[PATCH v2 03/11] pmem: enable REQ_FUA/REQ_FLUSH handling
Andreas Dilger
adilger at dilger.ca
Fri Nov 13 18:43:28 CST 2015
On Nov 13, 2015, at 5:20 PM, Dan Williams <dan.j.williams at intel.com> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Nov 13, 2015 at 4:06 PM, Ross Zwisler
> <ross.zwisler at linux.intel.com> wrote:
>> Currently the PMEM driver doesn't accept REQ_FLUSH or REQ_FUA bios. These
>> are sent down via blkdev_issue_flush() in response to a fsync() or msync()
>> and are used by filesystems to order their metadata, among other things.
>>
>> When we get an msync() or fsync() it is the responsibility of the DAX code
>> to flush all dirty pages to media. The PMEM driver then just has issue a
>> wmb_pmem() in response to the REQ_FLUSH to ensure that before we return all
>> the flushed data has been durably stored on the media.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Ross Zwisler <ross.zwisler at linux.intel.com>
>
> Hmm, I'm not seeing why we need this patch. If the actual flushing of
> the cache is done by the core why does the driver need support
> REQ_FLUSH? Especially since it's just a couple instructions. REQ_FUA
> only makes sense if individual writes can bypass the "drive" cache,
> but no I/O submitted to the driver proper is ever cached we always
> flush it through to media.
If the upper level filesystem gets an error when submitting a flush
request, then it assumes the underlying hardware is broken and cannot
be as aggressive in IO submission, but instead has to wait for in-flight
IO to complete. Since FUA/FLUSH is basically a no-op for pmem devices,
it doesn't make sense _not_ to support this functionality.
Cheers, Andreas
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