This temporarily increases amount of boiler-plate code, but
this is going to be mitigated in the following commits.
Signed-off-by: Adam Rutkowski <adam.j.rutkowski@intel.com>
Global free cacheline list is divided into a set of freelists, one
per execution context. When attempting to map addres to cache, first
the freelist for current execution context is considered (fast path).
If current execution context freelist is empty (fast path failure),
mapping function attempts to get freelist from other execution context
list (slow path).
The purpose of this change is improve concurrency in freelist access.
It is part of fine granularity metadata lock implementation.
Signed-off-by: Adam Rutkowski <adam.j.rutkowski@intel.com>
Promotion policy is supposed to perform ALRU noise filtering by
eliminating one-hit wonders being added to cache and polluting it.
Signed-off-by: Jan Musial <jan.musial@intel.com>
ocf_request has always been first class citizen in OCF,
so lets place it along with another essential objects.
Signed-off-by: Robert Baldyga <robert.baldyga@intel.com>
NOTE: This is still not the real asynchronism. Metadata interfaces
are still not fully asynchronous.
Signed-off-by: Robert Baldyga <robert.baldyga@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Michal Mielewczyk <michal.mielewczyk@intel.com>
- Queue allocation is now separated from starting cache.
- Queue can be created and destroyed in runtime.
- All queue ops accept queue handle instead of queue id.
- Cache stores queues as list instead of array.
Signed-off-by: Michal Mielewczyk <michal.mielewczyk@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Robert Baldyga <robert.baldyga@intel.com>