Hi Darrick, Am So., 2. Dez. 2018 um 19:13 Uhr schrieb Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@xxxxxxxxxx>: > From: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@xxxxxxxxxx> > > In commit 4721a601099, we tried to fix a problem wherein directio reads > into a splice pipe will bounce EFAULT/EAGAIN all the way out to > userspace by simulating a zero-byte short read. This happens because > some directio read implementations (xfs) will call > bio_iov_iter_get_pages to grab pipe buffer pages and issue asynchronous > reads, but as soon as we run out of pipe buffers that _get_pages call > returns EFAULT, which the splice code translates to EAGAIN and bounces > out to userspace. > > In that commit, the iomap code catches the EFAULT and simulates a > zero-byte read, but that causes assertion errors on regular splice reads > because xfs doesn't allow short directio reads. This causes infinite > splice() loops and assertion failures on generic/095 on overlayfs > because xfs only permit total success or total failure of a directio > operation. The underlying issue in the pipe splice code has now been > fixed by changing the pipe splice loop to avoid avoid reading more data > than there is space in the pipe. > > Therefore, it's no longer necessary to simulate the short directio, so > remove the hack from iomap. > > Fixes: 4721a601099 ("iomap: dio data corruption and spurious errors when pipes fill") > Reported-by: Amir Goldstein <amir73il@xxxxxxxxx> > Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > v2: split into two patches per hch request > --- > fs/iomap.c | 9 --------- > 1 file changed, 9 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/fs/iomap.c b/fs/iomap.c > index 3ffb776fbebe..d6bc98ae8d35 100644 > --- a/fs/iomap.c > +++ b/fs/iomap.c > @@ -1877,15 +1877,6 @@ iomap_dio_rw(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *iter, > dio->wait_for_completion = true; > ret = 0; > } > - > - /* > - * Splicing to pipes can fail on a full pipe. We have to > - * swallow this to make it look like a short IO > - * otherwise the higher splice layers will completely > - * mishandle the error and stop moving data. > - */ > - if (ret == -EFAULT) > - ret = 0; > break; > } > pos += ret; I'm afraid this breaks the following test case on xfs and gfs2, the two current users of iomap_dio_rw. Here, the splice system call fails with errno = EAGAIN when trying to "move data" from a file opened with O_DIRECT into a pipe. The test case can be run with option -d to not use O_DIRECT, which makes the test succeed. The -r option switches from reading from the pipe sequentially to reading concurrently with the splice, which doesn't change the behavior. Any thoughts? Thanks, Andreas =================================== 8< =================================== #define _GNU_SOURCE #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <sys/wait.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <fcntl.h> #include <err.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdbool.h> #include <string.h> #include <errno.h> #define SECTOR_SIZE 512 #define BUFFER_SIZE (150 * SECTOR_SIZE) void read_from_pipe(int fd, const char *filename, size_t size) { char buffer[SECTOR_SIZE]; size_t sz; ssize_t ret; while (size) { sz = size; if (sz > sizeof buffer) sz = sizeof buffer; ret = read(fd, buffer, sz); if (ret < 0) err(1, "read: %s", filename); if (ret == 0) { fprintf(stderr, "read: %s: unexpected EOF\n", filename); exit(1); } size -= sz; } } void do_splice1(int fd, const char *filename, size_t size) { bool retried = false; int pipefd[2]; if (pipe(pipefd) == -1) err(1, "pipe"); while (size) { ssize_t spliced; spliced = splice(fd, NULL, pipefd[1], NULL, size, SPLICE_F_MOVE); if (spliced == -1) { if (errno == EAGAIN && !retried) { retried = true; fprintf(stderr, "retrying splice\n"); sleep(1); continue; } err(1, "splice"); } read_from_pipe(pipefd[0], filename, spliced); size -= spliced; } close(pipefd[0]); close(pipefd[1]); } void do_splice2(int fd, const char *filename, size_t size) { bool retried = false; int pipefd[2]; int pid; if (pipe(pipefd) == -1) err(1, "pipe"); pid = fork(); if (pid == 0) { close(pipefd[1]); read_from_pipe(pipefd[0], filename, size); exit(0); } else { close(pipefd[0]); while (size) { ssize_t spliced; spliced = splice(fd, NULL, pipefd[1], NULL, size, SPLICE_F_MOVE); if (spliced == -1) { if (errno == EAGAIN && !retried) { retried = true; fprintf(stderr, "retrying splice\n"); sleep(1); continue; } err(1, "splice"); } size -= spliced; } close(pipefd[1]); waitpid(pid, NULL, 0); } } void usage(const char *argv0) { fprintf(stderr, "USAGE: %s [-rd] {filename}\n", basename(argv0)); exit(2); } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { void (*do_splice)(int fd, const char *filename, size_t size); const char *filename; char *buffer; int opt, open_flags, fd; ssize_t ret; do_splice = do_splice1; open_flags = O_CREAT | O_TRUNC | O_RDWR | O_DIRECT; while ((opt = getopt(argc, argv, "rd")) != -1) { switch(opt) { case 'r': do_splice = do_splice2; break; case 'd': open_flags &= ~O_DIRECT; break; default: /* '?' */ usage(argv[0]); } } if (optind >= argc) usage(argv[0]); filename = argv[optind]; printf("%s reader %s O_DIRECT\n", do_splice == do_splice1 ? "sequential" : "concurrent", (open_flags & O_DIRECT) ? "with" : "without"); buffer = aligned_alloc(SECTOR_SIZE, BUFFER_SIZE); if (buffer == NULL) err(1, "aligned_alloc"); fd = open(filename, open_flags, 0666); if (fd == -1) err(1, "open: %s", filename); memset(buffer, 'x', BUFFER_SIZE); ret = write(fd, buffer, BUFFER_SIZE); if (ret < 0) err(1, "write: %s", filename); if (ret != BUFFER_SIZE) { fprintf(stderr, "%s: short write\n", filename); exit(1); } ret = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_SET); if (ret != 0) err(1, "lseek: %s", filename); do_splice(fd, filename, BUFFER_SIZE); if (unlink(filename) == -1) err(1, "unlink: %s", filename); return 0; } =================================== 8< ===================================