Updated version. Thanks, Miklos --- Fuse supports the following I/O modes: - direct-io - cached + write-through + writeback-cache The direct-io mode can be selected with the FOPEN_DIRECT_IO flag in the FUSE_OPEN reply. In direct-io mode the page cache is completely bypassed for reads and writes. No read-ahead takes place. Shared mmap is disabled. In cached mode reads may be satisfied from the page cache, and data may be read-ahead by the kernel to fill the cache. The cache is always kept consistent after any writes to the file. All mmap modes are supported. The cached mode has two sub modes controlling how writes are handled. The write-through mode is the default and is supported on all kernels. The writeback-cache mode may be selected by the FUSE_WRITEBACK_CACHE flag in the FUSE_INIT reply. In write-through mode each write is immediately sent to userspace as one or more WRITE requests, as well as updating any cached pages (and caching previously uncached, but fully written pages). No READ requests are ever sent for writes, so when an uncached page is partially written, the page is discarded. In writeback-cache mode (enabled by the FUSE_WRITEBACK_CACHE flag) writes go to the cache only, which means that the write(2) syscall can often complete very fast. Dirty pages are written back implicitly (background writeback or page reclaim on memory pressure) or explicitly (invoked by close(2), fsync(2) and when the last ref to the file is being released on munmap(2)). This mode assumes that all changes to the filesystem go through the FUSE kernel module (size and atime/ctime/mtime attributes are kept up-to-date by the kernel), so it's generally not suitable for network filesystems. If a partial page is written, then the page needs to be first read from userspace. This means, that even for files opened for O_WRONLY it is possible that READ requests will be generated by the kernel.