Thread (10 messages) 10 messages, 5 authors, 2014-02-01

Re: [LSF/MM TOPIC] Fixing large block devices on 32 bit

From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
Date: 2014-01-31 23:27:44
Also in: linux-fsdevel, linux-mm, linux-scsi

On Fri, 2014-01-31 at 13:47 -0800, Dave Hansen wrote:
On 01/31/2014 11:02 AM, James Bottomley wrote:
quoted
     3. Increase pgoff_t and the radix tree indexes to u64 for
        CONFIG_LBDAF.  This will blow out the size of struct page on 32
        bits by 4 bytes and may have other knock on effects, but at
        least it will be transparent.
I'm not sure how many acrobatics we want to go through for 32-bit, but...
That's partly the question: 32 bits was dying in the x86 space (at least
until quark), but it's still predominant in embedded.
Between page->mapping and page->index, we have 64 bits of space, which
*should* be plenty to uniquely identify a block.  We could easily add a
second-level lookup somewhere so that we store some cookie for the
address_space instead of a direct pointer.  How many devices would need,
practically?  8 bits worth?
That might work.  8 bits would get us up to 4PB, which is looking a bit
high for single disk spinning rust.  However, how would the cookie work
efficiently? remember we'll be doing this lookup every time we pull a
page out of the page cache.  And the problem is that most of our lookups
will be on file inodes, which won't be > 16TB, so it's a lot of overhead
in the generic machinery for a problem that only occurs on buffer
related page cache lookups.

James

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