1f1e030bf7
The hash.h hash_long function, when used on a 64 bit machine, ignores many of the middle-order bits. (The prime chosen it too bit-sparse). IP addresses for clients of an NFS server are very likely to differ only in the low-order bits. As addresses are stored in network-byte-order, these bits become middle-order bits in a little-endian 64bit 'long', and so do not contribute to the hash. Thus you can have the situation where all clients appear on one hash chain. So, until hash_long is fixed (or maybe forever), us a hash function that works well on IP addresses - xor the bytes together. Thanks to "Iozone" <capps@iozone.org> for identifying this problem. Cc: "Iozone" <capps@iozone.org> Signed-off-by: Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org> |
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802 | ||
8021q | ||
appletalk | ||
atm | ||
ax25 | ||
bluetooth | ||
bridge | ||
core | ||
dccp | ||
decnet | ||
econet | ||
ethernet | ||
ieee80211 | ||
ipv4 | ||
ipv6 | ||
ipx | ||
irda | ||
key | ||
lapb | ||
llc | ||
netfilter | ||
netlink | ||
netrom | ||
packet | ||
rose | ||
rxrpc | ||
sched | ||
sctp | ||
sunrpc | ||
unix | ||
wanrouter | ||
x25 | ||
xfrm | ||
compat.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
Makefile | ||
nonet.c | ||
socket.c | ||
sysctl_net.c | ||
TUNABLE |