Re: [RFC PATCH] fpathconf() for fsync() behavior

From: Valerie Aurora Henson
Date: Thu Apr 23 2009 - 12:24:09 EST


On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 08:42:30AM -0400, Theodore Tso wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 12:21:05PM +0100, Jamie Lokier wrote:
> > Andrew Morton wrote:
> > > Would it be better to implement new syscall(s) with finer-grained control
> > > and better semantics? Then userspace would just need to to:
> > >
> > > fsync_on_steroids(fd, FSYNC_BEFORE_RENAME);
> > >
> > > and that all gets down into the filesystem which can then work out what
> > > it needs to do to implement the command.
> >
> > +1 from me. Several flags come to mind for discussion.
> > FSYNC_HARDWARE. FSYNC_ORDER_ONLY, FSYNC_FLUSH.
> > FSYNC_DATA_BEFORE_SIZE. FSYNC_BEFORE_NEW_FILE.
> >
> > Nick Piggin was working on fsync_range().
> >
> > Maybe it's time to do fsync properly?
>
> We could create such a thing, but how many application programmers
> will actually *use* them? People need to check out my blog, where my
> competence, my judgement, even my paternity was questioned about this
> issue.

I am sorry you were personally attacked over this issue - that was
uncalled for and unproductive. I wish personal attacks were less
common in open source.

> Application writers don't care about OS portability (it only has to
> work on Linux), or working on multiple filesystems (it only has work
> on ext3, and any filesystems which doesn't do automagic fsync's at the
> right magic times automagically is broken by design). This includes
> many GNOME and KDE developers. So as we concluded at the filesystem
> and storage workshop, we probably will have to keep automagic
> hueristics out there, for all of the broken applications. Heck, Linus
> even refused to call those applications "broken".
>
> So we can create a more finer-grained controlled system call ---
> although I would suggest that we just add some extra flags to
> sync_file_range() --- but it's doubtful that many application
> programmers will use it.

I remain hopeful. :) Application developers *want* to do the right
thing in general; they are just facing a hopeless catch-22 right now.
The POSIX-ly correct use of fsync() exposes them to potential
multi-second delays on 95% of file systems currently in existence -
and the fsync() isn't even needed in many cases!

For example, Red Hat is beginning to support XFS officially, and I
would be happy to fix any bugs we receive about applications failing
to do fsync() before rename() - if I was sure I wasn't introducing a
performance regression.

-VAL
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