From: Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de>
To: Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>,
Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Block layer question - indicating EOF on block devices
Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2004 09:18:28 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20041202081828.GC10454@suse.de> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1101912876.30770.14.camel@localhost.localdomain>
On Wed, Dec 01 2004, Alan Cox wrote:
> On Mer, 2004-12-01 at 02:43, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> wrote:
> > If the driver simply returns an I/O error, userspace should see a short
> > read and be happy?
>
> And the logs fill with I/O error messages.
read-ahead should definitely be marked quiet, agree.
> > > and
> > > it also fills the log with "I/O error on" spew from the block layer
> > > innards even if REQ_QUIET is magically set.
> >
> > We'd need to propagate that quietness back up to the buffer_head layer, at
> > least.
>
> Thats what I was assuming looking at the code. Really the block layer is
> broken here. It should not be whining about I/O errors on readahead
> blocks just letting them go. It has no idea if the readahead is a
> badblock a media feature or whatever. (or as James added on irc scsi
> reservations).
The upper buffer layer could do something intelligent if EOF is set on
the bio, it really should. The problem is that there's no -EXXX to flag
EOF from the driver, it would be nicest if one could just do:
end_that_request_chunk(req, 1, good_bytes);
end_that_request_chunk(req, -EOF, residual);
and be done with it.
--
Jens Axboe
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-12-02 8:19 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-11-30 15:50 Block layer question - indicating EOF on block devices Alan Cox
2004-12-01 2:43 ` Andrew Morton
2004-12-01 14:54 ` Alan Cox
2004-12-02 8:18 ` Jens Axboe [this message]
2004-12-02 13:01 ` Alan Cox
2004-12-02 14:07 ` Jens Axboe
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=20041202081828.GC10454@suse.de \
--to=axboe@suse.de \
--cc=akpm@osdl.org \
--cc=alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk \
--cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is an external index of several public inboxes,
see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror
all data and code used by this external index.