On Wed, Jul 17, 2024 at 03:12:51PM +0000, Pankaj Raghav (Samsung) wrote: > > >> > > >> This is really too much. It's something that will never happen. Just > > >> delete the message. > > >> > > >>> + if (max > MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER) { > > >>> + VM_WARN_ONCE(1, > > >>> + "max order > MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER. Setting max_order to MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER"); > > >>> + max = MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER; > > >> > > >> Absolutely not. If the filesystem declares it can support a block size > > >> of 4TB, then good for it. We just silently clamp it. > > > > > > Hmm, but you raised the point about clamping in the previous patches[1] > > > after Ryan pointed out that we should not silently clamp the order. > > > > > > ``` > > >> It seems strange to silently clamp these? Presumably for the bs>ps usecase, > > >> whatever values are passed in are a hard requirement? So wouldn't want them to > > >> be silently reduced. (Especially given the recent change to reduce the size of > > >> MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER to less then PMD size in some cases). > > > > > > Hm, yes. We should probably make this return an errno. Including > > > returning an errno for !IS_ENABLED() and min > 0. > > > ``` > > > > > > It was not clear from the conversation in the previous patches that we > > > decided to just clamp the order (like it was done before). > > > > > > So let's just stick with how it was done before where we clamp the > > > values if min and max > MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER? > > > > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/Zoa9rQbEUam467-q@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > > > > The way I see it, there are 2 approaches we could take: > > > > 1. Implement mapping_max_folio_size_supported(), write a headerdoc for > > mapping_set_folio_order_range() that says min must be lte max, max must be lte > > mapping_max_folio_size_supported(). Then emit VM_WARN() in > > mapping_set_folio_order_range() if the constraints are violated, and clamp to > > make it safe (from page cache's perspective). The VM_WARN()s can just be inline > > Inlining with the `if` is not possible since: > 91241681c62a ("include/linux/mmdebug.h: make VM_WARN* non-rvals") > > > in the if statements to keep them clean. The FS is responsible for checking > > mapping_max_folio_size_supported() and ensuring min and max meet requirements. > > This is sort of what is done here but IIUC willy's reply to the patch, > he prefers silent clamping over having WARNINGS. I think because we check > the constraints during the mount time, so it should be safe to call > this I guess? That's my read of the situation, but I'll ask about it at the next thp meeting if that helps. > > > > 2. Return an error from mapping_set_folio_order_range() (and the other functions > > that set min/max). No need for warning. No state changed if error is returned. > > FS can emit warning on error if it wants. > > I think Chinner was not happy with this approach because this is done > per inode and basically we would just shutdown the filesystem in the > first inode allocation instead of refusing the mount as we know about > the MAX_PAGECACHE_ORDER even during the mount phase anyway. I agree. Filesystem-wide properties (e.g. fs blocksize) should cause the mount to fail if the pagecache cannot possibly handle any file blocks. Inode-specific properties (e.g. the forcealign+notears write work John Garry is working on) could error out of open() with -EIO, but that's a specialty file property. --D > -- > Pankaj >