On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 06:50:44PM +0000, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 06:20:27PM +0000, Sargun Dhillon wrote: > > I fail to see why this is neccessary if you incorporate error reporting into the > > sync_fs callback. Why is this separate from that callback? If you pickup Jeff's > > patch that adds the 2nd flag to errseq for "observed", you should be able to > > stash the first errseq seen in the ovl_fs struct, and do the check-and-return > > in there instead instead of adding this new infrastructure. > > You still haven't explained why you want to add the "observed" flag. In the overlayfs model, many users may be using the same filesystem (super block) for their upperdir. Let's say you have something like this: /workdir [Mounted FS] /workdir/upperdir1 [overlayfs upperdir] /workdir/upperdir2 [overlayfs upperdir] /workdir/userscratchspace The user needs to be able to do something like: sync -f ${overlayfs1}/file which in turn will call sync on the the underlying filesystem (the one mounted on /workdir), and can check if the errseq has changed since the overlayfs was mounted, and use that to return an error to the user. If we do not advance the errseq on the upperdir to "mark it as seen", that means future errors will not be reported if the user calls sync -f ${overlayfs1}/file, because errseq will not increment the value if the seen bit is unset. On the other hand, if we mark it as seen, then if the user calls sync on /workdir/userscratchspace/file, they wont see the error since we just set the SEEN flag. You need a new flag (observed) to differentiate between "Seen and reported to user" versus "seen by a second-order system, so should now increment". One alternative is to always increment the errseq error counter, but I've gotta imagine there's a reason that wasn't done in the first place.