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Re: [PATCH for-4.2 v2 3/3] block/file-posix: Let post-EOF fallocate seri


From: Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy
Subject: Re: [PATCH for-4.2 v2 3/3] block/file-posix: Let post-EOF fallocate serialize
Date: Tue, 2 Jun 2020 19:16:00 +0300
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.8.1

02.06.2020 18:46, Max Reitz wrote:
On 02.06.20 16:43, Vladimir Sementsov-Ogievskiy wrote:
01.11.2019 18:25, Max Reitz wrote:

Sorry for being late, I have some comments

Uh, well.  Reasonable, but I hope you don’t mind me having no longer
having this patch fresh on my mind.

The XFS kernel driver has a bug that may cause data corruption for qcow2
images as of qemu commit c8bb23cbdbe32f.  We can work around it by
treating post-EOF fallocates as serializing up until infinity (INT64_MAX
in practice).

Cc: qemu-stable@nongnu.org
Signed-off-by: Max Reitz <mreitz@redhat.com>
---
   block/file-posix.c | 36 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
   1 file changed, 36 insertions(+)

diff --git a/block/file-posix.c b/block/file-posix.c
index 0b7e904d48..1f0f61a02b 100644
--- a/block/file-posix.c
+++ b/block/file-posix.c
@@ -2721,6 +2721,42 @@ raw_do_pwrite_zeroes(BlockDriverState *bs,
int64_t offset, int bytes,
       RawPosixAIOData acb;
       ThreadPoolFunc *handler;
   +#ifdef CONFIG_FALLOCATE
+    if (offset + bytes > bs->total_sectors * BDRV_SECTOR_SIZE) {
+        BdrvTrackedRequest *req;
+        uint64_t end;
+
+        /*
+         * This is a workaround for a bug in the Linux XFS driver,
+         * where writes submitted through the AIO interface will be
+         * discarded if they happen beyond a concurrently running
+         * fallocate() that increases the file length (i.e., both the
+         * write and the fallocate() happen beyond the EOF).
+         *
+         * To work around it, we extend the tracked request for this
+         * zero write until INT64_MAX (effectively infinity), and mark
+         * it as serializing.
+         *
+         * We have to enable this workaround for all filesystems and
+         * AIO modes (not just XFS with aio=native), because for
+         * remote filesystems we do not know the host configuration.
+         */
+
+        req = bdrv_co_get_self_request(bs);
+        assert(req);
+        assert(req->type == BDRV_TRACKED_WRITE);
+        assert(req->offset <= offset);
+        assert(req->offset + req->bytes >= offset + bytes);

Why these assertions?

Mostly to see that bdrv_co_get_self_request() (introduced by the same
series) actually got the right request.  (I suppose.)

TrackedRequest offset and bytes fields correspond
to the original request. When request is being expanded to satisfy
request_alignment, these fields are not updated.

Well, shrunk in this case, but OK.

So, maybe, we should assert overlap_offset and overlap_bytes?

Maybe, but would that have any benefit?  Especially after this patch
having been in qemu for over half a year?

(Also, intuitively off the top of my head I don’t see how it would make
more sense to check overlap_offset and overlap_bytes, if all the
assertions are for is to see that we got the right request.
overlap_offset and overlap_bytes may still not exactly match @offset or
@bytes, respectively.)

Your suggestion makes it sound a bit like you have a different purpose
in mind what these assertions might be useful for...?

No I just think it may have false-positives, when actual request is larger
than original. So offset may be < req->offset and req->offset + req->bytes may 
be
less than offset + bytes. And we will crash. I should make a reproducer to
prove it, but it seems possible.


+
+        end = INT64_MAX & -(uint64_t)bs->bl.request_alignment;
+        req->bytes = end - req->offset;

And I doubt that we should update req->bytes. We never updated it in
other places, it corresponds to original request. It's enough to update
overlap_bytes to achieve corresponding serialising.

Does it hurt?  If so, would you send a patch?

I assume you reply to this patch instead of writing a patch because you
have the same feeling of “It probably doesn’t really matter, so let’s
have a discussion first”.

1. yes, and
2. I probably don't see the full picture around tracked requests


My stance is: I don’t think it matters and this whole piece of code is a
hack that shouldn’t exist, obviously.  So I don’t really care how it
fits into all of our other code.

I would like to say I wouldn’t mind a patch to drop the req->bytes
assignment, but OTOH it would mean I’d have to review it and verify that
it’s indeed sufficient to set overlap_bytes.

If it’s in any way inconvenient for you that req->bytes is adjusted,
then of course please send one.

+        req->overlap_bytes = req->bytes;
+
+        bdrv_mark_request_serialising(req, bs->bl.request_alignment);

Not sure, how much should we care about request_alignment here, I think,
it's enough to just set req->overlap_bytes = INT64_MAX -
req->overlap_offest, but it doesn't really matter.

As long as req->bytes is adjusted, we have to care, or the overlap_bytes
calculation in bdrv_mark_request_serialising will overflow.

Well, one could argue that it doesn’t matter because the MAX() will
still do the right thing, but overflowing is never nice.

Hmm I think, if reduce it to just INT64_MAX, we should pass 1 as align to 
bdrv_mark_request_serialising.


(Of course, it probably doesn’t matter at all if we just wouldn’t touch
req->bytes.)


OK, thanks for the answer, I'll prepare a patch.


--
Best regards,
Vladimir



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