[Rationale] =========== Fscache has been landed as a generic caching management framework in the Linux kernel for decades. It aims to manage cache data availability or fetch data if needed. Currently it's mainly used for network fses, but in principle the main caching subsystem can be used more widely. We do really like fscache framework and we believe it'd be better to reuse such framework if possible instead of duplicating other alternatives for better maintenance and testing. Therefore for our container image use cases, we applied the existing fscache to implement on-demand read for erofs in the past months. For more details, also see [1]. In short, here each erofs filesystem is composed of multiple blobs (or devices). Each blob corresponds to one fscache cookie to strictly follow on-disk format and implement the image downloading in a deterministic manner, which means it has a unique checksum and is signed by vendors. Data of each erofs inode can be scattered among multiple blobs (cookie) since erofs supports chunk-level deduplication. In this case, each erofs inode can correspond to multiple cookies, and there's a logical to physical offset mapping between the logical offset in erofs inode and the physical offset in the backing file. As described above, per-cookie netfs model can not be used here directly. Instead, we'd like to propose/decouple a simple set of raw fscache APIs, to access cache for all fses to use. We believe it's useful since it's like the relationship between raw bio and iomap, both of which are useful for local fses. fscache_read() seems a reasonable candidate and is enough for such use case. In addition, the on-demand read feature relies on .prepare_read() to reuse the hole detecting logic as much as possible. However, after fscache/netfs rework, libnetfs is preferred to access fscache, making .prepare_read() closely coupled with libnetfs, or more precisely, netfs_io_subrequest. [What We Do] ============ As we discussed previously, we propose a new interface, i,e, .prepare_ondemand_read() dedicated for the on-demand read scenarios, which is independent on netfs_io_subrequest. The netfs will still use the original .prepare_read() as usual. And as we discussed, in the near future, prepare_read() will get enhanced and more information will be needed and then returned to callers. Thus netfs_io_subrequest is retained as the aggregation for all parameters needed as the internal implementation inside Cachefiles. Jingbo Xu (2): fscache,cachefiles: add prepare_ondemand_read() callback erofs: switch to prepare_ondemand_read() in fscache mode fs/cachefiles/io.c | 42 ++++- fs/erofs/fscache.c | 257 +++++++++++------------------- include/linux/netfs.h | 7 + include/trace/events/cachefiles.h | 4 +- 4 files changed, 135 insertions(+), 175 deletions(-) -- 2.19.1.6.gb485710b