They've done a technology transition once already from legacy file system filter drivers to the minifilter model. If they see enough benefit to another change, it wouldn't be unprecedented.
Mind you, it looks like after 20-ish years Windows still supports loading legacy filter drivers. Given the considerable work that goes into getting even a simple filesystem minifilter driver working reliably, it's safe to assume that we'd be looking at a similarly protracted transition period.
As to the performance, I don't think the raw infrastructure to support minifilters is the major performance hit. The work the drivers themselves end up doing tends to be the bigger hit in my experience.
Mind you, it looks like after 20-ish years Windows still supports loading legacy filter drivers. Given the considerable work that goes into getting even a simple filesystem minifilter driver working reliably, it's safe to assume that we'd be looking at a similarly protracted transition period.
As to the performance, I don't think the raw infrastructure to support minifilters is the major performance hit. The work the drivers themselves end up doing tends to be the bigger hit in my experience.
Some background for the curious:
https://www.osr.com/nt-insider/2019-issue1/the-state-of-wind...