Re: [PATCH 1/2]: Fix BUG in cancel_dirty_pages on XFS

From: Nick Piggin
Date: Wed Jan 24 2007 - 19:48:00 EST


David Chinner wrote:
On Thu, Jan 25, 2007 at 11:12:41AM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:

... so surely if you do a direct read followed by a buffered read,
you should *not* get the same data if there has been some activity
to modify that part of the file in the meantime (whether that be a
buffered or direct write).


Right. And that is what happens in XFS because it purges the
caches on direct I/O and forces data to be re-read from disk.

And that is critical for direct IO writes, of course.

Effectively, if you are mixing direct I/O with other types of I/O
(buffered or mmap) then the application really needs to be certain
it is doing the right thing because there are races that can occur
below the filesystem. All we care about in the filesystem is that
what we cache is the same as what is on disk, and that implies that
direct I/O needs to purge the cache regardless of the state it is in....

Hence we need to unmap pages and use truncate semantics on them to
ensure they are removed from the page cache....

OK, I understand that this does need to happen (at least for writes),
so you need to fix it regardless of the DIO read issue.

But I'm just interested about DIO reads. I think you can get pretty
reasonable semantics without discarding pagecache, but the semantics
are weaker in one aspect.

DIO read
1. writeback page
2. read from disk

Now your read will pick up data no older than 1. And if a buffered
write happens after 2, then there is no problem either.

So if you are doing a buffered write and DIO read concurrently, you
want synchronisation so the buffered write happens either before 1
or after 2 -- the DIO read will see either all or none of the write.

Supposing your pagecache isn't invalidated, then a buffered write
(from mmap, if XFS doesn't allow write(2)) comes in between 1 and 2,
then the DIO read will find either none, some, or all of that write.

So I guess what you are preventing is the "some" case. Am I right?

--
SUSE Labs, Novell Inc.
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