Right...
Well, I must still be misunderstanding you :(. It sounded like you were
saying other network filesystems take the socket exclusively for the
duration of an entire operation (i.e., only a single RPC call oustanding
with the server at a time). And I'm pretty sure that isn't the case...
Which means I'm still confused as to how POHMELFS's transactions are
fundamentally different here from, say, NFS's use of RPC. In both cases,
multiple requests can be in flight, and the server is free to reply to
requests in any order. And in the case of a timeout, RPC requests are
resent (to the same server.. let's ignore failover for the moment). Am I
missing something? Or giving NFS too much credit here?
I see. And if the inode drops out of the client cache, and is later
reopened, the st_ino seen by an application may change? st_ino isn't used
for much, but I wonder if that would impact a large cp or rsync's ability
to preserve hard links.
Not if the server waits for the cache invalidation to be acked before
applying the update. That is, treat the client's cached copy as a lease
or read lock. I believe this is how NFSv4 delegations behave, and it's
how Ceph metadata leases (dentries, inode contents) and file access
capabilities (which control sync vs async file access) behave. I'm not
all that familiar with samba, but my guess is that its leases are broken
synchronously as well.
That's half of it... ideally, though, the client would have a reference to
the real object as well, so that the original foo.txt would be removed.
I.e. not only avoid doing the wrong thing, but also do the right thing.
I have yet to come up with a satisfying solution there. Doing a d_drop on
dentry lease revocation gets me most of the way there (Ceph's path
generation could stop when it hits an unhashed dentry and make the request
path relative to an inode), but the problem I'm coming up against is that
there is no explicit communication of the CWD between the VFS and fs
(well, that I know of), so the client doesn't know when it needs a real
reference to the directory (and I'm not especially keen on taking
references for _all_ cached directory inodes). And I'm not really sure
how .. is supposed to behave in that context.
Anyway...
sage
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