On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 08:45:16AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> If we get two unaligned direct IO's to the same filesystem block
> that is marked as a new allocation (i.e. buffer_new), then both IOs will
> zero the portion of the block they are not writing data to. As a
> result, when the IOs complete there will be a portion of the block
> that contains zeros from the last IO to complete rather than the
> data that should be there.
Urgh. Yuck.
> This is easily manifested by qemu using aio+dio with an unaligned
> guest filesystem - every IO is unaligned and fileystem corruption is
> encountered in the guest filesystem. xfstest 240 (from Eric Sandeen)
> is also a simple reproducer.
>
> To avoid this problem, track unaligned IO that triggers sub-block zeroing and
> check new incoming unaligned IO that require sub-block zeroing against that
> list. If we get an overlap where the start and end of unaligned IOs hit the
> same filesystem block, then we need to block the incoming IOs until the IO
> that
> is zeroing the block completes. The blocked IO can then continue without
> needing to do any zeroing and hence won't overwrite valid data with zeros.
Urgh. Yuck.
Could we perhaps handle this by making an IO instantiate a page cache
page for partial writes, and forcing that portion of the IO through the
page cache? The second IO would hit the same page and use the existing
O_DIRECT vs page cache paths.
--
Matthew Wilcox Intel Open Source Technology Centre
"Bill, look, we understand that you're interested in selling us this
operating system, but compare it to ours. We can't possibly take such
a retrograde step."
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