On Tue, Dec 4, 2018 at 4:35 PM Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Dec 04, 2018 at 07:13:32AM -0800, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > On Mon, Dec 03, 2018 at 02:46:20PM +0200, Amir Goldstein wrote: > > > > From: Dave Chinner <dchinner@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > > > The man page says: > > > > > > > > EINVAL Requested range extends beyond the end of the source file > > > > > > > > But the current behaviour is that copy_file_range does a short > > > > copy up to the source file EOF. Fix the kernel behaviour to match > > > > the behaviour described in the man page. > > > > I think the behavior implemented is a lot more useful than the one > > documented.. > > The current behaviour is really nasty. Because copy_file_range() can > return short copies, the caller has to implement a loop to ensure > the range hey want get copied. When the source range you are > trying to copy overlaps source EOF, this loop: > > while (len > 0) { > ret = copy_file_range(... len ...) > ... > off_in += ret; > off_out += ret; > len -= ret; > } > > Currently the fallback code copies up to the end of the source file > on the first copy and then fails the second copy with EINVAL because > the source range is now completely beyond EOF. > > So, from an application perspective, did the copy succeed or did it > fail? > > Existing tools that exercise copy_file_range (like xfs_io) consider > this a failure, because the second copy_file_range() call returns > EINVAL and not some "there is no more to copy" marker like read() > returning 0 bytes when attempting to read beyond EOF. > > IOWs, we cannot tell the difference between a real error and a short > copy because the input range spans EOF and it was silently > shortened. That's the API problem we need to fix here - the existing > behaviour is really crappy for applications. Erroring out > immmediately is one solution, and it's what the man page says should > happen so that is what I implemented. > > Realistically, though, I think an attempt to read beyond EOF for the > copy should result in behaviour like read() (i.e. return 0 bytes), > not EINVAL. The existing behaviour needs to change, though. There are two checks to consider 1. pos_in >= EOF should return EINVAL 2. however what's perhaps should be relaxed is pos_in+len >= EOF should return a short copy. Having check#1 enforced allows to us to differentiate between a real error and a short copy. > > > > i_size_read()... > > > > > > Otherwise > > > Reviewed-by: Amir Goldstein <amir73il@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > Looks like this doesn't even compile? > > It's fixed in a later patch that consolidates the checks into a > generic check function, but I'm not sure why my "compile every > patch" script didn't catch this. > > Cheers, > > -Dave. > -- > Dave Chinner > david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx