Hi, On Mon, 2011-12-19 at 17:03 +0100, Miklos Szeredi wrote: > On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 3:38 PM, Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hi, > > > > On Sat, 2011-12-17 at 07:36 +0000, Al Viro wrote: > >> On Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 12:11:32PM +0100, Miklos Szeredi wrote: > >> > @@ -241,6 +242,11 @@ void __destroy_inode(struct inode *inode) > >> > BUG_ON(inode_has_buffers(inode)); > >> > security_inode_free(inode); > >> > fsnotify_inode_delete(inode); > >> > + if (!inode->i_nlink) { > >> > + WARN_ON(atomic_long_read(&inode->i_sb->s_remove_count) == 0); > >> > + atomic_long_dec(&inode->i_sb->s_remove_count); > >> > + } > >> > >> Umm... That relies on ->destroy_inode() doing nothing stupid; granted, > >> all work on actual file removal should've been done in ->evice_inode() > >> leaving only (RCU'd) freeing of in-core, but there are odd ones that > >> do strange things in ->destroy_inode() and I'm not sure that it's not > >> a Yet Another Remount Race(tm). OTOH, it's clearly not worse than what > >> we used to have; just something to keep in mind for future work. > >> > > GFS2 is one of those cases. The issue is that when we enter > > ->evict_inode() with i_nlink 0, we do not know whether any other node > > still has the inode open. If it does, then we do not deallocate it in > > ->evict_inode() but instead just forget about it, just as if i_nlink was > >> 0 leaving the remaining opener(s) to do the deallocation later, > > And does GFS2 care about read-only remount races because of that? > I.e. if an unlinked file is still open on another node, should we > prevent remounting read-only until it the file is released and > actually gone? > > If that's not a requirement (and I don't see why it should be) then all is fine. > > Thanks, > Miklos Ok. Good, we don't need to worry about that. We can support any mix of read-write, and read-only nodes with the caveat that a cluster with only one read-write node will have no other node to perform recovery for it, should it fail. Also, since read-only nodes cannot deallocate inodes (even if they are the last openers of a file) then they will simply ignore such inodes, and wait for the next read-write node to perform an allocation in that resource group, whereupon the deallocation will be completed. So remounting read-only is a purely local operation so far as GFS2 is concerned, Steve. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html