On 05/19/2018 08:29 PM, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > On Thu, Feb 08, 2018 at 12:59:48PM -0600, Goldwyn Rodrigues wrote: >> From: Goldwyn Rodrigues <rgoldwyn@xxxxxxxx> >> >> In case direct I/O encounters an error midway, it returns the error. >> Instead it should be returning the number of bytes transferred so far. >> >> Test case for filesystems (with ENOSPC): >> 1. Create an almost full filesystem >> 2. Create a file, say /mnt/lastfile, until the filesystem is full. >> 3. Direct write() with count > sizeof /mnt/lastfile. >> >> Result: write() returns -ENOSPC. However, file content has data written >> in step 3. >> >> Added a sysctl entry: dio_short_writes which is on by default. This is >> to support applications which expect either and error or the bytes submitted >> as a return value for the write calls. >> >> This fixes fstest generic/472. >> >> Signed-off-by: Goldwyn Rodrigues <rgoldwyn@xxxxxxxx> > > Hi, > > I was wondering if you could give an update regarding what's up with > this patch? > > There doesn't seem to be any movement on this patch in a while, and so > I still have xfstests generic/472 suppressed in {kvm,gce}-xfstests. > >From earlier discussions, In between errors of a direct I/O cannot be handled correctly and may need a lot of tracking that it is not worth performing. It would be better to drop this test case and add in the documentation that a direct I/O error could mean that the write() may or may not have occurred and underlying data may be inconsistent. I am proposing: diff --git a/man2/write.2 b/man2/write.2 index f8a94f3ff..86f655e26 100644 --- a/man2/write.2 +++ b/man2/write.2 @@ -274,6 +274,14 @@ On Linux, returning the number of bytes actually transferred. .\" commit e28cc71572da38a5a12c1cfe4d7032017adccf69 (This is true on both 32-bit and 64-bit systems.) +.PP +While performing +.BR write() +using direct I/O, an error returned does not mean the +entire write has failed. Partial data may be written +and the file offset to length on which the +.BR write() +was attempted should be considered inconsistent. .SH BUGS According to POSIX.1-2008/SUSv4 Section XSI 2.9.7 ("Thread Interactions with Regular File Operations"): -- Goldwyn