On Tue, Jun 12, 2018 at 11:07 AM, Ross Zwisler <ross.zwisler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Jun 11, 2018 at 05:41:46PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: >> On Fri 08-06-18 16:51:14, Dan Williams wrote: >> > In preparation for implementing support for memory poison (media error) >> > handling via dax mappings, implement a lock_page() equivalent. Poison >> > error handling requires rmap and needs guarantees that the page->mapping >> > association is maintained / valid (inode not freed) for the duration of >> > the lookup. >> > >> > In the device-dax case it is sufficient to simply hold a dev_pagemap >> > reference. In the filesystem-dax case we need to use the entry lock. >> > >> > Export the entry lock via dax_lock_page() that uses rcu_read_lock() to >> > protect against the inode being freed, and revalidates the page->mapping >> > association under xa_lock(). >> > >> > Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> >> >> Some comments below... >> >> > diff --git a/fs/dax.c b/fs/dax.c >> > index cccf6cad1a7a..b7e71b108fcf 100644 >> > --- a/fs/dax.c >> > +++ b/fs/dax.c >> > @@ -361,6 +361,82 @@ static void dax_disassociate_entry(void *entry, struct address_space *mapping, >> > } >> > } >> > >> > +struct page *dax_lock_page(unsigned long pfn) >> > +{ >> >> Why do you return struct page here? Any reason behind that? Because struct >> page exists and can be accessed through pfn_to_page() regardless of result >> of this function so it looks a bit confusing. Also dax_lock_page() name >> seems a bit confusing. Maybe dax_lock_pfn_mapping_entry()? > > It's also a bit awkward that the functions are asymmetric in their arguments: > dax_lock_page(pfn) vs dax_unlock_page(struct page) > > Looking at dax_lock_page(), we only use 'pfn' to get 'page', so maybe it would > be cleaner to just always deal with struct page, i.e.: > > void dax_lock_page(struct page *page); > void dax_unlock_page(struct page *page); No, intent was to have the locking routine return the object that it validated and then deal with that same object at unlock. dax_lock_page() can fail to acquire a lock.