On 10/11/18 1:08 PM, Dan Williams wrote: > On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 3:37 AM Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On Mon 08-10-18 14:32:46, Eric Sandeen wrote: >>> In response to an earlier xfs patch to change how xfs reacts to >>> dax incompatibilities, Dave said: >>> >>>> I suspect we need to be more harsh are rejecting mounts with -o dax >>>> on devices DAX isn't supported on. This mount option is going into >>>> production systems - it's not just for "testing" as the comments all >>>> claim. i Things will break in production systems if DAX isn't >>>> enabled and they are expecting it to be enabled. >>> >>> and I tend to agree, so proposing this change to hard-fail a dax mount if >>> the device doesn't support it, instead of silently disabling the >>> functionality. Proposing for ext2, ext4, and xfs to keep behavior in >>> sync. >> >> Let me include Dan and Ross into the discussion since they were the ones >> proposing the "silent fallback" behavior (ext4 actually did fail the mount >> instead not so long ago - see 24f3478d664b "ext4: auto disable dax instead >> of failing mount" from December). Guys, why did you choose the fallback >> path instead of a failure? > > The different behavior between filesystems was confusing customers so > we had to align them, then the question was which default to pick. > Honestly, we came to the decision to bring ext4 in line with the xfs > behavior because we thought that would be easier than the alternative. > Dave and Christoph made repeated arguments that DAX is just a hidden > performance optimization that no application should rely on, so we > went the path of least resistance and changed the ext4 default. Ok, well, I guess we'd better reconcile "it's a hidden performance hint" with "if the administrator asked they must receive..." before making this change... cc: hch for bonus input. -Eric > I'm perfectly fine switching both to the "fail if not DAX device" behavior. >