On Fri, Jan 09, 2015 at 08:51:30AM -0800, Jeff Layton wrote:
> Ok, it'd be good to document that in some comments then for the sake of
> posterity (maybe it is later in the set -- I haven't gotten to the end
> yet).
What kinds of comments do you expect? Not implementing unused features
of a protocol should be the default for anything in Linux.
> Now, that said...I think that your ROC semantics are wrong here. You
> also have to take delegations into account. [1]
>
> Basically the semantics that you want are that nfsd should do all of
> the ROC stuff on last close iff there are no outstanding delegations or
> on delegreturn iff there are no opens.
>
> What we ended up doing in the unreleased code we have was to create a
> new per-client and per-file object (that we creatively called an
> "odstate"). An open stateid and a delegation stateid would hold a
> reference to this object which is put when those stateids are freed.
> When its refcount goes to zero, then we'd free any outstanding layouts
> on the file for that client and free the object.
>
> You probably want to do something similar here.
>
> [1]: Tom and Trond mentioned that there's a RFC5661 errata pending for
> this, but I don't see it right offhand.
It would be good to look at the errata. While the idea of keeping
layouts around longer makes sense, I would only expect to do this
if they layout state was created based on a delegation stateid, not
a lock or open stateid. In that case having the layouts hang off
the "parent" stateid might be another option.
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