On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 10:32:33PM -0400, Theodore Ts'o wrote: > On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 09:59:29AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > > Ah, you are testing pure overwrites, which means for ext4 the only > > thing it needs to care about is cached mappings. What happens when > > you add O_DSYNC here? > > I think you mean O_SYNC, right? No, I *explicitly* meant O_DSYNC. > In a pure overwrite case, where all > of the extents are initialized and where the Oracle or DB2 server is > doing writes to preallocated, pre-initialized space in the tablespace > file followed by fdatasync(), there *are* no post-I/O data integrity > operations which are required. Wrong: O_DSYNC DIO write IO requires the data to be on stable storage at IO completion. This means the pure overwrite IO must be either issued as a REQ_FUA write or as a normal write followed by a device cache flush. That device cache flush is a post-I/O data integrity operation and that is handled by iomap_dio_complete() -> generic_write_sync() -> vfs_fsync_range().... > If the file is opened O_SYNC or if the blocks were not > preallocated using fallocate(2) and not initialized ahead of time, > then sure, we can't use this optimization. Well, yes. That's the whole point of the IOMAP_F_DIRTY flag - if that is set, we don't attempt any pure overwrite optimisations because it's not a pure overwrite and metadata needs flushing to the journal. Hence we need to call generic_write_sync(). > What we might to do is to let the file system tell the iomap layer > via a flag whether or not there are no post-I/O metadata > operations required, and then *if* that flag is set, and *if* the > inode has no pages in the page cache (so there are no invalidate > operations necessary), it should be safe to skip using > queue_work(). That way, the file system has to affirmatively > state that it is safe to skip the workqueue, so it shouldn't do > any harm to other file systems using the iomap DIO layer. > > What am I missing? You didn't read my followup email. IOMAP_F_DIRTY is the flag you describe, and it already exists. -Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx