On Tue, 10 Jul 2007, Nick Piggin wrote:
> > Hmmm.... I did not notice that yet but then I have not done much work
> > there.
>
> Notice what?
The bad code for the buffer heads.
> > > - A real "nobh" mode. nobh was created I think mainly to avoid problems
> > > with buffer_head memory consumption, especially on lowmem machines. It
> > > is basically a hack (sorry), which requires special code in filesystems,
> > > and duplication of quite a bit of tricky buffer layer code (and bugs).
> > > It also doesn't work so well for buffers with non-trivial private data
> > > (like most journalling ones). fsblock implements this with basically a
> > > few lines of code, and it shold work in situations like ext3.
> >
> > Hmmm.... That means simply page struct are not working...
>
> I don't understand you. jbd needs to attach private data to each bh, and
> that can stay around for longer than the life of the page in the pagecache.
Right. So just using page struct alone wont work for the filesystems.
> There are no changes to the filesystem API for large pages (although I
> am adding a couple of helpers to do page based bitmap ops). And I don't
> want to rely on contiguous memory. Why do you think handling of large
> pages (presumably you mean larger than page sized blocks) is strange?
We already have a way to handle large pages: Compound pages.
> Conglomerating the constituent pages via the pagecache radix-tree seems
> logical to me.
Meaning overhead to handle each page still exists? This scheme cannot
handle large contiguous blocks as a single entity?
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