• Jeff Layton's avatar
    nfsd: don't fsync nfsd_files on last close · 4c475eee
    Jeff Layton authored
    Most of the time, NFSv4 clients issue a COMMIT before the final CLOSE of
    an open stateid, so with NFSv4, the fsync in the nfsd_file_free path is
    usually a no-op and doesn't block.
    
    We have a customer running knfsd over very slow storage (XFS over Ceph
    RBD). They were using the "async" export option because performance was
    more important than data integrity for this application. That export
    option turns NFSv4 COMMIT calls into no-ops. Due to the fsync in this
    codepath however, their final CLOSE calls would still stall (since a
    CLOSE effectively became a COMMIT).
    
    I think this fsync is not strictly necessary. We only use that result to
    reset the write verifier. Instead of fsync'ing all of the data when we
    free an nfsd_file, we can just check for writeback errors when one is
    acquired and when it is freed.
    
    If the client never comes back, then it'll never see the error anyway
    and there is no point in resetting it. If an error occurs after the
    nfsd_file is removed from the cache but before the inode is evicted,
    then it will reset the write verifier on the next nfsd_file_acquire,
    (since there will be an unseen error).
    
    The only exception here is if something else opens and fsyncs the file
    during that window. Given that local applications work with this
    limitation today, I don't see that as an issue.
    
    Link: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2166658
    Fixes: ac3a2585 ("nfsd: rework refcounting in filecache")
    Reported-and-tested-by: default avatarPierguido Lambri <plambri@redhat.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarJeff Layton <jlayton@kernel.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarChuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
    4c475eee
filecache.c 33.6 KB