Re: [PATCH v6 8/9] vfs: update times after copying data in __generic_file_write_iter

From: Amir Goldstein
Date: Mon Oct 03 2022 - 09:53:03 EST


On Mon, Oct 3, 2022 at 4:01 PM Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Sun, 2022-10-02 at 10:08 +0300, Amir Goldstein wrote:
> > On Fri, Sep 30, 2022 at 2:30 PM Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > The c/mtime and i_version currently get updated before the data is
> > > copied (or a DIO write is issued), which is problematic for NFS.
> > >
> > > READ+GETATTR can race with a write (even a local one) in such a way as
> > > to make the client associate the state of the file with the wrong change
> > > attribute. That association can persist indefinitely if the file sees no
> > > further changes.
> > >
> > > Move the setting of times to the bottom of the function in
> > > __generic_file_write_iter and only update it if something was
> > > successfully written.
> > >
> >
> > This solution is wrong for several reasons:
> >
> > 1. There is still file_update_time() in ->page_mkwrite() so you haven't
> > solved the problem completely
>
> Right. I don't think there is a way to solve the problem vs. mmap.
> Userland can write to a writeable mmap'ed page at any time and we'd
> never know. We have to specifically carve out mmap as an exception here.
> I'll plan to add something to the manpage patch for this.
>
> > 2. The other side of the coin is that post crash state is more likely to end
> > up data changes without mtime/ctime change
> >
>
> Is this really something filesystems rely on? I suppose the danger is
> that some cached data gets written to disk before the write returns and
> the inode on disk never gets updated.
>
> But...isn't that a danger now? Some of the cached data could get written
> out and the updated inode just never makes it to disk before a crash
> (AFAIU). I'm not sure that this increases our exposure to that problem.
>
>

You are correct that that danger exists, but it only exists for overwriting
to allocated blocks.

For writing to new blocks, mtime change is recorded in transaction
before the block mapping is recorded in transaction so there is no
danger in this case (before your patch).

Also, observing size change without observing mtime change
after crash seems like a very bad outcome that may be possible
after your change.

These are just a few cases that I could think of, they may be filesystem
dependent, but my gut feeling is that if you remove the time update before
the operation, that has been like that forever, a lot of s#!t is going to float
for various filesystems and applications.

And it is not one of those things that are discovered during rc or even
stable kernel testing - they are discovered much later when users start to
realize their applications got bogged up after crash, so it feels like to me
like playing with fire.

> > If I read the problem description correctly, then a solution that invalidates
> > the NFS cache before AND after the write would be acceptable. Right?
> > Would an extra i_version bump after the write solve the race?
> >
>
> I based this patch on Neil's assertion that updating the time before an
> operation was pointless if we were going to do it afterward. The NFS
> client only really cares about seeing it change after a write.
>

Pointless to NFS client maybe.
Whether or not this is not changing user behavior for other applications
is up to you to prove and I doubt that you can prove it because I doubt
that it is true.

> Doing both would be fine from a correctness standpoint, and in most
> cases, the second would be a no-op anyway since a query would have to
> race in between the two for that to happen.
>
> FWIW, I think we should update the m/ctime and version at the same time.
> If the version changes, then there is always the potential that a timer
> tick has occurred. So, that would translate to a second call to
> file_update_time in here.
>
> The downside of bumping the times/version both before and after is that
> these are hot codepaths, and we'd be adding extra operations there. Even
> in the case where nothing has changed, we'd have to call
> inode_needs_update_time a second time for every write. Is that worth the
> cost?

Is there a practical cost for iversion bump AFTER write as I suggested?
If you NEED m/ctime update AFTER write and iversion update is not enough
then I did not understand from your commit message why that is.

Thanks,
Amir.