On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 01:27:21PM +0100, Rasmus Villemoes wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 22 2014, Theodore Ts'o <tytso@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > Guarantee that the on-disk timestamps will be no more than 24 hours
> > stale.
> >
> > + unsigned short days_since_boot = jiffies / (HZ * 86400);
>
> This seems to wrap every 49 days (assuming 32 bit jiffies and HZ==1000),
> so on-disk updates can be delayed indefinitely, assuming just the right
> delays between writes.
Good point, I'll fix this.
> Would it make sense to introduce days_since_boot as a global variable
> and avoid these issues? This would presumably also make update_time a
> few cycles faster (avoiding a division-by-constant), but not sure if
> that's important. And something of course needs to update
> days_since_boot, but that should be doable.
I can do this fairly simply like this:
get_monotonic_boottime(&uptime);
daycode = uptime.tv_sec / (HZ * 86400);
and we only need to do this if lazytime is set, and the inode isn't
marked as I_DIRTY_TIME:
if ((inode->i_sb->s_flags & MS_LAZYTIME) &&
!(flags & S_VERSION)) {
if (inode->i_state & I_DIRTY_TIME)
return 0;
get_monotonic_boottime(&uptime);
daycode = do_div64(uptime.tv_sec do_div, (HZ * 86400));
if (!inode->i_ts_dirty_day ||
inode->i_ts_dirty_day == daycode) {
spin_lock(&inode->i_lock);
inode->i_state |= I_DIRTY_TIME;
spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
inode->i_ts_dirty_day = daycode;
return 0;
}
}
So I'm not entirely sure it's worth it to create a global variable for
days since boot; I've been runnin with this patch in my laptop, we
wouldn't be triggering the get_monotonic_bootime() function all that
often. (Since once the dirty_time flg is set, we don't need to check
about whether we need to set it again.) And if we *did* care, it
would be simple enough to use a static counter which only recalculates
daycode every 30 or 60 minutes.
Cheers,
- Ted
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