On 07/30, Eric Biggers wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 03:12:15PM -0700, Jaegeuk Kim wrote:
> > On 07/30, Eric Biggers wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jul 27, 2021 at 06:51:54PM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote:
> > > > From: Eric Biggers <[email protected]>
> > > > 
> > > > Currently, non-overwrite DIO writes are fundamentally unsafe on f2fs as
> > > > they require preallocating blocks, but f2fs doesn't support unwritten
> > > > blocks and therefore has to preallocate the blocks as regular blocks.
> > > > f2fs has no way to reliably roll back such preallocations, so as a
> > 
> > Hmm, I'm still wondering why this becomes a problem. And, do we really need
> > to roll back the preallocated blocks?
> > 
> > > > result, f2fs will leak uninitialized blocks to users if a DIO write
> > > > doesn't fully complete.  This can be easily reproduced by issuing a DIO
> > > > write that will fail due to misalignment, e.g.:
> > 
> > If there's any error, truncating blocks having NEW_ADDR could address this?
> > 
> 
> My understanding is that the "NEW_ADDR" block address in f2fs means that space
> was reserved for the block, but not allocated in any particular place yet.
> Buffered writes reserve blocks in this way, but DIO writes cannot because DIO 
> by
> definition has to directly write to a specific on-disk location.  Therefore 
> DIO
> writes require that the blocks be preallocated for real.

Sorry, checking back the DIO flow, we do allocate real block addresses if DIO
has holes.

f2fs_preallocate_blocks
 -> f2fs_map_blocks(F2FS_GET_BLOCK_PRE_DIO)
  -> __allocate_data_block()
   -> f2fs_allocate_data_block() gets a free LBA

Then, back to your concern, do we need to truncate blocks beyond i_size, if we
meet any failure?

> 
> - Eric


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