David Howells wrote:
David Chinner <[email protected]> wrote:
+ ret = block_prepare_write(page, 0, end, get_block);
As I understand the way prepare_write() works, this is incorrect.
I think it is actually OK.
The start and end points passed to block_prepare_write() delimit the region of
the page that is going to be modified. This means that prepare_write()
doesn't need to fill it in if the page is not up to date. It does, however,
need to fill in the region before (if present) and the region after (if
present). Look at it like this:
+---------------+
| |
| | <-- Filled in by prepare_write()
| |
to-> |:::::::::::::::|
| |
| | <-- Filled in by caller
| |
offset->|:::::::::::::::|
| |
| | <-- Filled in by prepare_write()
| |
page-> +---------------+
However, page_mkwrite() isn't told which bit of the page is going to be
written to. This means it has to ask prepare_write() to make sure the whole
page is filled in. In other words, offset and to must be equal (in AFS I set
them both to 0).
Dave is using prepare_write here to ensure blocks are allocated in the
given range. The filesystem's ->nopage function must ensure it is uptodate
before allowing it to be mapped.
With what you've got, if, say, 'offset' is 0 and 'to' is calculated at
PAGE_SIZE, then if the page is not up to date for any reason, then none of the
page will be updated before the page is written on by the faulting code.
Consider that the code currently works OK today _without_ page_mkwrite.
page_mkwrite is being added to do block allocation / reservation.
You probably get away with this in a blockdev-based filesystem because it's
unlikely that the page will cease to be up to date.
However, if someone adds a syscall to punch holes in files, this may change...
We have one. Strangely enough, it is done with madvise(MADV_REMOVE).
--
SUSE Labs, Novell Inc.
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