On Mon, Jun 28, 2010 at 07:04:20PM -0700, Joel Becker wrote: > On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 11:56:15AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > > > Regarding XFS, how do you handle catching the tail of an > > > allocation with an lseek(2)'d write? That is, your current allocation > > > has a few blocks outside of i_size, then I lseek(2) a gigabyte past EOF > > > and write there. The code has to recognize to zero around old_i_size > > > before moving out to new_i_size, right? I think that's where our old > > > approaches had problems. > > > > xfs_file_aio_write() handles both those cases for us via > > xfs_zero_eof(). What it does is map the region from the old EOF to > > the start of the new write and zeroes any allocated blocks that are > > not marked unwritten that lie within the range. It does this via the > > internal mapping interface because we hide allocated blocks past EOF > > from the page cache and higher layers. > > Makes sense as an approach. We deliberately do this through the > page cache to take advantage of its I/O patterns and tie in with JBD2. > Also, we don't feel like maintaining an entire shadow page cache ;-)
Just to clarify any possible misunderstanding here, xfs_zero_eof() also does it's IO through the page cache for similar reasons. It's just the mappings are found via the internal interfaces before the zeroing is done via the anonymous pagecache_write_begin()/ pagecache_write_end() functions (in xfs_iozero()) rather than using the generic block functions. Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner da...@fromorbit.com _______________________________________________ Ocfs2-devel mailing list Ocfs2-devel@oss.oracle.com http://oss.oracle.com/mailman/listinfo/ocfs2-devel