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authorBrian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>2026-03-11 12:24:56 -0400
committerCarlos Maiolino <cem@kernel.org>2026-03-23 11:07:59 +0100
commit2f46c239fce617ac26cc40d9520b1c0cf05cd34f (patch)
tree3376ed3a0a0a5cbbd2ea125c8cf78fd0a4794455 /tools/perf/scripts/python/stackcollapse.py
parent92e9dff9ca5026805798b13b967760f8058794e8 (diff)
xfs: flush dirty pagecache over hole in zoned mode zero range
For zoned filesystems a window exists between the first write to a sparse range (i.e. data fork hole) and writeback completion where we might spuriously observe holes in both the COW and data forks. This occurs because a buffered write populates the COW fork with delalloc, writeback submission removes the COW fork delalloc blocks and unlocks the inode, and then writeback completion remaps the physically allocated blocks into the data fork. If a zero range operation does a lookup during this window where both forks show a hole, it incorrectly reports a hole mapping for a range that contains data. This currently works because iomap checks for dirty pagecache over holes and unwritten mappings. If found, it flushes and retries the lookup. We plan to remove the hole flush logic from iomap, however, so lift the flush into xfs_zoned_buffered_write_iomap_begin() to preserve behavior and document the purpose for it. Zoned XFS filesystems don't support unwritten extents, so if zoned mode can come up with a way to close this transient hole window in the future, this flush can likely be removed. Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Carlos Maiolino <cem@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'tools/perf/scripts/python/stackcollapse.py')
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