On Mon, Nov 11, 2024 at 09:27:33AM -0700, Keith Busch wrote: > Just purely for backward compatibility, I don't think you can have the > nvme driver error out if a stream is too large. The fcntl lifetime hint > never errored out before, which gets set unconditionally from the > file_inode without considering the block device's max write stream. True. But block/fops.c should simply not the write hint in that case (or even do a bit of folding if we care enough). > > - block/fops.c is the place to map the existing write hints into > > the write streams instead of the driver > > I might be something here, but that part sure looks the same as what's > in this series. Your series simply mixes up the existing write (temperature) hint and the write stream, including for file system use. This version does something very similar, but only for block devices. > > > - the stream granularity is added, because adding it to statx at a > > later time would be nasty. Getting it in nvme is actually amazingly > > cumbersome so I gave up on that and just fed a dummy value for > > testing, though > > Just regarding the documentation on the write_stream_granularity, you > don't need to discard the entire RU in a single command. You can > invalidate the RU simply by overwriting the LBAs without ever issuing > any discard commands. True. Did I managed this was a quick hack job? > If you really want to treat it this way, you need to ensure the first > LBA written to an RU is always aligned to NPDA/NPDAL. Those are just hints as well, but I agree you probably get much better results if they do. > If this is really what you require to move this forward, though, that's > fine with me. I could move it forward, but right now I'm more than over subsribed. If someone actually pushing for this work could put more effort into it it will surely be faster.