[PATCH] xfstests: 091, 240, 268 fix for xfs on 4k sector hard drive
Eric Sandeen
sandeen at sandeen.net
Thu Jul 25 14:07:04 CDT 2013
On 7/25/13 1:43 PM, Dwight Engen wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jul 2013 10:23:19 -0500
> Eric Sandeen <sandeen at sandeen.net> wrote:
>
> [...]
>> (You can probably mkfs w/ an explicit 512 sector size, and confirm
>> that 512-byte DIOs work again)
>
> Hi Eric, yep, confirmed that doing mkfs.xfs -b size=1024 (used 1024
> instead of 512 so that 240 would run) makes 091, 240, and 268 work
> without my changes.
Ok; that's because a specified block size < physical sector size switches the
"sector size" setting in the superblock back down to logical sector size.
-b 4096 -s 512 should make it work too.
>> bleah, perhaps that was a mistake - or perhaps we need to fix
>> kernelspace to prefer physical-size IOs, but allow logical-size if a
>> DIO requests it.
>
> ext4 and btrfs did work, so perhaps that is what they are doing, I
> have not looked yet.
well, they probably don't have this "sector size" notion
throughout the code like we do.
> [... test 240]
>>>>>> -logical_block_size=`blockdev --getss $TEST_DEV`
>>>>>> +logical_block_size=`blockdev --getpbsz $TEST_DEV`
>>>>>
>>>>> FWIW, that doesn't make much sense - putting the physical block
>>>>> size into a variable named "logical_block_size".....
>>>
>>> Yeah, that name wouldn't make much sense with this change. Its
>>> actually being used to compare to the fs block size and then its
>>> passed into aiodio_sparse2 as offset. 091 and 268 use the more
>>> generic name bsize, should I can change it to that?
>>
>> Well, that was put there with:
>>
>> commit 2dbd21dc152d89715263990c881025f17c7b632e
>> Author: Jeff Moyer <jmoyer at redhat.com>
>> Date: Fri Feb 11 15:20:02 2011 -0500
>>
>> 240: only run when the file system block size is larger than the
>> disk sector size
>> This test really wants to test partial file-system block I/Os.
>> Thus, if the device has a 4K sector size, and the file system has a
>> 4K block size, there's really no point in running the test. In the
>> attached patch, I check that the fs block size is larger than the
>> device's logical block size, which should cover a 4k device block
>> size with a 16k fs block size.
>>
>> I verified that the patched test does not run on my 4k sector
>> device with a 4k file system. I also verified that it continues to
>> run on a 512 byte logical sector device with a 4k file system block
>> size.
>> Signed-off-by: Jeff Moyer <jmoyer at redhat.com>
>> Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch at lst.de>
>
> The name was added in this commit, and the message would lead me to
> believe that Jeff intended for the test to not run on a 4k physical
> sector disk with a 4k fs, so is the "logical_block_size" name a
> misnomer?
Well, it wants to be able to do sub-fs-block-sized direct IO.
Jeff assumed that the DIO limitation would be logical block size,
but the mkfs commit I referenced changed the limit to physical block
size, which I think is a mistake, in retrospect. At least for the
buftarg sector sizes, we should probably set it to logical sector
size, to allow smaller DIOs if requested. Let me give that some
thought.
-Eric
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