• Konstantin Khlebnikov's avatar
    proc/sysctl: prune stale dentries during unregistering · d6cffbbe
    Konstantin Khlebnikov authored
    Currently unregistering sysctl table does not prune its dentries.
    Stale dentries could slowdown sysctl operations significantly.
    
    For example, command:
    
     # for i in {1..100000} ; do unshare -n -- sysctl -a &> /dev/null ; done
     creates a millions of stale denties around sysctls of loopback interface:
    
     # sysctl fs.dentry-state
     fs.dentry-state = 25812579  24724135        45      0       0       0
    
     All of them have matching names thus lookup have to scan though whole
     hash chain and call d_compare (proc_sys_compare) which checks them
     under system-wide spinlock (sysctl_lock).
    
     # time sysctl -a > /dev/null
     real    1m12.806s
     user    0m0.016s
     sys     1m12.400s
    
    Currently only memory reclaimer could remove this garbage.
    But without significant memory pressure this never happens.
    
    This patch collects sysctl inodes into list on sysctl table header and
    prunes all their dentries once that table unregisters.
    
    Konstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@yandex-team.ru> writes:
    > On 10.02.2017 10:47, Al Viro wrote:
    >> how about >> the matching stats *after* that patch?
    >
    > dcache size doesn't grow endlessly, so stats are fine
    >
    > # sysctl fs.dentry-state
    > fs.dentry-state = 92712	58376	45	0	0	0
    >
    > # time sysctl -a &>/dev/null
    >
    > real	0m0.013s
    > user	0m0.004s
    > sys	0m0.008s
    Signed-off-by: default avatarKonstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@yandex-team.ru>
    Suggested-by: default avatarAl Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarEric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
    d6cffbbe
inode.c 12.4 KB