Re: [PATCH 2/4] configfs: Fix writing at a non-zero offset

From: Bart Van Assche
Date: Mon Jul 26 2021 - 17:52:29 EST


On 7/26/21 2:13 PM, Bodo Stroesser wrote:
On 26.07.21 18:26, Bart Van Assche wrote:
On 7/26/21 7:58 AM, Bodo Stroesser wrote:
On 23.07.21 23:23, Bart Van Assche wrote:
Let's say user writes 5 times to configfs file while keeping it open.
On every write() call it writes 1 character only, e.g. first "A", then "B", ...

The original code before the changes 5 times called flush_write_buffer for the
strings "A\0", "B\0", ... (with the '\0' not included in the count parameter,
so count is 1 always, which is the length of the last write).

Isn't that behavior a severe violation of how POSIX specifies that the write() system call should be implemented?

Hmm. I'm not sure which detail should violate POSIX spec? Is there any
definition how data should be flushed from buffer internally? (I'm by
far not a POSIX expert!)

I would rather say the new behavior, to call flush_write_buffer during the
first write() for the data of that write, and then on the second write to
call flush_write_buffer for the concatenated data of the first and the
second write, could be a violation of POSIX, because the one times written
data of the first write is flushed twice.

I don't like the idea of breaking the "one write, one flush" principle that
was implemented before. The old comment:
"There is no easy way for us to know if userspace is only doing a partial
write, so we don't support them. We expect the entire buffer to come on the
first write."
as I interpret it, makes clear that configfs code has to work according to
that principle. (Or even block all but the first write, but that would even
more break compatibility to old implementation.)

Hi Bodo,

The private email that you sent me made it clear that you would like to keep the behavior from kernel 5.13. That means passing "A\0", "B\0", ... to the configfs store callback function if "AB..." is witten one byte at a time. What is not clear to me is how a store callback with argument "B\0" can know at which offset that write happened? From <linux/configfs.h> (I have added argument names):

ssize_t (*store)(struct config_item *item, const char *page,
size_t count);

My understanding of the POSIX specification [1] is that writes should happen at the proper offset. If user space software writes "A" at offset 0 and "B" at offset 1 then the string "AB" should be passed to the configfs store callback.

Regarding the "action" attribute from your tcmu patch, how about checking the last character of the string written into that attribute instead of the first character? Would that be sufficient to write twice into that attribute without having to call close() and open() between the two write actions?

To me the following comment: "There is no easy way for us to know if userspace is only doing a partial write, so we don't support them. We expect the entire buffer to come on the first write." means that writing "ABCD" by first writing "AB" and next "CD" will trigger two item->store() calls. Triggering a single item->store() call for partial writes is not supported.

Thanks,

Bart.

[1] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/