On 06/10/2013 05:31 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 10, 2013 at 09:17:31AM -0400, Brian Foster wrote:
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> I wanted to get this onto the list... I suspect this could be
>> similar/related to the issue reported here:
>>
>> http://oss.sgi.com/archives/xfs/2013-06/msg00066.html
>
> Unlikely - generic/263 tests mmap IO vs direct IO, and Sage's
> problem has neither...
>
Oh, Ok. I didn't look at that one closely enough then.
>> While running xfstests, the only apparent regression I hit from 3.9.0
>> was generic/263. This test fails due to the following command (and
>> resulting output):
>
> Not a regression - 263 has been failing ever since it was introduced
> in 2011 by:
>
> commit 0d69e10ed15b01397e8c6fd7833fa3c2970ec024
...
>
> It is testing mmap() writes vs direct IO, something that is known to
> be fundamentally broken (i.e. racy) as mmap() page fault path does
> not hold the XFS_IOLOCK or i_mutex in any way. The direct IO path
> tries to wark around this by flushing and invalidating cached pages
> before IO submission, but the lack of locking in the page fault path
> means we can't avoid the race entirely.
>
Thanks for the explanation.
>> P.S., I also came across the following thread which, if related,
>> suggests this might be known/understood to a degree:
>>
>> http://oss.sgi.com/archives/xfs/2012-04/msg00703.html
>
> Yup, that's potentially one aspect of it. However, have you run the
> test code on ext3/4? it works just fine - it's only XFS that has
> problems with this case, so it's not clear that this is a DIO
> problem. It was never able to work out where ext3/ext4 were zeroing
> the part of the page beyond EOF, and I couldn't ever make the DIO
> code reliably do the right thing. It's one of the reasons that lead
> to this discussion as LSFMM:
>
> http://lwn.net/Articles/548351/
>
Interesting, thanks again. I did happen to run the script and the fsx
test on the ext4 rootfs of my VM and observed expected behavior.
Note that I mentioned this was harder to reproduce with fixed alloc
sizes less than 128k or so. I don't believe ext4 does any kind of
speculative preallocation in the manner that XFS does. Perhaps that is a
factor..?
Brian
> Cheers,
>
> Dave.
>
|