On Sat, Mar 03, 2018 at 09:55:22AM -0500, Jeff Layton wrote:
> On Mon, 2018-02-19 at 11:45 -0800, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> > From: Matthew Wilcox <[email protected]>
> > 
> > This results in no change in structure size on 64-bit x86 as it fits in
> > the padding between the gfp_t and the void *.
> > 
> 
> While the patch itself looks fine, we should take note that this will
> likely increase the size of radix_tree_root on 32-bit arches.
> 
> I don't think that's necessarily a deal breaker, but there are a lot of
> users of radix_tree_root. Many of those users have their own spinlock
> for radix tree accesses, and could be trivially changed to use the
> xa_lock. That would need to be done piecemeal though.
> 
> A less disruptive idea might be to just create some new struct that's a
> spinlock + radix_tree_root, and then use that going forward in the
> xarray conversion. That might be better anyway if you're considering a
> more phased approach for getting this merged.

Well, it's a choice.  If we do:

struct xarray {
        spinlock_t xa_lock;
        struct radix_tree_root root;
};

then the padding on 64-bit turns that into a 24-byte struct.  So do we
spend the extra 4 bytes on 32-bit and have the struct the way we want it
to look from the beginning, or do we spend the extra 8 bytes on 64-bit
and have to redo the struct accessors after the conversions are complete?
I chose option (a), but reasonable people can disagree on that choice.

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