On Thu 24-08-17 05:31:26, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 17, 2017 at 06:08:15PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote:
> > We return IOMAP_F_NEEDDSYNC flag from ext4_iomap_begin() for a
> > synchronous write fault when inode has some uncommitted metadata
> > changes. In the fault handler ext4_dax_fault() we then detect this case,
> > call vfs_fsync_range() to make sure all metadata is committed, and call
> > dax_pfn_mkwrite() to mark PTE as writeable. Note that this will also
> > dirty corresponding radix tree entry which is what we want - fsync(2)
> > will still provide data integrity guarantees for applications not using
> > userspace flushing. And applications using userspace flushing can avoid
> > calling fsync(2) and thus avoid the performance overhead.
>
> Why is this only wiered up for the huge_fault handler and not the
> regular?
We do handle both. Just ext4 naming is a bit confusing and ext4_dax_fault()
uses ext4_dax_huge_fault() for handling.
Honza
--
Jan Kara <[email protected]>
SUSE Labs, CR
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