On Fri 20-04-18 11:49:32, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > On Tue, Apr 17, 2018 at 05:59:36PM -0700, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 12:03:29PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > > > Hello, > > > > > > I think I owe you a reply here... Sorry that it took so long. > > > > Took me just as long :) > > > > > On Fri 01-12-17 22:13:27, Luis R. Rodriguez wrote: > > > > > > > > I'll note that its still not perfectly clear if really the semantics behind > > > > freeze_bdev() match what I described above fully. That still needs to be > > > > vetted for. For instance, does thaw_bdev() keep a superblock frozen if we > > > > an ioctl initiated freeze had occurred before? If so then great. Otherwise > > > > I think we'll need to distinguish the ioctl interface. Worst possible case > > > > is that bdev semantics and in-kernel semantics differ somehow, then that > > > > will really create a holy fucking mess. > > > > > > I believe nobody really thought about mixing those two interfaces to fs > > > freezing and so the behavior is basically defined by the implementation. > > > That is: > > > > > > freeze_bdev() on sb frozen by ioctl_fsfreeze() -> EBUSY > > > freeze_bdev() on sb frozen by freeze_bdev() -> success > > > ioctl_fsfreeze() on sb frozen by freeze_bdev() -> EBUSY > > > ioctl_fsfreeze() on sb frozen by ioctl_fsfreeze() -> EBUSY > > > > > > thaw_bdev() on sb frozen by ioctl_fsfreeze() -> EINVAL > > > > Phew, so this is what we want for the in-kernel freezing so we're good > > and *can* combine these then. > > I double checked, and I don't see where you get EINVAL for this case. > We *do* keep the sb frozen though, which is good, and the worst fear > I had was that we did not. However we return 0 if there was already > a prior freeze_bdev() or ioctl_fsfreeze() other than the context that > started the prior freeze (--bdev->bd_fsfreeze_count > 0). > > The -EINVAL is only returned currently if there were no freezers. > > int thaw_bdev(struct block_device *bdev, struct super_block *sb) > { > int error = -EINVAL; > > mutex_lock(&bdev->bd_fsfreeze_mutex); > if (!bdev->bd_fsfreeze_count) > goto out; But this is precisely where we'd bail if we freeze sb by ioctl_fsfreeze() but try to thaw by thaw_bdev(). ioctl_fsfreeze() does not touch bd_fsfreeze_count... Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-xfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html