On Wed, May 28, 2008 at 11:33:24AM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: > On Tue 27-05-08 20:41:28, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote: > > On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 02:43:12PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: > > > On Mon 26-05-08 23:30:43, Aneesh Kumar K.V wrote: > > > > > > > I have got another question now related to page_mkwrite. AFAIU writepage > > > > writeout dirty buffer_heads. It also looks at whether the pages are > > > > dirty or not. In the page_mkwrite callback both are not true. ie we call > > > > set_page_dirty from do_wp_page after calling page_mkwrite. I haven't > > > > verified whether the above is correct or not. Just thinking reading the > > > > code. > > > Writepage call itself doesn't look at whether the page is dirty or not - > > > that flag is already cleared when writepage is called. You are right that > > > the page is marked dirty only after page_mkwrite is called - the meaning of > > > page_mkwrite() call is roughly "someone wants to do the first write to this > > > page via mmap, prepare filesystem for that". But we don't really care > > > whether the page is dirty or not - we know it carries correct data (it is > > > uptodate) and so we can write it if we want (and need). > > > > > > > I am looking at __block_write_full_page and we have > > > > if (!buffer_mapped(bh) && buffer_dirty(bh)) { > > WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); > > err = get_block(inode, block, bh, 1); > > if (err) > > > > ie, we do get_block only if the buffer_head is dirty. So I am bit > > doubtful whether we are actually allocating blocks via page_mkwrite. > Good catch, we should mark unmapped buffers dirty before calling writepage. > Actually, if the page didn't have any buffers, block_write_full_page() will > create them all dirty so that's probably why I didn't hit it in my testing > but it's definitely safer to mark them dirty explicitely. Thanks. looking at create_empty_buffers we do that only if page is marked as dirty. In the case of page_mkwrite the page is also not marked dirty when we call the call back right ? > It is enough to change ext4_bh_mapped() to something like: > static int ext4_bh_prepare_fill(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh) > { > if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { > /* > * Mark buffer as dirty so that block_write_full_page() > * writes it > */ > set_buffer_dirty(bh); > return 1; > } > return 0; > } > > Should I send you an updated patch with this change and the changes we spoke > about yesterday, or just an incremental changes which you will fold yourself > into the big one? > This will mark only the first unmapped buffer_head as dirty. What about the rest of the buffer_heads in the page that are unmapped ? I am looking at pushing the ext4_page_mkwrite before rest of the changes. That is needed to handle ENOSPC when mmap write to files with holes. -aneesh -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html