Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Why are you doing it this way? What's wrong with using > write_cache_pages() to push all the contiguous dirty folios into a single > I/O object, submitting it when the folios turn out not to be contiguous, > or when we run out of a batch? > > You've written an awful lot of code here and it's a different model from > every other filesystem. Why is it better? Because write_cache_pages(): (1) Takes no account of fscache. I can't just build knowledge of PG_fscache into it because PG_private_2 may be used differently by other filesystems (btrfs, for example). (I'm also trying to phase out the use of PG_private_2 and instead uses PG_writeback to cover both and the difference will be recorded elsewhere - but that's not there yet). (2) Calls ->writepage() individually for each folio - which is excessive. In AFS's implementation, we locate the first folio, then race through the following folios without ever waiting until we hit something that's locked or a gap and then stop and submit. write_cache_pages(), otoh, calls us with the next folio already undirtied and set for writeback when we find out that we don't want it yet. (3) Skips over holes, but at some point in the future we're going to need to schedule adjacent clean pages (before and after) for writeback too to handle transport compression and fscache updates if the granule size for either is larger than the folio size. It might be better to take what's in cifs, generalise it and replace write_cache_pages() with it, then have a "->submit_write()" aop that takes an ITER_XARRAY iterator to write from. David