Re: [RFC PATCH v1 00/30] fs: inode->i_version rework and optimization

From: Jeff Layton
Date: Tue Mar 21 2017 - 13:24:41 EST


On Tue, 2017-03-21 at 12:30 -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 21, 2017 at 06:45:00AM -0700, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 20, 2017 at 05:43:27PM -0400, J. Bruce Fields wrote:
> > > To me, the interesting question is whether this allows us to turn on
> > > i_version updates by default on xfs and ext4.
> >
> > XFS v5 file systems have it on by default.
>
> Great, thanks.
>
> > Although we'll still need to agree on the exact semantics of i_version
> > before it's going to be useful.
>
> Once it's figured out maybe we should write it up for a manpage that
> could be used if statx starts exposing it to userspace.
>
> A first attempt:
>
> - It's a u64.
>
> - It works for regular files and directories. (What about symlinks or
> other special types?)
>
> - It changes between two checks if and only if there were intervening
> data or metadata changes. The change will always be an increase, but
> the amount of the increase is meaningless.
> - NFS doesn't actually require that it increases, but I think it
> should. I assume 64 bits means we don't need a discussion of
> wraparound.

I thought NFS spec required that you be able to recognize old change
attributes so that they can be discarded. I could be wrong here though.
I'd have to go back and look through the spec to be sure.

> - AFS wants an actual counter: if you get i_version X, then
> write twice, then get i_version X+2, you're allowed to assume
> your writes were the only modifications. Let's ignore this
> for now. In the future if someone explains how to count
> operations, then we can extend the interface to tell the
> caller it can get those extra semantics.
>
> - It's durable; the above comparison still works if there were reboots
> between the two i_version checks.
> - I don't know how realistic this is--we may need to figure out
> if there's a weaker guarantee that's still useful. Do
> filesystems actually make ctime/mtime/i_version changes
> atomically with the changes that caused them? What if a
> change attribute is exposed to an NFS client but doesn't make
> it to disk, and then that value is reused after reboot?
>

Yeah, there could be atomicity there. If we bump i_version, we'll mark
the inode dirty and I think that will end up with the new i_version at
least being journalled before __mark_inode_dirty returns.

That said, I suppose it is possible for us to bump the counter, hand
that new counter value out to a NFS client and then the box crashes
before it makes it to the journal.

Not sure how big a problem that really is.

> Am I missing any issues?
>

No, I think you have it covered, and that's pretty much exactly what I
had in mind as far as semantics go. Thanks for writing it up!

--
Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>