| Direct Access for files |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Motivation |
| ---------- |
| |
| The page cache is usually used to buffer reads and writes to files. |
| It is also used to provide the pages which are mapped into userspace |
| by a call to mmap. |
| |
| For block devices that are memory-like, the page cache pages would be |
| unnecessary copies of the original storage. The DAX code removes the |
| extra copy by performing reads and writes directly to the storage device. |
| For file mappings, the storage device is mapped directly into userspace. |
| |
| |
| Usage |
| ----- |
| |
| If you have a block device which supports DAX, you can make a filesystem |
| on it as usual. The DAX code currently only supports files with a block |
| size equal to your kernel's PAGE_SIZE, so you may need to specify a block |
| size when creating the filesystem. |
| |
| Currently 3 filesystems support DAX: ext2, ext4 and xfs. Enabling DAX on them |
| is different. |
| |
| Enabling DAX on ext2 |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| When mounting the filesystem, use the "-o dax" option on the command line or |
| add 'dax' to the options in /etc/fstab. This works to enable DAX on all files |
| within the filesystem. It is equivalent to the '-o dax=always' behavior below. |
| |
| |
| Enabling DAX on xfs and ext4 |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Summary |
| ------- |
| |
| 1. There exists an in-kernel file access mode flag S_DAX that corresponds to |
| the statx flag STATX_ATTR_DAX. See the manpage for statx(2) for details |
| about this access mode. |
| |
| 2. There exists a persistent flag FS_XFLAG_DAX that can be applied to regular |
| files and directories. This advisory flag can be set or cleared at any |
| time, but doing so does not immediately affect the S_DAX state. |
| |
| 3. If the persistent FS_XFLAG_DAX flag is set on a directory, this flag will |
| be inherited by all regular files and subdirectories that are subsequently |
| created in this directory. Files and subdirectories that exist at the time |
| this flag is set or cleared on the parent directory are not modified by |
| this modification of the parent directory. |
| |
| 4. There exist dax mount options which can override FS_XFLAG_DAX in the |
| setting of the S_DAX flag. Given underlying storage which supports DAX the |
| following hold: |
| |
| "-o dax=inode" means "follow FS_XFLAG_DAX" and is the default. |
| |
| "-o dax=never" means "never set S_DAX, ignore FS_XFLAG_DAX." |
| |
| "-o dax=always" means "always set S_DAX ignore FS_XFLAG_DAX." |
| |
| "-o dax" is a legacy option which is an alias for "dax=always". |
| This may be removed in the future so "-o dax=always" is |
| the preferred method for specifying this behavior. |
| |
| NOTE: Modifications to and the inheritance behavior of FS_XFLAG_DAX remain |
| the same even when the filesystem is mounted with a dax option. However, |
| in-core inode state (S_DAX) will be overridden until the filesystem is |
| remounted with dax=inode and the inode is evicted from kernel memory. |
| |
| 5. The S_DAX policy can be changed via: |
| |
| a) Setting the parent directory FS_XFLAG_DAX as needed before files are |
| created |
| |
| b) Setting the appropriate dax="foo" mount option |
| |
| c) Changing the FS_XFLAG_DAX flag on existing regular files and |
| directories. This has runtime constraints and limitations that are |
| described in 6) below. |
| |
| 6. When changing the S_DAX policy via toggling the persistent FS_XFLAG_DAX flag, |
| the change in behaviour for existing regular files may not occur |
| immediately. If the change must take effect immediately, the administrator |
| needs to: |
| |
| a) stop the application so there are no active references to the data set |
| the policy change will affect |
| |
| b) evict the data set from kernel caches so it will be re-instantiated when |
| the application is restarted. This can be achieved by: |
| |
| i. drop-caches |
| ii. a filesystem unmount and mount cycle |
| iii. a system reboot |
| |
| |
| Details |
| ------- |
| |
| There are 2 per-file dax flags. One is a persistent inode setting (FS_XFLAG_DAX) |
| and the other is a volatile flag indicating the active state of the feature |
| (S_DAX). |
| |
| FS_XFLAG_DAX is preserved within the filesystem. This persistent config |
| setting can be set, cleared and/or queried using the FS_IOC_FS[GS]ETXATTR ioctl |
| (see ioctl_xfs_fsgetxattr(2)) or an utility such as 'xfs_io'. |
| |
| New files and directories automatically inherit FS_XFLAG_DAX from |
| their parent directory _when_ _created_. Therefore, setting FS_XFLAG_DAX at |
| directory creation time can be used to set a default behavior for an entire |
| sub-tree. |
| |
| To clarify inheritance, here are 3 examples: |
| |
| Example A: |
| |
| mkdir -p a/b/c |
| xfs_io -c 'chattr +x' a |
| mkdir a/b/c/d |
| mkdir a/e |
| |
| dax: a,e |
| no dax: b,c,d |
| |
| Example B: |
| |
| mkdir a |
| xfs_io -c 'chattr +x' a |
| mkdir -p a/b/c/d |
| |
| dax: a,b,c,d |
| no dax: |
| |
| Example C: |
| |
| mkdir -p a/b/c |
| xfs_io -c 'chattr +x' c |
| mkdir a/b/c/d |
| |
| dax: c,d |
| no dax: a,b |
| |
| |
| The current enabled state (S_DAX) is set when a file inode is instantiated in |
| memory by the kernel. It is set based on the underlying media support, the |
| value of FS_XFLAG_DAX and the filesystem's dax mount option. |
| |
| statx can be used to query S_DAX. NOTE that only regular files will ever have |
| S_DAX set and therefore statx will never indicate that S_DAX is set on |
| directories. |
| |
| Setting the FS_XFLAG_DAX flag (specifically or through inheritance) occurs even |
| if the underlying media does not support dax and/or the filesystem is |
| overridden with a mount option. |
| |
| |
| |
| Implementation Tips for Block Driver Writers |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| To support DAX in your block driver, implement the 'direct_access' |
| block device operation. It is used to translate the sector number |
| (expressed in units of 512-byte sectors) to a page frame number (pfn) |
| that identifies the physical page for the memory. It also returns a |
| kernel virtual address that can be used to access the memory. |
| |
| The direct_access method takes a 'size' parameter that indicates the |
| number of bytes being requested. The function should return the number |
| of bytes that can be contiguously accessed at that offset. It may also |
| return a negative errno if an error occurs. |
| |
| In order to support this method, the storage must be byte-accessible by |
| the CPU at all times. If your device uses paging techniques to expose |
| a large amount of memory through a smaller window, then you cannot |
| implement direct_access. Equally, if your device can occasionally |
| stall the CPU for an extended period, you should also not attempt to |
| implement direct_access. |
| |
| These block devices may be used for inspiration: |
| - brd: RAM backed block device driver |
| - dcssblk: s390 dcss block device driver |
| - pmem: NVDIMM persistent memory driver |
| |
| |
| Implementation Tips for Filesystem Writers |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Filesystem support consists of |
| - adding support to mark inodes as being DAX by setting the S_DAX flag in |
| i_flags |
| - implementing ->read_iter and ->write_iter operations which use dax_iomap_rw() |
| when inode has S_DAX flag set |
| - implementing an mmap file operation for DAX files which sets the |
| VM_MIXEDMAP and VM_HUGEPAGE flags on the VMA, and setting the vm_ops to |
| include handlers for fault, pmd_fault, page_mkwrite, pfn_mkwrite. These |
| handlers should probably call dax_iomap_fault() passing the appropriate |
| fault size and iomap operations. |
| - calling iomap_zero_range() passing appropriate iomap operations instead of |
| block_truncate_page() for DAX files |
| - ensuring that there is sufficient locking between reads, writes, |
| truncates and page faults |
| |
| The iomap handlers for allocating blocks must make sure that allocated blocks |
| are zeroed out and converted to written extents before being returned to avoid |
| exposure of uninitialized data through mmap. |
| |
| These filesystems may be used for inspiration: |
| - ext2: see Documentation/filesystems/ext2.rst |
| - ext4: see Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ |
| - xfs: see Documentation/admin-guide/xfs.rst |
| |
| |
| Handling Media Errors |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The libnvdimm subsystem stores a record of known media error locations for |
| each pmem block device (in gendisk->badblocks). If we fault at such location, |
| or one with a latent error not yet discovered, the application can expect |
| to receive a SIGBUS. Libnvdimm also allows clearing of these errors by simply |
| writing the affected sectors (through the pmem driver, and if the underlying |
| NVDIMM supports the clear_poison DSM defined by ACPI). |
| |
| Since DAX IO normally doesn't go through the driver/bio path, applications or |
| sysadmins have an option to restore the lost data from a prior backup/inbuilt |
| redundancy in the following ways: |
| |
| 1. Delete the affected file, and restore from a backup (sysadmin route): |
| This will free the filesystem blocks that were being used by the file, |
| and the next time they're allocated, they will be zeroed first, which |
| happens through the driver, and will clear bad sectors. |
| |
| 2. Truncate or hole-punch the part of the file that has a bad-block (at least |
| an entire aligned sector has to be hole-punched, but not necessarily an |
| entire filesystem block). |
| |
| These are the two basic paths that allow DAX filesystems to continue operating |
| in the presence of media errors. More robust error recovery mechanisms can be |
| built on top of this in the future, for example, involving redundancy/mirroring |
| provided at the block layer through DM, or additionally, at the filesystem |
| level. These would have to rely on the above two tenets, that error clearing |
| can happen either by sending an IO through the driver, or zeroing (also through |
| the driver). |
| |
| |
| Shortcomings |
| ------------ |
| |
| Even if the kernel or its modules are stored on a filesystem that supports |
| DAX on a block device that supports DAX, they will still be copied into RAM. |
| |
| The DAX code does not work correctly on architectures which have virtually |
| mapped caches such as ARM, MIPS and SPARC. |
| |
| Calling get_user_pages() on a range of user memory that has been mmaped |
| from a DAX file will fail when there are no 'struct page' to describe |
| those pages. This problem has been addressed in some device drivers |
| by adding optional struct page support for pages under the control of |
| the driver (see CONFIG_NVDIMM_PFN in drivers/nvdimm for an example of |
| how to do this). In the non struct page cases O_DIRECT reads/writes to |
| those memory ranges from a non-DAX file will fail (note that O_DIRECT |
| reads/writes _of a DAX file_ do work, it is the memory that is being |
| accessed that is key here). Other things that will not work in the |
| non struct page case include RDMA, sendfile() and splice(). |