Dongsheng Yang 1d57628ff9 dm-pcache: add persistent cache target in device-mapper
This patch introduces dm-pcache, a new DM target that places a DAX-
capable persistent-memory device in front of any slower block device and
uses it as a high-throughput, low-latency  cache.

Design highlights
-----------------
- DAX data path – data is copied directly between DRAM and the pmem
  mapping, bypassing the block layer’s overhead.

- Segmented, crash-consistent layout
  - all layout metadata are dual-replicated CRC-protected.
  - atomic kset flushes; key replay on mount guarantees cache integrity
    even after power loss.

- Striped multi-tree index
  - Multi‑tree indexing for high parallelism.
  - overlap-resolution logic ensures non-intersecting cached extents.

- Background services
  - write-back worker flushes dirty keys in order, preserving backing-device
    crash consistency. This is important for checkpoint in cloud storage.
  - garbage collector reclaims clean segments when utilisation exceeds a
    tunable threshold.

- Data integrity – optional CRC32 on cached payload; metadata always protected.

Comparison with existing block-level caches
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Feature                          | pcache (this patch)             | bcache                       | dm-writecache             |
|----------------------------------|---------------------------------|------------------------------|---------------------------|
| pmem access method               | DAX                             | bio (block I/O)              | DAX                       |
| Write latency (4 K rand-write)   | ~5 µs                           | ~20 µs                       | ~5 µs                     |
| Concurrency                      | multi subtree index             | global index tree            | single tree + wc_lock     |
| IOPS (4K randwrite, 32 numjobs)  | 2.1 M                           | 352 K                        | 283 K                     |
| Read-cache support               | YES                             | YES                          | NO                        |
| Deployment                       | no re-format of backend         | backend devices must be      | no re-format of backend   |
|                                  |                                 | reformatted                  |                           |
| Write-back ordering              | log-structured;                 | no ordering guarantee        | no ordering guarantee     |
|                                  | preserves app-IO-order          |                              |                           |
| Data integrity checks            | metadata + data CRC(optional)   | metadata CRC only            | none                      |
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Signed-off-by: Dongsheng Yang <dongsheng.yang@linux.dev>
Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@redhat.com>
2025-08-25 15:25:29 +02:00
2022-09-28 09:02:20 +02:00
2025-02-19 14:53:27 -07:00
2025-08-17 15:22:10 -07:00
2024-03-18 03:36:32 -06:00

Linux kernel
============

There are several guides for kernel developers and users. These guides can
be rendered in a number of formats, like HTML and PDF. Please read
Documentation/admin-guide/README.rst first.

In order to build the documentation, use ``make htmldocs`` or
``make pdfdocs``.  The formatted documentation can also be read online at:

    https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/

There are various text files in the Documentation/ subdirectory,
several of them using the reStructuredText markup notation.

Please read the Documentation/process/changes.rst file, as it contains the
requirements for building and running the kernel, and information about
the problems which may result by upgrading your kernel.
Description
No description provided
Readme 3.5 GiB
Languages
C 97%
Assembly 1%
Shell 0.6%
Rust 0.5%
Python 0.4%
Other 0.3%