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[Gluster-devel] New locking strategy


From: Xavier Hernandez
Subject: [Gluster-devel] New locking strategy
Date: Tue, 03 Apr 2012 15:20:19 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:11.0) Gecko/20120327 Thunderbird/11.0.1

Hello developers,

I'm currently trying to implement a new method for managing inode and entry modifications that will be faster (I hope) than the current method for the most common cases. To do so I need to know exactly how the locking mechanism works. I have been browsing the source code and doing some tests, and I would like to be sure that I have understood it correctly before continuing.

All information is based on latest qa releases from 3.3 branch.

My understanding is this:

- There are three locking fops: lk, inodelk and entrylk.
- Client application locks created using fcntl() are received by the translators as lk requests. - All other functionalities of lk fop are not currently used by any translator (I mean F_RESLK_LCK, F_RESLK_LCKW, F_RESLK_UNLCK and F_GETLK_FD). - inodelk and entrlylk are only used by AFR to lock inodes or directory entries before modification.
- Translators don't generate lk requests internally.
- Client application requests cannot directly generate an inodelk or entrylk requests.
- inodelk and entrylk locks are always mandatory.
- lk locks may be mandatory or advisory.
- lk and inodelk are independent from each other, meaning that a lock using lk will not be visible to inodelk and will not block it. inodelk won't block lk requests neither. - User requests can only be blocked by lk created locks (if a write request from user is allowed to pass without using inodelk, it won't be blocked by a previous inodelk).

Is this interpretation correct and complete ?

Thanks for your help,

Xavi



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