On Wed 20-05-15 18:04:40, Kent Overstreet wrote: > > Yeah. I never figured out a sane way to migrate pages and keep everything > > else happy. Daniel Phillips is having a go at page forking for tux3; let's > > see if the questions about that get resolved. > > That would be great, we need something. > > I'd also be really curious what btrfs is doing today - is it just bouncing > everything internally, or did they come up with something more clever? Btrfs is just waiting for IO to complete. > > > Also, there's probably always going to be situations where we're reading or > > > writing to pages user space can stomp on (dio) - IMO we need to add a bio flag > > > to annotate this - "if you need this to be stable you have to bounce it". > > > Otherwise either filesystems/block drivers are going to be stuck bouncing > > > everything, or it'll just (continue to be) buggy. > > > > Well, for now there's BIO_SNAP_STABLE that forces the block layer to bounce it, > > but right now ext3 is the last user of it, and afaict btrfs is the only other > > FS that takes care of stable pages on its own. > > I have no idea what BIO_SNAP_STABLE was supposed to be for, but I don't see how > it's useful for anything sane. It's for the case where lower layer requests it needs stable pages but upper layer isn't able to provide them (as is the case of ext3). Then block layer bounces the data for the caller. > But that's the complete opposite of the problem stable pages are supposed to > solve: stable pages are for when the _lower_ layer (be it filesystem, bcache, > md, lvm) needs the memory being either read to or written from (both, it's not > just writes) to not be diddled over while the IO is in flight. > > Now, a point that I think has been missed is that stable pages are _not_ a > complete solution, at least for consumers in the block layer. > > The situation today is that if I'm in the block layer, and I get a handed a read > or write bio, I _don't know_ if it's from something that's going to diddle over > those pages or not. So if I require stable pages - be it for data checksumming > or for other things - I've just got to bounce the bio myself. > > And then the really annoying thing is that if you've got stacked things that all > need stable pages (maybe btrfs on top of bcache on top of md) - they _all_ have > to assume the pages aren't going to be stable, so if they need them they _all_ > have to bounce - even though once the first layer bounced the bio that made it > stable for everything underneath it. The current design is that if you need stable pages for your device, set bdi capability BDI_CAP_STABLE_WRITES, fs then takes care of not scribbling over your page while it is under writeback or uses BIO_SNAP_STABLE if it cannot. There is no reason why this shouldn't work with device stacking (although I'm not sure it really works currently). You are right that this won't solve the possible issues with direct IO where user scribbles over the buffers while direct IO is in flight. We could make direct IO submit pages with BIO_SNAP_STABLE when underlying device declares they are required but I assume some users would rather like to promise they don't touch them than paying the cost of copy... I have to say I don't quite see the advantage of your proposal over this... > Stable pages for IO to/from the pagecache are _not_ going to solve this problem, > because the page cache is not the only source of IO to non stable pages (Direct > IO will always be, even if everything else gets fixed). > > So what I'm proposing is: > > - Add a new bio flag: BIO_PAGES_NOT_STABLE > > - Everything that submits a bio and _doesn't_ guarantee that the pages won't be > touched while the IO is in flight has to set that flag. This flag will have > to be preserved when cloning a bio, but not when cloning a bio and its pages > (i.e. bouncing it). > > This is going to be a lot of not-fun work auditing code, but IMO it really needs > to be done. As a bonus, once it's done everything that generates IO that must be > expensively bounced will be nicely annotated. > > To verify that the annotations are correct, for writes we can add some debug > code to the generic IO path that checksums the data before and after the IO and > complains loudly if the checksums don't match. Dunno what we can do for reads. > > Thoughts? Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html