On 3/29/23 19:41, Nitesh Shetty wrote:
>>> +What:              /sys/block/<disk>/queue/copy_max_bytes
>>> +Date:              November 2022
>>> +Contact:   linux-bl...@vger.kernel.org
>>> +Description:
>>> +           [RW] While 'copy_max_bytes_hw' is the hardware limit for the
>>> +           device, 'copy_max_bytes' setting is the software limit.
>>> +           Setting this value lower will make Linux issue smaller size
>>> +           copies from block layer.
>>
>>              This is the maximum number of bytes that the block
>>                 layer will allow for a copy request. Must be smaller than
>>                 or equal to the maximum size allowed by the hardware 
>> indicated
> 
> Looks good.  Will update in next version. We took reference from discard. 
> 
>>              by copy_max_bytes_hw. Write 0 to use the default kernel
>>              settings.
>>
> 
> Nack, writing 0 will not set it to default value. (default value is
> copy_max_bytes = copy_max_bytes_hw)

It is trivial to make it work that way, which would match how max_sectors_kb
works. Write 0 to return copy_max_bytes being equal to the default
copy_max_bytes_hw.

The other possibility that is also interesting is "write 0 to disable copy
offload and use emulation". This one may actually be more useful.

> 
>>> +
>>> +
>>> +What:              /sys/block/<disk>/queue/copy_max_bytes_hw
>>> +Date:              November 2022
>>> +Contact:   linux-bl...@vger.kernel.org
>>> +Description:
>>> +           [RO] Devices that support offloading copy functionality may have
>>> +           internal limits on the number of bytes that can be offloaded
>>> +           in a single operation. The `copy_max_bytes_hw`
>>> +           parameter is set by the device driver to the maximum number of
>>> +           bytes that can be copied in a single operation. Copy
>>> +           requests issued to the device must not exceed this limit.
>>> +           A value of 0 means that the device does not
>>> +           support copy offload.
>>
>>              [RO] This is the maximum number of kilobytes supported in a
>>                 single data copy offload operation. A value of 0 means that 
>> the
>>              device does not support copy offload.
>>
> 
> Nack, value is in bytes. Same as discard.

Typo. I meant Bytes. Your text is too long an too convoluted, so unclear.

-- 
Damien Le Moal
Western Digital Research

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