Re: 2.5.59-mm5

Nikita Danilov (Nikita@Namesys.COM)
Fri, 24 Jan 2003 15:14:40 +0300


Andrew Morton writes:

[...]

>
> In this very common scenario, the only way we'll ever get "lumps" of reads is
> if some other processes come in and happen to want to read nearby sectors.

Or if you have read-ahead for meta-data, which is quite useful. Isn't
read ahead targeting the same problem as this anticipatory scheduling?

> In the best case, the size of the lump is proportional to the number of
> processes which are concurrently trying to read something. This just doesn't
> happen enough to be significant or interesting.
>
> But writes are completely different. There is no dependency between them and
> at any point in time we know where on-disk a lot of writes will be placed.
> We don't know that for reads, which is why we need to twiddle thumbs until the
> application or filesystem makes up its mind.
>

Nikita.
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