On Mon, Jun 05, 2023 at 02:21:41PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: > On Mon 05-06-23 11:16:55, Jan Kara wrote: > > Yeah, I agree, that is also the conclusion I have arrived at when thinking > > about this problem now. We should be able to just remove the conversion > > from ext4_page_mkwrite() and rely on write(2) or truncate(2) doing it when > > growing i_size. > > OK, thinking more about this and searching through the history, I've > realized why the conversion is originally in ext4_page_mkwrite(). The > problem is described in commit 7b4cc9787fe35b ("ext4: evict inline data > when writing to memory map") but essentially it boils down to the fact that > ext4 writeback code does not expect dirty page for a file with inline data > because ext4_write_inline_data_end() should have copied the data into the > inode and cleared the folio's dirty flag. > > Indeed messing with xattrs from the writeback path to copy page contents > into inline data xattr would be ... interesting. Hum, out of good ideas for > now :-|. Is it so bad? Now that we don't have writepage in ext4, only writepages, it seems like we have a considerably more benign locking environment to work in.