On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 09:29:51AM +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 03:10:55PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 02:40:04PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > > On Tue, Dec 01, 2020 at 05:54:18PM +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > > Replace the gendisk pointer in struct bio with a pointer to the newly > > > > improved struct block device. From that the gendisk can be trivially > > > > accessed with an extra indirection, but it also allows to directly > > > > look up all information related to partition remapping. > > > > > > The extra indirection is often done in fast path, so just wondering why > > > you don't consider to embed gendisk into block_device? Then the extra > > > indirection can be avoided. > > > > oops, that is only possible for disk, and indirection is still needed > > for partitions. > > I looked into that, but given that the block device is allocated as part > of the inode we'd need to tell ->alloc_inode if we want to allocate the > small inode without the gendisk, or the large one with it which doesn't > work with the current interface. I guess it could be done without fs code change, because now block device is always allocated by bdev_alloc() since 22ae8ce8b892("block: simplify bdev/disk lookup in blkdev_get"). And one manual inode allocation with a bit duplication from new_inode_pseudo() should be fine: allocate big inode for disk, and small for partition inode_init_always(sb, inode); if (inode) { spin_lock(&inode->i_lock); inode->i_state = 0; spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); INIT_LIST_HEAD(&inode->i_sb_list); inode_sb_list_add(inode); } > Beause the hd_struct is gone we're > still not using more structures in the I/O path than we did before. Indeed, and block_device instance is often cached in IO path. thanks, Ming