On Sat, Jan 18, 2020 at 08:28:38PM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> I think it's pretty gross, actually. It  makes the same mistake made
> with locking in the old direct IO code - it encodes specific lock
> operations via flags into random locations in the DIO path. This is
> a very slippery slope, and IMO it is an layering violation to encode
> specific filesystem locking smeantics into a layer that is supposed
> to be generic and completely filesystem agnostic. i.e.  this
> mechanism breaks if a filesystem moves to a different type of lock
> (e.g. range locks), and history teaches us that we'll end up making
> a horrible, unmaintainable mess to support different locking
> mechanisms and contexts.
> 
> I think that we should be moving to a model where the filesystem
> provides an unlock method in the iomap operations structure, and if
> the method is present in iomap_dio_complete() it gets called for the
> filesystem to unlock the inode at the appropriate point. This also
> allows the filesystem to provide a different method for read or
> write unlock, depending on what type of lock it held at submission.
> This gets rid of the need for the iomap code to know what type of
> lock the caller holds, too.

I'd rather avoid yet another method.  But I think with a little
tweaking we can move the unlock into the ->end_io method.


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