xfs
[Top] [All Lists]

RE: A blocksize problem about dax and ext4

To: Cholerae Hu <choleraehyq@xxxxxxxxx>, Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: A blocksize problem about dax and ext4
From: "Elliott, Robert (Persistent Memory)" <elliott@xxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 24 Dec 2015 02:47:07 +0000
Accept-language: en-US
Cc: Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Ted Tso <tytso@xxxxxxx>, "adilger.kernel@xxxxxxxxx" <adilger.kernel@xxxxxxxxx>, "linux-nvdimm@xxxxxxxxxxxx" <linux-nvdimm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "linux-ext4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <linux-ext4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx" <xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Delivered-to: xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx
In-reply-to: <CAM=YXF-wZEhodxVRN8nqyH9Vg7t85ut2-0PnEn9OvhpG_jX3mA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
References: <CAM=YXF-aXxp19=uFDExUswpEfKXNN6LJScxAB-7-u-AgRiXJ2g@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <CAPcyv4gYHuSWuugnELSO6B1rye+b89io3zJVUXwRt0wE1ZfPrA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <94D0CD8314A33A4D9D801C0FE68B40295BEC985F@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20151224000021.GU19802@dastard> <CAM=YXF9Dt-BuY9yM7d023a16gp=edGHeCDVTCwV-AEotj6sbFg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <CAPcyv4g1eHgm8oUvxFaJkRD-T7jAyw95FQ-q3_GC2JU_kkU-Kg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <CAM=YXF-wZEhodxVRN8nqyH9Vg7t85ut2-0PnEn9OvhpG_jX3mA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Thread-index: AQHRPXn8bxToPOnbsUmlb/yBrXUup57Y0FsAgAA5STCAADeRgIAACZyAgAAGkACAABtSgIAAAlzA
Thread-topic: A blocksize problem about dax and ext4
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cholerae Hu [mailto:choleraehyq@xxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, December 23, 2015 8:36 PM
> Subject: Re: A blocksize problem about dax and ext4
...
> xfs will silently disable dax when the fs block size is too small,
> i.e. your mmap() operations are backed by page cache in this case.
> Currently the only indication of whether a mapping is DAX backed or
> not is the presence of the VM_MIXEDMAP flag ("mm" in the VmFlags field
> of /proc/<pid>/smaps)
> 
> Did you mean that I should make the blocksize bigger until the mount
> command tell me that dax is enabled?

To really use DAX, the filesystem block size must match the
system CPU's page size, which is probably 4096 bytes.

---
Robert Elliott, HPE Persistent Memory

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>