Nick Piggin <[email protected]> wrote:
> You can drop the lock, do the invalidation,
Hmmm... There's a danger of incurring a race by doing that. Consider two
processes both trying to write to a dirty page for which writeback will be
rejected:
(1) The first process gets EKEYREJECTED from the server, drops its lock and
is then preempted.
(2) The second process gets EKEYREJECTED from the server, drops its lock,
truncates the page, reloads the page and modifies it.
(3) The first process resumes and truncates the page, thereby splatting the
second process's write.
Or:
(1) The first process gets EKEYREJECTED from the server, clears the writeback
information from the page, drops its lock and is then preempted.
(2) The second process attaches its own writeback information to the page and
modifies it.
(3) The first process resumes and truncates the page, thereby splatting the
second process's write.
Really, what I want to do is pass the page lock to truncate to deal with.
Better still, I want truncate to be selective, based on whether or not a page
is still associated with the rejected writeback. I wonder if I should call
truncate_complete_page() or invalidate_complete_page() directly.
What might help is that PG_writeback is set on all pages in the rejected run,
even those that are unlocked.
Network filesystems are such fun:-)
David
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