On Fri, Oct 26, 2007 at 14:59:57 -0700, Mike Waychison wrote: > Jason Uhlenkott wrote: > >Additionally, ext3_bmap() has this to say about it: > > > > if (EXT3_I(inode)->i_state & EXT3_STATE_JDATA) { > > /* > > * This is a REALLY heavyweight approach, but the use of > > * bmap on dirty files is expected to be extremely rare: > > * only if we run lilo or swapon on a freshly made file > > * do we expect this to happen. > > * > > * (bmap requires CAP_SYS_RAWIO so this does not > > * represent an unprivileged user DOS attack --- we'd be > > * in trouble if mortal users could trigger this path at > > * will.) > > Hmm. I don't know what the right approach to this is. This seems to be > the same situation as the delayed allocation problem, no? Yup. > What if we just returned 0? Tools like lilo are already doing sync(), > would that cause the journal to get flushed explicitly anyway? Not sure, but I'd be pretty nervous about breaking any existing users which aren't explicitly syncing. Are you envisioning users who want to see where their data is landing for performance reasons? It seems like such users are going to have sufficiently different desires from existing FIBMAP users (who need to know where everything is because they intend to fiddle with the raw device) that a different interface might be warranted. - 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