On Sat, Apr 29, 2023 at 12:56:03AM -0400, Theodore Ts'o wrote: > On Sat, Apr 29, 2023 at 11:16:14AM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > > > bdi_unregister() is called in del_gendisk(), since bdi_register() has > > to be called in add_disk() where major/minor is figured out. > > > > > problem is that the block device shouldn't just *vanish*, with the > > > > That looks not realistic, removable disk can be gone any time, and device > > driver error handler often deletes disk as the last straw, and it shouldn't > > be hard to observe such error. > > It's not realistic to think that the file system can write back any > dirty pages, sure. At this point, the user has already yanked out the > thumb drive, and the physical device is gone. However, various fields > like bdi->dev shouldn't get deinitialized until after the > s_ops->shutdown() function has returned. > > We need to give the file system a chance to shutdown any pending > writebacks; otherwise, we could be racing with writeback happening in > some other kernel thread, and while the I/O is certainly not going to > suceed, it would be nice if attempts to write to the block device > return an error, intead potentially causing the kernel to crash. > > The shutdown function might need to sleep while it waits for > workqueues or kernel threads to exit, or while it iterates over all > inodes and clears all of the dirty bits and/or drop all of the pages > associated with the file system on the disconnected block device. So > while this happens, I/O should just fail, and not result in a kernel > BUG or oops. > > Once the s_ops->shutdown() has returned, then del_gendisk can shutdown > and/or deallocate anything it wants, and if the file system tries to > use the bdi after s_ops->shutdown() has returned, well, it deserves > anything it gets. > > (Well, it would be nice if things didn't bug/oops in fs/buffer.c if > there is no s_ops->shutdown() function, since there are a lot of > legacy file systems that use the buffer cache and until we can add > some kind of generic shutdown function to fs/libfs.c and make sure > that all of the legacy file systems that are likely to be used on a > USB thumb drive are fixed, it would be nice if they were protected. > At the very least, we should make that things are no worse than they > currently are.) > > - Ted > > P.S. Note that the semantics I've described here for > s_ops->shutdown() are slightly different than what the FS_IOC_SHUTDOWN > ioctl currently does. For example, after FS_IOC_SHUTDOWN, writes to > files will fail, but read to already open files will succeed. I know > this because the original ext4 shutdown implementation did actually > prevent reads from going through, but we got objections from those > that wanted ext4's FS_IOC_SHUTDOWN to work the same way as xfs's. <blink> Wot? The current XFS read IO path does this as it's first check: STATIC ssize_t xfs_file_read_iter( struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *to) { struct inode *inode = file_inode(iocb->ki_filp); struct xfs_mount *mp = XFS_I(inode)->i_mount; ssize_t ret = 0; XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_read_calls); if (xfs_is_shutdown(mp)) return -EIO; .... It's been this way since .... 1997 on Irix when forced shutdowns were introduced with this commit: commit a96958f0891133f2731094b455465e88c03a13fb Author: Supriya Wickrematillake <sup@xxxxxxx> Date: Sat Jan 25 02:55:04 1997 +0000 First cut of XFS I/O error handling changes. So, yeah, XFS *always* errors out user read IO after a shutdown. /me wonders what ext4 does static ssize_t ext4_file_read_iter(struct kiocb *iocb, struct iov_iter *to) { struct inode *inode = file_inode(iocb->ki_filp); if (unlikely(ext4_forced_shutdown(EXT4_SB(inode->i_sb)))) return -EIO; Huh. It does the same thing as XFS. I now have no idea what you are talking about now, Ted. Ah: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-ext4/20170203022224.idwexzwnqmbyskbj@xxxxxxxxx/ You explicitly mention readpage/readpages, which was the page fault IO path (address space ops, not file ops). These days we have xfs_vm_read_folio(), which goes through iomap, which then asks the filesystem to map the folio to the underlying storage for IO, which then calls xfs_read_iomap_begin(), and that does: static int xfs_read_iomap_begin( struct inode *inode, loff_t offset, loff_t length, unsigned flags, struct iomap *iomap, struct iomap *srcmap) { struct xfs_inode *ip = XFS_I(inode); struct xfs_mount *mp = ip->i_mount; struct xfs_bmbt_irec imap; xfs_fileoff_t offset_fsb = XFS_B_TO_FSBT(mp, offset); xfs_fileoff_t end_fsb = xfs_iomap_end_fsb(mp, offset, length); int nimaps = 1, error = 0; bool shared = false; unsigned int lockmode = XFS_ILOCK_SHARED; u64 seq; ASSERT(!(flags & (IOMAP_WRITE | IOMAP_ZERO))); if (xfs_is_shutdown(mp)) return -EIO; .... a shutdown check as it's first operation. I'm pretty sure that this has always been the case - for reading pages/folios through page faults, we've always errored those out in the block mapping callback function, not in the high level VFS interfacing functions. Yeah, looking at the old page based path from 2008: STATIC int xfs_vm_readpage( struct file *unused, struct page *page) { return mpage_readpage(page, xfs_get_blocks); } Call chain: mpage_readpage xfs_get_blocks __xfs_get_blocks xfs_iomap int xfs_iomap( .... { xfs_mount_t *mp = ip->i_mount; .... int iomap_flags = 0; ASSERT((ip->i_d.di_mode & S_IFMT) == S_IFREG); if (XFS_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(mp)) return XFS_ERROR(EIO); Yup, there's the shutdown check way back in the 2008 code base for the pagefault IO path. IOWs, we've always errored out any attempt to do IO via page faults after a shutdown, too. The XFS ->page_mkwrite() path also does a shutdown check as it's first operation, which leaves just read faults through filemap_fault as skipping the shutdown check. Yeah, so if the page is uptodate in the page cache, the fault still succeeds. This was left in place so that root filesystems might still be able to execute a system shutdown after the root filesystem was shut down. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't, but it doesn't hurt anything to let read page faults for cached data to succeed after a shutdown... That's trivial to change - just add a shutdown check before calling filemap_fault(). I just don't see a need to change that for XFS, and I don't care one way or another if other filesystems do something different here, either, as long as they don't issue read IO to the underlying device.... > So we have an out of tree patch for ext4's FS_IOC_SHUTDOWN > implementation in our kernels at $WORK, because we were using it when > we knew that the back-end server providing the iSCSI or remote block > had died, and we wanted to make sure our borg (think Kubernetes) jobs > would fast fail when they tried reading from the dead file system, as > opposed to failing only after some timeout had elapsed. Well, yeah. That's pretty much why XFS has failed all physical I/O attempts (read or write) after a shutdown for the past 25 years. Shutdowns on root filesystems are a bit nasty, though, because if you don't allow cached executables to run, the whole system dies instantly with no warning or ability to safely shutdown applications at all. > To avoid confusion, we should probably either use a different name > than s_ops->shutdown(), or add a new mode to FS_IOC_SHUTDOWN which > corresponds to "the block device is gone, shut *everything* down: > reads, writes, everything. Yup, that's pretty much what we already do for a shutdown, so I'm not sure what you are advocating for, Ted. If you add the shutdown check to the filemap_fault() path then even that last little "allow cached executables to still run on a shutdown root fs" helper goes away and then you have what you want... -Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx