On 6/1/23 13:50, Miklos Szeredi wrote: > On Thu, 1 Jun 2023 at 13:17, Bernd Schubert <bschubert@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hi Miklos, >> >> On 5/19/22 11:39, Miklos Szeredi wrote: >>> On Tue, 17 May 2022 at 12:08, Dharmendra Singh <dharamhans87@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> >>>> In FUSE, as of now, uncached lookups are expensive over the wire. >>>> E.g additional latencies and stressing (meta data) servers from >>>> thousands of clients. These lookup calls possibly can be avoided >>>> in some cases. Incoming three patches address this issue. >>>> >>>> >>>> Fist patch handles the case where we are creating a file with O_CREAT. >>>> Before we go for file creation, we do a lookup on the file which is most >>>> likely non-existent. After this lookup is done, we again go into libfuse >>>> to create file. Such lookups where file is most likely non-existent, can >>>> be avoided. >>> >>> I'd really like to see a bit wider picture... >>> >>> We have several cases, first of all let's look at plain O_CREAT >>> without O_EXCL (assume that there were no changes since the last >>> lookup for simplicity): >>> >>> [not cached, negative] >>> ->atomic_open() >>> LOOKUP >>> CREATE >>> >> >> [...] >> >>> [not cached] >>> ->atomic_open() >>> OPEN_ATOMIC >> >> new patch version is eventually going through xfstests (and it finds >> some issues), but I have a question about wording here. Why >> "OPEN_ATOMIC" and not "ATOMIC_OPEN". Based on your comment @Dharmendra >> renamed all functions and this fuse op "open atomic" instead of "atomic >> open" - for my non native English this sounds rather weird. At best it >> should be "open atomically"? > > FUSE_OPEN_ATOMIC is a specialization of FUSE_OPEN. Does that explain > my thinking? Yeah, just the vfs function is also called atomic_open. We now have static int fuse_atomic_open(struct inode *dir, struct dentry *entry, struct file *file, unsigned flags, umode_t mode) { struct fuse_conn *fc = get_fuse_conn(dir); if (fc->no_open_atomic) return fuse_open_nonatomic(dir, entry, file, flags, mode); else return fuse_open_atomic(dir, entry, file, flags, mode); } Personally I would use something like _fuse_atomic_open() and fuse_create_open() (instead of fuse_open_nonatomic). The order of "open atomic" also made it into libfuse and comments - it just sounds a bit weird ;) I have to live with it, if you prefer it like this. Thanks, Bernd