[linux-cifs-client] tail -f /mounted/share/filename is not
working
Shirish Pargaonkar
shirishpargaonkar at gmail.com
Wed Apr 15 15:50:49 GMT 2009
2009/3/20 Günter Kukkukk <linux at kukkukk.com>:
> Am Freitag, 20. März 2009 schrieb Suresh Jayaraman:
>> � wrote:
>> > Hi Steve, Jeff,
>> >
>> > this one is on my todo list for more than a year now.
>>
>> May be this behavior has changed now? I tried to reproduce this on
>> 2.6.27.19 with directio option against a Samba-3.0.26 server. I could
>> not reproduce this at all (I used tail instead of statgk). I'm
>> seeing the stuff written with negligible delay on the client.
>>
>> Are you able to reproduce this with the recent kernels? If yes, are you
>> getting more clues as to what is happening with a tcpdump/cifsFYI ?
>
> About a year ago i had some short irc talk with Jeff about this tail -f ..
> problem, but we dropped it, cause other stuff had higher priority.
>
> I actually do my tests on Steve's recent git kernel tree - so 2.6.29-rc7 -
> against recent samba_v-3-3-test.
> As i already mentioned
> "Btw - when using the mount option "directio", all _seems_ to be fine."
> the tail -f ... problem is only seen here when "directio" is _not_ used.
>
> The wire traffic to the server is only a repeated
> QUERY_PATH_INFO (Query File Unix Basic)
> as requested periodically from the clients program fstat()
>
> Btw - my statgk applet has some advantages over 'tail' when debugging this, by also
> listing the size (..) change - and showing the ability to really read the appended
> line(s) - and list it as ASCII and also as some first hex bytes (which are often nil here).
>
> In inode.c --> cifs_revalidate() the var "invalidate_inode" is correctly set true.
>
> To me, the problematic part is inside this code fragment:
>
> -----------------------
> if (invalidate_inode) {
> /* shrink_dcache not necessary now that cifs dentry ops
> are exported for negative dentries */
> /* if (S_ISDIR(direntry->d_inode->i_mode))
> shrink_dcache_parent(direntry); */
> if (S_ISREG(direntry->d_inode->i_mode)) {
> if (direntry->d_inode->i_mapping) {
> wbrc = filemap_fdatawait(direntry->d_inode->i_mapping);
> if (wbrc)
> CIFS_I(direntry->d_inode)->write_behind_rc = wbrc;
> }
> /* may eventually have to do this for open files too */
> if (list_empty(&(cifsInode->openFileList))) {
> /* changed on server - flush read ahead pages */
> cFYI(1, ("Invalidating read ahead data on "
> "closed file"));
> invalidate_remote_inode(direntry->d_inode);
> }
> }
> }
>
> -------------------------------
>
> The code path to use
> invalidate_remote_inode(direntry->d_inode);
> is not hit.
> (when i force "invalidate_remote_inode(direntry->d_inode);" here, all
> looks much better)
>
Even forcing a call to invalidate_remote_inode() does not seem to
help if the server (f)opened file
in with "a" mode instead of "w" mode i.e. if wrt.c calls fp = fopen
(filename, "a"); instead of fp = fopen (filename, "w");
> Sorry, when i'm wrong here. :-)
>
> Cheers, Günter
>
>>
>> >
>> > How to test:
>> > server side: use "./wrt filename" or "./wrt -s 100 filename"
>> > to start writing/appending to a file on a (samba) exported share
>> > (regarding the '-s' option, I though writing large data would/could
>> > trigger some cifs "re-read server" internals (page dirty...))
>> > cifs client side: (one might use 'tail -f /mnt/xyz/filename' as well)
>> > use ./statgk /mnt/xyz/filename
>> >
>> > On the cifs client side "statgk" uses fstat() to get possible _updated_
>> > file info from the server (filesize, times, ...) - cifs *realizes* (!) the size (times) change,
>> > but no "read additional data" from the server is done.
>> >
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>
>
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