On Tue, Jun 26, 2007 at 04:02:47PM +0530, Amit K. Arora wrote: > > Can you clarify - what is the current behaviour when ENOSPC (or some other > > error) is hit? Does it keep the current fallocate() or does it free it? > > Currently it is left on the file system implementation. In ext4, we do > not undo preallocation if some error (say, ENOSPC) is hit. Hence it may > end up with partial (pre)allocation. This is inline with dd and > posix_fallocate, which also do not free the partially allocated space. I can't find anything in the specification of posix_fallocate (http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/posix_fallocate.html) that tells what should happen to allocate blocks on error. But common sense would be to not leak disk space on failure of this syscall, and this definitively should not be left up to the filesystem, either we always leak it or always free it, and I'd strongly favour the latter variant. > > For FA_ZERO_SPACE - I'd think this would (IMHO) be the default - we > > don't want to expose uninitialized disk blocks to userspace. I'm not > > sure if this makes sense at all. > > I don't think we need to make it default - atleast for filesystems which > have a mechanism to distinguish preallocated blocks from "regular" ones. > In ext4, for example, we will have a way to mark uninitialized extents. > All the preallocated blocks will be part of these uninitialized extents. > And any read on these extents will treat them as a hole, returning > zeroes to user land. Thus any existing data on uninitialized blocks will > not be exposed to the userspace. This is the xfs unwritten extent behaviour. But anyway, the important bit is uninitialized blocks should never ever leak to userspace, so there is not need for the flag. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html