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From: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
To: linux-mm <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
	linux-fsdevel <linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org>,
	LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Cc: lsf-pc <lsf-pc@lists.linuxfoundation.org>, Neil Brown <neilb@suse.de>
Subject: [LSF/MM TOPIC] do we really need PG_error at all?
Date: Sun, 26 Feb 2017 09:42:44 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <1488120164.2948.4.camel@redhat.com> (raw)

Proposing this as a LSF/MM TOPIC, but it may turn out to be me just not
understanding the semantics here.

As I was looking into -ENOSPC handling in cephfs, I noticed that
PG_error is only ever tested in one place [1] __filemap_fdatawait_range,
which does this:

	if (TestClearPageError(page))
		ret = -EIO;

This error code will override any AS_* error that was set in the
mapping. Which makes me wonder...why don't we just set this error in the
mapping and not bother with a per-page flag? Could we potentially free
up a page flag by eliminating this?

The main argument I could see for keeping it is that removing it might
subtly change the behavior of sync_file_range if you have tasks syncing
different ranges in a file concurrently. I'm not sure if that would
break any guarantees though.

Even if we do need it, I think we might need some cleanup here anyway. A
lot of readpage operations end up setting that flag when they hit an
error. Isn't it wrong to return an error on fsync, just because we had a
read error somewhere in the file in a range that was never dirtied?

--
[1]: there is another place in f2fs, but it's more or less equivalent to
the call site in __filemap_fdatawait_range.

-- 
Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>

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             reply	other threads:[~2017-02-26 14:42 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 15+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2017-02-26 14:42 Jeff Layton [this message]
2017-02-26 17:10 ` [LSF/MM TOPIC] do we really need PG_error at all? James Bottomley
2017-02-26 21:03   ` NeilBrown
2017-02-26 22:43     ` Jeff Layton
2017-02-26 23:30     ` James Bottomley
2017-02-26 23:57       ` Jeff Layton
2017-02-27  0:27       ` NeilBrown
2017-02-27 15:07         ` Jeff Layton
2017-02-27 22:51           ` Andreas Dilger
2017-02-27 23:02             ` Jeff Layton
2017-02-27 23:32             ` NeilBrown
2017-02-28  1:11               ` [Lsf-pc] " Jeff Layton
2017-02-28 10:12                 ` Boaz Harrosh
2017-02-28 11:32                   ` Jeff Layton
2017-02-28 20:45                 ` NeilBrown

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