Sorry for replying to this email and not to patch posting directly but I didn't find the original mail in any of my mailboxes... On Tue 20-10-15 17:31:18, Dan Williams wrote: > On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 5:01 PM, Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 11:31:45PM +0000, Williams, Dan J wrote: > >> Here is a status summary of the topic-branches nvdimm.git is tracking > >> for v4.4. Unless indicated these branches are not present in -next. > >> Please ACK, NAK, or ask for a re-post of any of the below to disposition > >> it for the merge window. > >> > >> === > >> for-4.4/dax-fixes: > >> === > > ... > >> Dave Chinner (5): > >> xfs: fix inode size update overflow in xfs_map_direct() > >> xfs: introduce BMAPI_ZERO for allocating zeroed extents > >> xfs: Don't use unwritten extents for DAX > >> xfs: DAX does not use IO completion callbacks > >> xfs: add ->pfn_mkwrite support for DAX > > > > Please drop these. They have not been reviewed yet, and because > > the changes affect more than just DAX (core XFS allocator > > functionality was changed) these need to go through the XFS tree. > > > > Ok, thanks for the heads up. For the get_user_pages() patches that > build on these fixes I'm assuming your review bandwidth is in short > supply to also give an XFS sign-off on those changes for 4.4? > > I'm wondering if we can take a conservative step forward with those > patches for 4.4. if XFS and EXT4 interactions need more time to get > worked out, which I believe they do, I can conceive just turning on > get_user_pages() support for DAX-mappings of the raw block device. > This would be via the new facility I posted yesterday: > https://lists.01.org/pipermail/linux-nvdimm/2015-October/002512.html. > While not very functional for applications it makes testing base DAX > mechanisms straightforward. I had a look at the patch and I miss one thing: Why do we need bd_mutex to protect faults? I see a comment there: /* check that the faulting page hasn't raced with bdev resize */ Is it really possible that bdev gets shrunk under us? Hum, looking into fs/block_dev.c, probably it is. But there are other places - like DIO path - assuming that block device mapping cannot just disappear from under us. I wonder how that would cope with bdev size change... Also we only call invalidate_bdev() to invalidate page cache pages of the bdev after resize which specifically skips any mmaped pages so bdev resizing in presence of mmap is unreliable to say the least. Anyway, bd_mutex seems like a big hammer in the fast path to protect against rare size changes. Also nesting of bd_mutex under mmap_sem makes me somewhat uneasy (I'd definitely wonder whether lockdep would not complain about that)... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html