On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 08:55:59AM +0800, majianpeng wrote: > On 2012-07-31 05:42 Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Wrote: > >On Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 03:14:28PM +0800, majianpeng wrote: > >> When exec bio_alloc, the bi_rw is zero.But after calling bio_add_page, > >> it will use bi_rw. > >> Fox example, in functiion __bio_add_page,it will call merge_bvec_fn(). > >> The merge_bvec_fn of raid456 will use the bi_rw to judge the merge. > >> >> if ((bvm->bi_rw & 1) == WRITE) > >> >> return biovec->bv_len; /* always allow writes to be mergeable */ > > > >So if bio_add_page() requires bi_rw to be set, then shouldn't it be > >set up for every caller? I noticed there are about 50 call sites for > >bio_add_page(), and you've only touched about 10 of them. Indeed, I > >notice that the RAID0/1 code uses bio_add_page, and as that can be > >stacked on top of RAID456, it also needs to set bi_rw correctly. > >As a result, your patch set is nowhere near complete, not does it > >document that bio_add_page requires that bi_rw be set before calling > >(which is the new API requirement, AFAICT). > There are many place call bio_add_page and I send some of those. Because my abilty, so I only send > some patchs which i understand clearly. Sure, but my point is that there is no point changing only a few and ignoring the great majority of callers. Either fix them all, fix it some other way (e.g. API change), or remove the code from the RAID5 function that requires it. > In __bio_add_page: > >>if (q->merge_bvec_fn) { > >> struct bvec_merge_data bvm = { > >> /* prev_bvec is already charged in > >> bi_size, discharge it in order to > >> simulate merging updated prev_bvec > >> as new bvec. */ > >> .bi_bdev = bio->bi_bdev, > >> .bi_sector = bio->bi_sector, > >> .bi_size = bio->bi_size - prev_bv_len, > >> .bi_rw = bio->bi_rw, > >> }; > it used bio->bi_rw. > Before raid5_mergeable_bvec appearing, in kernel 'merge_bvec_fn' did not use bio->bi_rw. Right, but as things stand right now, the RAID5 code is a no-op because nobody is setting bio->bi_rw correctly. it is effectively dead code. > But i think we shold not suppose bi_rw not meanless. To decide whether we should take it to have meaning, data is required to show that the RAID5 optimisation it enables is worthwhile. If the optimisation is not worthwhile, then the correct thing to do is remove the optimisation in the RAID5 code and remove the bi_rw field from the struct bvec_merge_data. > >So, my question is whether the RAID456 code is doing something > >valid. That write optimisation is clearly not enabled for a > >significant amount of code and filesystems, so the first thing to do > >is quantify the benefit of the optimisation. I can't evalute the > >merit of this change without data telling me it is worthwhile, and > >it's a lot of code to churn for no benefit.... > > > Sorry, we do not think the 'merge_bvec_fn' did not use bi_rw. It's entirely possible that when bi_rw was added to struct bvec_merge_data, the person who added it was mistaken that bi_rw was set at this point in time when in fact it never has been. Hence it's presence and reliance on it would be a bug. That's what I'm asking - is this actually beneificial, or should it simply be removed from struct bvec_merge_data? Data is needed to answer that question.... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs