Re: [PATCH][RFC][BUG] updating the ctime and mtime time stamps inmsync()
From: Peter Staubach
Date: Thu Jan 10 2008 - 11:53:20 EST
Anton Salikhmetov wrote:
2008/1/10, Rik van Riel <riel@xxxxxxxxxx>:
On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:56:07 +0300
"Anton Salikhmetov" <salikhmetov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
However, I don't see how they will work if there has been
something like a sync(2) done after the mmap'd region is
modified and the msync call. When the inode is written out
as part of the sync process, I_DIRTY_PAGES will be cleared,
thus causing a miss in this code.
The I_DIRTY_PAGES check here is good, but I think that there
needs to be some code elsewhere too, to catch the case where
I_DIRTY_PAGES is being cleared, but the time fields still need
to be updated.
Agreed. The mtime and ctime should probably also be updated
when I_DIRTY_PAGES is cleared.
The alternative would be to remember that the inode had been
dirty in the past, and have the mtime and ctime updated on
msync or close - which would be more complex.
Adding the new flag (AS_MCTIME) has been already suggested by Peter
Staubach in his first solution for this bug. Now I understand that the
AS_MCTIME flag is required for fixing the bug.
Well, that was the approach before we had I_DIRTY_PAGES. I am
still wondering whether we can get this approach to work, with
a little more support and heuristics. PeterZ's work to better
track dirty pages should be helpful in determining when and why
a patch was dirty.
I keep thinking that by recording the time when a page was found
to be dirty and the file is mmap'd and then updating the mtime
and ctime fields in the inode during msync() and sync_single_inode()
if that time is newer than the mtime and ctime fields, then we
can solve the problem of when and when not to update those two
time fields.
I haven't had a chance to think it all through completely or do
the appropriate analysis yet though.
ps
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/