Re: [PATCH RFC 2/9] timekeeping: new interfaces for multigrain timestamp handing

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On Tue, 2023-10-31 at 09:37 +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 27, 2023 at 06:35:58AM -0400, Jeff Layton wrote:
> > On Thu, 2023-10-26 at 13:20 +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > On Wed, Oct 25, 2023 at 08:25:35AM -0400, Jeff Layton wrote:
> > > > On Wed, 2023-10-25 at 19:05 +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > > > > On Tue, Oct 24, 2023 at 02:40:06PM -0400, Jeff Layton wrote:
> > > > In earlier discussions you alluded to some repair and/or analysis tools
> > > > that depended on this counter.
> > > 
> > > Yes, and one of those "tools" is *me*.
> > > 
> > > I frequently look at the di_changecount when doing forensic and/or
> > > failure analysis on filesystem corpses.  SOE analysis, relative
> > > modification activity, etc all give insight into what happened to
> > > the filesystem to get it into the state it is currently in, and
> > > di_changecount provides information no other metadata in the inode
> > > contains.
> > > 
> > > > I took a quick look in xfsprogs, but I
> > > > didn't see anything there. Is there a library or something that these
> > > > tools use to get at this value?
> > > 
> > > xfs_db is the tool I use for this, such as:
> > > 
> > > $ sudo xfs_db -c "sb 0" -c "a rootino" -c "p v3.change_count" /dev/mapper/fast
> > > v3.change_count = 35
> > > $
> > > 
> > > The root inode in this filesystem has a change count of 35. The root
> > > inode has 32 dirents in it, which means that no entries have ever
> > > been removed or renamed. This sort of insight into the past history
> > > of inode metadata is largely impossible to get any other way, and
> > > it's been the difference between understanding failure and having no
> > > clue more than once.
> > > 
> > > Most block device parsing applications simply write their own
> > > decoder that walks the on-disk format. That's pretty trivial to do,
> > > developers can get all the information needed to do this from the
> > > on-disk format specification documentation we keep on kernel.org...
> > > 
> > 
> > Fair enough. I'm not here to tell you that you guys that you need to
> > change how di_changecount works. If it's too valuable to keep it
> > counting atime-only updates, then so be it.
> > 
> > If that's the case however, and given that the multigrain timestamp work
> > is effectively dead, then I don't see an alternative to growing the on-
> > disk inode. Do you?
> 
> Yes, I do see alternatives. That's what I've been trying
> (unsuccessfully) to describe and get consensus on. I feel like I'm
> being ignored and rail-roaded here, because nobody is even
> acknowledging that I'm proposing alternatives and keeps insisting
> that the only solution is a change of on-disk format.
> 
> So, I'll summarise the situation *yet again* in the hope that this
> time I won't get people arguing about atime vs i-version and what
> constitutes an on-disk format change because that goes nowhere and
> does nothing to determine which solution might be acceptible.
> 
> The basic situation is this:
> 
> If XFS can ignore relatime or lazytime persistent updates for given
> situations, then *we don't need to make periodic on-disk updates of
> atime*. This makes the whole problem of "persistent atime update bumps
> i_version" go away because then we *aren't making persistent atime
> updates* except when some other persistent modification that bumps
> [cm]time occurs.
> 
> But I don't want to do this unconditionally - for systems not
> running anything that samples i_version we want relatime/lazytime
> to behave as they are supposed to and do periodic persistent updates
> as per normal. Principle of least surprise and all that jazz.
> 
> So we really need an indication for inodes that we should enable this
> mode for the inode. I have asked if we can have per-operation
> context flag to trigger this given the needs for io_uring to have
> context flags for timestamp updates to be added. 
> 
> I have asked if we can have an inode flag set by the VFS or
> application code for this. e.g. a flag set by nfsd whenever it accesses a
> given inode.
> 
> I have asked if this inode flag can just be triggered if we ever see
> I_VERSION_QUERIED set or statx is used to retrieve a change cookie,
> and whether this is a reliable mechanism for setting such a flag.
> 

Ok, so to make sure I understand what you're proposing:

This would be a new inode flag that would be set in conjunction with
I_VERSION_QUERIED (but presumably is never cleared)? When XFS sees this
flag set, it would skip sending the atime to disk.

Given that you want to avoid on-disk changes, I assume this flag will
not be stored on disk. What happens after the NFS server reboots?

Consider:

1/ NFS server queries for the i_version and we set the
I_NO_ATIME_UPDATES_ON_DISK flag (or whatever) in conjunction with
I_VERSION_QUERIED. Some atime updates occur and the i_version isn't
bumped (as you'd expect).

2/ The server then reboots.

3/ Server comes back up, and some local task issues a read against the
inode. I_NO_ATIME_UPDATES_ON_DISK never had a chance to be set after the
reboot, so that atime update ends up incrementing the i_version counter.

4/ client cache invalidation occurs even though there was no write to
the file

This might reduce some of the spurious i_version bumps, but I don't see
how it can eliminate them entirely.

> I have suggested mechanisms for using masked off bits of timestamps
> to encode sub-timestamp granularity change counts and keep them
> invisible to userspace and then not using i_version at all for XFS.
> This avoids all the problems that the multi-grain timestamp
> infrastructure exposed due to variable granularity of user visible
> timestamps and ordering across inodes with different granularity.
> This is potentially a general solution, too.
> 

I don't really understand this at all, but trying to do anything with
fine-grained timestamps will just run into a lot of the same problems we
hit with the multigrain work. If you still see this as a path forward,
maybe you can describe it more detail?


> So, yeah, there are *lots* of ways we can solve this problem without
> needing to change on-disk formats.
> 

-- 
Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>




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