Re: [RFC] freeing unlinked file indefinitely delayed

From: Al Viro
Date: Mon Jul 13 2015 - 15:56:58 EST


On Mon, Jul 13, 2015 at 01:17:51PM -0500, Ben Myers wrote:
> > For one thing, this patch does *not* check for i_nlink at all.
>
> I agree that no checking of i_nlink has the advantage of brevity.
> Anyone who is using dentry.d_fsdata with an open_by_handle workload (if
> there are any) will be affected.

Translate, please. What does d_fsdata have to anything above?

> > For another, there's no such thing as 'filesystems internal lock' for
> > i_nlink protection - that's handled by i_mutex... And what does
> > iget() have to do with any of that?
>
> i_mutex is good enough only for local filesystems.
> Network/clustered/distributed filesystems need to take an internal lock
> to provide exclusion for this .unlink with a .link on another host.
> That's where I'm coming from with iget().
>
> Maybe plumbing i_op.unlink with another argument to return i_nlink is
> something to consider? A helper for the few filesystems that need to do
> this might be good enough in the near term.

????

a) iget() had been gone since way back
b) it never had been called by VFS - it's a filesystem's responsibility
c) again, what the hell does iget() or its replacements have to do with
dentry eviction? It does *NOT* affect dentry refcount. Never had.
d) checks for _inode_ retention in icache are done by filesystem code, which
is certainly free to use its locks. Incidentally, for normal filesystems
no locks are needed at all - everything that changes ->i_nlink is holding
a referfence to in-core inode, so in a situation when its refcount is zero
and ->i_lock is held (providing an exclusion with icache lookups), ->i_nlink
is guaranteed to be stable.
e) why would VFS possibly want to know if there are links remaining after
successful ->unlink()?

I'm sorry, but you are not making any sense...
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