On May 03, 2007  21:31 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Apr 2007 23:43:32 +0530 "Amit K. Arora" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > + * ext4_fallocate:
> > + * preallocate space for a file
> > + * mode is for future use, e.g. for unallocating preallocated blocks etc.
> > + */
> 
> This description is rather thin.  What is the filesystem's actual behaviour
> here?  If the file is using extents then the implementation will do
> <something>.  If the file is using bitmaps then we will do <something else>.
> 
> But what?   Here is where it should be described.

My understanding is that glibc will handle zero-filling of files for
filesystems that do not support fallocate().

> > +int ext4_fallocate(struct inode *inode, int mode, loff_t offset, loff_t 
> > len)
> > +{
> > +   handle_t *handle;
> > +   ext4_fsblk_t block, max_blocks;
> > +   int ret, ret2, nblocks = 0, retries = 0;
> > +   struct buffer_head map_bh;
> > +   unsigned int credits, blkbits = inode->i_blkbits;
> > +
> > +   /* Currently supporting (pre)allocate mode _only_ */
> > +   if (mode != FA_ALLOCATE)
> > +           return -EOPNOTSUPP;
> > +
> > +   if (!(EXT4_I(inode)->i_flags & EXT4_EXTENTS_FL))
> > +           return -ENOTTY;
> 
> So we don't implement fallocate on bitmap-based files!  Well that's huge
> news.  The changelog would be an appropriate place to communicate this,
> along with reasons why, or a description of the plan to fix it.
> 
> Also, posix says nothing about fallocate() returning ENOTTY.

I _think_ this is to convince glibc to do the zero-filling in userspace,
but I'm not up on the API specifics.

> > +   block = offset >> blkbits;
> > +   max_blocks = (EXT4_BLOCK_ALIGN(len + offset, blkbits) >> blkbits)
> > +                    - block;
> > +   mutex_lock(&EXT4_I(inode)->truncate_mutex);
> > +   credits = ext4_ext_calc_credits_for_insert(inode, NULL);
> > +   mutex_unlock(&EXT4_I(inode)->truncate_mutex);
> 
> Now I'm mystified.  Given that we're allocating an arbitrary amount of disk
> space, and that this disk space will require an arbitrary amount of
> metadata, how can we work out how much journal space we'll be needing
> without at least looking at `len'?

Good question.

The uninitialized extent can cover up to 128MB with a single entry.
If @path isn't specified, then ext4_ext_calc_credits_for_insert()
function returns the maximum number of extents needed to insert a leaf,
including splitting all of the index blocks.  That would allow up to 43GB
(340 extents/block * 128MB) to be preallocated, but it still needs to take
the size of the preallocation into account (adding 3 blocks per 43GB - a
leaf block, a bitmap block and a group descriptor).

Also, since @path is not being given then truncate_mutex is not needed.

> > +           ret = ext4_ext_get_blocks(handle, inode, block,
> > +                                     max_blocks, &map_bh,
> > +                                     EXT4_CREATE_UNINITIALIZED_EXT, 0);
> > +           BUG_ON(!ret);
> 
> BUG_ON is vicious.  Is it really justified here?  Possibly a WARN_ON and
> ext4_error() would be safer and more useful here.

Ouch, not very friendly error handling.

Cheers, Andreas
--
Andreas Dilger
Principal Software Engineer
Cluster File Systems, Inc.

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to