• Chuck Lever's avatar
    NFS: Too many GETATTR and ACCESS calls after direct I/O · 65d26953
    Chuck Lever authored
    The cached read and write paths initialize fattr->time_start in their
    setup procedures.  The value of fattr->time_start is propagated to
    read_cache_jiffies by nfs_update_inode().  Subsequent calls to
    nfs_attribute_timeout() will then use a good time stamp when
    computing the attribute cache timeout, and squelch unneeded GETATTR
    calls.
    
    Since the direct I/O paths erroneously leave the inode's
    fattr->time_start field set to zero, read_cache_jiffies for that inode
    is set to zero after any direct read or write operation.  This
    triggers an otw GETATTR or ACCESS call to update the file's attribute
    and access caches properly, even when the NFS READ or WRITE replies
    have usable post-op attributes.
    
    Make sure the direct read and write setup code performs the same fattr
    initialization as the cached I/O paths to prevent unnecessary GETATTR
    calls.
    
    This was likely introduced by commit 0e574af1 in 2.6.15, which appears
    to add new nfs_fattr_init() call sites in the cached read and write
    paths, but not in the equivalent places in fs/nfs/direct.c.  A
    subsequent commit in the same series, 33801147, introduces the
    fattr->time_start field.
    
    Interestingly, the direct write reschedule path already has a call to
    nfs_fattr_init() in the right place.
    Reported-by: default avatarQuentin Barnes <qbarnes@yahoo-inc.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarChuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
    Cc: stable@kernel.org
    Signed-off-by: default avatarTrond Myklebust <Trond.Myklebust@netapp.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    65d26953
direct.c 26.7 KB