1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2.. _iomap_operations: 3 4.. 5 Dumb style notes to maintain the author's sanity: 6 Please try to start sentences on separate lines so that 7 sentence changes don't bleed colors in diff. 8 Heading decorations are documented in sphinx.rst. 9 10========================= 11Supported File Operations 12========================= 13 14.. contents:: Table of Contents 15 :local: 16 17Below are a discussion of the high level file operations that iomap 18implements. 19 20Buffered I/O 21============ 22 23Buffered I/O is the default file I/O path in Linux. 24File contents are cached in memory ("pagecache") to satisfy reads and 25writes. 26Dirty cache will be written back to disk at some point that can be 27forced via ``fsync`` and variants. 28 29iomap implements nearly all the folio and pagecache management that 30filesystems have to implement themselves under the legacy I/O model. 31This means that the filesystem need not know the details of allocating, 32mapping, managing uptodate and dirty state, or writeback of pagecache 33folios. 34Under the legacy I/O model, this was managed very inefficiently with 35linked lists of buffer heads instead of the per-folio bitmaps that iomap 36uses. 37Unless the filesystem explicitly opts in to buffer heads, they will not 38be used, which makes buffered I/O much more efficient, and the pagecache 39maintainer much happier. 40 41``struct address_space_operations`` 42----------------------------------- 43 44The following iomap functions can be referenced directly from the 45address space operations structure: 46 47 * ``iomap_dirty_folio`` 48 * ``iomap_release_folio`` 49 * ``iomap_invalidate_folio`` 50 * ``iomap_is_partially_uptodate`` 51 52The following address space operations can be wrapped easily: 53 54 * ``read_folio`` 55 * ``readahead`` 56 * ``writepages`` 57 * ``bmap`` 58 * ``swap_activate`` 59 60``struct iomap_folio_ops`` 61-------------------------- 62 63The ``->iomap_begin`` function for pagecache operations may set the 64``struct iomap::folio_ops`` field to an ops structure to override 65default behaviors of iomap: 66 67.. code-block:: c 68 69 struct iomap_folio_ops { 70 struct folio *(*get_folio)(struct iomap_iter *iter, loff_t pos, 71 unsigned len); 72 void (*put_folio)(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, unsigned copied, 73 struct folio *folio); 74 bool (*iomap_valid)(struct inode *inode, const struct iomap *iomap); 75 }; 76 77iomap calls these functions: 78 79 - ``get_folio``: Called to allocate and return an active reference to 80 a locked folio prior to starting a write. 81 If this function is not provided, iomap will call 82 ``iomap_get_folio``. 83 This could be used to `set up per-folio filesystem state 84 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20190429220934.10415-5-agruenba@redhat.com/>`_ 85 for a write. 86 87 - ``put_folio``: Called to unlock and put a folio after a pagecache 88 operation completes. 89 If this function is not provided, iomap will ``folio_unlock`` and 90 ``folio_put`` on its own. 91 This could be used to `commit per-folio filesystem state 92 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20180619164137.13720-6-hch@lst.de/>`_ 93 that was set up by ``->get_folio``. 94 95 - ``iomap_valid``: The filesystem may not hold locks between 96 ``->iomap_begin`` and ``->iomap_end`` because pagecache operations 97 can take folio locks, fault on userspace pages, initiate writeback 98 for memory reclamation, or engage in other time-consuming actions. 99 If a file's space mapping data are mutable, it is possible that the 100 mapping for a particular pagecache folio can `change in the time it 101 takes 102 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20221123055812.747923-8-david@fromorbit.com/>`_ 103 to allocate, install, and lock that folio. 104 105 For the pagecache, races can happen if writeback doesn't take 106 ``i_rwsem`` or ``invalidate_lock`` and updates mapping information. 107 Races can also happen if the filesystem allows concurrent writes. 108 For such files, the mapping *must* be revalidated after the folio 109 lock has been taken so that iomap can manage the folio correctly. 110 111 fsdax does not need this revalidation because there's no writeback 112 and no support for unwritten extents. 113 114 Filesystems subject to this kind of race must provide a 115 ``->iomap_valid`` function to decide if the mapping is still valid. 116 If the mapping is not valid, the mapping will be sampled again. 117 118 To support making the validity decision, the filesystem's 119 ``->iomap_begin`` function may set ``struct iomap::validity_cookie`` 120 at the same time that it populates the other iomap fields. 121 A simple validation cookie implementation is a sequence counter. 122 If the filesystem bumps the sequence counter every time it modifies 123 the inode's extent map, it can be placed in the ``struct 124 iomap::validity_cookie`` during ``->iomap_begin``. 125 If the value in the cookie is found to be different to the value 126 the filesystem holds when the mapping is passed back to 127 ``->iomap_valid``, then the iomap should considered stale and the 128 validation failed. 129 130These ``struct kiocb`` flags are significant for buffered I/O with iomap: 131 132 * ``IOCB_NOWAIT``: Turns on ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``. 133 134 * ``IOCB_DONTCACHE``: Turns on ``IOMAP_DONTCACHE``. 135 136Internal per-Folio State 137------------------------ 138 139If the fsblock size matches the size of a pagecache folio, it is assumed 140that all disk I/O operations will operate on the entire folio. 141The uptodate (memory contents are at least as new as what's on disk) and 142dirty (memory contents are newer than what's on disk) status of the 143folio are all that's needed for this case. 144 145If the fsblock size is less than the size of a pagecache folio, iomap 146tracks the per-fsblock uptodate and dirty state itself. 147This enables iomap to handle both "bs < ps" `filesystems 148<https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230725122932.144426-1-ritesh.list@gmail.com/>`_ 149and large folios in the pagecache. 150 151iomap internally tracks two state bits per fsblock: 152 153 * ``uptodate``: iomap will try to keep folios fully up to date. 154 If there are read(ahead) errors, those fsblocks will not be marked 155 uptodate. 156 The folio itself will be marked uptodate when all fsblocks within the 157 folio are uptodate. 158 159 * ``dirty``: iomap will set the per-block dirty state when programs 160 write to the file. 161 The folio itself will be marked dirty when any fsblock within the 162 folio is dirty. 163 164iomap also tracks the amount of read and write disk IOs that are in 165flight. 166This structure is much lighter weight than ``struct buffer_head`` 167because there is only one per folio, and the per-fsblock overhead is two 168bits vs. 104 bytes. 169 170Filesystems wishing to turn on large folios in the pagecache should call 171``mapping_set_large_folios`` when initializing the incore inode. 172 173Buffered Readahead and Reads 174---------------------------- 175 176The ``iomap_readahead`` function initiates readahead to the pagecache. 177The ``iomap_read_folio`` function reads one folio's worth of data into 178the pagecache. 179The ``flags`` argument to ``->iomap_begin`` will be set to zero. 180The pagecache takes whatever locks it needs before calling the 181filesystem. 182 183Buffered Writes 184--------------- 185 186The ``iomap_file_buffered_write`` function writes an ``iocb`` to the 187pagecache. 188``IOMAP_WRITE`` or ``IOMAP_WRITE`` | ``IOMAP_NOWAIT`` will be passed as 189the ``flags`` argument to ``->iomap_begin``. 190Callers commonly take ``i_rwsem`` in either shared or exclusive mode 191before calling this function. 192 193mmap Write Faults 194~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 195 196The ``iomap_page_mkwrite`` function handles a write fault to a folio in 197the pagecache. 198``IOMAP_WRITE | IOMAP_FAULT`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument 199to ``->iomap_begin``. 200Callers commonly take the mmap ``invalidate_lock`` in shared or 201exclusive mode before calling this function. 202 203Buffered Write Failures 204~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 205 206After a short write to the pagecache, the areas not written will not 207become marked dirty. 208The filesystem must arrange to `cancel 209<https://lore.kernel.org/all/20221123055812.747923-6-david@fromorbit.com/>`_ 210such `reservations 211<https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20220817093627.GZ3600936@dread.disaster.area/>`_ 212because writeback will not consume the reservation. 213The ``iomap_write_delalloc_release`` can be called from a 214``->iomap_end`` function to find all the clean areas of the folios 215caching a fresh (``IOMAP_F_NEW``) delalloc mapping. 216It takes the ``invalidate_lock``. 217 218The filesystem must supply a function ``punch`` to be called for 219each file range in this state. 220This function must *only* remove delayed allocation reservations, in 221case another thread racing with the current thread writes successfully 222to the same region and triggers writeback to flush the dirty data out to 223disk. 224 225Zeroing for File Operations 226~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 227 228Filesystems can call ``iomap_zero_range`` to perform zeroing of the 229pagecache for non-truncation file operations that are not aligned to 230the fsblock size. 231``IOMAP_ZERO`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 232``->iomap_begin``. 233Callers typically hold ``i_rwsem`` and ``invalidate_lock`` in exclusive 234mode before calling this function. 235 236Unsharing Reflinked File Data 237~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 238 239Filesystems can call ``iomap_file_unshare`` to force a file sharing 240storage with another file to preemptively copy the shared data to newly 241allocate storage. 242``IOMAP_WRITE | IOMAP_UNSHARE`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument 243to ``->iomap_begin``. 244Callers typically hold ``i_rwsem`` and ``invalidate_lock`` in exclusive 245mode before calling this function. 246 247Truncation 248---------- 249 250Filesystems can call ``iomap_truncate_page`` to zero the bytes in the 251pagecache from EOF to the end of the fsblock during a file truncation 252operation. 253``truncate_setsize`` or ``truncate_pagecache`` will take care of 254everything after the EOF block. 255``IOMAP_ZERO`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 256``->iomap_begin``. 257Callers typically hold ``i_rwsem`` and ``invalidate_lock`` in exclusive 258mode before calling this function. 259 260Pagecache Writeback 261------------------- 262 263Filesystems can call ``iomap_writepages`` to respond to a request to 264write dirty pagecache folios to disk. 265The ``mapping`` and ``wbc`` parameters should be passed unchanged. 266The ``wpc`` pointer should be allocated by the filesystem and must 267be initialized to zero. 268 269The pagecache will lock each folio before trying to schedule it for 270writeback. 271It does not lock ``i_rwsem`` or ``invalidate_lock``. 272 273The dirty bit will be cleared for all folios run through the 274``->writeback_range`` machinery described below even if the writeback fails. 275This is to prevent dirty folio clots when storage devices fail; an 276``-EIO`` is recorded for userspace to collect via ``fsync``. 277 278The ``ops`` structure must be specified and is as follows: 279 280``struct iomap_writeback_ops`` 281~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 282 283.. code-block:: c 284 285 struct iomap_writeback_ops { 286 int (*writeback_range)(struct iomap_writepage_ctx *wpc, 287 struct folio *folio, u64 pos, unsigned int len, u64 end_pos); 288 int (*writeback_submit)(struct iomap_writepage_ctx *wpc, int error); 289 }; 290 291The fields are as follows: 292 293 - ``writeback_range``: Sets ``wpc->iomap`` to the space mapping of the file 294 range (in bytes) given by ``offset`` and ``len``. 295 iomap calls this function for each dirty fs block in each dirty folio, 296 though it will `reuse mappings 297 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231207072710.176093-15-hch@lst.de/>`_ 298 for runs of contiguous dirty fsblocks within a folio. 299 Do not return ``IOMAP_INLINE`` mappings here; the ``->iomap_end`` 300 function must deal with persisting written data. 301 Do not return ``IOMAP_DELALLOC`` mappings here; iomap currently 302 requires mapping to allocated space. 303 Filesystems can skip a potentially expensive mapping lookup if the 304 mappings have not changed. 305 This revalidation must be open-coded by the filesystem; it is 306 unclear if ``iomap::validity_cookie`` can be reused for this 307 purpose. 308 309 If this methods fails to schedule I/O for any part of a dirty folio, it 310 should throw away any reservations that may have been made for the write. 311 The folio will be marked clean and an ``-EIO`` recorded in the 312 pagecache. 313 Filesystems can use this callback to `remove 314 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20201029163313.1766967-1-bfoster@redhat.com/>`_ 315 delalloc reservations to avoid having delalloc reservations for 316 clean pagecache. 317 This function must be supplied by the filesystem. 318 319 - ``writeback_submit``: Submit the previous built writeback context. 320 Block based file systems should use the iomap_ioend_writeback_submit 321 helper, other file system can implement their own. 322 File systems can optionall to hook into writeback bio submission. 323 This might include pre-write space accounting updates, or installing 324 a custom ``->bi_end_io`` function for internal purposes, such as 325 deferring the ioend completion to a workqueue to run metadata update 326 transactions from process context before submitting the bio. 327 This function must be supplied by the filesystem. 328 329Pagecache Writeback Completion 330~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 331 332To handle the bookkeeping that must happen after disk I/O for writeback 333completes, iomap creates chains of ``struct iomap_ioend`` objects that 334wrap the ``bio`` that is used to write pagecache data to disk. 335By default, iomap finishes writeback ioends by clearing the writeback 336bit on the folios attached to the ``ioend``. 337If the write failed, it will also set the error bits on the folios and 338the address space. 339This can happen in interrupt or process context, depending on the 340storage device. 341Filesystems that need to update internal bookkeeping (e.g. unwritten 342extent conversions) should set their own bi_end_io on the bios 343submitted by ``->submit_writeback`` 344This function should call ``iomap_finish_ioends`` after finishing its 345own work (e.g. unwritten extent conversion). 346 347Some filesystems may wish to `amortize the cost of running metadata 348transactions 349<https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220120034733.221737-1-david@fromorbit.com/>`_ 350for post-writeback updates by batching them. 351They may also require transactions to run from process context, which 352implies punting batches to a workqueue. 353iomap ioends contain a ``list_head`` to enable batching. 354 355Given a batch of ioends, iomap has a few helpers to assist with 356amortization: 357 358 * ``iomap_sort_ioends``: Sort all the ioends in the list by file 359 offset. 360 361 * ``iomap_ioend_try_merge``: Given an ioend that is not in any list and 362 a separate list of sorted ioends, merge as many of the ioends from 363 the head of the list into the given ioend. 364 ioends can only be merged if the file range and storage addresses are 365 contiguous; the unwritten and shared status are the same; and the 366 write I/O outcome is the same. 367 The merged ioends become their own list. 368 369 * ``iomap_finish_ioends``: Finish an ioend that possibly has other 370 ioends linked to it. 371 372Direct I/O 373========== 374 375In Linux, direct I/O is defined as file I/O that is issued directly to 376storage, bypassing the pagecache. 377The ``iomap_dio_rw`` function implements O_DIRECT (direct I/O) reads and 378writes for files. 379 380.. code-block:: c 381 382 ssize_t iomap_dio_rw(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *iter, 383 const struct iomap_ops *ops, 384 const struct iomap_dio_ops *dops, 385 unsigned int dio_flags, void *private, 386 size_t done_before); 387 388The filesystem can provide the ``dops`` parameter if it needs to perform 389extra work before or after the I/O is issued to storage. 390The ``done_before`` parameter tells the how much of the request has 391already been transferred. 392It is used to continue a request asynchronously when `part of the 393request 394<https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=c03098d4b9ad76bca2966a8769dcfe59f7f85103>`_ 395has already been completed synchronously. 396 397The ``done_before`` parameter should be set if writes for the ``iocb`` 398have been initiated prior to the call. 399The direction of the I/O is determined from the ``iocb`` passed in. 400 401The ``dio_flags`` argument can be set to any combination of the 402following values: 403 404 * ``IOMAP_DIO_FORCE_WAIT``: Wait for the I/O to complete even if the 405 kiocb is not synchronous. 406 407 * ``IOMAP_DIO_OVERWRITE_ONLY``: Perform a pure overwrite for this range 408 or fail with ``-EAGAIN``. 409 This can be used by filesystems with complex unaligned I/O 410 write paths to provide an optimised fast path for unaligned writes. 411 If a pure overwrite can be performed, then serialisation against 412 other I/Os to the same filesystem block(s) is unnecessary as there is 413 no risk of stale data exposure or data loss. 414 If a pure overwrite cannot be performed, then the filesystem can 415 perform the serialisation steps needed to provide exclusive access 416 to the unaligned I/O range so that it can perform allocation and 417 sub-block zeroing safely. 418 Filesystems can use this flag to try to reduce locking contention, 419 but a lot of `detailed checking 420 <https://lore.kernel.org/linux-ext4/20230314130759.642710-1-bfoster@redhat.com/>`_ 421 is required to do it `correctly 422 <https://lore.kernel.org/linux-ext4/20230810165559.946222-1-bfoster@redhat.com/>`_. 423 424 * ``IOMAP_DIO_PARTIAL``: If a page fault occurs, return whatever 425 progress has already been made. 426 The caller may deal with the page fault and retry the operation. 427 If the caller decides to retry the operation, it should pass the 428 accumulated return values of all previous calls as the 429 ``done_before`` parameter to the next call. 430 431These ``struct kiocb`` flags are significant for direct I/O with iomap: 432 433 * ``IOCB_NOWAIT``: Turns on ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``. 434 435 * ``IOCB_SYNC``: Ensure that the device has persisted data to disk 436 before completing the call. 437 In the case of pure overwrites, the I/O may be issued with FUA 438 enabled. 439 440 * ``IOCB_HIPRI``: Poll for I/O completion instead of waiting for an 441 interrupt. 442 Only meaningful for asynchronous I/O, and only if the entire I/O can 443 be issued as a single ``struct bio``. 444 445 * ``IOCB_DIO_CALLER_COMP``: Try to run I/O completion from the caller's 446 process context. 447 See ``linux/fs.h`` for more details. 448 449Filesystems should call ``iomap_dio_rw`` from ``->read_iter`` and 450``->write_iter``, and set ``FMODE_CAN_ODIRECT`` in the ``->open`` 451function for the file. 452They should not set ``->direct_IO``, which is deprecated. 453 454If a filesystem wishes to perform its own work before direct I/O 455completion, it should call ``__iomap_dio_rw``. 456If its return value is not an error pointer or a NULL pointer, the 457filesystem should pass the return value to ``iomap_dio_complete`` after 458finishing its internal work. 459 460Return Values 461------------- 462 463``iomap_dio_rw`` can return one of the following: 464 465 * A non-negative number of bytes transferred. 466 467 * ``-ENOTBLK``: Fall back to buffered I/O. 468 iomap itself will return this value if it cannot invalidate the page 469 cache before issuing the I/O to storage. 470 The ``->iomap_begin`` or ``->iomap_end`` functions may also return 471 this value. 472 473 * ``-EIOCBQUEUED``: The asynchronous direct I/O request has been 474 queued and will be completed separately. 475 476 * Any of the other negative error codes. 477 478Direct Reads 479------------ 480 481A direct I/O read initiates a read I/O from the storage device to the 482caller's buffer. 483Dirty parts of the pagecache are flushed to storage before initiating 484the read io. 485The ``flags`` value for ``->iomap_begin`` will be ``IOMAP_DIRECT`` with 486any combination of the following enhancements: 487 488 * ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``, as defined previously. 489 490Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling this 491function. 492 493Direct Writes 494------------- 495 496A direct I/O write initiates a write I/O to the storage device from the 497caller's buffer. 498Dirty parts of the pagecache are flushed to storage before initiating 499the write io. 500The pagecache is invalidated both before and after the write io. 501The ``flags`` value for ``->iomap_begin`` will be ``IOMAP_DIRECT | 502IOMAP_WRITE`` with any combination of the following enhancements: 503 504 * ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``, as defined previously. 505 506 * ``IOMAP_OVERWRITE_ONLY``: Allocating blocks and zeroing partial 507 blocks is not allowed. 508 The entire file range must map to a single written or unwritten 509 extent. 510 The file I/O range must be aligned to the filesystem block size 511 if the mapping is unwritten and the filesystem cannot handle zeroing 512 the unaligned regions without exposing stale contents. 513 514 * ``IOMAP_ATOMIC``: This write is being issued with torn-write 515 protection. 516 Torn-write protection may be provided based on HW-offload or by a 517 software mechanism provided by the filesystem. 518 519 For HW-offload based support, only a single bio can be created for the 520 write, and the write must not be split into multiple I/O requests, i.e. 521 flag REQ_ATOMIC must be set. 522 The file range to write must be aligned to satisfy the requirements 523 of both the filesystem and the underlying block device's atomic 524 commit capabilities. 525 If filesystem metadata updates are required (e.g. unwritten extent 526 conversion or copy-on-write), all updates for the entire file range 527 must be committed atomically as well. 528 Untorn-writes may be longer than a single file block. In all cases, 529 the mapping start disk block must have at least the same alignment as 530 the write offset. 531 The filesystems must set IOMAP_F_ATOMIC_BIO to inform iomap core of an 532 untorn-write based on HW-offload. 533 534 For untorn-writes based on a software mechanism provided by the 535 filesystem, all the disk block alignment and single bio restrictions 536 which apply for HW-offload based untorn-writes do not apply. 537 The mechanism would typically be used as a fallback for when 538 HW-offload based untorn-writes may not be issued, e.g. the range of the 539 write covers multiple extents, meaning that it is not possible to issue 540 a single bio. 541 All filesystem metadata updates for the entire file range must be 542 committed atomically as well. 543 544Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared or exclusive mode before 545calling this function. 546 547``struct iomap_dio_ops:`` 548------------------------- 549.. code-block:: c 550 551 struct iomap_dio_ops { 552 void (*submit_io)(const struct iomap_iter *iter, struct bio *bio, 553 loff_t file_offset); 554 int (*end_io)(struct kiocb *iocb, ssize_t size, int error, 555 unsigned flags); 556 struct bio_set *bio_set; 557 }; 558 559The fields of this structure are as follows: 560 561 - ``submit_io``: iomap calls this function when it has constructed a 562 ``struct bio`` object for the I/O requested, and wishes to submit it 563 to the block device. 564 If no function is provided, ``submit_bio`` will be called directly. 565 Filesystems that would like to perform additional work before (e.g. 566 data replication for btrfs) should implement this function. 567 568 - ``end_io``: This is called after the ``struct bio`` completes. 569 This function should perform post-write conversions of unwritten 570 extent mappings, handle write failures, etc. 571 The ``flags`` argument may be set to a combination of the following: 572 573 * ``IOMAP_DIO_UNWRITTEN``: The mapping was unwritten, so the ioend 574 should mark the extent as written. 575 576 * ``IOMAP_DIO_COW``: Writing to the space in the mapping required a 577 copy on write operation, so the ioend should switch mappings. 578 579 - ``bio_set``: This allows the filesystem to provide a custom bio_set 580 for allocating direct I/O bios. 581 This enables filesystems to `stash additional per-bio information 582 <https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220505201115.937837-3-hch@lst.de/>`_ 583 for private use. 584 If this field is NULL, generic ``struct bio`` objects will be used. 585 586Filesystems that want to perform extra work after an I/O completion 587should set a custom ``->bi_end_io`` function via ``->submit_io``. 588Afterwards, the custom endio function must call 589``iomap_dio_bio_end_io`` to finish the direct I/O. 590 591DAX I/O 592======= 593 594Some storage devices can be directly mapped as memory. 595These devices support a new access mode known as "fsdax" that allows 596loads and stores through the CPU and memory controller. 597 598fsdax Reads 599----------- 600 601A fsdax read performs a memcpy from storage device to the caller's 602buffer. 603The ``flags`` value for ``->iomap_begin`` will be ``IOMAP_DAX`` with any 604combination of the following enhancements: 605 606 * ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``, as defined previously. 607 608Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling this 609function. 610 611fsdax Writes 612------------ 613 614A fsdax write initiates a memcpy to the storage device from the caller's 615buffer. 616The ``flags`` value for ``->iomap_begin`` will be ``IOMAP_DAX | 617IOMAP_WRITE`` with any combination of the following enhancements: 618 619 * ``IOMAP_NOWAIT``, as defined previously. 620 621 * ``IOMAP_OVERWRITE_ONLY``: The caller requires a pure overwrite to be 622 performed from this mapping. 623 This requires the filesystem extent mapping to already exist as an 624 ``IOMAP_MAPPED`` type and span the entire range of the write I/O 625 request. 626 If the filesystem cannot map this request in a way that allows the 627 iomap infrastructure to perform a pure overwrite, it must fail the 628 mapping operation with ``-EAGAIN``. 629 630Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in exclusive mode before calling this 631function. 632 633fsdax mmap Faults 634~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 635 636The ``dax_iomap_fault`` function handles read and write faults to fsdax 637storage. 638For a read fault, ``IOMAP_DAX | IOMAP_FAULT`` will be passed as the 639``flags`` argument to ``->iomap_begin``. 640For a write fault, ``IOMAP_DAX | IOMAP_FAULT | IOMAP_WRITE`` will be 641passed as the ``flags`` argument to ``->iomap_begin``. 642 643Callers commonly hold the same locks as they do to call their iomap 644pagecache counterparts. 645 646fsdax Truncation, fallocate, and Unsharing 647------------------------------------------ 648 649For fsdax files, the following functions are provided to replace their 650iomap pagecache I/O counterparts. 651The ``flags`` argument to ``->iomap_begin`` are the same as the 652pagecache counterparts, with ``IOMAP_DAX`` added. 653 654 * ``dax_file_unshare`` 655 * ``dax_zero_range`` 656 * ``dax_truncate_page`` 657 658Callers commonly hold the same locks as they do to call their iomap 659pagecache counterparts. 660 661fsdax Deduplication 662------------------- 663 664Filesystems implementing the ``FIDEDUPERANGE`` ioctl must call the 665``dax_remap_file_range_prep`` function with their own iomap read ops. 666 667Seeking Files 668============= 669 670iomap implements the two iterating whence modes of the ``llseek`` system 671call. 672 673SEEK_DATA 674--------- 675 676The ``iomap_seek_data`` function implements the SEEK_DATA "whence" value 677for llseek. 678``IOMAP_REPORT`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 679``->iomap_begin``. 680 681For unwritten mappings, the pagecache will be searched. 682Regions of the pagecache with a folio mapped and uptodate fsblocks 683within those folios will be reported as data areas. 684 685Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling this 686function. 687 688SEEK_HOLE 689--------- 690 691The ``iomap_seek_hole`` function implements the SEEK_HOLE "whence" value 692for llseek. 693``IOMAP_REPORT`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 694``->iomap_begin``. 695 696For unwritten mappings, the pagecache will be searched. 697Regions of the pagecache with no folio mapped, or a !uptodate fsblock 698within a folio will be reported as sparse hole areas. 699 700Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling this 701function. 702 703Swap File Activation 704==================== 705 706The ``iomap_swapfile_activate`` function finds all the base-page aligned 707regions in a file and sets them up as swap space. 708The file will be ``fsync()``'d before activation. 709``IOMAP_REPORT`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 710``->iomap_begin``. 711All mappings must be mapped or unwritten; cannot be dirty or shared, and 712cannot span multiple block devices. 713Callers must hold ``i_rwsem`` in exclusive mode; this is already 714provided by ``swapon``. 715 716File Space Mapping Reporting 717============================ 718 719iomap implements two of the file space mapping system calls. 720 721FS_IOC_FIEMAP 722------------- 723 724The ``iomap_fiemap`` function exports file extent mappings to userspace 725in the format specified by the ``FS_IOC_FIEMAP`` ioctl. 726``IOMAP_REPORT`` will be passed as the ``flags`` argument to 727``->iomap_begin``. 728Callers commonly hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling this 729function. 730 731FIBMAP (deprecated) 732------------------- 733 734``iomap_bmap`` implements FIBMAP. 735The calling conventions are the same as for FIEMAP. 736This function is only provided to maintain compatibility for filesystems 737that implemented FIBMAP prior to conversion. 738This ioctl is deprecated; do **not** add a FIBMAP implementation to 739filesystems that do not have it. 740Callers should probably hold ``i_rwsem`` in shared mode before calling 741this function, but this is unclear. 742