svn-role <[email protected]> writes:
> Merge r1883355 from trunk:
>
> * r1883355
> Use the APR-1.4+ API for flushing file contents to disk.
> Justification:
> Reduce code duplication between APR and SVN.
> Votes:
> +1: brane, jun66j5, markphip
…
> + do {
> + apr_err = apr_file_datasync(file);
> + } while(APR_STATUS_IS_EINTR(apr_err));
> +
> + /* If the file is in a memory filesystem, fsync() may return
> + EINVAL. Presumably the user knows the risks, and we can just
> + ignore the error. */
> + if (APR_STATUS_IS_EINVAL(apr_err))
> + return SVN_NO_ERROR;
> +
> + if (apr_err)
> + return svn_error_wrap_apr(apr_err,
> + _("Can't flush file '%s' to disk"),
> + try_utf8_from_internal_style(fname, pool));
A few thoughts on this change:
1) Previously, the check for EINVAL within the svn_io_file_flush_to_disk()
function only happened in the #else block, so it did not affect the
behavior on Windows. With the change, the check happens unconditionally
on all platforms.
On Windows, APR_STATUS_IS_EINVAL() is defined as follows:
#define APR_STATUS_IS_EINVAL(s) ((s) == APR_EINVAL \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_INVALID_ACCESS \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_INVALID_DATA \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_INVALID_FUNCTION \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER \
|| (s) == APR_OS_START_SYSERR + ERROR_NEGATIVE_SEEK)
So with this change, all of these error codes are now going to be ignored,
and the svn_io_file_flush_to_disk() function will return SVN_NO_ERROR,
indicating the success of flushing the data to disk. Some of these error
codes, such as ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE, are quite generic.
I would think that this change opens a data corruption possibility in
the following case:
- A real error happens during FlushFileBuffers().
- It gets translated into one of the error codes above by the I/O stack.
- The error is ignored in the implementation of svn_io_file_flush_to_disk().
- The caller of svn_io_file_flush_to_disk() interprets this situation as a
successful data flush.
- He continues to work under an assumption that the data was successfully
flushed to disk, whereas in fact it was not. For example, by committing
a repository transaction.
- A power loss after the transaction commit causes the data to be lost or
corrupted.
2) Unless I am mistaken, this change replaces an fcntl(F_FULLFSYNC) with
fdatasync() when the latter is supported. So assuming that both operations
are supported, the new behavior of the svn_io_file_flush_to_disk() function
has weaker integrity guarantees than before, because fdatasync() does not
ensure that metadata such as the last modification time is written to disk.
I haven't done a thorough check if we rely on mtime being flushed to the
disk in our code, but even if we don't, svn_io_file_flush_to_disk() is part
of the public API, so altering its integrity guarantees in a patch release
might be unexpected for its callers.
Thoughts?
(A small disclaimer: these changes have slipped past my attention until now,
when I tried updating to 1.14.2. But better late than sorry…)
Thanks,
Evgeny Kotkov