Re: [man-pages RFC PATCH v4] statx, inode: document the new STATX_INO_VERSION field

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Tue, 2022-09-27 at 08:43 +1000, NeilBrown wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Sep 2022, Jeff Layton wrote:
> > 
> > Absolutely. That is the downside of this approach, but the priority here
> > has always been to improve nfsd. If we don't get the ability to present
> > this info via statx, then so be it. Later on, I suppose we can move that
> > handling into the kernel in some fashion if we decide it's worthwhile.
> > 
> > That said, not having this in statx makes it more difficult to test
> > i_version behavior. Maybe we can add a generic ioctl for that in the
> > interim?
> 
> I wonder if we are over-thinking this, trying too hard, making "perfect"
> the enemy of "good".
> While we agree that the current implementation of i_version is
> imperfect, it isn't causing major data corruption all around the world.
> I don't think there are even any known bug reports are there?
> So while we do want to fix it as best we can, we don't need to make that
> the first priority.
> 
> I think the first priority should be to document how we want it to work,
> which is what this thread is really all about.  The documentation can
> note that some (all) filesystems do not provide perfect semantics across
> unclean restarts, and can list any other anomalies that we are aware of.
> And on that basis we can export the current i_version to user-space via
> statx and start trying to write some test code.
> 
> We can then look at moving the i_version/ctime update from *before* the
> write to *after* the write, and any other improvements that can be
> achieved easily in common code.  We can then update the man page to say
> "since Linux 6.42, this list of anomalies is no longer present".
> 
> Then we can explore some options for handling unclean restart - in a
> context where we can write tests and maybe even demonstrate a concrete
> problem before we start trying to fix it.
> 

We can also argue that crash resilience isn't a hard requirement for all
possible applications. We'll definitely need some sort of mitigation for
nfsd so we can claim that it's MONOTONIC [1], but local applications may
not care whether the value rolls backward after a crash, since they
would have presumably crashed as well and may not be persisting values.

IOW, I think I agree with Dave C. that crash resilience for regular
files is best handled at the application level (with the first
application being knfsd). RFC 7862 requires that the change_attr_type be
homogeneous across the entire filesystem, so we don't have the option of
deciding that on a per-inode basis. If we want to advertise it, we have
ensure that all inode types conform.

I think for nfsd, a crash counter tracked in userland by nfsdcld
multiplied by some large number of reasonable version bumps in a jiffy
would work well and allow us to go back to advertising the value as
MONOTONIC. That's a bit of a project though and may take a while.

For presentation via statx, maybe we can create a
STATX_ATTR_VERSION_MONOTONIC bit for stx_attributes for when the
filesystem can provide that sort of guarantee. I may just add that
internally for now anyway, since that would make for nicer layering.

[1]: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7862#section-12.2.3
-- 
Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>




[Index of Archives]     [CEPH Users]     [Ceph Large]     [Ceph Dev]     [Information on CEPH]     [Linux BTRFS]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux