From: Christoph Hellwig [mailto:h...@lst.de]
> On Sun, Jan 22, 2017 at 06:19:24PM +0000, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> > No, I mean a network filesystem like 9p or cifs or nfs.  If the memcpy
> > is supposed to be performed by the backing device
> 
> struct backing_dev has no relation to the DAX code.  Even more so what's
> the point of doing a DAXish memcpy in that case?  If we buffer in
> memory for network I/O we should just use the page cache.

Oh, I didn't mean a 'struct backing_dev'.  I meant that, conceptually, there is 
no driver for the filesystem to call.  Here's the architecture that I'm trying 
to work with:

Two guests on the same physical machine (or a guest and a host) have access to 
the same set of physical addresses.  This might be an NV-DIMM, or it might just 
be DRAM (for the purposes of reducing guest overhead).  The network filesystem 
has been enhanced with a call to allow the client to ask the server "What is 
the physical address for this range of bytes in this file?"

We don't want to use the guest pagecache here.  That's antithetical to the 
second usage, and it's inefficient for the first usage.

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