* cat and grep can cause excess page read at EOF
@ 2009-04-30 14:25 David Howells
0 siblings, 0 replies; only message in thread
From: David Howells @ 2009-04-30 14:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-fsdevel, linux-nfs; +Cc: dhowells
Hi,
When reading a file that ends exactly on a page boundary, reading an entire
file and relying on read() = 0 to indicate the EOF (such as is done by cat and
grep) causes readpage() to be invoked on the filesystem for a page immediately
beyond EOF.
Is it worth making generic_file_aio_read() note that the EOF has been reached
and return 0 immediately, rather than trying to read over the EOF? The
problem with doing that might be that filesystems such as NFS2/3 might
occasionally miss the fact that a file has been extended on the server.
The call chain I see on my testbox is this:
[<ffffffffa0348382>] ? nfs_readpage+0x138/0x16a [nfs]
[<ffffffff8026fa15>] ? generic_file_aio_read+0x399/0x55a
[<ffffffff80294199>] ? do_sync_read+0xce/0x113
[<ffffffff80243cb8>] ? autoremove_wake_function+0x0/0x2e
[<ffffffff80355fe5>] ? file_has_perm+0x82/0x8b
[<ffffffff80294cd1>] ? vfs_read+0xaa/0x153
[<ffffffff80294e36>] ? sys_read+0x45/0x6e
[<ffffffff8020adeb>] ? system_call_fastpath+0x16/0x1b
nfs_readpage() is asked to read page 0x6400 from a 100MB file - which doesn't
exist, and so calls nfs_return_empty_page().
David
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