Forget about my question. :)
On Tue, 30 Jul 2002, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
>
> Who is using READA this days ?
>
>
> On Tue, 30 Jul 2002, Andrew Morton wrote:
>
> >
> > There's a bug in bread() which can cause it to misinterpret a
> > failed READA request as an IO error on SMP.
> >
> > If a filesytem block is subject to READA and __make_request()
> > decides that the request would block then __make_request()
> > will (via end_buffer_io_sync) mark the buffer as not uptodate
> > and will unlock it.
> >
> > But if another CPU attempts to bread() the same buffer at the same
> > time, the following happens:
> >
> > 1: ll_rw_block() sees the buffer is locked and does nothing at all
> >
> > 2: bread() does a wait_on_buffer()
> >
> > 3: the other CPU (the one doing READA) unlocks the non uptodate buffer
> >
> > 4: bread() sees the buffer come unlocked. It's not uptodate, so
> > bread() bogusly reports an IO error.
> >
> > I haven't seen it in the wild, because it is rare to get that
> > much read I/O in flight. reiserfs and ext3 (at least) use READA.
> >
> > An appropriate fix for 2.4 is to disable READA.
> >
> >
> > ll_rw_blk.c | 2 ++
> > 1 files changed, 2 insertions
> >
> > --- 2.4.19-rc3/drivers/block/ll_rw_blk.c~no-readahead Tue Jul 30 14:18:17 2002
> > +++ 2.4.19-rc3-akpm/drivers/block/ll_rw_blk.c Tue Jul 30 14:19:52 2002
> > @@ -841,7 +841,9 @@ static int __make_request(request_queue_
> > rw_ahead = 0; /* normal case; gets changed below for READA */
> > switch (rw) {
> > case READA:
> > +#if 0 /* bread() misinterprets failed READA attempts as IO errors on SMP */
> > rw_ahead = 1;
> > +#endif
> > rw = READ; /* drop into READ */
> > case READ:
> > case WRITE:
-
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