Re: sys_write() racy for multi-threaded append?
From: Eric Dumazet
Date: Fri Mar 09 2007 - 00:53:27 EST
Michael K. Edwards a Ãcrit :
On 3/8/07, Eric Dumazet <dada1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Absolutely not. We dont want to slow down kernel 'just in case a fool
might
want to do crazy things'
Actually, I think it would make the kernel (negligibly) faster to bump
f_pos before the vfs_write() call. Unless fget_light sets fput_needed
or the write doesn't complete cleanly, you won't have to touch the
file table entry again after vfs_write() returns. You can adjust
vfs_write to grab f_dentry out of the file before going into
do_sync_write. do_sync_write is done with the struct file before it
goes into the aio_write() loop. Result: you probably save at least an
L1 cache miss, unless the aio_write loop is so frugal with L1 cache
that it doesn't manage to evict the struct file.
Patch to follow.
Dont even try, you *cannot* do that, without breaking the standards, or
without a performance drop.
The only safe way would be to lock the file during the whole read()/write()
syscall, and we dont want this (this would be more expensive than current)
Dont forget 'file' may be some sockets/tty/whatever, not a regular file.
Standards are saying :
If an error occurs, file pointer remains unchanged.
You cannot know for sure how many bytes will be written, since write() can
returns a count that is different than buflen.
So you cannot update fpos before calling vfs_write()
About your L1 'miss', dont forget that multi-threaded apps are going to
atomic_dec_and_test(&file->f_count) anyway when fput() is done at the end of
syscall. And you were concerned about multi-threaded apps, didnt you ?
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