On Sat, Jun 03, 2023 at 11:57:48AM -0400, Mike Snitzer wrote: > On Fri, Jun 02 2023 at 8:52P -0400, > Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Fri, Jun 02, 2023 at 11:44:27AM -0700, Sarthak Kukreti wrote: > > > On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 8:28 AM Mike Snitzer <snitzer@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > On Tue, May 30 2023 at 10:55P -0400, > > > > Joe Thornber <thornber@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > On Tue, May 30, 2023 at 3:02 PM Mike Snitzer <snitzer@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Also Joe, for you proposed dm-thinp design where you distinquish > > > > > > between "provision" and "reserve": Would it make sense for REQ_META > > > > > > (e.g. all XFS metadata) with REQ_PROVISION to be treated as an > > > > > > LBA-specific hard request? Whereas REQ_PROVISION on its own provides > > > > > > more freedom to just reserve the length of blocks? (e.g. for XFS > > > > > > delalloc where LBA range is unknown, but dm-thinp can be asked to > > > > > > reserve space to accomodate it). > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > My proposal only involves 'reserve'. Provisioning will be done as part of > > > > > the usual io path. > > > > > > > > OK, I think we'd do well to pin down the top-level block interfaces in > > > > question. Because this patchset's block interface patch (2/5) header > > > > says: > > > > > > > > "This patch also adds the capability to call fallocate() in mode 0 > > > > on block devices, which will send REQ_OP_PROVISION to the block > > > > device for the specified range," > > > > > > > > So it wires up blkdev_fallocate() to call blkdev_issue_provision(). A > > > > user of XFS could then use fallocate() for user data -- which would > > > > cause thinp's reserve to _not_ be used for critical metadata. > > > > Mike, I think you might have misunderstood what I have been proposing. > > Possibly unintentionally, I didn't call it REQ_OP_PROVISION but > > that's what I intended - the operation does not contain data at all. > > It's an operation like REQ_OP_DISCARD or REQ_OP_WRITE_ZEROS - it > > contains a range of sectors that need to be provisioned (or > > discarded), and nothing else. > > No, I understood that. > > > The write IOs themselves are not tagged with anything special at all. > > I know, but I've been looking at how to also handle the delalloc > usecase (and yes I know you feel it doesn't need handling, the issue > is XFS does deal nicely with ensuring it has space when it tracks its > allocations on "thick" storage Oh, no it doesn't. It -works for most cases-, but that does not mean it provides any guarantees at all. We can still get ENOSPC for user data when delayed allocation reservations "run out". This may be news to you, but the ephemeral XFS delayed allocation space reservation is not accurate. It contains a "fudge factor" called "indirect length". This is a "wet finger in the wind" estimation of how much new metadata will need to be allocated to index the physical allocations when they are made. It assumes large data extents are allocated, which is good enough for most cases, but it is no guarantee when there are no large data extents available to allocate (e.g. near ENOSPC!). And therein lies the fundamental problem with ephemeral range reservations: at the time of reservation, we don't know how many individual physical LBA ranges the reserved data range is actually going to span. As a result, XFS delalloc reservations are a "close-but-not-quite" reservation backed by a global reserve pool that can be dipped into if we run out of delalloc reservation. If the reserve pool is then fully depleted before all delalloc conversion completes, we'll still give ENOSPC. The pool is sized such that the vast majority of workloads will complete delalloc conversion successfully before the pool is depleted. Hence XFS gives everyone the -appearance- that it deals nicely with ENOSPC conditions, but it never provides a -guarantee- that any accepted write will always succeed without ENOSPC. IMO, using this "close-but-not-quite" reservation as the basis of space requirements for other layers to provide "won't ENOSPC" guarantees is fraught with problems. We already know that it is insufficient in important corner cases at the filesystem level, and we also know that lower layers trying to do ephemeral space reservations will have exactly the same problems providing a guarantee. And these are problems we've been unable to engineer around in the past, so the likelihood we can engineer around them now or in the future is also very unlikely. > -- so adding coordination between XFS > and dm-thin layers provides comparable safety.. that safety is an > expected norm). > > But rather than discuss in terms of data vs metadata, the distinction > is: > 1) LBA range reservation (normal case, your proposal) > 2) non-LBA reservation (absolute value, LBA range is known at later stage) > > But I'm clearly going off script for dwelling on wanting to handle > both. Right, because if we do 1) then we don't need 2). :) > My looking at (ab)using REQ_META being set (use 1) vs not (use 2) was > a crude simplification for branching between the 2 approaches. > > And I understand I made you nervous by expanding the scope to a much > more muddled/shitty interface. ;) Nervous? No, I'm simply trying to make sure that everyone is on the same page. i.e. that if we water down the guarantee that 1) relies on, then it's not actually useful to filesystems at all. > > It's just not practical for the block device to add arbitrary > > constraints based on the type of IO because we then have to add > > mechanisms to userspace APIs to allow them to control the IO context > > so the block device will do the right thing. Especially considering > > we really only need one type of guarantee regardless of where the IO > > originates from or what type of data the IO contains.... > > If anything my disposition on the conditional to require a REQ_META > (or some fallocate generated REQ_UNSHARE ditto to reflect the same) to > perform your approach to REQ_OP_PROVISION and honor fallocate() > requirements is a big problem. Would be much better to have a flag to > express "this reservation does not have an LBA range _yet_, > nevertheless try to be mindful of this expected near-term block > allocation". And that's where all the complexity starts ;) > > Put simply: if we restrict REQ_OP_PROVISION guarantees to just > > REQ_META writes (or any other specific type of write operation) then > > it's simply not worth persuing at the filesystem level because the > > guarantees we actually need just aren't there and the complexity of > > discovering and handling those corner cases just isn't worth the > > effort. > > Here is where I get to say: I think you misunderstood me (but it was > my fault for not being absolutely clear: I'm very much on the same > page as you and Joe; and your visions need to just be implemented > ASAP). OK, good that we've clarified the misunderstandings on both sides quickly :) > I was taking your designs as a given, but looking further at: how do > we also handle the non-LBA (delalloc) usecase _before_ we include > REQ_OP_PROVISION in kernel. > > But I'm happy to let the delalloc case go (we can revisit addressing > it if/when needed). Again, I really don't think filesystem delalloc ranges ever need to be covered by block device provisioning guarantees because the filesystem itself provides no guarantees for unprovisioned writes. I suspect that if, in future, we want to manage unprovisioned space in different ways, we're better off taking this sort of approach: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20171026083322.20428-1-david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/ because using grow/shrink to manage the filesystem's unprovisioned space if far, far simpler than trying to use dynamic, cross layer ephemeral reservations. Indeed, with the block device filesystem shutdown path Christoph recently posted, we have a model for adding in-kernel filesystem control interfaces for block devices... There's something to be said for turning everything upside down occasionally. :) Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx