brelse(tp, fbp);
fbp = NULL;
fblk->bp = NULL;
@ -1794,12 +1794,9 @@ xfs_dir2_node_find_freeblk(
if (error)
return error;
lastfbno = xfs_dir2_da_to_db(args->geo, (xfs_dablk_t)fo);
firstfbno = xfs_dir2_byte_to_db(args->geo, XFS_DIR2_FREE_OFFSET);
/* If we haven't get a search start block, set it now */
if (fbno == -1)
fbno = xfs_dir2_byte_to_db(args->geo, XFS_DIR2_FREE_OFFSET);
for ( ; fbno < lastfbno; fbno++) {
for (fbno = lastfbno - 1; fbno >= firstfbno; fbno--) {
/* If it's ifbno we already looked at it. */
if (fbno == ifbno)
continue;
@ -1822,7 +1819,7 @@ xfs_dir2_node_find_freeblk(
dp->d_ops->free_hdr_from_disk(&freehdr, free);
/* Scan the free entry array for a large enough free space. */
for (findex = 0; findex < freehdr.nvalid; findex++) {
for (findex = freehdr.nvalid - 1; findex >= 0; findex--) {
if (be16_to_cpu(bests[findex]) != NULLDATAOFF &&
be16_to_cpu(bests[findex]) >= length) {
dbno = freehdr.firstdb + findex;