> -             err = bio_add_page(bio, page, PAGE_SIZE, 0);
> -             if (err != PAGE_SIZE) {
> +             if (bio_add_page(bio, page, PAGE_SIZE, 0) != PAGE_SIZE) {
>                       err = -EFAULT;
>                       goto err_out;
>               }

This patch looks like an improvement.  But looking at that whole
area just makes me cringe.

Why is there __erofs_get_meta_page with the two weird booleans instead
of a single erofs_get_meta_page that gets and gfp_t for additional
flags and an unsigned int for additional bio op flags.

Why do need ioprio support to start with?  Seeing that in a new
fs look kinda odd.  Do you have benchmarks that show the difference?

That function then calls erofs_grab_bio, which tries to handle a
bio_alloc failure, except that the function will not actually fail
due the mempool backing it.  It also seems like and awfully
huge function to inline.

Why is there __submit_bio which really just obsfucates what is
going on?  Also why is __submit_bio using bio_set_op_attrs instead
of opencode it as the comment right next to it asks you to?

Also I really don't understand why you can't just use read_cache_page
or even read_cache_page_gfp instead of __erofs_get_meta_page.
That function is a whole lot of duplication of functionality shared
by a lot of other file systems.

Reply via email to