On Thu, Aug 5, 2021 at 9:36 AM David Howells <dhowells@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Some network filesystems, however, currently keep track of which byte ranges > are modified within a dirty page (AFS does; NFS seems to also) and only write > out the modified data. NFS definitely does. I haven't used NFS in two decades, but I worked on some of the code (read: I made nfs use the page cache both for reading and writing) back in my Transmeta days, because NFSv2 was the default filesystem setup back then. See fs/nfs/write.c, although I have to admit that I don't recognize that code any more. It's fairly important to be able to do streaming writes without having to read the old contents for some loads. And read-modify-write cycles are death for performance, so you really want to coalesce writes until you have the whole page. That said, I suspect it's also *very* filesystem-specific, to the point where it might not be worth trying to do in some generic manner. In particular, NFS had things like interesting credential issues, so if you have multiple concurrent writers that used different 'struct file *' to write to the file, you can't just mix the writes. You have to sync the writes from one writer before you start the writes for the next one, because one might succeed and the other not. So you can't just treat it as some random "page cache with dirty byte extents". You really have to be careful about credentials, timeouts, etc, and the pending writes have to keep a fair amount of state around. At least that was the case two decades ago. [ goes off and looks. See "nfs_write_begin()" and friends in fs/nfs/file.c for some of the examples of these things, althjough it looks like the code is less aggressive about avoding the read-modify-write case than I thought I remembered, and only does it for write-only opens ] Linus Linus -- Linux-cachefs mailing list Linux-cachefs@xxxxxxxxxx https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cachefs