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authorMiklos Szeredi <miklos@szeredi.hu>2006-06-25 05:48:50 -0700
committerLinus Torvalds <torvalds@g5.osdl.org>2006-06-25 10:01:19 -0700
commit51eb01e73599efb88c6c20b1c226d20309a75450 (patch)
treec37e7a61ce7c049a4615dfb2ee994866d3c85bd6 /Documentation
parent3e8c54fad89144b8d63cc41619f363df1ec7cc42 (diff)
[PATCH] fuse: no backgrounding on interrupt
Don't put requests into the background when a fatal interrupt occurs while the request is in userspace. This removes a major wart from the implementation. Backgrounding of requests was introduced to allow breaking of deadlocks. However now the same can be achieved by aborting the filesystem through the 'abort' sysfs attribute. This is a change in the interface, but should not cause problems, since these kinds of deadlocks never happen during normal operation. Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <miklos@szeredi.hu> Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt40
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 34 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt b/Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt
index 33f74310d16..e7747774ceb 100644
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt
+++ b/Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt
@@ -304,25 +304,7 @@ Scenario 1 - Simple deadlock
| | for "file"]
| | *DEADLOCK*
-The solution for this is to allow requests to be interrupted while
-they are in userspace:
-
- | [interrupted by signal] |
- | <fuse_unlink() |
- | [release semaphore] | [semaphore acquired]
- | <sys_unlink() |
- | | >fuse_unlink()
- | | [queue req on fc->pending]
- | | [wake up fc->waitq]
- | | [sleep on req->waitq]
-
-If the filesystem daemon was single threaded, this will stop here,
-since there's no other thread to dequeue and execute the request.
-In this case the solution is to kill the FUSE daemon as well. If
-there are multiple serving threads, you just have to kill them as
-long as any remain.
-
-Moral: a filesystem which deadlocks, can soon find itself dead.
+The solution for this is to allow the filesystem to be aborted.
Scenario 2 - Tricky deadlock
----------------------------
@@ -355,24 +337,14 @@ but is caused by a pagefault.
| | [lock page]
| | * DEADLOCK *
-Solution is again to let the the request be interrupted (not
-elaborated further).
+Solution is basically the same as above.
An additional problem is that while the write buffer is being
copied to the request, the request must not be interrupted. This
is because the destination address of the copy may not be valid
after the request is interrupted.
-This is solved with doing the copy atomically, and allowing
-interruption while the page(s) belonging to the write buffer are
-faulted with get_user_pages(). The 'req->locked' flag indicates
-when the copy is taking place, and interruption is delayed until
-this flag is unset.
-
-Scenario 3 - Tricky deadlock with asynchronous read
----------------------------------------------------
-
-The same situation as above, except thread-1 will wait on page lock
-and hence it will be uninterruptible as well. The solution is to
-abort the connection with forced umount (if mount is attached) or
-through the abort attribute in sysfs.
+This is solved with doing the copy atomically, and allowing abort
+while the page(s) belonging to the write buffer are faulted with
+get_user_pages(). The 'req->locked' flag indicates when the copy is
+taking place, and abort is delayed until this flag is unset.