Re: [PATCH 3/8] swap: don't add ITER_BVEC flag to direct_IO rw

From: Al Viro
Date: Mon Dec 15 2014 - 01:16:14 EST


On Sun, Dec 14, 2014 at 09:26:57PM -0800, Omar Sandoval wrote:
> The rw argument to direct_IO has some ill-defined semantics. Some
> filesystems (e.g., ext4, FAT) decide whether they're doing a write with
> rw == WRITE, but others (e.g., XFS) check rw & WRITE. Let's set a good
> example in the swap file code and say ITER_BVEC belongs in
> iov_iter->flags but not in rw. This caters to the least common
> denominator and avoids a sweeping change of every direct_IO
> implementation for now.

Frankly, this is bogus. If anything, let's just kill the first argument
completely - ->direct_IO() can always pick it from iter->type.

As for catering to the least common denominator... To hell with the lowest
common denominator. How many instances of ->direct_IO() do we have, anyway?
24 in the mainline (and we don't give a flying fuck for out-of-tree code, as
a matter of policy). Moreover, several are of "do nothing" variety.

FWIW, 'rw' is a mess. We used to have this:
READ: O_DIRECT read
WRITE: O_DIRECT write
KERNEL_WRITE: swapout

These days KERNEL_WRITE got replaced with ITER_BVEC | WRITE. The thing is,
we have a bunch of places where we explicitly checked for being _equal_ to
WRITE. I.e. the checks that gave a negative on swapouts. I suspect that most
of them are wrong and should trigger on all writes, including swapouts, but
I really didn't want to dig into that pile of fun back then. That's the
main reason why 'rw' argument has survived at all...
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