On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 6:29 AM, Joe Thornber <thornber@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 03:05:07PM +0000, OS Engineering wrote: > > ... > >> Dm-cache commits on-disk metadata every time a REQ_SYNC or REQ_FUA >> bio is written. If no such requests are made then it commits >> metadata once every second. If power is lost, it may lose some >> recent writes. > > Not true (though it is true for thinp, which may be where you got this > idea?). For caching we have to commit whenever data is moved about, > otherwise a crash could result in us reading data that is not just out > of date (acceptable for some), but used to belong to a totally > different part of the device (always unacceptable). > > - Joe (Apologies if this is received multiple times -- I forgot to disable HTML the first time) Hi Joe, In Documentation/device-mapper/cache.txt, is this text out of date? On-disk metadata is committed every time a REQ_SYNC or REQ_FUA bio is written. If no such requests are made then commits will occur every second. This means the cache behaves like a physical disk that has a write cache (the same is true of the thin-provisioning target). If power is lost you may lose some recent writes. The metadata should always be consistent in spite of any crash. You say that this is the case for thinp, however. Does that mean that it's not possible to get stable writes with dm-thin without using cache-control commands? I don't see any documentation to this effect. If so, are there any plans to change this behavior (or make it configurable)? Thanks, -Michael -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel