On Mon, 2023-06-12 at 13:30 -0400, Jeff Layton wrote: > On Mon, 2023-06-12 at 11:58 -0400, Jeff Layton wrote: > > > > > Got it: I think I see what's happening. filemap_sample_wb_err just > > calls > > errseq_sample, which does this: > > > > errseq_t errseq_sample(errseq_t > > *eseq) > > { > > > > errseq_t old = > > READ_ONCE(*eseq); > > > > > > > > /* If nobody has seen this error yet, then we can be the > > first. */ > > if (!(old & > > ERRSEQ_SEEN)) > > > > old = > > 0; > > > > return > > old; > > > > } > > > > Because no one has seen that error yet (ERRSEQ_SEEN is clear), the > > write > > ends up being the first to see it and it gets back a 0, even though > > the > > error happened before the sample. > > > > The above behavior is what we want for the sample that we do at > > open() > > time, but not what's needed for this use-case. We need a new helper > > that > > samples the value regardless of whether it has already been seen: > > > > errseq_t errseq_peek(errseq_t *eseq) > > { > > return READ_ONCE(*eseq); > > } > > > > ...but we'll also need to fix up errseq_check to handle differences > > between the SEEN bit. > > > > I'll see if I can spin up a patch for that. Stay tuned. > > This may not be fixable with the way that NFS is trying to use > errseq_t. > > The fundamental problem is that we need to mark the errseq_t in the > mapping as SEEN when we sample it, to ensure that a later error is > recorded and not ignored. > > But...if the error hasn't been reported yet and we mark it SEEN here, > and then a later error doesn't occur, then a later open won't have > its > errseq_t set to 0, and that unseen error could be lost. > > It's a bit of a pity: as originally envisioned, the errseq_t > mechanism > would provide for this sort of use case, but we added this patch not > long after the original code went in, and it changed those semantics: > > b4678df184b3 errseq: Always report a writeback error once > > I don't see a good way to do this using the current errseq_t > mechanism, > given these competing needs. I'll keep thinking about it though. > Maybe > we could add some sort of store and forward mechanism for fsync on > NFS? > That could get rather complex though. > > Cheers, Does RHEL-8 have commit 6c984083ec24, 064109db53ec, d95b26650e86, e6005436f6cc, 9641d9bc9b75, and cea9ba7239dc applied? -- Trond Myklebust Linux NFS client maintainer, Hammerspace trond.myklebust@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx