On 3/5/22 13:40, Dave Chinner wrote:
On Sat, Mar 05, 2022 at 06:19:29AM +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
On Sat, Mar 05, 2022 at 09:12:55AM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
AFAICT, this patch leaves just the f2fs allocator usage of
inode->i_rw_hint to select a segment to allocate from as the
remaining consumer of this entire plumbing and user API. Is that
used by applications anywhere, or can that be removed and so the
rest of the infrastructure get removed and the fcntl()s no-op'd or
-EOPNOTSUPP?
I was told it is used quite heavily in android.
So it's primarily used by out of tree code? And that after this
patch, there's really no way to test that this API does anything
useful at all?
Hi Dave,
Android kernel developers follow the "upstream first" policy for core kernel
code (this means all kernel code other than kernel drivers that implement
support for the phone SoC). As a result, the Android 13 F2FS implementation is
very close to the upstream F2FS code. So the statement above about "out of tree
code" is not correct.
Bart.