On 27/04/2022 09:03, Pankaj Raghav wrote: > - Background and Motivation: > > The zone storage implementation in Linux, introduced since v4.10, first > targetted SMR drives which have a power of 2 (po2) zone size alignment > requirement. The po2 zone size was further imposed implicitly by the > block layer's blk_queue_chunk_sectors(), used to prevent IO merging > across chunks beyond the specified size, since v3.16 through commit > 762380ad9322 ("block: add notion of a chunk size for request merging"). > But this same general block layer po2 requirement for blk_queue_chunk_sectors() > was removed on v5.10 through commit 07d098e6bbad ("block: allow 'chunk_sectors' > to be non-power-of-2"). NAND, which is the media used in newer zoned storage > devices, does not naturally align to po2, and so the po2 requirement > does not make sense for those type of zone storage devices. > > Removing the po2 requirement from zone storage should therefore be possible > now provided that no userspace regression and no performance regressions are > introduced. Stop-gap patches have been already merged into f2fs-tools to > proactively not allow npo2 zone sizes until proper support is added [0]. > Additional kernel stop-gap patches are provided in this series for dm-zoned. > Support for npo2 zonefs and btrfs support is addressed in this series. > > There was an effort previously [1] to add support to non po2 devices via > device level emulation but that was rejected with a final conclusion > to add support for non po2 zoned device in the complete stack[2]. Hey Pankaj, One thing I'm concerned with this patches is, once we have npo2 zones (or to be precise not fs_info->sectorsize aligned zones) we have to check on every allocation if we still have at least have fs_info->sectorsize bytes left in a zone. If not we need to explicitly finish the zone, otherwise we'll run out of max active zones. This is a problem for zoned btrfs at the moment already but it'll be even worse with npo2, because we're never implicitly finishing zones. See also https://lore.kernel.org/linux-btrfs/42758829d8696a471a27f7aaeab5468f60b1565d.1651157034.git.naohiro.aota@xxxxxxx Thanks, Johannes