On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 09:42:34AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 9:00 AM, Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon 19-08-13 21:14:44, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > >> >> I could require ->writepages *and* ->flush_cmtime to handle the time > >> >> update, but that would complicate non-transactional filesystems. > >> >> Those filesystems should just flush cmtime at the end of writepages. > >> > > >> > do_writepages() is the wrong place to do such updates - we can get > >> > writeback directly through .writepage, so the time updates need to > >> > be in .writepage. That first .writepage call will clear the bit on > >> > the mapping, so it's only done on the first call to .writepage on > >> > the given mapping. > >> > >> Last time I checked, all the paths that actually needed the timestamp > >> update went through .writepages. I'll double-check. > > kswapd can call just .writepage to do the writeout so timestamp update > > should be handled there as well. Otherwise all pages in a mapping can be > > cleaned without timestamp being updated. > > OK, I'll fix that. > > > > > Which btw made me realize that even your scheme doesn't completely make > > sure timestamp is updated after mmap write - if you have pages 0 and 1, you > > write to both of them - CMTIME flag gets set. Then fsync_range(fd, 0, 4096) > > is called. We write the page 0, writeprotect it, update timestamps. But > > page 1 is still writeable so writes to it won't set CMTIME flag, neither > > update the timestamp... Not that I think this can be reasonably solved but > > it is a food for thought. > > This should already work. AS_CMTIME is set when the pte goes from > dirty to clean, not when the pte goes from wp to writable. So > whenever clear_page_dirty_for_io is called on page 1, AS_CMTIME will > be set and a subsequent writepages call will update the timestamp. Oh, I missed that - I thought you were setting AS_CMTIME during .page_mkwrite. Setting it in clear_page_dirty_for_io() is too late for filesystems to include it in their existing transactions during .writepage, (at least for XFs and ext4) because they do their delayed allocation transactions before changing page state.... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs