Re: Things I wish I'd known about Inotify

From: Michael Kerrisk (man-pages)
Date: Sat Apr 12 2014 - 01:45:37 EST


On 04/07/2014 11:31 AM, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Sun 06-04-14 11:00:29, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote:
>> On 04/04/2014 02:43 PM, Jan Kara wrote:
>>> On Fri 04-04-14 09:35:50, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote:
>>>> On 04/03/2014 10:52 PM, Jan Kara wrote:
>>>>> On Thu 03-04-14 08:34:44, Michael Kerrisk (man-pages) wrote:
>>
>> [...]
>>
>>>>>> Dealing with rename() events
>>>>>> The IN_MOVED_FROM and IN_MOVED_TO events that are generated by
>>>>>> rename(2) are usually available as consecutive events when readâ
>>>>>> ing from the inotify file descriptor. However, this is not guarâ
>>>>>> anteed. If multiple processes are triggering events for moniâ
>>>>>> tored objects, then (on rare occasions) an arbitrary number of
>>>>>> other events may appear between the IN_MOVED_FROM and IN_MOVED_TO
>>>>>> events.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Matching up the IN_MOVED_FROM and IN_MOVED_TO event pair generâ
>>>>>> ated by rename(2) is thus inherently racy. (Don't forget that if
>>>>>> an object is renamed outside of a monitored directory, there may
>>>>>> not even be an IN_MOVED_TO event.) Heuristic approaches (e.g.,
>>>>>> assume the events are always consecutive) can be used to ensure a
>>>>>> match in most cases, but will inevitably miss some cases, causing
>>>>>> the application to perceive the IN_MOVED_FROM and IN_MOVED_TO
>>>>>> events as being unrelated. If watch descriptors are destroyed
>>>>>> and re-created as a result, then those watch descriptors will be
>>>>>> inconsistent with the watch descriptors in any pending events.
>>>>>> (Re-creating the inotify file descriptor and rebuilding the cache
>>>>>> may be useful to deal with this scenario.)
>>>>> Well, but there's 'cookie' value meant exactly for matching up
>>>>> IN_MOVED_FROM and IN_MOVED_TO events. And 'cookie' is guaranteed to be
>>>>> unique at least within the inotify instance (in fact currently it is unique
>>>>> within the whole system but I don't think we want to give that promise).
>>>>
>>>> Yes, that's already assumed by my discussion above (its described elsewhere
>>>> in the page). But your comment makes me think I should add a few words to
>>>> remind the reader of that fact. I'll do that.
>>> Yes, that would be good.
>>>
>>>> But, the point is that even with the cookie, matching the events is
>>>> nontrivial, since:
>>>>
>>>> * There may not even be an IN_MOVED_FROM event
>>>> * There may be an arbitrary number of other events in between the
>>>> IN_MOVED_FROM and the IN_MOVED_TO.
>>>>
>>>> Therefore, one has to use heuristic approaches such as "allow at least
>>>> N millisconds" or "check the next N events" to see if there is an
>>>> IN_MOVED_FROM that matches the IN_MOVED_TO. I can't see any way around
>>>> that being inherently racy. (It's unfortunate that the kernel can't
>>>> provide a guarantee that the two events are always consecutive, since
>>>> that would simply user space's life considerably.)
>>
>>> Yeah, it's unpleasant but doing that would be quite costly/complex at the
>>> kernel side.
>>
>> Yep, I imagined that was probably the reason.
> I had a look into that code again and it's all designed around the fact
> that there's a single inode to notify. If you liked to have atomic rename
> notifications, you'd have to rewrite that to work with two inodes, finding
> out whether these two inodes are actually watched by the same group or
> not... Doable but complex. Alternatively you could just lock down the whole
> notification subsystem while generating rename events. But that's rather
> costly. Just that we have the complications written down somewhere in case
> someone wants to look into this in future.
>
>>> And the race would in the worst case lead to application
>>> thinking there's been file moved outside of watched area & a file moved
>>> somewhere else inside the watched area. So the application will have to
>>> possibly inspect that file. That doesn't seem too bad.
>>
>> It's actually very bad. See the text above. The point is that one likely
>> treatment on an IN_MOVED_FROM event that has no IN_MOVED_TO is to remove
>> the watches for the moved out subtree. If it turns out that this really
>> was just a rename(), then on the IN_MOVED_TO, the watches will be recreated
>> *with different watch descriptors*, thus invalidating the watch descriptors
>> in any queued but as yet unprocessed inotify events. See what I mean?
>> That's quite painful for user space.

Sorry for the late follow-up....

> But if I understand it right, you loose only the information for recreated
> watches. So you effectively loose all the information about what has
> happened inside the subtree of moved directory (or what has happened with
> the moved file). But since you think it's a file / dir moved from outside
> of watched area, you have to fully rescan that file / dir anyway.

Ack on you summary there.

> Sure
> that's costly but if your heuristics for detecting rename works 99.9% of
> time it should be OK, shouldn't it? And you have to have that code handling
> caching file / dir written anyway for handling real moves from outside of
> watched hierarchy.

And ack on that.

> Don't get me wrong, I understand it would be easier for userspace to get
> atomic rename notifications, I'm just trying to understand what exactly is
> painful so that I can compare the cost at the kernel side with the cost at
> the userspace side...

Yes, I was probably a little too strong in my statement. My perspective
is that I'd tried to write an (experimental) application that would track
*all* events for a file tree (modulo queue overflow), and then I
encountered the wall of "rename() events are not consecutive", which
basically rendered that task impossible because of the races involved.

All that you say above also fits with my understanding. I was just
(perhaps overly) disappointed to find that I couldn't (perfectly)
achieve the tracking task that I'd attempted. (And furthermore, of
course, the code became a bit more complicated to handle the
possibility that some queued events may be for watch descriptors
that are no longer valid.)

Thanks for your response.

Cheers,

Michael




--
Michael Kerrisk
Linux man-pages maintainer; http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/
Linux/UNIX System Programming Training: http://man7.org/training/
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