On 21/03/19 09:52AM, Shiyang Ruan wrote: > Some operations, such as comparing a range of data in two files under > fsdax mode, requires nested iomap_open()/iomap_end() on two file. Thus, > we introduce iomap_apply2() to accept arguments from two files and > iomap_actor2_t for actions on two files. > > Signed-off-by: Shiyang Ruan <ruansy.fnst@xxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > fs/iomap/apply.c | 56 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > include/linux/iomap.h | 7 +++++- > 2 files changed, 62 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) > > diff --git a/fs/iomap/apply.c b/fs/iomap/apply.c > index 26ab6563181f..fbc38ce3d5b6 100644 > --- a/fs/iomap/apply.c > +++ b/fs/iomap/apply.c > @@ -97,3 +97,59 @@ iomap_apply(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, loff_t length, unsigned flags, > > return written ? written : ret; > } > + > +loff_t > +iomap_apply2(struct inode *ino1, loff_t pos1, struct inode *ino2, loff_t pos2, > + loff_t length, unsigned int flags, const struct iomap_ops *ops, > + void *data, iomap_actor2_t actor) > +{ > + struct iomap smap = { .type = IOMAP_HOLE }; > + struct iomap dmap = { .type = IOMAP_HOLE }; > + loff_t written = 0, ret, ret2 = 0; > + loff_t len1 = length, len2, min_len; > + > + ret = ops->iomap_begin(ino1, pos1, len1, flags, &smap, NULL); > + if (ret) > + goto out_src; if above call fails we need not call ->iomap_end() on smap. > + if (WARN_ON(smap.offset > pos1)) { > + written = -EIO; > + goto out_src; > + } > + if (WARN_ON(smap.length == 0)) { > + written = -EIO; > + goto out_src; > + } > + len2 = min_t(loff_t, len1, smap.length); > + > + ret = ops->iomap_begin(ino2, pos2, len2, flags, &dmap, NULL); > + if (ret) > + goto out_dest; ditto > + if (WARN_ON(dmap.offset > pos2)) { > + written = -EIO; > + goto out_dest; > + } > + if (WARN_ON(dmap.length == 0)) { > + written = -EIO; > + goto out_dest; > + } > + min_len = min_t(loff_t, len2, dmap.length); > + > + written = actor(ino1, pos1, ino2, pos2, min_len, data, &smap, &dmap); > + > +out_dest: > + if (ops->iomap_end) > + ret2 = ops->iomap_end(ino2, pos2, len2, > + written > 0 ? written : 0, flags, &dmap); > +out_src: > + if (ops->iomap_end) > + ret = ops->iomap_end(ino1, pos1, len1, > + written > 0 ? written : 0, flags, &smap); > + I guess, this maynot be a problem, but I still think we should be consistent w.r.t len argument we are passing in ->iomap_end() for both type of iomap_apply* family of functions. IIUC, we used to call ->iomap_end() with the length argument filled by the filesystem from ->iomap_begin() call. whereas above breaks that behavior. Although I don't think this is FATAL, but still it is better to be consistent with the APIs. Thoughts? > + if (ret) > + return written ? written : ret; > + > + if (ret2) > + return written ? written : ret2; > + > + return written; > +} if (written) return written; return ret ? ret : ret2; Is above a simpler version? -ritesh