On Tue, Mar 14, 2023 at 10:07:51PM +0000, David Howells wrote: > The ITER_PIPE-type iterator was only used for generic_file_splice_read(), > but that has now been switched to either pull pages directly from the > pagecache for buffered file splice-reads or to use ITER_BVEC instead for > O_DIRECT file splice-reads. This leaves ITER_PIPE unused - so remove it. Wonderful, except that now you've got duplicates of ->read_iter() for everyone who wants zero-copy on ->splice_read() ;-/ I understand the attraction of arbitrary seeks on those suckers; ITER_PIPE is a massive headache in that respect. But I really don't like what your approach trades it for. And you are nowhere near done - consider e.g. NFS. Mainline has it feed ITER_PIPE to nfs_file_read(), which does call generic_file_read_iter() - after result = nfs_revalidate_mapping(inode, iocb->ki_filp->f_mapping); Sure, you can add nfs_file_splice_read() that would do what nfs_file_read() does, calling filemap_spice_read() instead of generic_file_read_iter(). Repeat the same for ocfs2 (locking of its own). And orangefs. And XFS (locking, again). And your own AFS, while we are at it. Et sodding cetera - *everything* that uses generic_file_splice_read() with ->read_iter other than generic_file_read_iter() needs review and, quite likely, a ->splice_read() instance of its own.