On Wed, May 06, 2020 at 08:57:58AM +0100, David Howells wrote: > Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > PG_fscache is going to be used to indicate that a page is being written to > > > the cache, and that the page should not be modified or released until it's > > > finished. > > > > > > Make afs_invalidatepage() and afs_releasepage() wait for it. > > > > Well, why? Keeping a refcount on the page will prevent it from going > > away while it's being written to storage. And the fact that it's > > being written to this cache is no reason to delay the truncate of a file > > (is it?) > > Won't that screw up ITER_MAPPING? Does that mean that ITER_MAPPING isn't > viable? Can you remind me why ITER_MAPPING needs: "The caller must guarantee that the pages are all present and they must be locked using PG_locked, PG_writeback or PG_fscache to prevent them from going away or being migrated whilst they're being accessed." An elevated refcount prevents migration, and it also prevents the pages from being freed. It doesn't prevent them from being truncated out of the file, but it does ensure the pages aren't reallocated.