Merge branch 'riscv-bcache' into riscv

This commit is contained in:
Frans Kaashoek 2019-08-01 15:46:50 -04:00
commit 62ece4b09e
6 changed files with 68 additions and 38 deletions

View file

@ -12,11 +12,7 @@
// * Do not use the buffer after calling brelse.
// * Only one process at a time can use a buffer,
// so do not keep them longer than necessary.
//
// The implementation uses two state flags internally:
// * B_VALID: the buffer data has been read from the disk.
// * B_DIRTY: the buffer data has been modified
// and needs to be written to disk.
#include "types.h"
#include "param.h"
@ -76,13 +72,11 @@ bget(uint dev, uint blockno)
}
// Not cached; recycle an unused buffer.
// Even if refcnt==0, B_DIRTY indicates a buffer is in use
// because log.c has modified it but not yet committed it.
for(b = bcache.head.prev; b != &bcache.head; b = b->prev){
if(b->refcnt == 0 && (b->flags & B_DIRTY) == 0) {
if(b->refcnt == 0) {
b->dev = dev;
b->blockno = blockno;
b->flags = 0;
b->valid = 0;
b->refcnt = 1;
release(&bcache.lock);
acquiresleep(&b->lock);
@ -99,8 +93,9 @@ bread(uint dev, uint blockno)
struct buf *b;
b = bget(dev, blockno);
if((b->flags & B_VALID) == 0) {
virtio_disk_rw(b);
if(!b->valid) {
virtio_disk_rw(b, 0);
b->valid = 1;
}
return b;
}
@ -111,8 +106,7 @@ bwrite(struct buf *b)
{
if(!holdingsleep(&b->lock))
panic("bwrite");
b->flags |= B_DIRTY;
virtio_disk_rw(b);
virtio_disk_rw(b, 1);
}
// Release a locked buffer.
@ -139,3 +133,19 @@ brelse(struct buf *b)
release(&bcache.lock);
}
void
bpin(struct buf *b) {
acquire(&bcache.lock);
b->refcnt++;
release(&bcache.lock);
}
void
bunpin(struct buf *b) {
acquire(&bcache.lock);
b->refcnt--;
release(&bcache.lock);
}

View file

@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
struct buf {
int flags;
int valid; // has data been read from disk?
int disk; // does disk "own" buf?
uint dev;
uint blockno;
struct sleeplock lock;
@ -9,6 +10,4 @@ struct buf {
struct buf *qnext; // disk queue
uchar data[BSIZE];
};
#define B_VALID 0x2 // buffer has been read from disk
#define B_DIRTY 0x4 // buffer needs to be written to disk

View file

@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ void binit(void);
struct buf* bread(uint, uint);
void brelse(struct buf*);
void bwrite(struct buf*);
void bpin(struct buf*);
void bunpin(struct buf*);
// console.c
void consoleinit(void);
@ -177,7 +179,7 @@ void plic_complete(int);
// virtio_disk.c
void virtio_disk_init(void);
void virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *);
void virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *, int);
void virtio_disk_intr();
// number of elements in fixed-size array

View file

@ -77,6 +77,7 @@ install_trans(void)
struct buf *dbuf = bread(log.dev, log.lh.block[tail]); // read dst
memmove(dbuf->data, lbuf->data, BSIZE); // copy block to dst
bwrite(dbuf); // write dst to disk
bunpin(dbuf);
brelse(lbuf);
brelse(dbuf);
}
@ -203,7 +204,7 @@ commit()
}
// Caller has modified b->data and is done with the buffer.
// Record the block number and pin in the cache with B_DIRTY.
// Record the block number and pin in the cache by increasing refcnt.
// commit()/write_log() will do the disk write.
//
// log_write() replaces bwrite(); a typical use is:
@ -227,9 +228,10 @@ log_write(struct buf *b)
break;
}
log.lh.block[i] = b->blockno;
if (i == log.lh.n)
if (i == log.lh.n) { // Add new block to log?
bpin(b);
log.lh.n++;
b->flags |= B_DIRTY; // prevent eviction
}
release(&log.lock);
}

View file

@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ alloc3_desc(int *idx)
}
void
virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b)
virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b, int write)
{
uint64 sector = b->blockno * (BSIZE / 512);
@ -192,7 +192,7 @@ virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b)
uint64 sector;
} buf0;
if(b->flags & B_DIRTY)
if(write)
buf0.type = VIRTIO_BLK_T_OUT; // write the disk
else
buf0.type = VIRTIO_BLK_T_IN; // read the disk
@ -208,7 +208,7 @@ virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b)
desc[idx[1]].addr = (uint64) b->data;
desc[idx[1]].len = BSIZE;
if(b->flags & B_DIRTY)
if(write)
desc[idx[1]].flags = 0; // device reads b->data
else
desc[idx[1]].flags = VRING_DESC_F_WRITE; // device writes b->data
@ -222,6 +222,7 @@ virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b)
desc[idx[2]].next = 0;
// record struct buf for virtio_disk_intr().
b->disk = 1;
info[idx[0]].b = b;
// avail[0] is flags
@ -235,10 +236,13 @@ virtio_disk_rw(struct buf *b)
*R(VIRTIO_MMIO_QUEUE_NOTIFY) = 0; // value is queue number
// Wait for virtio_disk_intr() to say request has finished.
while((b->flags & (B_VALID|B_DIRTY)) != B_VALID){
while(b->disk == 1) {
sleep(b, &vdisk_lock);
}
info[idx[0]].b = 0;
free_chain(idx[0]);
release(&vdisk_lock);
}
@ -252,15 +256,10 @@ virtio_disk_intr()
if(info[id].status != 0)
panic("virtio_disk_intr status");
info[id].b->flags |= B_VALID;
info[id].b->flags &= ~B_DIRTY;
info[id].b->disk = 0; // disk is done with buf
wakeup(info[id].b);
info[id].b = 0;
free_chain(id);
used_idx = (used_idx + 1) % NUM;
}

View file

@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ workloads.
<p>Run usertests to see if you don't break anything.
<h2>Lock-free bcache lookup</h2>
<h2>More scalabale bcache lookup</h2>
<p>Several processes reading different files repeatedly will
@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ workloads.
and run test0 from bcachetest and you will see "!"s.
<p>Modify <tt>bget</tt> so that a lookup for a buffer that is in the
bcache doesn't need to acquire <tt>bcache.lock</tt>. This more
bcache doesn't need to acquire <tt>bcache.lock</tt>. This is more
tricky than the kalloc assignment, because bcache buffers are truly
shared among processes. You must maintain the invariant that a
buffer is only once in memory.
@ -116,15 +116,33 @@ against, including:
<p>A challenge is testing whether you code is still correct. One way
to do is to artificially delay certain operations
using <tt>sleepticks</tt>.
using <tt>sleepticks</tt>. <tt>test1</tt> trashes the buffer cache
and exercises more code paths.
<p>Here are some hints:
<ul>
<li> Use an atomic increment instruction for incrementing and
decrementing <tt>b->ref</tt> (see <tt>__sync_fetch_and_add() and
related primitives</tt>)
<li>Don't walk the <tt>bcache.head</tt> list to find a buffer
<li>Read the description of buffer cache in the xv6 book (Section 7.2).
<li>Use a simple design: i.e., don't design a lock-free implementation.
<li>Use a simple hash table with locks per bucket.
<li>Searching in hash table for a buffer and allocating an entry
for that buffer when the buffer is not found must be atomic.
<li>It is fine to acquire <tt>bcache.lock</tt> in <tt>brelse</tt>
to update the LRU/MRU list.
</ul>
<p>Check that your implementation has less contention
on <tt>test0</tt>
<p>Make sure your implementation passes bcachetest and usertests.
<p>Optional:
<ul>
<li>make the buffer cache more scalable (e.g., avoid taking
out <tt>bcache.lock</tt> on <tt>brelse</tt>).
<li>make lookup lock-free (Hint: use gcc's <tt>__sync_*</tt>
functions.) How do you convince yourself that your implementation is correct?
</ul>
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