From: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
To: C Anthony Risinger <anthony@extof.me>
Cc: Andrey Kuzmin <andrey.v.kuzmin@gmail.com>,
Mike Fedyk <mfedyk@mikefedyk.com>, David Arendt <admin@prnet.org>,
"linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org" <linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Default to read-only on snapshot creation and have a flag if snapshot should be writable (was: [PATCH 0/5] btrfs: Readonly snapshots)
Date: Tue, 30 Nov 2010 10:17:45 +0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4CF45EC9.5080902@cn.fujitsu.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <6742321336526268697@unknownmsgid>
C Anthony Risinger wrote:
> On Nov 29, 2010, at 3:48 PM, Andrey Kuzmin <andrey.v.kuzmin@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> I'm not sure why zfs came up, they don't own the term :). As to
>> zfs/overhead topic, I doubt there's any difference between clone and
>> writable shapshot (there should be none, of course, it's just two
>> different names for the same concept).
>>
>> Regards,
>> Andrey
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 12:43 AM, Mike Fedyk <mfedyk@mikefedyk.com>
>> wrote:
>>> On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 1:31 PM, Andrey Kuzmin
>>> <andrey.v.kuzmin@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> This may sound excessive as any new concept introduction that late
>>>> in
>>>> development, but readonly/writable snapshots could be further
>>>> differentiated by naming the latter clones. This way end-user would
>>>> naturally perceive snapsot as read-only PIT fs image, while clone
>>>> would naturally refer to (writable) head fork.
>>>>
>>> I'm not sure we want to take all of the terminology that zfs uses as
>>> it may also bring the percieved drawbacks as well. Isn't there some
>>> additional overhead for a zfs clone compared to a snapshot? I'm not
>>> very familiar with zfs so that's why I ask.
>>>
>> --
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>
> I don't like the idea of readonly by default, or further changes to
> terminology, for several reasons:
>
I quite agree with you. LVM2 also defaults to read/write for snapshots.
> ) readonly by default offers no real enhancement whatsoever other than
> breaking _anything_ that's written right now
This was the first thing that came to my mind.
> ) btrfs readonly is not even really readonly; as superuser could
> simply flip a flag to enable writes, readonly merely prevents
> accidental writes or misbehaving apps... ie. protecting you from
> yourself
> ) backups are the simple/obvious use case; I personally use btrfs
> heavily for LXC containers, in which case nearly every single snapshot
> is intended to be writable -- usually cloning a template into a new
> domain
> ) I also use an initramfs hook to provide system rollbacks, also
> writable; the hook also provides multiple versions of the "branch"...
> all writable
> ) adding new terms is not a good idea imo; I've already spewed out
> many sentences explaining the difference between subvolumes and
> snapshots, ie. that there is none... adding another term only adds to
> this problem; they each describe the same thing, but differentiate
> based on origin or current state, neither of which actually describe
> what it _is_-- a new named pointer to a tree, like a git branch -- a
> subvolume.
>
> I think a better solution/compromise would be to leave snapshots
> writeable by default, since that's more true to what's happening
> internally anyway, but maybe introduce a mount option controlling the
> default action for that mount point.
>
> C Anthony [mobile]
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-11-30 2:17 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-11-29 20:02 Default to read-only on snapshot creation and have a flag if snapshot should be writable (was: [PATCH 0/5] btrfs: Readonly snapshots) Mike Fedyk
2010-11-29 20:41 ` David Arendt
2010-11-29 21:08 ` Mike Fedyk
2010-11-29 21:31 ` Andrey Kuzmin
2010-11-29 21:43 ` Mike Fedyk
2010-11-29 21:48 ` Andrey Kuzmin
2010-11-30 0:33 ` C Anthony Risinger
2010-11-30 2:17 ` Li Zefan [this message]
2010-11-30 12:44 ` Andrey Kuzmin
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