Re: [PATCH RFC 1/3] block: Add support for REQ_OP_ASSIGN_RANGE operation

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Hi, Martin,

On 20.12.2019 01:37, Martin K. Petersen wrote:
> 
> Kirill,
> 
>> Hm. BLKDEV_ZERO_NOUNMAP is used in __blkdev_issue_write_zeroes() only.
>> So, do I understand right that we should the below two?:
>>
>> 1) Introduce a new flag BLKDEV_ZERO_ALLOCATE for
>> blkdev_issue_write_zeroes().
> 
>> 2) Introduce a new flag REQ_NOZERO in enum req_opf.
> 
> Something like that. If zeroing is a problem for you.

My intention is to use this in fs allocators to notify virtual block devices
about allocated blocks (like in patch [3/3]). Filesystems allocators know about
written and unwritten extents, and they don't need a zeroing of allocated blocks.

Since a block range allocation action is less complicated (and faster), than
operation of allocation + zeroing of allocated blocks (at least for some devices),
we just choose it as the fastest. This is the reason we avoid zeroing.

> Right now we offer the following semantics:
> 
> 	Deallocate, no zeroing (discard)
> 
> 	Optionally deallocate, zeroing (zeroout)
> 
> 	Allocate, zeroing (zeroout + NOUNMAP)
> 
> Some devices also implement a fourth option which would be:
> 
> 	Anchor: Allocate, no zeroing
> 
>> Won't this confuse a reader that we have blkdev_issue_write_zeroes(),
>> which does not write zeroes sometimes? Maybe we should rename
>> blkdev_issue_write_zeroes() in some more generic name?
> 
> Maybe. The naming is what it is for hysterical raisins and reflects how
> things are implemented in the storage protocols. I wouldn't worry too
> much about that. We can rename things if need be but we shouldn't plumb
> an essentially identical operation through the block stack just to
> expose a different name at the top.

Not introduction a new operation is a good thing. Especially, since we don't
need a specific max_xxx_xxx_sectors != max_write_zeroes_sectors for it.

I'll rework the patch in this way (it seems it will become pretty small
after that).

One more thing to discuss. The new REQ_NOZERO flag won't be supported
by many block devices (their number will be even less, than number of
REQ_OP_WRITE_ZEROES supporters). Will this be a good thing, in case
of we will be completing BLKDEV_ZERO_ALLOCATE bios in __blkdev_issue_write_zeroes()
before splitting? I mean introduction of some flag in struct request_queue::limits.
Completion of them with -EOPNOTSUPP in block devices drivers looks
suboptimal for me.

Thanks,
Kirill



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