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Re: [PATCH v1 0/8] VFS: In-kernel copy system call


From: Darrick J. Wong
Subject: Re: [PATCH v1 0/8] VFS: In-kernel copy system call
Date: Wed, 9 Sep 2015 14:16:36 -0700
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15)

On Wed, Sep 09, 2015 at 02:52:08PM -0400, Anna Schumaker wrote:
> On 09/08/2015 06:39 PM, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 08, 2015 at 02:45:39PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> >> On Tue, Sep 8, 2015 at 2:29 PM, Darrick J. Wong <address@hidden> wrote:
> >>> On Tue, Sep 08, 2015 at 09:03:09PM +0100, Pádraig Brady wrote:
> >>>> On 08/09/15 20:10, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> >>>>> On Tue, Sep 8, 2015 at 11:23 AM, Anna Schumaker
> >>>>> <address@hidden> wrote:
> >>>>>> On 09/08/2015 11:21 AM, Pádraig Brady wrote:
> >>>>>>> I see copy_file_range() is a reflink() on BTRFS?
> >>>>>>> That's a bit surprising, as it avoids the copy completely.
> >>>>>>> cp(1) for example considered doing a BTRFS clone by default,
> >>>>>>> but didn't due to expectations that users actually wanted
> >>>>>>> the data duplicated on disk for resilience reasons,
> >>>>>>> and for performance reasons so that write latencies were
> >>>>>>> restricted to the copy operation, rather than being
> >>>>>>> introduced at usage time as the dest file is CoW'd.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> If reflink() is a possibility for copy_file_range()
> >>>>>>> then could it be done optionally with a flag?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> The idea is that filesystems get to choose how to handle copies in the
> >>>>>> default case.  BTRFS could do a reflink, but NFS could do a server side
> >>>
> >>> Eww, different default behaviors depending on the filesystem. :)
> >>>
> >>>>>> copy instead.  I can change the default behavior to only do a data copy
> >>>>>> (unless the reflink flag is specified) instead, if that is desirable.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> What does everybody think?
> >>>>>
> >>>>> I think the best you could do is to have a hint asking politely for
> >>>>> the data to be deep-copied.  After all, some filesystems reserve the
> >>>>> right to transparently deduplicate.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Also, on a true COW filesystem (e.g. btrfs sometimes), there may be no
> >>>>> advantage to deep copying unless you actually want two copies for
> >>>>> locality reasons.
> >>>>
> >>>> Agreed. The relink and server side copy are separate things.
> >>>> There's no advantage to not doing a server side copy,
> >>>> but as mentioned there may be advantages to doing deep copies on BTRFS
> >>>> (another reason not previous mentioned in this thread, would be
> >>>> to avoid ENOSPC errors at some time in the future).
> >>>>
> >>>> So having control over the deep copy seems useful.
> >>>> It's debatable whether ALLOW_REFLINK should be on/off by default
> >>>> for copy_file_range().  I'd be inclined to have such a setting off by 
> >>>> default,
> >>>> but cp(1) at least will work with whatever is chosen.
> >>>
> >>> So far it looks like people are interested in at least these "make data 
> >>> appear
> >>> in this other place" filesystem operations:
> >>>
> >>> 1. reflink
> >>> 2. reflink, but only if the contents are the same (dedupe)
> >>
> >> What I meant by this was: if you ask for "regular copy", you may end
> >> up with a reflink anyway.  Anyway, how can you reflink a range and
> >> have the contents *not* be the same?
> > 
> > reflink forcibly remaps fd_dest's range to fd_src's range.  If they didn't
> > match before, they will afterwards.
> > 
> > dedupe remaps fd_dest's range to fd_src's range only if they match, of 
> > course.
> > 
> > Perhaps I should have said "...if the contents are the same before the 
> > call"?
> > 
> >>
> >>> 3. regular copy
> >>> 4. regular copy, but make the hardware do it for us
> >>> 5. regular copy, but require a second copy on the media (no-dedupe)
> >>
> >> If this comes from me, I have no desire to ever use this as a flag.
> > 
> > I meant (5) as a "disable auto-dedupe for this operation" flag, not as
> > a "reallocate all the shared blocks now" op...
> > 
> >> If someone wants to use chattr or some new operation to say "make this
> >> range of this file belong just to me for purpose of optimizing future
> >> writes", then sure, go for it, with the understanding that there are
> >> plenty of filesystems for which that doesn't even make sense.
> > 
> > "Unshare these blocks" sounds more like something fallocate could do.
> > 
> > So far in my XFS reflink playground, it seems that using the defrag tool to
> > un-cow a file makes most sense.  AFAICT the XFS and ext4 defraggers copy a
> > fragmented file's data to a second file and use a 'swap extents' operation,
> > after which the donor file is unlinked.
> > 
> > Hey, if this syscall turns into a more generic "do something involving two
> > (fd:off:len) (fd:off:len) tuples" call, I guess we could throw in "swap
> > extents" as a 7th operation, to refactor the ioctls.  <smirk>
> > 
> >>
> >>> 6. regular copy, but don't CoW (eatmyothercopies) (joke)
> >>>
> >>> (Please add whatever ops I missed.)
> >>>
> >>> I think I can see a case for letting (4) fall back to (3) since (4) is an
> >>> optimization of (3).
> >>>
> >>> However, I particularly don't like the idea of (1) falling back to (3-5).
> >>> Either the kernel can satisfy a request or it can't, but let's not just
> >>> assume that we should transmogrify one type of request into another.  
> >>> Userspace
> >>> should decide if a reflink failure should turn into one of the copy 
> >>> variants,
> >>> depending on whether the user wants to spread allocation costs over 
> >>> rewrites or
> >>> pay it all up front.  Also, if we allow reflink to fall back to copy, how 
> >>> do
> >>> programs find out what actually took place?  Or do we simply not allow 
> >>> them to
> >>> find out?
> >>>
> >>> Also, programs that expect reflink either to finish or fail quickly might 
> >>> be
> >>> surprised if it's possible for reflink to take a longer time than usual 
> >>> and
> >>> with the side effect that a deep(er) copy was made.
> >>>
> >>> I guess if someone asks for both (1) and (3) we can do the fallback in the
> >>> kernel, like how we handle it right now.
> >>>
> >>
> >> I think we should focus on what the actual legit use cases might be.
> >> Certainly we want to support a mode that's "reflink or fail".  We
> >> could have these flags:
> >>
> >> COPY_FILE_RANGE_ALLOW_REFLINK
> >> COPY_FILE_RANGE_ALLOW_COPY
> >>
> >> Setting neither gets -EINVAL.  Setting both works as is.  Setting just
> >> ALLOW_REFLINK will fail if a reflink can't be supported.  Setting just
> >> ALLOW_COPY will make a best-effort attempt not to reflink but
> >> expressly permits reflinking in cases where either (a) plain old
> >> write(2) might also result in a reflink or (b) there is no advantage
> >> to not reflinking.
> > 
> > I don't agree with having a 'copy' flag that can reflink when we also have a
> > 'reflink' flag.  I guess I just don't like having a flag with different
> > meanings depending on context.
> > 
> > Users should be able to get the default behavior by passing '0' for flags, 
> > so
> > provide FORBID_REFLINK and FORBID_COPY flags to turn off those behaviors, 
> > with
> > an admonishment that one should only use them if they have a goooood reason.
> > Passing neither gets you reflink-xor-copy, which is what I think we both 
> > want
> > in the general case.
> 
> I agree here that 0 for flags should do something useful, and I wanted to
> double check if reflink-xor-copy is a good default behavior.

Ok.

> > 
> > FORBID_REFLINK = 1
> > FORBID_COPY = 2
> 
> I don't like the idea of using flags to forbid behavior.  I think it would be
> more straightforward to have flags like REFLINK_ONLY or COPY_ONLY so users
> can tell us what they want, instead of what they don't want.

Seems fine to me.

> While I'm thinking about flags, COPY_FILE_RANGE_REFLINK_ONLY would be a bit
> of a mouthful.  Does anybody have suggestions for ways that I could make this
> shorter?

CFR_REFLINK_ONLY?

--D

> 
> Thanks,
> Anna
> 
> > CHECK_SAME = 4
> > HW_COPY = 8
> > 
> > DEDUPE = (FORBID_COPY | CHECK_SAME)
> > 
> > What do you say to that?
> > 
> >> An example of (b) would be a filesystem backed by deduped
> >> thinly-provisioned storage that can't do anything about ENOSPC because
> >> it doesn't control it in the first place.
> >>
> >> Another option would be to split up the copy case into "I expect to
> >> overwrite a lot of the target file soon, so (c) try to commit space
> >> for that or (d) try to make it time-efficient".  Of course, (d) is
> >> irrelevant on filesystems with no random access (nvdimms, for
> >> example).
> >>
> >> I guess the tl;dr is that I'm highly skeptical of any use for
> >> disallowing reflinking other than forcibly committing space in cases
> >> where committing space actually means something.
> > 
> > That's more or less where I was going too. :)
> > 
> > --D
> > 
> 
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