Re: [PATCH] man/statx: Add STATX_ATTR_DAX
From: Ira Weiny <hidden>
Date: 2020-09-28 16:48:14
Also in:
linux-api, linux-fsdevel, linux-man, linux-xfs, lkml
On Mon, May 04, 2020 at 05:20:16PM -0700, 'Ira Weiny' wrote:
From: Ira Weiny <redacted> Linux 5.8 is slated to have STATX_ATTR_DAX support. https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200428002142.404144-4-ira.weiny@intel.com/ (local) https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200504161352.GA13783@magnolia/ (local) Add the text to the statx man page. Signed-off-by: Ira Weiny <redacted>
Have I sent this to the wrong list? Or perhaps I have missed a reply. I don't see this applied to the man-pages project.[1] But perhaps I am looking at the wrong place? Thank you, Ira [1] git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/man-pages/man-pages.git
quoted hunk ↗ jump to hunk
--- man2/statx.2 | 24 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 24 insertions(+)diff --git a/man2/statx.2 b/man2/statx.2 index 2e90f07dbdbc..14c4ab78e7bd 100644 --- a/man2/statx.2 +++ b/man2/statx.2@@ -468,6 +468,30 @@ The file has fs-verity enabled. It cannot be written to, and all reads from it will be verified against a cryptographic hash that covers the entire file (e.g., via a Merkle tree). +.TP +.BR STATX_ATTR_DAX (since Linux 5.8) +The file is in the DAX (cpu direct access) state. DAX state attempts to +minimize software cache effects for both I/O and memory mappings of this file. +It requires a file system which has been configured to support DAX. +.PP +DAX generally assumes all accesses are via cpu load / store instructions which +can minimize overhead for small accesses, but may adversely affect cpu +utilization for large transfers. +.PP +File I/O is done directly to/from user-space buffers and memory mapped I/O may +be performed with direct memory mappings that bypass kernel page cache. +.PP +While the DAX property tends to result in data being transferred synchronously, +it does not give the same guarantees of O_SYNC where data and the necessary +metadata are transferred together. +.PP +A DAX file may support being mapped with the MAP_SYNC flag, which enables a +program to use CPU cache flush instructions to persist CPU store operations +without an explicit +.BR fsync(2). +See +.BR mmap(2) +for more information. .SH RETURN VALUE On success, zero is returned. On error, \-1 is returned, and-- 2.25.1