On Apr 7, 2019, at 2:13 PM, Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Sun, Apr 07, 2019 at 01:10:55PM -0500, Eric Sandeen wrote: >> On 4/6/19 6:27 PM, Theodore Ts'o wrote: >>> On Mon, Apr 01, 2019 at 09:55:19PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote: >>>> >>>> When Ted is done laughing, I really would like to consider something >>>> like this to solve the problem of grub-style bootloaders requiring a >>>> lease on the blocks underneath a file with a term exceeding that of the >>>> running kernel. >>>> >>>> We can probably skip the harsh synchronous writes in favor of fsync on >>>> close, but we would need to keep the critical component of checkpointing >>>> the journal on fsync and syncfs. >>> >>> At least for ext4, we don't need to add anything new, since FIFREEZE >>> force a journal checkpoint. So we could try to get a patch into grub >>> which causes update_grub to open each kernel that it finds, and calls >>> fsync(2) on it, and then for all file systems where it finds a kernel, >>> it can call FIFREEZE and FITHAW on it, and that would be that. >> >> Certain operating systems have hacked this in. My concern would be when >> /boot is on / ... calling FIFREEZE on the root fs would most likely be >> a bad thing. Certain operating systems avoid calling FIFREEZE for >> /boot-on-root. ;) >> >> Doing it for a standalone /boot seems like a reasonable (if hacky) >> workaround as long as we lack a more targeted quiesce interface... > > The other problem we noticed is that neither the grub scripts nor the > rpm package scripts bother to call fsync on the files they write (or > sync after they're done to mop up after everyone else), so I figured as > long as I'm ("jokingly") working around it all in kernel space, why not > just go all the way? :P > > Ok, I'll go work on an ioctl or something. If Grub isn't even bothering to call fsync() on a file, what is the chance that they would call a special ioctl on the file? What about doing "chattr +S /boot" so that all file IO in this directory is done synchronously, which would work even if /boot is not on a separate filesystem? The "+S" flag is inherited by new files created in the directory. Cheers, Andreas
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