[01/11] memory-failure: Remove comment referencing AS_EIO
Commit Message
The EIO is now reported to every caller which has the file open on
the next operation which returns an error. We obviously cannot check
whether the user took action correctly on that error, but we can remove
this comment as wb_err is never cleared, unlike AS_EIO.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) <willy@infradead.org>
---
mm/memory-failure.c | 28 ----------------------------
1 file changed, 28 deletions(-)
Comments
Looks good:
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
@@ -992,34 +992,6 @@ static int me_pagecache_dirty(struct page_state *ps, struct page *p)
* who check the mapping.
* This way the application knows that something went
* wrong with its dirty file data.
- *
- * There's one open issue:
- *
- * The EIO will be only reported on the next IO
- * operation and then cleared through the IO map.
- * Normally Linux has two mechanisms to pass IO error
- * first through the AS_EIO flag in the address space
- * and then through the PageError flag in the page.
- * Since we drop pages on memory failure handling the
- * only mechanism open to use is through AS_AIO.
- *
- * This has the disadvantage that it gets cleared on
- * the first operation that returns an error, while
- * the PageError bit is more sticky and only cleared
- * when the page is reread or dropped. If an
- * application assumes it will always get error on
- * fsync, but does other operations on the fd before
- * and the page is dropped between then the error
- * will not be properly reported.
- *
- * This can already happen even without hwpoisoned
- * pages: first on metadata IO errors (which only
- * report through AS_EIO) or when the page is dropped
- * at the wrong time.
- *
- * So right now we assume that the application DTRT on
- * the first EIO, but we're not worse than other parts
- * of the kernel.
*/
mapping_set_error(mapping, -EIO);
}