* Re: test osd on zfs [not found] <516E7D5C.7080309@nazarianin.com> @ 2013-04-17 15:19 ` Sage Weil 2013-04-17 15:57 ` Henry C Chang 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 15:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Aleksey Leonov; +Cc: ceph-devel Hey, Can you test with the wip-debug-xattr branch? Set debug filestore = 30 and it will dump the xattr values to the log on set and get, so we can see what is going on. Also/alternatively, strace with -f -v -x, which will (I think) include the full value of the get/setxattr args.. Thanks! sage On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Aleksey Leonov wrote: > Hi all, > > I create test VM for try run ceph osd on zfs. > mkcephfs run ok. Osd down 2 minutes after start. > > ceph.conf > [global] > max open files = 131072 > log file = /var/log/ceph/$name.log > pid file = /var/run/ceph/$name.pid > [mon] > mon data = /ceph/mon/$name > [mon.alpha] > host = ct1 > mon addr = 10.10.10.2:6789 > [mds] > [mds.alpha] > host = ct1 > [osd] > debug filestore = 20 > filestore xattr use omap = true > osd data = /ceph/osd/$name > osd journal = /ceph/osd/$name/journal > osd journal size = 2000 ; journal size, in megabytes > journal dio = false > journal aio = false > > [osd.0] > host = ct1 > > > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 15:19 ` test osd on zfs Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 15:57 ` Henry C Chang 2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-17 15:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil; +Cc: Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. Regards, Henry 2013/4/17 Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>: > Hey, > > Can you test with the wip-debug-xattr branch? Set debug filestore = 30 > and it will dump the xattr values to the log on set and get, so we can see > what is going on. > > Also/alternatively, strace with -f -v -x, which will (I think) include the > full value of the get/setxattr args.. > > Thanks! > sage > > > On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Aleksey Leonov wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I create test VM for try run ceph osd on zfs. >> mkcephfs run ok. Osd down 2 minutes after start. >> >> ceph.conf >> [global] >> max open files = 131072 >> log file = /var/log/ceph/$name.log >> pid file = /var/run/ceph/$name.pid >> [mon] >> mon data = /ceph/mon/$name >> [mon.alpha] >> host = ct1 >> mon addr = 10.10.10.2:6789 >> [mds] >> [mds.alpha] >> host = ct1 >> [osd] >> debug filestore = 20 >> filestore xattr use omap = true >> osd data = /ceph/osd/$name >> osd journal = /ceph/osd/$name/journal >> osd journal size = 2000 ; journal size, in megabytes >> journal dio = false >> journal aio = false >> >> [osd.0] >> host = ct1 >> >> >> >> >> > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 15:57 ` Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Henry C Chang ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Jeff Mitchell @ 2013-04-17 16:37 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Henry C Chang; +Cc: Sage Weil, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Henry C Chang wrote: > I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not > return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too > small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? I've used ZFSonLinux quite a bit and they do seem to be very eager to fix bugs related to improper behavior, so if it's actually a bug I/someone can talk to them and try to get them to look at it soonish. --Jeff ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell @ 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Henry C Chang 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Sage Weil 2013-04-17 17:04 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-17 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Mitchell; +Cc: Sage Weil, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel getxattr linux man page says ERANGE will be returned if the size of the value buffer is too small to hold the result. Thus, I think it is a bug of ZFS (or ZOL, at least). 2013/4/18 Jeff Mitchell <jeffrey.mitchell@gmail.com>: > Henry C Chang wrote: >> >> I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not >> return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too >> small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. > > > Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? > > I've used ZFSonLinux quite a bit and they do seem to be very eager to fix > bugs related to improper behavior, so if it's actually a bug I/someone can > talk to them and try to get them to look at it soonish. > > --Jeff > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Sage Weil 2013-04-17 17:04 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: behlendorf1, Jeff Mitchell; +Cc: Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Adding Brian Behlendorf to the CC list, as we were just talking about this yesterday at LUG. :) I suspect this is a bug; the posix docs indicate ERANGE is apprpriate here: [ERANGE] value (as indicated by size) is too small to hold the extended attribute data. from http://www.unix.com/man-page/all/2/GETXATTR/. sage On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Jeff Mitchell wrote: > Henry C Chang wrote: > > I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not > > return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too > > small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. > > Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? > > I've used ZFSonLinux quite a bit and they do seem to be very eager to fix bugs > related to improper behavior, so if it's actually a bug I/someone can talk to > them and try to get them to look at it soonish. > > --Jeff > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Henry C Chang 2013-04-17 17:00 ` Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 17:04 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2013-04-17 17:05 ` Sage Weil 2 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 17:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Jeff Mitchell; +Cc: Henry C Chang, Sage Weil, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 9:37 AM, Jeff Mitchell <jeffrey.mitchell@gmail.com> wrote: > Henry C Chang wrote: >> >> I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not >> return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too >> small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. > > > Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? Took a brief look at the zfs code, seems like a zfs bug. diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c index c03764f..96db7dd 100644 --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c @@ -263,6 +263,9 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, void *value, size_t size) if (!size) return (nv_size); + if (size < nv_size) + return (-ERANGE); + memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); return (MIN(size, nv_size)); This should fix it. Not tested of course. Yehuda ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 17:04 ` Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 17:05 ` Sage Weil 2013-04-17 17:15 ` Yehuda Sadeh 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yehuda Sadeh Cc: Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel, behlendorf1 [Adding Brian to CC list again :)] On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Yehuda Sadeh wrote: > On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 9:37 AM, Jeff Mitchell > <jeffrey.mitchell@gmail.com> wrote: > > Henry C Chang wrote: > >> > >> I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not > >> return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too > >> small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. > > > > > > Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? > > Took a brief look at the zfs code, seems like a zfs bug. > > diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > index c03764f..96db7dd 100644 > --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > @@ -263,6 +263,9 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char > *name, void *value, size_t size) > if (!size) > return (nv_size); > > + if (size < nv_size) > + return (-ERANGE); > + > memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); > > return (MIN(size, nv_size)); > > > This should fix it. Not tested of course. > > Yehuda > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 17:05 ` Sage Weil @ 2013-04-17 17:15 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2013-04-17 18:06 ` Brian Behlendorf 2013-04-17 18:57 ` Brian Behlendorf 0 siblings, 2 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 17:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Sage Weil Cc: Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel, behlendorf1 On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 10:05 AM, Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com> wrote: > [Adding Brian to CC list again :)] > > On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Yehuda Sadeh wrote: > >> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 9:37 AM, Jeff Mitchell >> <jeffrey.mitchell@gmail.com> wrote: >> > Henry C Chang wrote: >> >> >> >> I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not >> >> return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too >> >> small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. >> > >> > >> > Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? >> >> Took a brief look at the zfs code, seems like a zfs bug. >> >> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> index c03764f..96db7dd 100644 >> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> @@ -263,6 +263,9 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char >> *name, void *value, size_t size) >> if (!size) >> return (nv_size); >> >> + if (size < nv_size) >> + return (-ERANGE); >> + >> memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >> >> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); >> >> >> This should fix it. Not tested of course. Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is going to fail with ERANGE. Yehuda ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 17:15 ` Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 18:06 ` Brian Behlendorf 2013-04-17 18:57 ` Brian Behlendorf 1 sibling, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-17 18:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yehuda Sadeh Cc: Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel On 04/17/2013 10:15 AM, Yehuda Sadeh wrote: > On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 10:05 AM, Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com> wrote: >> [Adding Brian to CC list again :)] >> >> On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Yehuda Sadeh wrote: >> >>> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 9:37 AM, Jeff Mitchell >>> <jeffrey.mitchell@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> Henry C Chang wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I looked into this problem earlier. The problem is that zfs does not >>>>> return ERANGE when the size of value buffer passed to getxattr is too >>>>> small. zfs returns with truncated xattr value. >>>> >>>> >>>> Is this a bug in ZFS, or simply different behavior? >>> >>> Took a brief look at the zfs code, seems like a zfs bug. >>> >>> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> index c03764f..96db7dd 100644 >>> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> @@ -263,6 +263,9 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char >>> *name, void *value, size_t size) >>> if (!size) >>> return (nv_size); >>> >>> + if (size < nv_size) >>> + return (-ERANGE); >>> + >>> memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >>> >>> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); >>> >>> >>> This should fix it. Not tested of course. > > Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is > going to fail with ERANGE. > > Yehuda > That does sounds like a zfs bug, According to getxattr(2) it should return ERANGE if the buffer is too small. I'll take a look but it's strange that this hasn't surfaced before. If the size of the value buffer is too small to hold the result, errno is set to ERANGE. Thanks, Brian ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 17:15 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2013-04-17 18:06 ` Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-17 18:57 ` Brian Behlendorf 2013-04-17 19:07 ` Yehuda Sadeh 1 sibling, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-17 18:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yehuda Sadeh Cc: Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Here's a patch for the ERANGE error (lightly tested). Sage's patch looks good but only covers one of two code paths for xattrs. With zfs they may either be stored as a system attribute which is usually close to the dnode on disk (zfs set xattr=sa pool/dataset). Or they may be stored in their own object which is how it's implemented on Solaris (zfs set xattr=on pool/dataset). The second method is still the default for compatibility reasons even though it's slower. Sage's patch only covered the SA case. > Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is > going to fail with ERANGE. Why? We support an arbitrary number of maximum sized xattrs (65536). What am I missing here? Incidentally, does anybody know of an good xattr test suite we could add to our regression tests? Thanks, Brian diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char *name, void *value, goto out; } + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { + error = -ERANGE; + goto out; + } + error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, 0, cr); out: if (xip) @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, void *value, size_t size) if (!size) return (nv_size); - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); + if (size < nv_size) + return (-ERANGE); + + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); return (MIN(size, nv_size)); } ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 18:57 ` Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-17 19:07 ` Yehuda Sadeh 2013-04-17 19:09 ` Stefan Priebe 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Brian Behlendorf Cc: Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 11:57 AM, Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> wrote: > > Here's a patch for the ERANGE error (lightly tested). Sage's patch looks > good but only covers one of two code paths for xattrs. With zfs they may > either be stored as a system attribute which is usually close to the dnode > on disk (zfs set xattr=sa pool/dataset). Or they may be stored in their own > object which is how it's implemented on Solaris (zfs set xattr=on > pool/dataset). The second method is still the default for compatibility > reasons even though it's slower. Sage's patch only covered the SA case. > > >> Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is >> going to fail with ERANGE. > > Why? We support an arbitrary number of maximum sized xattrs (65536). What > am I missing here? > > Incidentally, does anybody know of an good xattr test suite we could add to > our regression tests? > > Thanks, > Brian > > diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 > --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char *name, > void *value, > goto out; > } > > + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { > + error = -ERANGE; > + goto out; > + } > + > error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, 0, cr); > out: > if (xip) > @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, > void *value, size_t size) > if (!size) > return (nv_size); > > - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); > > + if (size < nv_size) > + return (-ERANGE); Note, that zpl_xattr_get_sa() is called by __zpl_xattr_get() which can also be called by zpl_xattr_get() to test for xattr existence. So it needs to make sure that zpl_xattr_set() doesn't fail if getting -ERANGE. > + > + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); > > return (MIN(size, nv_size)); No need for MIN() here. Yehuda ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 19:07 ` Yehuda Sadeh @ 2013-04-17 19:09 ` Stefan Priebe 2013-04-17 20:16 ` Mark Nelson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Stefan Priebe @ 2013-04-17 19:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Yehuda Sadeh Cc: Brian Behlendorf, Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Sorry to disturb, but what is the raeson / advantage of using zfs for ceph? Greets, Stefan Am 17.04.2013 21:07, schrieb Yehuda Sadeh: > On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 11:57 AM, Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> wrote: >> >> Here's a patch for the ERANGE error (lightly tested). Sage's patch looks >> good but only covers one of two code paths for xattrs. With zfs they may >> either be stored as a system attribute which is usually close to the dnode >> on disk (zfs set xattr=sa pool/dataset). Or they may be stored in their own >> object which is how it's implemented on Solaris (zfs set xattr=on >> pool/dataset). The second method is still the default for compatibility >> reasons even though it's slower. Sage's patch only covered the SA case. >> >> >>> Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is >>> going to fail with ERANGE. >> >> Why? We support an arbitrary number of maximum sized xattrs (65536). What >> am I missing here? >> >> Incidentally, does anybody know of an good xattr test suite we could add to >> our regression tests? >> >> Thanks, >> Brian >> >> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 >> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >> @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char *name, >> void *value, >> goto out; >> } >> >> + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { >> + error = -ERANGE; >> + goto out; >> + } >> + >> error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, 0, cr); >> out: >> if (xip) >> @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, >> void *value, size_t size) >> if (!size) >> return (nv_size); >> >> - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >> >> + if (size < nv_size) >> + return (-ERANGE); > > Note, that zpl_xattr_get_sa() is called by __zpl_xattr_get() which can > also be called by zpl_xattr_get() to test for xattr existence. So it > needs to make sure that zpl_xattr_set() doesn't fail if getting > -ERANGE. > >> + >> + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); >> >> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); > > No need for MIN() here. > > > Yehuda > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 19:09 ` Stefan Priebe @ 2013-04-17 20:16 ` Mark Nelson 2013-04-17 20:49 ` Jeff Mitchell 2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf 0 siblings, 2 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Mark Nelson @ 2013-04-17 20:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Priebe Cc: Yehuda Sadeh, Brian Behlendorf, Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel I'll let Brian talk about the virtues of ZFS, but from my perspective it's an interesting option as there are a lot of folks banging on it for NFS servers and it has some interesting capabilities. I have no idea how well it will work in practice, but if we can show that Ceph can run on it at least people can try it out and give us feedback. Mark On 04/17/2013 02:09 PM, Stefan Priebe wrote: > Sorry to disturb, but what is the raeson / advantage of using zfs for ceph? > > Greets, > Stefan > Am 17.04.2013 21:07, schrieb Yehuda Sadeh: >> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 11:57 AM, Brian Behlendorf >> <behlendorf1@llnl.gov> wrote: >>> >>> Here's a patch for the ERANGE error (lightly tested). Sage's patch >>> looks >>> good but only covers one of two code paths for xattrs. With zfs they >>> may >>> either be stored as a system attribute which is usually close to the >>> dnode >>> on disk (zfs set xattr=sa pool/dataset). Or they may be stored in >>> their own >>> object which is how it's implemented on Solaris (zfs set xattr=on >>> pool/dataset). The second method is still the default for compatibility >>> reasons even though it's slower. Sage's patch only covered the SA case. >>> >>> >>>> Well, looking at the code again it's not going to work, as setxattr is >>>> going to fail with ERANGE. >>> >>> Why? We support an arbitrary number of maximum sized xattrs (65536). >>> What >>> am I missing here? >>> >>> Incidentally, does anybody know of an good xattr test suite we could >>> add to >>> our regression tests? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Brian >>> >>> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 >>> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>> @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char >>> *name, >>> void *value, >>> goto out; >>> } >>> >>> + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { >>> + error = -ERANGE; >>> + goto out; >>> + } >>> + >>> error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, >>> 0, cr); >>> out: >>> if (xip) >>> @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char >>> *name, >>> void *value, size_t size) >>> if (!size) >>> return (nv_size); >>> >>> - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >>> >>> + if (size < nv_size) >>> + return (-ERANGE); >> >> Note, that zpl_xattr_get_sa() is called by __zpl_xattr_get() which can >> also be called by zpl_xattr_get() to test for xattr existence. So it >> needs to make sure that zpl_xattr_set() doesn't fail if getting >> -ERANGE. >> >>> + >>> + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); >>> >>> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); >> >> No need for MIN() here. >> >> >> Yehuda >> -- >> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in >> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >> > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 20:16 ` Mark Nelson @ 2013-04-17 20:49 ` Jeff Mitchell 2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf 1 sibling, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Jeff Mitchell @ 2013-04-17 20:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mark Nelson Cc: Stefan Priebe, Yehuda Sadeh, Brian Behlendorf, Sage Weil, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel > On 04/17/2013 02:09 PM, Stefan Priebe wrote: >> >> Sorry to disturb, but what is the raeson / advantage of using zfs for >> ceph? A few things off the top of my head: 1) Very mature filesystem with full xattr support (this bug notwithstanding) and copy-on-write snapshots. While the port to Linux sometimes has some rough edges (but in my experience over the past few years is generally very good), the main code from Solaris (and now the Illumos project) is well-tested and very well regarded. Btrfs has many of the same features, but in my real-world experience I've had multiple btrfs filesystems go corrupt with very innocuous usage patterns and across a variety of kernel versions. The zfsonlinux bugs don't tend to be data-destructive, once data is written to it. 2) Very intelligent caching; also supports external devices (like SSDs) for a level 2 cache. This speeds up reads dramatically. 3) Very robust error-checking. There are lots of stories of ZFS finding bad memory, bad controllers, and bad hard drives because of its checksumming (which you can optionally turn off for speed). If you set up the OSDs such that each OSD is based off of a ZFS mirror, you get these benefits locally. For some people, especially when heavy on reads (due to the intelligent caching), a solution that knocks the remote replication level down by one but uses local mirrors for OSDs may provide good functionality and safety compromises. --Jeff ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 20:16 ` Mark Nelson 2013-04-17 20:49 ` Jeff Mitchell @ 2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf 2013-04-18 2:20 ` Henry C Chang 2013-04-18 5:56 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG 1 sibling, 2 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-17 21:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Mark Nelson Cc: Stefan Priebe, Yehuda Sadeh, Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel On 04/17/2013 01:16 PM, Mark Nelson wrote: > I'll let Brian talk about the virtues of ZFS, I think the virtues of ZFS have been discussed at length in various other forums. But in short it brings some nice functionality to the table which may be useful to ceph and that's worth exploring. >>>> >>>> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>> index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 >>>> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>> @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char >>>> *name, >>>> void *value, >>>> goto out; >>>> } >>>> >>>> + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { >>>> + error = -ERANGE; >>>> + goto out; >>>> + } >>>> + >>>> error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, >>>> 0, cr); >>>> out: >>>> if (xip) >>>> @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char >>>> *name, >>>> void *value, size_t size) >>>> if (!size) >>>> return (nv_size); >>>> >>>> - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >>>> >>>> + if (size < nv_size) >>>> + return (-ERANGE); >>> >>> Note, that zpl_xattr_get_sa() is called by __zpl_xattr_get() which can >>> also be called by zpl_xattr_get() to test for xattr existence. So it >>> needs to make sure that zpl_xattr_set() doesn't fail if getting >>> -ERANGE. This shouldn't be a problem. The zpl_xattr_get() call from zpl_xattr_set() passes a NULL value and zero size which will prevent it from hitting the ERANGE error. It will return instead the xattr size as expected. >>> >>>> + >>>> + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); >>>> >>>> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); >>> >>> No need for MIN() here. Thanks for catching that. I've opened a pull request at github with the updated fix and kicked it off for automated testing. It would be nice to verify this resolves the crash. https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/1409 diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c index c03764f..42a06ad 100644 --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char *name, void goto out; } + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { + error = -ERANGE; + goto out; + } + error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, 0, cr); out: if (xip) @@ -263,9 +268,12 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, void * if (!size) return (nv_size); - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); + if (size < nv_size) + return (-ERANGE); + + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); - return (MIN(size, nv_size)); + return (size); } static int ^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf @ 2013-04-18 2:20 ` Henry C Chang 2013-04-18 5:56 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG 1 sibling, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-18 2:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Brian Behlendorf Cc: Mark Nelson, Stefan Priebe, Yehuda Sadeh, Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Sorry, off the topic. I am wondering if we use zfs as the underlying filesystem for ceph osd and let osd filestore do sync writes, do we still need the osd journal? 2013/4/18 Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>: > On 04/17/2013 01:16 PM, Mark Nelson wrote: >> >> I'll let Brian talk about the virtues of ZFS, > > > I think the virtues of ZFS have been discussed at length in various other > forums. But in short it brings some nice functionality to the table which > may be useful to ceph and that's worth exploring. > > >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>>> index c03764f..9f4d63c 100644 >>>>> --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>>> +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c >>>>> @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char >>>>> *name, >>>>> void *value, >>>>> goto out; >>>>> } >>>>> >>>>> + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { >>>>> + error = -ERANGE; >>>>> + goto out; >>>>> + } >>>>> + >>>>> error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, >>>>> 0, cr); >>>>> out: >>>>> if (xip) >>>>> @@ -263,7 +268,10 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char >>>>> *name, >>>>> void *value, size_t size) >>>>> if (!size) >>>>> return (nv_size); >>>>> >>>>> - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); >>>>> >>>>> + if (size < nv_size) >>>>> + return (-ERANGE); >>>> >>>> >>>> Note, that zpl_xattr_get_sa() is called by __zpl_xattr_get() which can >>>> also be called by zpl_xattr_get() to test for xattr existence. So it >>>> needs to make sure that zpl_xattr_set() doesn't fail if getting >>>> -ERANGE. > > > This shouldn't be a problem. The zpl_xattr_get() call from zpl_xattr_set() > passes a NULL value and zero size which will prevent it from hitting the > ERANGE error. It will return instead the xattr size as expected. > > >>>> >>>>> + >>>>> + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); >>>>> >>>>> return (MIN(size, nv_size)); >>>> >>>> >>>> No need for MIN() here. > > > Thanks for catching that. > > I've opened a pull request at github with the updated fix and kicked it off > for automated testing. It would be nice to verify this resolves the crash. > > https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/1409 > > diff --git a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > index c03764f..42a06ad 100644 > > --- a/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > +++ b/module/zfs/zpl_xattr.c > @@ -225,6 +225,11 @@ zpl_xattr_get_dir(struct inode *ip, const char *name, > void > goto out; > } > > + if (size < i_size_read(xip)) { > + error = -ERANGE; > + goto out; > + } > + > error = zpl_read_common(xip, value, size, 0, UIO_SYSSPACE, 0, cr); > out: > if (xip) > @@ -263,9 +268,12 @@ zpl_xattr_get_sa(struct inode *ip, const char *name, > void * > > if (!size) > return (nv_size); > > - memcpy(value, nv_value, MIN(size, nv_size)); > + if (size < nv_size) > + return (-ERANGE); > + > + memcpy(value, nv_value, size); > > - return (MIN(size, nv_size)); > + return (size); > } > > static int ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf 2013-04-18 2:20 ` Henry C Chang @ 2013-04-18 5:56 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG 2013-04-18 14:50 ` Sage Weil 1 sibling, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG @ 2013-04-18 5:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Brian Behlendorf Cc: Mark Nelson, Yehuda Sadeh, Sage Weil, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel Am 17.04.2013 um 23:14 schrieb Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>: > On 04/17/2013 01:16 PM, Mark Nelson wrote: >> I'll let Brian talk about the virtues of ZFS, > > I think the virtues of ZFS have been discussed at length in various other forums. But in short it brings some nice functionality to the table which may be useful to ceph and that's worth exploring. Sure I know about the advantages of zfs. I just thought about how ceph can benefit. Right now I've no idea. The osds should be single disks so zpool, zraid does not matter. Ceph does it own scrubbing and check summing and instead of btrfs ceph does not know how to use snapshots with zfs. That's why I'm asking. Greets, Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-18 5:56 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG @ 2013-04-18 14:50 ` Sage Weil 2013-04-18 20:07 ` Alex Elsayed 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Sage Weil @ 2013-04-18 14:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG Cc: Brian Behlendorf, Mark Nelson, Yehuda Sadeh, Jeff Mitchell, Henry C Chang, Aleksey Leonov, ceph-devel On Thu, 18 Apr 2013, Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG wrote: > Am 17.04.2013 um 23:14 schrieb Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>: > > > On 04/17/2013 01:16 PM, Mark Nelson wrote: > >> I'll let Brian talk about the virtues of ZFS, > > > > I think the virtues of ZFS have been discussed at length in various other forums. But in short it brings some nice functionality to the table which may be useful to ceph and that's worth exploring. > Sure I know about the advantages of zfs. > > I just thought about how ceph can benefit. Right now I've no idea. The > osds should be single disks so zpool, zraid does not matter. Ceph does > it own scrubbing and check summing and instead of btrfs ceph does not > know how to use snapshots with zfs. That's why I'm asking. The main things that come to mind: - zfs checksumming - ceph can eventually use zfs snapshots similarly to how it uses btrfs snapshots to create stable checkpoints as journal reference points, allowing parallel (instead of writeahead) journaling - can use raidz beneath a single ceph-osd for better reliability (e.g., 2x * raidz instead of 3x replication) ZFS doesn't have a clone function that we can use to enable efficient cephfs/rbd/rados snaps, but maybe this will motivate someone to implement one. :) sage ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-18 14:50 ` Sage Weil @ 2013-04-18 20:07 ` Alex Elsayed 2013-04-19 10:47 ` Jeff Mitchell 0 siblings, 1 reply; 20+ messages in thread From: Alex Elsayed @ 2013-04-18 20:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ceph-devel Sage Weil wrote: <snip> > The main things that come to mind: > > - zfs checksumming > - ceph can eventually use zfs snapshots similarly to how it uses btrfs > snapshots to create stable checkpoints as journal reference points, > allowing parallel (instead of writeahead) journaling > - can use raidz beneath a single ceph-osd for better reliability (e.g., 2x > * raidz instead of 3x replication) > > ZFS doesn't have a clone function that we can use to enable efficient > cephfs/rbd/rados snaps, but maybe this will motivate someone to implement > one. :) Since Btrfs has implemented raid5/6 support (meaning raidz is only a feature gain if you want 3x parity, which is unlikely to be useful for an OSD[1]), the checksumming may be the only real benefit since it supports sha256 (in addition to the non-cryptographic fletcher2/fletcher4), whereas btrfs only has crc32c at this time. [1] A raidz3 with 4 disks is basically raid1, at which point you may as well use Ceph-level replication. And a 5-or-more-disk OSD strikes me as a questionable way to set it up, considering Ceph's strengths. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
* Re: test osd on zfs 2013-04-18 20:07 ` Alex Elsayed @ 2013-04-19 10:47 ` Jeff Mitchell 0 siblings, 0 replies; 20+ messages in thread From: Jeff Mitchell @ 2013-04-19 10:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Elsayed; +Cc: ceph-devel Alex Elsayed wrote: > Since Btrfs has implemented raid5/6 support (meaning raidz is only a feature > gain if you want 3x parity, which is unlikely to be useful for an OSD[1]), > the checksumming may be the only real benefit since it supports sha256 (in > addition to the non-cryptographic fletcher2/fletcher4), whereas btrfs only > has crc32c at this time. Plus (in my real-world experience) *far* better robustness. If Ceph could use either and both had feature parity, I'd choose ZFS in a heartbeat. I've had too many simple Btrfs filesystems go corrupt, not even using any fancy RAID features. I wasn't aware that Ceph was using btrfs' file-scope clone command. ZFS doesn't have that, although in theory with the new capabilities system it could be supported in one implementation without requiring an on-disk format change. --Jeff ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 20+ messages in thread
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2013-04-17 15:19 ` test osd on zfs Sage Weil
2013-04-17 15:57 ` Henry C Chang
2013-04-17 16:37 ` Jeff Mitchell
2013-04-17 17:00 ` Henry C Chang
2013-04-17 17:00 ` Sage Weil
2013-04-17 17:04 ` Yehuda Sadeh
2013-04-17 17:05 ` Sage Weil
2013-04-17 17:15 ` Yehuda Sadeh
2013-04-17 18:06 ` Brian Behlendorf
2013-04-17 18:57 ` Brian Behlendorf
2013-04-17 19:07 ` Yehuda Sadeh
2013-04-17 19:09 ` Stefan Priebe
2013-04-17 20:16 ` Mark Nelson
2013-04-17 20:49 ` Jeff Mitchell
2013-04-17 21:14 ` Brian Behlendorf
2013-04-18 2:20 ` Henry C Chang
2013-04-18 5:56 ` Stefan Priebe - Profihost AG
2013-04-18 14:50 ` Sage Weil
2013-04-18 20:07 ` Alex Elsayed
2013-04-19 10:47 ` Jeff Mitchell
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