On Wed, Jan 04, 2012 at 05:21:00PM -0600, Eric Sandeen wrote: > On 1/4/12 5:17 PM, Dave Chinner wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 04, 2012 at 02:54:25PM -0600, Eric Sandeen wrote: > >> Ok, this is a significant rework of 275, which made too many > >> assumptions about details of space usage and failed on several > >> filesystems (it passed on xfs, but only by accident). > >> > >> This new version tries to leave about 256k free, then tries > >> a single 1M IO, and fails only if 0 bytes are written. > >> > >> It also sends a lot more to $seq.full for debugging on failure > >> and fixes a few other stylistic things. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > I just had another thought about this, Eric.... > > > >> +# And at least some of it should succeed. > >> +_filesize=`du $SCRATCH_MNT/tmp1 | awk '{print $1}'` > >> +[ $_filesize -eq 0 ] && _fail "write file err: Partial write until enospc failed; wrote 0 bytes." > > > > The question that just came to mind was this assumes that allocation > > succeeded so therefore the partial write succeeded. But that's not > > necessary the case. The partial write might not succeed leaving the > > file size as zero, but the underlying FS might not remove all the > > blocks it allocated (nothing says that it has to). Hence to > > determine if a partial write succeeded, we also need to check that > > the file size itself is greater than zero.... > > Probably need to read up on what posix says it should do. I think > what you're saying is that it might leave blocks allocated past EOF? > That'd be surprising to me, but maybe I misunderstand? There's no guarantee that du is even reporting blocks on disk. e.g for XFS du will also report reserved (in-memory) delalloc space on the inode and that includes speculative allocation beyond EOF. We don't have to remove specultive delalloc ranges when a partial write occurs, so effectively checking du output to see if a partial write succeeded is not a sufficient test to determine if the partial write succeeded or not. However, if the partial write did succeed then the file size *must* change to reflect what was written. Hence I suspect all we actually need here is a file size check... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs