On Tue, 2017-04-04 at 10:09 -0700, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Tue, Apr 04, 2017 at 12:25:46PM -0400, Jeff Layton wrote: > > That said, I think giving more specific errors where we can is useful. > > When your program is erroring out and writing 'I/O error' to the logs, > > then how much time will your admins burn before they figure out that it > > really failed because the filesystem was full? > > df is one of the first things I check ... a few years ago, I also learned > to check df -i ... ;-) > > Anyway, given the decision to simply report the last error lets us do this > implementation: > > void filemap_set_wb_error(struct address_space *mapping, int err) > { > struct inode *inode = mapping->host; > unsigned int wb_err; > > if (!err) > return; > /* > * This should be called with the error code that we want to return > * on fsync. Thus, it should always be <= 0. > */ > WARN_ON(err > 0 || err < -MAX_ERRNO); > > spin_lock(&inode->i_lock); > wb_err = ((mapping->wb_err & ~MAX_ERRNO) + (1 << 12)) | -err; > WRITE_ONCE(mapping->wb_err, wb_err); Do we need the WRITE_ONCE, given that you're under a spinlock there? > spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock); > } > > int filemap_report_wb_error(struct file *file) > { > struct inode *inode = file_inode(file); > unsigned int wb_err = READ_ONCE(mapping->wb_err); > > if (file->f_wb_err == wb_err) > return 0; > return -(wb_err & 4095); > } > > That only gives us 20 bits of counter, but I think that's enough. That'd be fine with me, but I'm all for allowing filesystems to return arbitrary writeback errors on fsync. Others may have different opinions there. We could add a wrapper function that sanitizes the error codes if some filesystems wanted that though. -- Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>