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Date:      Tue, 3 Apr 2001 11:13:04 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Matt Dillon <dillon@earth.backplane.com>
To:        Garrett Rooney <rooneg@electricjellyfish.net>
Cc:        Alfred Perlstein <alfred@FreeBSD.ORG>, cvs-committers@FreeBSD.ORG, cvs-all@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: cvs commit: src/sys/sys mbuf.h src/sys/kern uipc_mbuf.c
Message-ID:  <200104031813.f33ID4b58965@earth.backplane.com>
References:  <200104030315.f333FCX69312@freefall.freebsd.org> <20010403140457.B2952@electricjellyfish.net>

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:On Mon, Apr 02, 2001 at 08:15:12PM -0700, Alfred Perlstein wrote:
:> alfred      2001/04/02 20:15:12 PDT
:> 
:>   Modified files:
:>     sys/sys              mbuf.h 
:>     sys/kern             uipc_mbuf.c 
:>   Log:
:>   Use only one mutex for the entire mbuf subsystem.
:
:I can see how this makes some things cheaper by allowing you to only lock a
:single mutex instead of several, but doesn't it also limit you to only a
:single thread using the mbuf subsystem at a time?  Since mbufs are used in a
:fairly large number of places throught the system, wouldn't that be bad?
:
:I'm sure this has been thought through, I'm just trying to understand why this
:will be better in the long run.  Isn't the goal to have fine grained locking,
:rather than single locks limiting access to subsystems?
:
:-- 
:garrett rooney                     Unix was not designed to stop you from 

    What about using the BSDI hash-table-of-mutexes idea?  Where mutex
    functionality is overloaded to some degree for any given subsystem.
    This gives us sufficient parallelism without polluting system structures
    with their own mutexes.

						-Matt

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