On Wed, 2006-12-13 at 12:56 +1100, Nick Piggin wrote: > Note that these pages should be *really* rare. Definitely even for normal > filesystems I think RMW would use too much bandwidth if it were required > for any significant number of writes. If file "foo" exists on the server, and contains data, then something like fd = open("foo", O_WRONLY); write(fd, "1", 1); should never need to trigger a read. That's a fairly common workload when you think about it (happens all the time in apps that do random write). > I don't want to mandate anything just yet, so I'm just going through our > options. The first two options (remove, and RMW) are probably trickier > than they need to be, given the 3rd option available (temp buffer). Given > your input, I'm increasingly thinking that the best course of action would > be to fix this with the temp buffer and look at improving that later if it > causes a noticable slowdown. What is the generic problem you are trying to resolve? I saw something fly by about a reader filling the !uptodate page while the writer is updating it: how is that going to happen if the writer has the page locked? AFAIK the only thing that can modify the page if it is locked (aside from the process that has locked it) is a process that has the page mmapped(). However mmapped pages are always uptodate, right? Trond - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html