On Mon, Dec 04, 2023 at 09:02:56AM +0000, John Garry wrote: > On 01/12/2023 22:07, Dave Chinner wrote: > > > Sure, and I think that we need a better story for supporting buffered IO for > > > atomic writes. > > > > > > Currently we have: > > > - man pages tell us RWF_ATOMIC is only supported for direct IO > > > - statx gives atomic write unit min/max, not explicitly telling us it's for > > > direct IO > > > - RWF_ATOMIC is ignored for !O_DIRECT > > > > > > So I am thinking of expanding statx support to enable querying of atomic > > > write capabilities for buffered IO and direct IO separately. > > You're over complicating this way too much by trying to restrict the > > functionality down to just what you want to implement right now. > > > > RWF_ATOMIC is no different to RWF_NOWAIT. The API doesn't decide > > what can be supported - the filesystems themselves decide what part > > of the API they can support and implement those pieces. > > Sure, but for RWF_ATOMIC we still have the associated statx call to tell us > whether atomic writes are supported for a file and the specific range > capability. > > > > > TO go back to RWF_NOWAIT, for a long time we (XFS) only supported > > RWF_NOWAIT on DIO, and buffered reads and writes were given > > -EOPNOTSUPP by the filesystem. Then other filesystems started > > supporting DIO with RWF_NOWAIT. Then buffered read support was added > > to the page cache and XFS, and as other filesystems were converted > > they removed the RWF_NOWAIT exclusion check from their read IO > > paths. > > > > We are now in the same place with buffered write support for > > RWF_NOWAIT. XFS, the page cache and iomap allow buffered writes w/ > > RWF_NOWAIT, but ext4, btrfs and f2fs still all return -EOPNOTSUPP > > because they don't support non-blocking buffered writes yet. > > > > This is the same model we should be applying with RWF_ATOMIC - we > > know that over time we'll be able to expand support for atomic > > writes across both direct and buffered IO, so we should not be > > restricting the API or infrastructure to only allow RWF_ATOMIC w/ > > DIO. > > Agreed. > > > Just have the filesystems reject RWF_ATOMIC w/ -EOPNOTSUPP if > > they don't support it, > > Yes, I was going to add this regardless. > > > and for those that do it is conditional on > > whther the filesystem supports it for the given type of IO being > > done. > > > > Seriously - an application can easily probe for RWF_ATOMIC support > > without needing information to be directly exposed in statx() - just > > open a O_TMPFILE, issue the type of RWF_ATOMIC IO you require to be > > supported, and if it returns -EOPNOTSUPP then it you can't use > > RWF_ATOMIC optimisations in the application.... > > ok, if that is the done thing. > > So I can't imagine that atomic write unit range will be different for direct > IO and buffered IO (ignoring for a moment Christoph's idea for CoW always > for no HW offload) when supported. But it seems that we may have a scenario > where statx tells is that atomic writes are supported for a file, and a DIO > write succeeds and a buffered IO write may return -EOPNOTSUPP. If that's > acceptable then I'll work towards that. > > If we could just run statx on a file descriptor here then that would be > simpler... statx(fd, "", AT_EMPTY_PATH, ...); ? --D > Thanks, > John > > >