ext3: Avoid starting a transaction in writepage when not necessary

We don't have to start a transaction in writepage() when all the blocks
are a properly allocated. Even in ordered mode either the data has been
written via write() and they are thus already added to transaction's list
or the data was written via mmap and then it's random in which transaction
they get written anyway.

This should help VM to pageout dirty memory without blocking on transaction
commits.

Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
This commit is contained in:
Jan Kara 2009-03-26 13:08:04 +01:00 committed by Linus Torvalds
parent 0384e29591
commit 9e80d40773
1 changed files with 13 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -1435,6 +1435,10 @@ static int journal_dirty_data_fn(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
return 0;
}
static int buffer_unmapped(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
{
return !buffer_mapped(bh);
}
/*
* Note that we always start a transaction even if we're not journalling
* data. This is to preserve ordering: any hole instantiation within
@ -1505,6 +1509,15 @@ static int ext3_ordered_writepage(struct page *page,
if (ext3_journal_current_handle())
goto out_fail;
if (!page_has_buffers(page)) {
create_empty_buffers(page, inode->i_sb->s_blocksize,
(1 << BH_Dirty)|(1 << BH_Uptodate));
} else if (!walk_page_buffers(NULL, page_buffers(page), 0, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, buffer_unmapped)) {
/* Provide NULL instead of get_block so that we catch bugs if buffers weren't really mapped */
return block_write_full_page(page, NULL, wbc);
}
page_bufs = page_buffers(page);
handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(inode));
if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
@ -1512,11 +1525,6 @@ static int ext3_ordered_writepage(struct page *page,
goto out_fail;
}
if (!page_has_buffers(page)) {
create_empty_buffers(page, inode->i_sb->s_blocksize,
(1 << BH_Dirty)|(1 << BH_Uptodate));
}
page_bufs = page_buffers(page);
walk_page_buffers(handle, page_bufs, 0,
PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, bget_one);