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[0/1] iomap regression for aio dio 4k writes

Message ID 20230621174114.1320834-1-bongiojp@gmail.com
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Series iomap regression for aio dio 4k writes | expand

Message

Jeremy Bongio June 21, 2023, 5:29 p.m. UTC
Hi Darrick and Allison,

There has been a standing performance regression involving AIO DIO
4k-aligned writes on ext4 backed by a fast local SSD since the switch
to iomap. I think it was originally reported and investigated in this
thread: https://lore.kernel.org/all/87lf7rkffv.fsf@collabora.com/

Short version:
Pre-iomap, for ext4 async direct writes, after the bio is written to disk
the completion function is called directly during the endio stage.

Post-iomap, for direct writes, after the bio is written to disk, the completion
function is deferred to a work queue. This adds latency that impacts
performance most noticeably in very fast SSDs.

Detailed version:
A possible explanation is below, followed by a few questions to figure
out the right way to fix it.

In 4.15, ext4 uses fs/direct-io.c. When an AIO DIO write has completed
in the nvme driver, the interrupt handler for the write request ends
in calling bio_endio() which ends up calling dio_bio_end_aio(). A
different end_io function is used for async and sync io. If there are
no pages mapped in memory for the write operation's inode, then the
completion function for ext4 is called directly. If there are pages
mapped, then they might be dirty and need to be updated and work
is deferred to a work queue.

Here is the relevant 4.15 code:

fs/direct-io.c: dio_bio_end_aio()
if (dio->result)
        defer_completion = dio->defer_completion ||
                           (dio_op == REQ_OP_WRITE &&
                           dio->inode->i_mapping->nrpages);
if (defer_completion) {
        INIT_WORK(&dio->complete_work, dio_aio_complete_work);
        queue_work(dio->inode->i_sb->s_dio_done_wq,
                   &dio->complete_work);
} else {
        dio_complete(dio, 0, DIO_COMPLETE_ASYNC);
}

After ext4 switched to using iomap, the endio function became
iomap_dio_bio_end_io() in fs/iomap/direct-io.c. In iomap the same end io
function is used for both async and sync io. All write requests will
defer io completion to a work queue even if there are no mapped pages
for the inode.

Here is the relevant code in latest kernel (post-iomap) ...

fs/iomap/direct-io.c: iomap_dio_bio_end_io()
if (dio->wait_for_completion) {
          struct task_struct *waiter = dio->submit.waiter;
          WRITE_ONCE(dio->submit.waiter, NULL);
          blk_wake_io_task(waiter);
   } else if (dio->flags & IOMAP_DIO_WRITE) {
         struct inode *inode = file_inode(dio->iocb->ki_filp);

         WRITE_ONCE(dio->iocb->private, NULL);
         INIT_WORK(&dio->aio.work, iomap_dio_complete_work);
         queue_work(inode->i_sb->s_dio_done_wq, &dio->aio.work);
   } else {
         WRITE_ONCE(dio->iocb->private, NULL);
         iomap_dio_complete_work(&dio->aio.work);
}

With the attached patch, I see significantly better performance in 5.10 than 4.15. 5.10 is the latest kernel where I have driver support for an SSD that is fast enough to reproduce the regression. I verified that upstream iomap works the same.

Test results using the reproduction script from the original report
and testing with 4k/8k/12k/16k blocksizes and write-only:
https://people.collabora.com/~krisman/dio/week21/bench.sh

fio benchmark command:
fio --ioengine libaio --size=2G --direct=1 --filename=${MNT}/file --iodepth=64 \
--time_based=1 --thread=1 --overwrite=1 --bs=${BS} --rw=$RW \
--name "`uname -r`-${TYPE}-${RW}-${BS}-${FS}" \
--runtime=100 --output-format=terse >> ${LOG}

For 4.15, with all write completions called in io handler:
4k:  bw=1056MiB/s
8k:  bw=2082MiB/s
12k: bw=2332MiB/s
16k: bw=2453MiB/s

For unmodified 5.10, with all write completions deferred:
4k:  bw=1004MiB/s
8k:  bw=2074MiB/s
12k: bw=2309MiB/s
16k: bw=2465MiB/s

For modified 5.10, with all write completions called in io handler:
4k:  bw=1193MiB/s
8k:  bw=2258MiB/s
12k: bw=2346MiB/s
16k: bw=2446MiB/s

Questions:

Why did iomap from the beginning not make the async/sync io and
mapped/unmapped distinction that fs/direct-io.c did?

Since no issues have been found for ext4 calling completion work
directly in the io handler pre-iomap, it is unlikely that this is
unsafe (sleeping within an io handler callback). However, this may not
be true for all filesystems. Does XFS potentially sleep in its
completion code?

Allison, Ted mentioned you saw a similar problem when doing performance testing for the latest version of Unbreakable Linux. Can you test/verify this patch addresses your performance regression as well?

Jeremy Bongio (1):
  For DIO writes with no mapped pages for inode, skip deferring
    completion.

 fs/iomap/direct-io.c | 4 +++-
 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

Comments

Dave Chinner June 21, 2023, 11:59 p.m. UTC | #1
On Wed, Jun 21, 2023 at 10:29:19AM -0700, Jeremy Bongio wrote:
> Hi Darrick and Allison,
> 
> There has been a standing performance regression involving AIO DIO
> 4k-aligned writes on ext4 backed by a fast local SSD since the switch
> to iomap. I think it was originally reported and investigated in this
> thread: https://lore.kernel.org/all/87lf7rkffv.fsf@collabora.com/
> 
> Short version:
> Pre-iomap, for ext4 async direct writes, after the bio is written to disk
> the completion function is called directly during the endio stage.
> 
> Post-iomap, for direct writes, after the bio is written to disk, the completion
> function is deferred to a work queue. This adds latency that impacts
> performance most noticeably in very fast SSDs.
> 
> Detailed version:
> A possible explanation is below, followed by a few questions to figure
> out the right way to fix it.
> 
> In 4.15, ext4 uses fs/direct-io.c. When an AIO DIO write has completed
> in the nvme driver, the interrupt handler for the write request ends
> in calling bio_endio() which ends up calling dio_bio_end_aio(). A
> different end_io function is used for async and sync io. If there are
> no pages mapped in memory for the write operation's inode, then the
> completion function for ext4 is called directly. If there are pages
> mapped, then they might be dirty and need to be updated and work
> is deferred to a work queue.
> 
> Here is the relevant 4.15 code:
> 
> fs/direct-io.c: dio_bio_end_aio()
> if (dio->result)
>         defer_completion = dio->defer_completion ||
>                            (dio_op == REQ_OP_WRITE &&
>                            dio->inode->i_mapping->nrpages);
> if (defer_completion) {
>         INIT_WORK(&dio->complete_work, dio_aio_complete_work);
>         queue_work(dio->inode->i_sb->s_dio_done_wq,
>                    &dio->complete_work);
> } else {
>         dio_complete(dio, 0, DIO_COMPLETE_ASYNC);
> }
> 
> After ext4 switched to using iomap, the endio function became
> iomap_dio_bio_end_io() in fs/iomap/direct-io.c. In iomap the same end io
> function is used for both async and sync io.

Yes, because the IO completion processing is the same regardless of
whether the IO is submitted for sync or async completion.

> All write requests will
> defer io completion to a work queue even if there are no mapped pages
> for the inode.

Yup.

Consider O_DSYNC DIO writes: Where are the post-IO completion
integrity operations done?

Consider DIO write IO completion for different filesystems: how does
iomap_dio_complete() know whether dio->dops->end_io() needs to run
in task context or not.

e.g. DIO writes into unwritten extents: where are the written
conversion transactions run?

> With the attached patch, I see significantly better performance in 5.10 than 4.15. 5.10 is the latest kernel where I have driver support for an SSD that is fast enough to reproduce the regression. I verified that upstream iomap works the same.
> 
> Test results using the reproduction script from the original report
> and testing with 4k/8k/12k/16k blocksizes and write-only:
> https://people.collabora.com/~krisman/dio/week21/bench.sh
> 
> fio benchmark command:
> fio --ioengine libaio --size=2G --direct=1 --filename=${MNT}/file --iodepth=64 \
> --time_based=1 --thread=1 --overwrite=1 --bs=${BS} --rw=$RW \

Ah, you are testing pure overwrites, which means for ext4 the only
thing it needs to care about is cached mappings. What happens when
you add O_DSYNC here?

> --name "`uname -r`-${TYPE}-${RW}-${BS}-${FS}" \
> --runtime=100 --output-format=terse >> ${LOG}
> 
> For 4.15, with all write completions called in io handler:
> 4k:  bw=1056MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2082MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2332MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2453MiB/s
> 
> For unmodified 5.10, with all write completions deferred:
> 4k:  bw=1004MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2074MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2309MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2465MiB/s

I don't see a regression here - the differences are in the noise of
a typical fio overwrite test.

> For modified 5.10, with all write completions called in io handler:
> 4k:  bw=1193MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2258MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2346MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2446MiB/s
>
> Questions:
> 
> Why did iomap from the beginning not make the async/sync io and
> mapped/unmapped distinction that fs/direct-io.c did?

Because the iomap code was designed from the ground up as an
extent-based concurrent async IO engine that supported concurrent
reads and writes to the same sparse file with full data integrity
handling guarantees.

The old dio code started off as "sync" DIO only, and it was for a
long time completely broken for async DIO. Correct support for that
was eventually tacked on via DIO_COMPLETE_ASYNC, but it was still
basically an awful, nasty, complex, "block at a time" synchronous
IO engine.

> Since no issues have been found for ext4 calling completion work
> directly in the io handler pre-iomap, it is unlikely that this is
> unsafe (sleeping within an io handler callback). However, this may not
> be true for all filesystems. Does XFS potentially sleep in its
> completion code?

Yes, and ext4 does too. e.g. O_DSYNC overwrites always need to be
deferred to task context to be able to take sleeping locks and
potentially block on journal and or device cache flushes.

i.e. Have you considered what context all of XFS, f2fs, btrfs,
zonefs and gfs2 need for pure DIO overwrite completion in all it's
different variants?

AFAIC, it's far simpler conceptually to defer all writes to
completion context than it is to try to work out what writes need to
be deferred and what doesn't, especially as the filesystem ->end_io
completion might need to sleep and the iomap code has no idea
whether that is possible.

Cheers,

Dave.
Dave Chinner June 22, 2023, 1:55 a.m. UTC | #2
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 09:59:30AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 21, 2023 at 10:29:19AM -0700, Jeremy Bongio wrote:
> > Since no issues have been found for ext4 calling completion work
> > directly in the io handler pre-iomap, it is unlikely that this is
> > unsafe (sleeping within an io handler callback). However, this may not
> > be true for all filesystems. Does XFS potentially sleep in its
> > completion code?
> 
> Yes, and ext4 does too. e.g. O_DSYNC overwrites always need to be
> deferred to task context to be able to take sleeping locks and
> potentially block on journal and or device cache flushes.
> 
> i.e. Have you considered what context all of XFS, f2fs, btrfs,
> zonefs and gfs2 need for pure DIO overwrite completion in all it's
> different variants?
> 
> AFAIC, it's far simpler conceptually to defer all writes to
> completion context than it is to try to work out what writes need to
> be deferred and what doesn't, especially as the filesystem ->end_io
> completion might need to sleep and the iomap code has no idea
> whether that is possible.

Ok, so having spent a bit more thought on this away from the office
this morning, I think there is a generic way we can avoid deferring
completions for pure overwrites.

We already have a mechanism in iomap that tells us if the write is a
pure overwrite and we use it to change how we issue O_DSYNC DIO
writes. i.e. we use it to determine if we can use FUA writes rather
than a post-IO journal/device cache flush to guarantee data
integrity. See IOMAP_DIO_WRITE_FUA for how we determine whether we
need issue a generic_write_sync() call or not in the post IO
completion processing.

The iomap flags that determines if we can make this optimisation are
IOMAP_F_SHARED and IOMAP_F_DIRTY. IOMAP_F_SHARED indicates a COW is
required to break sharing for the write IO to proceed, whilst
IOMAP_F_DIRTY indicates that the inode is either dirty or that the
write IO requires metadata to be dirtied at completion time (e.g.
unwritten extent conversion) before the sync operation that provides
data integrity guarantees can be run.

If neither of these flags are set in the iomap, it effectively means
that the IO is a pure overwrite. i.e. the filesytsem has explicitly
said that this write IO does not need any post-IO completion
filesystem work to be done.

At this point, the iomap code can optimise for a pure overwrite into
an IOMAP_MAPPED extent, knowing that the only thing it needs to care
about on completion is internal data integrity requirements (i.e.
O_DSYNC/O_SYNC) of the IO.

Hence if the filesystem has told iomap that it has no IO completion
requirements, and iomap doesn't need generic_write_sync() for data
integrity (i.e. no data integrity required or FUA was used for the
entire IO), then we could complete the DIO write directly from the
bio completion callback context...

IOWs, what you want can be done, it's just a whole lot more complex
than just avoiding a queue_work() call...

-Dave.
Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) June 22, 2023, 2:55 a.m. UTC | #3
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 11:55:23AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> Ok, so having spent a bit more thought on this away from the office
> this morning, I think there is a generic way we can avoid deferring
> completions for pure overwrites.

OK, this is how we can, but should we?  The same amount of work
needs to be done, no matter whether we do it in interrupt context or
workqueue context.  Doing it in interrupt context has lower latency,
but maybe allows us to batch up the work and so get better bandwidth.
And we can't handle other interrupts while we're handling this one,
so from a whole-system perspective, I think we'd rather do the work in
the workqueue.

Latency is important for reads, but why is it important for writes?
There's such a thing as a dependent read, but writes are usually buffered
and we can wait as long as we like for a write to complete.
Christoph Hellwig June 22, 2023, 4:08 a.m. UTC | #4
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 03:55:52AM +0100, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> Latency is important for reads, but why is it important for writes?
> There's such a thing as a dependent read, but writes are usually buffered
> and we can wait as long as we like for a write to complete.

That was exactly my reasoning on why I did always defer the write
completions in the initial iomap direct I/O code, and until now no
one has complained.

I could see why people care either about synchronous writes, or polled
io_uring writes, for which we might be able to do the work in the
completion thread context, but for aio writes this feels a bit odd.
Dave Chinner June 22, 2023, 4:47 a.m. UTC | #5
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 03:55:52AM +0100, Matthew Wilcox wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 11:55:23AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > Ok, so having spent a bit more thought on this away from the office
> > this morning, I think there is a generic way we can avoid deferring
> > completions for pure overwrites.
> 
> OK, this is how we can, but should we?  The same amount of work
> needs to be done, no matter whether we do it in interrupt context or
> workqueue context.  Doing it in interrupt context has lower latency,
> but maybe allows us to batch up the work and so get better bandwidth.
> And we can't handle other interrupts while we're handling this one,
> so from a whole-system perspective, I think we'd rather do the work in
> the workqueue.

Yup, I agree with you there, but I can also be easily convinced that
optimising the pure in-place DIO overwrite path is worth the effort.

> Latency is important for reads, but why is it important for writes?
> There's such a thing as a dependent read, but writes are usually buffered
> and we can wait as long as we like for a write to complete.

The OP cares about async direct IO performance, not buffered writes.
And for DIO writes, there is most definitely such a thing as
"dependent writes".

Think about journalled data - you can't overwrite data in place
until the data write to the journal has first completed all the way
down to stable storage.  i.e. there's an inherent IO
completion-to-submission write ordering constraint in the algorithm,
and so we have dependent writes.

And that's the whole point of the DIO write FUA optimisations in
iomap; they avoid the dependent "write" that provides data integrity
i.e.  the journal flush and/or device cache flush that
generic_write_sync() issues in IO completion is a dependent write
because it cannot start until all the data being written has reached
the device entirely.

Using completion-to-submission ordering of the integrity operations
means we don't need to block other IOs to the same file, other
journal operations in the filesystem or other data IO to provide
that data integrity requirement for the specific O_DSYNC DIO write
IO. If we can use an FUA write for this instead of a separate cache
flush, then we end up providing O_DSYNC writes with about 40% lower
completion latency than a "write + cache flush" sequential IO pair.

This means that things like high performance databases improve
throughput by 25-50% and operational latency goes down by ~30-40% if
we can make extensive use of FUA writes to provide the desired data
integrity guarantees.

From that perspective, an application doing pure overwrites with
ordering depedencies might actually be very dependent on minimising
individual DIO write latency for overall performance...

Cheers,

Dave.
Allison Henderson June 22, 2023, 11:22 p.m. UTC | #6
On Wed, 2023-06-21 at 10:29 -0700, Jeremy Bongio wrote:
> Hi Darrick and Allison,
> 
> There has been a standing performance regression involving AIO DIO
> 4k-aligned writes on ext4 backed by a fast local SSD since the switch
> to iomap. I think it was originally reported and investigated in this
> thread:
> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://lore.kernel.org/all/87lf7rkffv.fsf@collabora.com/__;!!ACWV5N9M2RV99hQ!L6pU0-g5XWj5298hj3etLj9LW11t5Ga7cvTM1iDf158n1gTLot0r0WELozslls0LvJ8X9vil81pOn_CQMgHZyQ$
>  
> 
> Short version:
> Pre-iomap, for ext4 async direct writes, after the bio is written to
> disk
> the completion function is called directly during the endio stage.
> 
> Post-iomap, for direct writes, after the bio is written to disk, the
> completion
> function is deferred to a work queue. This adds latency that impacts
> performance most noticeably in very fast SSDs.
> 
> Detailed version:
> A possible explanation is below, followed by a few questions to
> figure
> out the right way to fix it.
> 
> In 4.15, ext4 uses fs/direct-io.c. When an AIO DIO write has
> completed
> in the nvme driver, the interrupt handler for the write request ends
> in calling bio_endio() which ends up calling dio_bio_end_aio(). A
> different end_io function is used for async and sync io. If there are
> no pages mapped in memory for the write operation's inode, then the
> completion function for ext4 is called directly. If there are pages
> mapped, then they might be dirty and need to be updated and work
> is deferred to a work queue.
> 
> Here is the relevant 4.15 code:
> 
> fs/direct-io.c: dio_bio_end_aio()
> if (dio->result)
>         defer_completion = dio->defer_completion ||
>                            (dio_op == REQ_OP_WRITE &&
>                            dio->inode->i_mapping->nrpages);
> if (defer_completion) {
>         INIT_WORK(&dio->complete_work, dio_aio_complete_work);
>         queue_work(dio->inode->i_sb->s_dio_done_wq,
>                    &dio->complete_work);
> } else {
>         dio_complete(dio, 0, DIO_COMPLETE_ASYNC);
> }
> 
> After ext4 switched to using iomap, the endio function became
> iomap_dio_bio_end_io() in fs/iomap/direct-io.c. In iomap the same end
> io
> function is used for both async and sync io. All write requests will
> defer io completion to a work queue even if there are no mapped pages
> for the inode.
> 
> Here is the relevant code in latest kernel (post-iomap) ...
> 
> fs/iomap/direct-io.c: iomap_dio_bio_end_io()
> if (dio->wait_for_completion) {
>           struct task_struct *waiter = dio->submit.waiter;
>           WRITE_ONCE(dio->submit.waiter, NULL);
>           blk_wake_io_task(waiter);
>    } else if (dio->flags & IOMAP_DIO_WRITE) {
>          struct inode *inode = file_inode(dio->iocb->ki_filp);
> 
>          WRITE_ONCE(dio->iocb->private, NULL);
>          INIT_WORK(&dio->aio.work, iomap_dio_complete_work);
>          queue_work(inode->i_sb->s_dio_done_wq, &dio->aio.work);
>    } else {
>          WRITE_ONCE(dio->iocb->private, NULL);
>          iomap_dio_complete_work(&dio->aio.work);
> }
> 
> With the attached patch, I see significantly better performance in
> 5.10 than 4.15. 5.10 is the latest kernel where I have driver support
> for an SSD that is fast enough to reproduce the regression. I
> verified that upstream iomap works the same.
> 
> Test results using the reproduction script from the original report
> and testing with 4k/8k/12k/16k blocksizes and write-only:
> https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://people.collabora.com/*krisman/dio/week21/bench.sh__;fg!!ACWV5N9M2RV99hQ!L6pU0-g5XWj5298hj3etLj9LW11t5Ga7cvTM1iDf158n1gTLot0r0WELozslls0LvJ8X9vil81pOn_CpnhVXfg$
>  
> 
> fio benchmark command:
> fio --ioengine libaio --size=2G --direct=1 --filename=${MNT}/file --
> iodepth=64 \
> --time_based=1 --thread=1 --overwrite=1 --bs=${BS} --rw=$RW \
> --name "`uname -r`-${TYPE}-${RW}-${BS}-${FS}" \
> --runtime=100 --output-format=terse >> ${LOG}
> 
> For 4.15, with all write completions called in io handler:
> 4k:  bw=1056MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2082MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2332MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2453MiB/s
> 
> For unmodified 5.10, with all write completions deferred:
> 4k:  bw=1004MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2074MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2309MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2465MiB/s
> 
> For modified 5.10, with all write completions called in io handler:
> 4k:  bw=1193MiB/s
> 8k:  bw=2258MiB/s
> 12k: bw=2346MiB/s
> 16k: bw=2446MiB/s
> 
> Questions:
> 
> Why did iomap from the beginning not make the async/sync io and
> mapped/unmapped distinction that fs/direct-io.c did?
> 
> Since no issues have been found for ext4 calling completion work
> directly in the io handler pre-iomap, it is unlikely that this is
> unsafe (sleeping within an io handler callback). However, this may
> not
> be true for all filesystems. Does XFS potentially sleep in its
> completion code?
> 
> Allison, Ted mentioned you saw a similar problem when doing
> performance testing for the latest version of Unbreakable Linux. Can
> you test/verify this patch addresses your performance regression as
> well?
Hi Jeremy, 

Sure I can link this patch to the bug report to see if the tester sees
any improvements.  If anything, I think it's a good data point to have,
even if we are still considering other solutions.  Thanks!

Allison

> 
> Jeremy Bongio (1):
>   For DIO writes with no mapped pages for inode, skip deferring
>     completion.
> 
>  fs/iomap/direct-io.c | 4 +++-
>  1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>
Theodore Ts'o June 23, 2023, 2:32 a.m. UTC | #7
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 09:59:29AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> Ah, you are testing pure overwrites, which means for ext4 the only
> thing it needs to care about is cached mappings. What happens when
> you add O_DSYNC here?

I think you mean O_SYNC, right?  In a pure overwrite case, where all
of the extents are initialized and where the Oracle or DB2 server is
doing writes to preallocated, pre-initialized space in the tablespace
file followed by fdatasync(), there *are* no post-I/O data integrity
operations which are required.

If the file is opened O_SYNC or if the blocks were not preallocated
using fallocate(2) and not initialized ahead of time, then sure, we
can't use this optimization.

However, the cases where databases workloads *are* doing overwrites
and using fdatasync(2) most certainly do exist, and the benefit of
this optimization can be a 20% throughput.  Which is nothing to sneeze
at.

What we might to do is to let the file system tell the iomap layer via
a flag whether or not there are no post-I/O metadata operations
required, and then *if* that flag is set, and *if* the inode has no
pages in the page cache (so there are no invalidate operations
necessary), it should be safe to skip using queue_work().  That way,
the file system has to affirmatively state that it is safe to skip the
workqueue, so it shouldn't do any harm to other file systems using the
iomap DIO layer.

What am I missing?

Cheers,

						- Ted
Dave Chinner June 23, 2023, 3:02 a.m. UTC | #8
On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 10:32:33PM -0400, Theodore Ts'o wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 22, 2023 at 09:59:29AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > Ah, you are testing pure overwrites, which means for ext4 the only
> > thing it needs to care about is cached mappings. What happens when
> > you add O_DSYNC here?
> 
> I think you mean O_SYNC, right?

No, I *explicitly* meant O_DSYNC.

> In a pure overwrite case, where all
> of the extents are initialized and where the Oracle or DB2 server is
> doing writes to preallocated, pre-initialized space in the tablespace
> file followed by fdatasync(), there *are* no post-I/O data integrity
> operations which are required.

Wrong: O_DSYNC DIO write IO requires the data to be on stable
storage at IO completion. This means the pure overwrite IO must be
either issued as a REQ_FUA write or as a normal write followed by a
device cache flush.

That device cache flush is a post-I/O data integrity operation and
that is handled by iomap_dio_complete() -> generic_write_sync() -> 
vfs_fsync_range()....

> If the file is opened O_SYNC or if the blocks were not
> preallocated using fallocate(2) and not initialized ahead of time,
> then sure, we can't use this optimization.

Well, yes. That's the whole point of the IOMAP_F_DIRTY flag - if
that is set, we don't attempt any pure overwrite optimisations
because it's not a pure overwrite and metadata needs flushing to the
journal. Hence we need to call generic_write_sync().

> What we might to do is to let the file system tell the iomap layer
> via a flag whether or not there are no post-I/O metadata
> operations required, and then *if* that flag is set, and *if* the
> inode has no pages in the page cache (so there are no invalidate
> operations necessary), it should be safe to skip using
> queue_work().  That way, the file system has to affirmatively
> state that it is safe to skip the workqueue, so it shouldn't do
> any harm to other file systems using the iomap DIO layer.
> 
> What am I missing?

You didn't read my followup email. IOMAP_F_DIRTY is the flag
you describe, and it already exists.

-Dave.