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From: John Garry <[email protected]>
To: Luis Chamberlain <[email protected]>
Cc: "Matthew Wilcox" <[email protected]>,
	"Pankaj Raghav" <[email protected]>,
	"Daniel Gomez" <[email protected]>,
	"Javier González" <[email protected]>,
	[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected], [email protected],
	[email protected]
Subject: Re: [PATCH v6 00/10] block atomic writes
Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2024 09:34:36 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <[email protected]> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>

On 08/04/2024 18:50, Luis Chamberlain wrote:
> I agree that when you don't set the sector size to 16k you are not forcing the
> filesystem to use 16k IOs, the metadata can still be 4k. But when you
> use a 16k sector size, the 16k IOs should be respected by the
> filesystem.
> 
> Do we break BIOs to below a min order if the sector size is also set to
> 16k?  I haven't seen that and its unclear when or how that could happen.

AFAICS, the only guarantee is to not split below LBS.

> 
> At least for NVMe we don't need to yell to a device to inform it we want
> a 16k IO issued to it to be atomic, if we read that it has the
> capability for it, it just does it. The IO verificaiton can be done with
> blkalgn [0].
> 
> Does SCSI*require*  an 16k atomic prep work, or can it be done implicitly?
> Does it need WRITE_ATOMIC_16?

physical block size is what we can implicitly write atomically. So if 
you have a 4K PBS and 512B LBS, then WRITE_ATOMIC_16 would be required 
to write 16KB atomically.

> 
> [0]https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://github.com/dagmcr/bcc/tree/blkalgn__;!!ACWV5N9M2RV99hQ!I0tfdPsEq9vdHMSC7JVmVDHCb5w6invjudW7pZW50v3mZ7dWMMf0cBtY_BQlZZmYSjLzPQDZoLO7-K6MQQ$  
> 
>> So just increasing the inode block size / FS block size does not
>> really change anything, in itself.
> If we're breaking up IOs when a min order is set for an inode, that
> would need to be looked into, but we're not seeing that.

In practice you won't see it, but I am talking about guarantees not to 
see it.

> 
>>> Do untorn writes actually exist in SCSI?  I was under the impression
>>> nobody had actually implemented them in SCSI hardware.
>> I know that some SCSI targets actually atomically write data in chunks >
>> LBS. Obviously atomic vs non-atomic performance is a moot point there, as
>> data is implicitly always atomically written.
>>
>> We actually have an mysql/innodb port of this API working on such a SCSI
>> target.
> I suspect IO verification with the above tool should prove to show the
> same if you use a filesystem with a larger sector size set too, and you
> just would not have to do any changes to userspace other than the
> filesystem creation with say mkfs.xfs params of -b size=16k -s size=16k

Ok, I see

> 
>> However I am not sure about atomic write support for other SCSI targets.
> Good to know!
> 
>>>> We saw untorn writes as not being a property of the file or even the inode
>>>> itself, but rather an attribute of the specific IO being issued from the
>>>> userspace application.
>>> The problem is that keeping track of that is expensive for buffered
>>> writes.  It's a model that only works for direct IO.  Arguably we
>>> could make it work for O_SYNC buffered IO, but that'll require some
>>> surgery.
>> To me, O_ATOMIC would be required for buffered atomic writes IO, as we want
>> a fixed-sized IO, so that would mean no mixing of atomic and non-atomic IO.
> Would using the same min and max order for the inode work instead?

Maybe, I would need to check further.

Thanks,
John


  parent reply	other threads:[~2024-04-10  8:35 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 40+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2024-03-26 13:38 [PATCH v6 00/10] block atomic writes John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 01/10] block: Pass blk_queue_get_max_sectors() a request pointer John Garry
2024-04-10 22:58   ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 02/10] block: Call blkdev_dio_unaligned() from blkdev_direct_IO() John Garry
2024-04-10 22:53   ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-11  8:06     ` John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 03/10] fs: Initial atomic write support John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 04/10] fs: Add initial atomic write support info to statx John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 05/10] block: Add core atomic write support John Garry
2024-03-26 17:11   ` Randy Dunlap
2024-04-10 23:34     ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-11  8:15       ` John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 06/10] block: Add atomic write support for statx John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 07/10] block: Add fops atomic write support John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 08/10] scsi: sd: Atomic " John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 09/10] scsi: scsi_debug: " John Garry
2024-03-26 13:38 ` [PATCH v6 10/10] nvme: " John Garry
2024-04-11  0:29   ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-11  8:59     ` John Garry
2024-04-11 16:22       ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-11 23:32         ` Dan Helmick
2024-03-27  3:50 ` [PATCH v6 00/10] block atomic writes Matthew Wilcox
2024-03-27 13:37   ` John Garry
2024-04-04 16:48     ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-04-05 10:06       ` John Garry
2024-04-08 17:50         ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-10  4:05           ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-04-10  6:20             ` Hannes Reinecke
2024-04-11  0:38               ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-14 20:50             ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-15 21:18               ` Matthew Wilcox
2024-04-16 21:11                 ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-10  8:34           ` John Garry [this message]
2024-04-11 19:07             ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-04-12  8:15               ` John Garry
2024-04-12 18:28                 ` Luis Chamberlain
2024-03-27 20:31   ` Dave Chinner
2024-04-05 10:20     ` Kent Overstreet
2024-04-05 10:55       ` John Garry
2024-04-05  6:14   ` Kent Overstreet

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