I naively assumed, from the "readahead" in the name, that readahead would be submitting READA bios. It does not. I recently did some statistics on how many READ and READA requests we actually see on the block device level. I was suprised that READA is basically only used for file system internal meta data (and not even for all file systems), but _never_ for file data. A simple dd if=bigfile of=/dev/null bs=4k count=1 will absolutely cause readahead of the configured amount, no problem. But on the block device level, these are READ requests, where I'd expected them to be READA requests, based on the name. This is because __do_page_cache_readahead() calls read_pages(), which in turn is mapping->a_ops->readpages(), or, as fallback, mapping->a_ops->readpage(). On that level, all variants end up submitting as READ. This may even be intentional. But if so, I'd like to understand that. Please, anyone in the know, enlighten me ;) Lars Annecdotical: I've seen an oracle being killed by OOM, because someone did a grep -r . while accidentally having a bogusly huge readahead set. -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel