On Sat, Jul 25, 2020 at 10:14:41AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > > +bool fscrypt_dio_supported(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *iter) > > +{ > > + const struct inode *inode = file_inode(iocb->ki_filp); > > + const unsigned int blocksize = i_blocksize(inode); > > + > > + /* If the file is unencrypted, no veto from us. */ > > + if (!fscrypt_needs_contents_encryption(inode)) > > + return true; > > + > > + /* We only support direct I/O with inline crypto, not fs-layer crypto */ > > + if (!fscrypt_inode_uses_inline_crypto(inode)) > > + return false; > > + > > + /* > > + * Since the granularity of encryption is filesystem blocks, the I/O > > + * must be block aligned -- not just disk sector aligned. > > + */ > > + if (!IS_ALIGNED(iocb->ki_pos | iov_iter_alignment(iter), blocksize)) > > + return false; > > Doesn't this force user buffers to be filesystem block size aligned, > instead of 512 byte aligned as is typical for direct IO? > > That's going to cause applications that work fine on normal > filesystems becaues the memalign() buffers to 512 bytes or logical > block device sector sizes (as per the open(2) man page) to fail on > encrypted volumes, and it's not going to be obvious to users as to > why this happens. The status quo is that direct I/O on encrypted files falls back to buffered I/O. So this patch is strictly an improvement; it's making direct I/O work in a case where previously it didn't work. > > XFS has XFS_IOC_DIOINFO to expose exactly this information to > userspace on a per-file basis. Other filesystem and VFS developers > have said for the past 15 years "we don't need no stinking DIOINFO". > The same people shot down adding optional IO alignment > constraint fields to statx() a few years ago, too. > > Yet here were are again, with alignment of DIO buffers being an > issue that userspace needs to know about.... > A DIOINFO ioctl sounds like a good idea to me, although I'm not familiar with previous discussions about it. Note that there are lots of other cases where ext4 and f2fs fall back to buffered I/O; see ext4_dio_supported() and f2fs_force_buffered_io(). So this isn't a new problem. - Eric