On Fri, Oct 22, 2021 at 08:52:55PM +0000, Jane Chu wrote: > Thanks - I try to be honest. As far as I can tell, the argument > about the flag is a philosophical argument between two views. > One view assumes design based on perfect hardware, and media error > belongs to the category of brokenness. Another view sees media > error as a build-in hardware component and make design to include > dealing with such errors. No, I don't think so. Bit errors do happen in all media, which is why devices are built to handle them. It is just the Intel-style pmem interface to handle them which is completely broken. > errors in mind from start. I guess I'm trying to articulate why > it is acceptable to include the RWF_DATA_RECOVERY flag to the > existing RWF_ flags. - this way, pwritev2 remain fast on fast path, > and its slow path (w/ error clearing) is faster than other alternative. > Other alternative being 1 system call to clear the poison, and > another system call to run the fast pwrite for recovery, what > happens if something happened in between? Well, my point is doing recovery from bit errors is by definition not the fast path. Which is why I'd rather keep it away from the pmem read/write fast path, which also happens to be the (much more important) non-pmem read/write path.