From: Andi Kleen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Thu, 18 Aug 2005 03:05:25 +0200
> I would just set the ra pointer to a single global structure if the > allocation fails. Then you can avoid all the other checks. It will > slow down things and trash some state, but not fail and nobody > should expect good performance after out of memory anyways. The only > check still needed would be on freeing. I would think twice about that due to repeatability concerns. Yes, we should care less when memory is so low, but if we can avoid this kind of scenerio easily we should. Having said that, I would like to recommend looking into a scheme where the path leading to the filp allocation states whether the read-ahead bits are needed or not. This has two benefits: 1) Repeatability, and error signalling at the correct place should the memory allocation fail. 2) We can avoid the pointer dereference overhead. The read-ahead state is always at (filp + 1). Macro'ized or static inline function'ized interfaces for this access can make it look clean and perhaps even implement debugging of the case where we try to get at the read-ahead state for a non-read-ahead filp. I do really think that would be a better approach. A quick glance shows that it should be easy to propagate the "need_read_ahead" state, just by passing a boolean to get_unused_fd() via sock_map_fd(). - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html