On Thu, Oct 18, 2007 at 01:52:49PM +1000, Lachlan McIlroy wrote:
David Chinner wrote:
On Wed, Oct 17, 2007 at 01:56:00PM +0900, Utako Kusaka wrote:
Hi,
The atime is changed for reading but it returns to a previous value
after unmount. i_update_core is still off after reading a file using
read(), readdir() and readlink(). So an inode isn't flushed to disk.
I think this was done by design - Christoph? I can't remember exactly
as it was more than two years ago this change was made. It is effectively
equivalent to using the relatime mount option.
The question is whether we want to change the default behaviour or
whether we need to supply an "atimeisatime" mount option for those
that really need atime to be updated on every access.
If we change it back then will anything that scans the filesystem cause
inodes to be dirtied and create a lot of inode flush traffic that we
don't currently have?
Right. And given that it's taken over 2 years for anyone to notice
that atime only get updated when a file is otherwise dirtied....
If we are going to put these back in, then they should be
calls to xfs_ichgtime_fast() so that we know what the reason
for marking the core dirty is.
xfs_ichgtime_fast() will also dirty the linux inode so that sync
will push out the change.
The VFS already calls filp_accessed, which marks the linux inode
dirty. We're telling sync that the inode really isn't dirty when
it tries to flush it, so it's not going to disk....
As Christoph pointed out last night to me the problem really is that
VFS atime updates don't have a callback into the filesystem(*) so if
we want to write back atime we've basically got to duplicate VFS
infrastructure.
(*) i.e. call ->setattr to set the atime.
Cheers,
Dave.