On Wed, Aug 09, 2023 at 03:05:39PM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > + /* > + * Udev is triggered whenever anyone closes a block device or unmounts > + * a file systemm on a block device. > + * The default udev rules invoke blkid to read the fs super and create > + * symlinks to the bdev under /dev/disk. For this, it uses buffered > + * reads through the page cache. > + * > + * xfs_db also uses buffered reads to examine metadata. There is no > + * coordination between xfs_db and udev, which means that they can run > + * concurrently. Note there is no coordination between the kernel and > + * blkid either. > + * > + * On a system with 64k pages, the page cache can cache the superblock > + * and the root inode (and hence the root directory) with the same 64k > + * page. If udev spawns blkid after the mkfs and the system is busy > + * enough that it is still running when xfs_db starts up, they'll both > + * read from the same page in the pagecache. > + * > + * The unmount writes updated inode metadata to disk directly. The XFS > + * buffer cache does not use the bdev pagecache, nor does it invalidate > + * the pagecache on umount. If the above scenario occurs, the pagecache > + * no longer reflects what's on disk, xfs_db reads the stale metadata, > + * and fails to find /a. Most of the time this succeeds because closing > + * a bdev invalidates the page cache, but when processes race, everyone > + * loses. > + */ > if (mp->m_logdev_targp && mp->m_logdev_targp != mp->m_ddev_targp) { > blkdev_issue_flush(mp->m_logdev_targp->bt_bdev); > invalidate_bdev(mp->m_logdev_targp->bt_bdev); While I have no complaints with this as a commit message, it's just too verbose for an inline comment, IMO. Something pithier and more generic would seem appropriate. How about: /* * Prevent userspace (eg blkid or xfs_db) from seeing stale data. * XFS is not coherent with the bdev's page cache. */