Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2000 20:46:11 -0800 From: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> To: Kirk McKusick <mckusick@flamingo.McKusick.COM> Cc: Terry Lambert <tlambert@primenet.com>, fs@freebsd.org, jkh@freebsd.org Subject: Re: changing mount options still can cause damage? Message-ID: <20000222204610.I21720@fw.wintelcom.net> In-Reply-To: <200002230232.SAA22016@flamingo.McKusick.COM>; from mckusick@flamingo.McKusick.COM on Tue, Feb 22, 2000 at 06:32:25PM -0800 References: <200002230230.TAA27823@usr07.primenet.com> <200002230232.SAA22016@flamingo.McKusick.COM>
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* Kirk McKusick <mckusick@flamingo.McKusick.COM> [000222 19:14] wrote: > A downgrade from read-write to read-only does a complete flush > of the filesystem before setting the clean bit in the superblock. > So, even if you have been running async before or even during > the period that you do the downgrade to read-only, you will > not trash the filesystem. I do not believe that you are lying > to anybody by deleting the commentary about cycling between > read-only and read-write. Appropriate warnings about async are > called for, however the only warning necessary about cycling > between sync and async is that the danger of async does not > go away for several minutes after you have cycled to sync. > > ~Kirk You're saying the exact opposite of what Bruce and Luoqi said, they both say that updating the mount from async -> noasync/sync is safe because of the flush_files call. Looking at the code you seem right... ("ffs/ffs_vfsops.c" line 186 of 1283) if (mp->mnt_flag & MNT_UPDATE) { ump = VFSTOUFS(mp); fs = ump->um_fs; devvp = ump->um_devvp; err = 0; ronly = fs->fs_ronly; /* MNT_RELOAD might change this */ if (ronly == 0 && (mp->mnt_flag & MNT_RDONLY)) { flags = WRITECLOSE; if (mp->mnt_flag & MNT_FORCE) flags |= FORCECLOSE; if (mp->mnt_flag & MNT_SOFTDEP) { err = softdep_flushfiles(mp, flags, p); } else { err = ffs_flushfiles(mp, flags, p); } ronly = 1; } It sure looks like it forces the structures to disk because ffs_flushfiles calls VOP_FSYNC on the filesystem dev vp. Which I would assume fixes up link counts for inodes possibly opened, but deleted before the the filesystem is set to read-only. ufs_close calls ufs_itimes which avoids attempting to update the inode access time if the fs is readonly, so does ufs_inactive. However the async -> noasync/sync doesn't do the same (fsync the device vp), shouldn't it, and if it did, wouldn't that fix the problem? It's not like doing a fsync on the whole filesystem at that point would be a common occurance. I think you're correct however I'm assuming you've seen the case brought up by Bruce and Luoqi, specifically the unlink and downgrade to read-only. thanks, -- -Alfred Perlstein - [bright@wintelcom.net|alfred@freebsd.org] To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-fs" in the body of the message
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