Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/4] Attempt to make progress with btrfs dev number strangeness.

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 8/11/21 6:13 PM, NeilBrown wrote:
On Wed, 11 Aug 2021, Josef Bacik wrote:

I think this is a step in the right direction, but I want to figure out a way to
accomplish this without magical mount points that users must be aware of.

magic mount *options* ???


I think the stat() st_dev ship as sailed, we're stuck with that.  However
Christoph does have a valid point where it breaks the various info spit out by
/proc.  You've done a good job with the treeid here, but it still makes it
impossible for somebody to map the st_dev back to the correct mount.

The ship might have sailed, but it is not water tight.  And as the world
it round, it can still come back to bite us from behind.
Anything can be transitioned away from, whether it is devfs or 32-bit
time or giving different device numbers to different file-trees.

The linkage between device number and and filesystem is quite strong.
We could modified all of /proc and /sys/ and audit and whatever else to
report the fake device number, but we cannot get the fake device number
into the mount table (without making the mount table unmanageablely
large).
And if subtrees aren't in the mount-table for the NFS server, I don't
think they should be in the mount-table of the NFS client.  So we cannot
export them to NFS.

I understand your dislike for mount options.  An alternative with
different costs and benefits would be to introduce a new filesystem type
- btrfs2 or maybe betrfs.  This would provide numdevs=1 semantics and do
whatever we decided was best with inode numbers.  How much would you
hate that?


A lot more ;).


I think we aren't going to solve that problem, at least not with stat().  I
think with statx() spitting out treeid we have given userspace a way to
differentiate subvolumes, and so we should fix statx() to spit out the the super
block device, that way new userspace things can do their appropriate lookup if
they so choose.

I don't think we should normalize having multiple devnums per filesystem
by encoding it in statx().  It *would* make sense to add a btrfs ioctl
which reports the real device number of a file.  Tools that really need
to work with btrfs could use that, but it would always be obvious that
it was an exception.

That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that stat() continues to behave the way it currently does, for legacy users.

And then for statx() it returns the correct devnum like any other file system, with the augmentation of the treeid so that future userspace programs can use the treeid to decide if they want to wander into a subvolume.

This way moving forward we have a way to map back to a mount point because statx() will return the actual devnum for the mountpoint, and then we can use the treeid to be smart about when we wander into a subvolume.

And if we're going to add a treeid, I would actually like to add a parent_treeid as well so we could tell if we're a snapshot or just a normal subvolume.



This leaves the problem of nfsd.  Can you just integrate this new treeid into
nfsd, and use that to either change the ino within nfsd itself, or do something
similar to what your first patchset did and generate a fsid based on the treeid?

I would only want nfsd to change the inode number.  I no longer think it
is acceptable for nfsd to report different device number (as I mention
above).
I would want the new inode number to be explicitly provided by the
filesystem.  Whether that is a new export_operation or a new field in
'struct kstat' doesn't really bother me.  I'd *prefer* it to be st_ino,
but I can live without that.


Right, I'm not saying nfsd has to propagate our dev_t thing, I'm saying that you could accomplish the same behavior without the mount options. We add either a new SB_I_HAS_TREEID or FS_HAS_TREEID, depending on if you prefer to tag the sb or the fs_type, and then NFS does the inode number magic transformation automatically and we are good to go.

On the topic of inode numbers....  I've recently learned that btrfs
never reuses inode (objectid) numbers (except possibly after an
unmount).  Equally it doesn't re-use subvol numbers.  How much does this
contribute to the 64 bits not being enough for subtree+inode?

It would be nice if we could be comfortable limiting the objectid number
to 40 bits and the root.objectid (filetree) number to 24 bits, and
combine them into a 64bit inode number.

If we added a inode number reuse scheme that was suitably performant,
would that make this possible?  That would remove the need for a treeid,
and allow us to use project-id to identify subtrees.


We had a resuse scheme, we deprecated and deleted it. I don't want to arbitrarily limit objectid's to work around this issue.


Mount options are messy, and are just going to lead to distro's turning them on
without understanding what's going on and then we have to support them forever.
   I want to get this fixed in a way that we all hate the least with as little
opportunity for confused users to make bad decisions.  Thanks,

Hence my question: how much do you hate creating a new filesystem type
to fix the problems?


I'm still not convinced we can't solve this without adding new options or fstypes. I think flags to indicate that we're special and to use a treeid that we stuff into the inode would be a reasonable solution. That being said I'm a little sleep deprived so I could be missing why my plan is a bad one, so I'm willing to be convinced that mount options are the solution to this, but I want to make sure we're damned certain that's the best way forward. Thanks,

Josef



[Index of Archives]     [Linux Filesystem Development]     [Linux USB Development]     [Linux Media Development]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux NILFS]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Yosemite Info]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux