On 2/4/22 5:09 AM, Mikulas Patocka wrote: > > > On Thu, 3 Feb 2022, Bart Van Assche wrote: > >> On 2/3/22 10:50, Mikulas Patocka wrote: >>> On Tue, 1 Feb 2022, Bart Van Assche wrote: >>>> On 2/1/22 10:32, Mikulas Patocka wrote: >>>>> /** >>>>> + * blk_queue_max_copy_sectors - set maximum copy offload sectors for >>>>> the >>>>> queue >>>>> + * @q: the request queue for the device >>>>> + * @size: the maximum copy offload sectors >>>>> + */ >>>>> +void blk_queue_max_copy_sectors(struct request_queue *q, unsigned int >>>>> size) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + q->limits.max_copy_sectors = size; >>>>> +} >>>>> +EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_queue_max_copy_sectors); >>>> >>>> Please either change the unit of 'size' into bytes or change its type into >>>> sector_t. >>> >>> blk_queue_chunk_sectors, blk_queue_max_discard_sectors, >>> blk_queue_max_write_same_sectors, blk_queue_max_write_zeroes_sectors, >>> blk_queue_max_zone_append_sectors also have the unit of sectors and the >>> argument is "unsigned int". Should blk_queue_max_copy_sectors be >>> different? >> >> As far as I know using the type sector_t for variables that represent a number >> of sectors is a widely followed convention: >> >> $ git grep -w sector_t | wc -l >> 2575 >> >> I would appreciate it if that convention would be used consistently, even if >> that means modifying existing code. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Bart. > > Changing the sector limit variables in struct queue_limits from > unsigned int to sector_t would increase the size of the structure and > its cache footprint. > > And we can't send bios larger than 4GiB anyway because bi_size is > 32-bit. > > Jens, what do you think about it? Should the sectors limits be > sector_t? Why make it larger than it needs to? -- Jens Axboe