On Wed, Apr 12 2017, Jeff Layton wrote:

> +void __filemap_set_wb_error(struct address_space *mapping, int err)

I was really hoping that this would be

  void __set_wb_error(wb_err_t *wb_err, int err)

so

Then nfs_context_set_write_error could become

static void nfs_context_set_write_error(struct nfs_open_context *ctx, int error)
{
        __set_wb_error(&ctx->wb_err, error);
}

and filemap_set_sb_error() would be:

static inline void filemap_set_wb_error(struct address_space *mapping, int err)
{
        /* Optimize for the common case of no error */
        if (unlikely(err))
                __set_wb_error(&mapping->f_wb_err, err);
}

Similarly we would have
  wb_err_t sample_wb_error(wb_err_t *wb_err)
  {
   ...
  }

and

wb_err_t filemap_sample_wb_error(struct address_space *mapping)
{
  return sample_wb_error(&mapping->f_wb_err);
}

so nfs_file_fsync_commit() could have
  ret = sample_wb_error(&ctx->wb_err);
in place of
        ret = xchg(&ctx->error, 0);

int filemap_report_wb_error(struct file *file)

would become

int filemap_report_wb_error(struct file *file, wb_err_t *err)

or something.

The address space is just one (obvious) place where the wb error can be
stored.  The filesystem might have a different place with finer
granularity (nfs already does).


> +wb_err_t filemap_sample_wb_error(struct address_space *mapping)
> +{
> +     wb_err_t old = READ_ONCE(mapping->wb_err);
> +     wb_err_t new = old;
> +
> +     /*
> +      * For the common case of no errors ever having been set, we can skip
> +      * marking the SEEN bit. Once an error has been set, the value will
> +      * never go back to zero.
> +      */
> +     if (old != 0) {
> +             new |= WB_ERR_SEEN;
> +             if (old != new)
> +                     cmpxchg(&mapping->wb_err, old, new);
> +     }
> +     return new;
> +}

I do like how the use of cmpxchg work out here - no looping!

Thanks
NeilBrown

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to