On Tue, Aug 16, 2022 at 10:42:29AM -0600, Andreas Dilger wrote: > > IMHO, this whole discussion is putting the cart before the horse. > Changing existing (and useful) IO behavior to accommodate an API that > nobody has ever used, and is unlikely to even be widely used, doesn't > make sense to me. Most applications won't check or care about the new > DIO size fields, since they've lived this long without statx() returning > this info, and will just pick a "large enough" size (4KB, 1MB, whatever) > that gives them the performance they need. They *WILL* care if the app > is suddenly unable to read data from a file in ways that have worked for > a long time. > > Even if apps are modified to check these new DIO size fields, and then > try to DIO write to a file in f2fs that doesn't allow it, then f2fs will > return an error, which is what it would have done without the statx() > changes, so no harm done AFAICS. > > Even with a more-complex DIO status return that handles a "direction" > field (which IMHO is needlessly complex), there is always the potential > for a TOCTOU race where a file changes between checking and access, so > the userspace code would need to handle this. > I'm having trouble making sense of your argument here; you seem to be saying that STATX_DIOALIGN isn't useful, so it doesn't matter if we design it correctly? That line of reasoning is concerning, as it's certainly intended to be useful, and if it's not useful there's no point in adding it. Are there any specific concerns that you have, besides TOCTOU races and the lack of support for read-only DIO? I don't think that TOCTOU races are a real concern here. Generally DIO constraints would only change if the application doing DIO intentionally does something to the file, or if there are changes that involve the filesystem being taken offline, e.g. the filesystem being mounted with significantly different options or being moved to a different block device. And, well, everything else in stat()/statx() is subject to TOCTOU as well, but is still used... - Eric