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Message-ID: <55D57E6A.5040605@cn.fujitsu.com>
Date: Thu, 20 Aug 2015 15:14:50 +0800
From: Dongsheng Yang <yangds.fnst@...fujitsu.com>
To: Richard Weinberger <richard@....at>,
<linux-mtd@...ts.infradead.org>
CC: <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>, <linux-fsdevel@...r.kernel.org>,
<dedekind1@...il.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2/2] ubifs: Allow O_DIRECT
On 08/20/2015 02:42 PM, Richard Weinberger wrote:
> Yang, (Sorry if I've used your last name lately)
Haha, that's fine. My friends in China all call me Dongsheng. :)
>
> Am 20.08.2015 um 05:00 schrieb Dongsheng Yang:
>> On 08/20/2015 04:35 AM, Richard Weinberger wrote:
>>> Currently UBIFS does not support direct IO, but some applications
>>> blindly use the O_DIRECT flag.
>>> Instead of failing upon open() we can do better and fall back
>>> to buffered IO.
>>
>> Hmmmm, to be honest, I am not sure we have to do it as Dave
>> suggested. I think that's just a work-around for current fstests.
>>
>> IMHO, perform a buffered IO when user request direct IO without
>> any warning sounds not a good idea. Maybe adding a warning would
>> make it better.
>
> Well, how would you inform the user?
> A printk() to dmesg is useless are the vast majority of open()
> callers do not check dmesg... :)
>
> Major filesystems implement ->direct_IO these days and having
> a "return 0"-stub seems to be legit.
> For example exofs does too. So, I really don't consider it a work around.
Hmmm, then I am okey with this idea now.
>
>> I think we need more discussion about AIO&DIO in ubifs, and actually
>> I have a plan for it. But I have not listed the all cons and pros of
>> it so far.
>
> Sure, having a real ->direct_IO would be be best solution.
> My patch won't block this.
Yes, agree. So let's return 0 currently.
Yang
>
> Thanks,
> //richard
> .
>
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