*/
return 1;
+ /* Sometimes neither read-modify-write nor reconstruct-write
+ * cycles can work. In those cases we read every block we
+ * can. Then the parity-update is certain to have enough to
+ * work with.
+ * This can only be a problem when we need to write something,
+ * and some device has failed. If either of those tests
+ * fail we need look no further.
+ */
+ if (!s->failed || !s->to_write)
+ return 0;
+
+ if (test_bit(R5_Insync, &dev->flags) &&
+ !test_bit(STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE, &sh->state))
+ /* Pre-reads at not permitted until after short delay
+ * to gather multiple requests. However if this
+ * device is no Insync, the block could only be be computed
+ * and there is no need to delay that.
+ */
+ return 0;
if (
- (sh->raid_conf->level <= 5 && s->failed && fdev[0]->towrite &&
- (!test_bit(R5_Insync, &dev->flags) || test_bit(STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE, &sh->state)) &&
+ (sh->raid_conf->level <= 5 && fdev[0]->towrite &&
!test_bit(R5_OVERWRITE, &fdev[0]->flags)) ||
((sh->raid_conf->level == 6 ||
sh->sector >= sh->raid_conf->mddev->recovery_cp)
- && s->failed && s->to_write &&
+ &&
(s->to_write - s->non_overwrite <
- sh->raid_conf->raid_disks - sh->raid_conf->max_degraded) &&
- (!test_bit(R5_Insync, &dev->flags) || test_bit(STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE, &sh->state))))
+ sh->raid_conf->raid_disks - sh->raid_conf->max_degraded)
+ ))
return 1;
return 0;
}