On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 11:55:20AM -0600, Eric Sandeen wrote:
> On 11/15/13, 11:19 AM, Eric Sandeen wrote:
> > On 11/13/13, 7:16 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
> >
> >> That's client side, not server side, so that's the NFS client inode
> >> it is locking, not the server side XFS inode.
> >
> > Ah, geez, you're right. (x3)
> >
> > <snip>
> >
> >> Server side, where i_version is pulled out of an XFS inode:
> >>
> >> $ git grep i_version fs/nfsd
> >> fs/nfsd/nfs3xdr.c: fhp->fh_post_change =
> >> fhp->fh_dentry->d_inode->i_version;
> >> fs/nfsd/nfs4xdr.c: write64(p, inode->i_version);
> >> fs/nfsd/nfsfh.h: fhp->fh_pre_change = inode->i_version;
> >> $
> >>
> >> the nfsfh.h hit is in fill_pre_wcc(), which appears to be called
> >> under i_mutex but not i_lock. The xdr encoding functions don't
> >> appear to be holding i_lock, and may be holding i_mutex, but I
> >> haven't looked that far.
> >
> > I'm still not sure how . . .
>
> ugh didn't mean to send this reply quite yet, sorry.
>
> Not sure how we do an unlocked read on a 32-bit machine that doesn't
> potentially
> get the wrong answer. I talked to Bruce about it a bit; nothing jumped out at
> us. At worst (?) it seems that if you happened to race on a read at exactly
> the 2^32'nd modification, you might go backwards.
>
> As Bruce says, even if so, maybe "so rare we don't care?"
Especially as it requires 2^32 modifications to first be made to the
file before there's even the possibility of a high word race on a
read and then there's only one increment we could race with before
it doesn't chnge again for another 2^32 modifications.
Hence, at 1 in 4 billion modifications potentially causing a problem,
I'd agree with the "so rare we don't care" assessment.
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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