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Message-ID: <eb812b45-e28d-430d-a7a3-5b73edcc8057@suse.com>
Date: Sat, 4 May 2024 09:36:33 +0930
From: Qu Wenruo <wqu@...e.com>
To: Anand Jain <anand.jain@...cle.com>, linux-btrfs@...r.kernel.org,
linux-ext4@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH RFC 4/4] btrfs-progs: convert: support ext2 unwritten file
data extents
在 2024/5/4 08:57, Anand Jain 写道:
>
>
> On 5/4/24 06:23, Qu Wenruo wrote:
>>
>>
>> 在 2024/5/3 21:55, Anand Jain 写道:
>> [...]
>>>>> +int find_prealloc(struct blk_iterate_data *data, int index, bool
>>>>> *prealloc)
>>>>
>>>> This function is called for every file extent we're going to create.
>>>> I'm not a big fan of doing so many lookup.
>>>>
>>>> My question is, is this the only way to determine the flag of the
>>>> data extent?
>>>>
>>>> My instinct says there should be a straight forward way to determine
>>>> if a file extent is preallocated or not, just like what we do in our
>>>> file extent items.
>>>
>>>
>>>> Thus during the ext2fs_block_iterate2(), there should be some way to
>>>> tell if a block is preallocated or not.
>>>
>>> Unfortunately, the callback doesn't provide the extent flags. Unless,
>>> I miss something?
>>
>> You're right, the iterator interface does not provide any extra info.
>>
>> And I also checked the kernel implementation, they have extra
>> ext4_map_blocks() to do the resolve, and then ext4_es_lookup_extent()
>> to determine if it's unwritten.
>>
>> So I'm afraid we have to go this solution.
>>
>>
>> Meanwhile related to the implementation, can we put the prealloc flat
>> into blk_iterate_data?
>> So that we can handle different fses' preallocated extents in a more
>> common way.
>>
>
> I initially thought so, but is blk_iterate_data::num_blocks always
> equal to extent::e_len in all file data extent situations mixed
> with hole and unwritten combinations? If not, then the flag might
> not be appropriate there, as it doesn't apply to the entirety of
> blk_iterate_data::num_blocks.
I do not think we need @num_blocks to match extent_len.
We're already doing some kind of merge inside block_iterate_proc(), and
if we find previous extent flag doesn't match the current one, we just
need to submit the previous one.
Although I also believe we need some better abstraction for the common code.
The current one doesn't explain everything well for things parameters
like disk_block/file_block.
Thanks,
Qu
>
> Thanks, Anand
>
>> Thanks,
>> Qu
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