Christoph Hellwig noticed that we were doing some unnecessary
work in orangefs_flush:
orangefs_flush just writes out data on every close(2) call. There is
no need to change anything about the dirty state, especially as
orangefs doesn't treat I_DIRTY_TIMES special in any way. The code
seems to come from partially open coding vfs_fsync.
He sent in a patch with the above commit message and also a
patch that was a reversion of another Orangefs patch I had
sent upstream a while ago. I had to fix his reversion patch
so that it would compile which caused his "don't mess with
I_DIRTY_TIMES" patch to fail to apply. So here I have just
remade his patch and applied it after the fixed reversion patch.
Signed-off-by: Mike Marshall <hubcap@omnibond.com>
* on an explicit fsync call. This duplicates historical OrangeFS
* behavior.
*/
- struct inode *inode = file->f_mapping->host;
int r;
- if (inode->i_state & I_DIRTY_TIME) {
- spin_lock(&inode->i_lock);
- inode->i_state &= ~I_DIRTY_TIME;
- spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
- mark_inode_dirty_sync(inode);
- }
-
r = filemap_write_and_wait_range(file->f_mapping, 0, LLONG_MAX);
if (r > 0)
return 0;