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Date:	Fri, 12 Sep 2014 13:35:51 -0400
From:	Theodore Ts'o <tytso@....edu>
To:	"Darrick J. Wong" <darrick.wong@...cle.com>
Cc:	linux-ext4@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH 26/25] libext2fs: call get_alloc_block hook when
 allocating blocks

On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 03:34:47PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> > Hmm... I wonder if we can get away with changing ext2fs_new_block2(fs,
> > goal, bmap, ret_blk) so that if bmap is NULL, we change its behavior
> > so that (a) it tries to use the get_alloc_block() hook if it is present, and
> > (b) it will try to load the block bitmap if it is not already loaded,
> > instead of returning an error.
> 
> Quite probably.  I tried to avoid API behavioral change, at least for the
> inital patch, though I was thinking that a general cleanup was probably in
> order.

It turns out that making a behavioral change could very well break
some callers --- including e2fsck (see e2fsck_get_alloc_block for an
example of wahy).  What I'm currently thinking about is an API sort of
like this:

errcode_t ext2fs_alloc_blocks(ext2_filsys fs, blk64_t goal,
	  	              unsigned int *num_blocks,
			      char *block_buf, int flags, blk64_t *ret)

... which can be used to efficiently allocate up to *num_blocks blocks
at a time, much like the mballoc interface.  I suspect that would be
useful for a number of different cases, including ext2fs_fallocate and
mk_hugefiles.c.

What I'm currently wondering about is whether it's worth the interface
complexity to have something like a "struct ext2fs_allocation_request"
structure, so we can potentially add more hints that a future
implementation might use, or whether that's not worth it.

What do folks think?

					- Ted
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