소스 검색

fs, jbd: use a more generic hash function

While the hash function used by the revoke hashtable is good somewhere else,
it's not really good here.

The default hash shift (8) means that one third of the hashing function
gets lost (and is undefined anyways (8 - 12 = negative shift)):

	"(block << (hash_shift - 12))) & (table->hash_size - 1)"

Instead, just use the kernel's generic hash function that gets used everywhere
else.

Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sasha.levin@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Sasha Levin 11 년 전
부모
커밋
3c9cafe05f
1개의 변경된 파일2개의 추가작업 그리고 5개의 파일을 삭제
  1. 2 5
      fs/jbd/revoke.c

+ 2 - 5
fs/jbd/revoke.c

@@ -93,6 +93,7 @@
 #include <linux/bio.h>
 #endif
 #include <linux/log2.h>
+#include <linux/hash.h>
 
 static struct kmem_cache *revoke_record_cache;
 static struct kmem_cache *revoke_table_cache;
@@ -129,15 +130,11 @@ static void flush_descriptor(journal_t *, struct journal_head *, int, int);
 
 /* Utility functions to maintain the revoke table */
 
-/* Borrowed from buffer.c: this is a tried and tested block hash function */
 static inline int hash(journal_t *journal, unsigned int block)
 {
 	struct jbd_revoke_table_s *table = journal->j_revoke;
-	int hash_shift = table->hash_shift;
 
-	return ((block << (hash_shift - 6)) ^
-		(block >> 13) ^
-		(block << (hash_shift - 12))) & (table->hash_size - 1);
+	return hash_32(block, table->hash_shift);
 }
 
 static int insert_revoke_hash(journal_t *journal, unsigned int blocknr,