On Thu, Jul 29, 2021 at 08:50:50AM +1000, NeilBrown wrote: > On Wed, 28 Jul 2021, Neal Gompa wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 28, 2021 at 3:02 AM NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Wed, 28 Jul 2021, Wang Yugui wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > This patchset works well in 5.14-rc3. > > > > > > Thanks for testing. > > > > > > > > > > > 1, fixed dummy inode(255, BTRFS_FIRST_FREE_OBJECTID - 1 ) is changed to > > > > dynamic dummy inode(18446744073709551358, or 18446744073709551359, ...) > > > > > > The BTRFS_FIRST_FREE_OBJECTID-1 was a just a hack, I never wanted it to > > > be permanent. > > > The new number is ULONG_MAX - subvol_id (where subvol_id starts at 257 I > > > think). > > > This is a bit less of a hack. It is an easily available number that is > > > fairly unique. > > > > > > > > > > > 2, btrfs subvol mount info is shown in /proc/mounts, even if nfsd/nfs is > > > > not used. > > > > /dev/sdc btrfs 94G 3.5M 93G 1% /mnt/test > > > > /dev/sdc btrfs 94G 3.5M 93G 1% /mnt/test/sub1 > > > > /dev/sdc btrfs 94G 3.5M 93G 1% /mnt/test/sub2 > > > > > > > > This is a visiual feature change for btrfs user. > > > > > > Hopefully it is an improvement. But it is certainly a change that needs > > > to be carefully considered. > > > > I think this is behavior people generally expect, but I wonder what > > the consequences of this would be with huge numbers of subvolumes. If > > there are hundreds or thousands of them (which is quite possible on > > SUSE systems, for example, with its auto-snapshotting regime), this > > would be a mess, wouldn't it? > > Would there be hundreds or thousands of subvols concurrently being > accessed? The auto-mounted subvols only appear in the mount table while > that are being accessed, and for about 15 minutes after the last access. > I suspect that most subvols are "backup" snapshots which are not being > accessed and so would not appear. bees dedupes across subvols and polls every few minutes for new data to dedupe. bees doesn't particularly care where the "src" in the dedupe call comes from, so it will pick a subvol that has a reference to the data at random (whichever one comes up first in backref search) for each dedupe call. There is a cache of open fds on each subvol root so that it can access files within that subvol using openat(). The cache quickly populates fully, i.e. it holds a fd to every subvol on the filesystem. The cache has a 15 minute timeout too, so bees would likely keep the mount table fully populated at all times. plocate also uses openat() and it can also be active on many subvols simultaneously, though it only runs once a day, and it's reasonable to exclude all snapshots from plocate for performance reasons. My bigger concern here is that users on btrfs can currently have private subvols with secret names. e.g. user$ mkdir -m 700 private user$ btrfs sub create private/secret user$ cd private/secret user$ ...do stuff... Would "secret" now be visible in the very public /proc/mounts every time the user is doing stuff? > > Or can we add a way to mark these things to not show up there or is > > there some kind of behavioral change we can make to snapper or other > > tools to make them not show up here? > > Certainly it might make sense to flag these in some way so that tools > can choose the ignore them or handle them specially, just as nfsd needs > to handle them specially. I was considering a "local" mount flag. I would definitely want an 'off' switch for this thing until the impact is better understood. > NeilBrown > > > > > > > > > -- > > 真実はいつも一つ!/ Always, there's only one truth! > > > >