From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: from cn.fujitsu.com ([59.151.112.132]:39496 "EHLO heian.cn.fujitsu.com" rhost-flags-OK-FAIL-OK-FAIL) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1750786AbbKZGxk (ORCPT ); Thu, 26 Nov 2015 01:53:40 -0500 Subject: Re: [PATCH 0/7] Let user specify the kernel version for features To: Anand Jain , References: <1448453300-8449-1-git-send-email-anand.jain@oracle.com> <5656683C.6060001@cn.fujitsu.com> <5656A18E.9050607@oracle.com> CC: , , , <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net> From: Qu Wenruo Message-ID: <5656AC64.3030304@cn.fujitsu.com> Date: Thu, 26 Nov 2015 14:53:24 +0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: <5656A18E.9050607@oracle.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; format=flowed Sender: linux-btrfs-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: Anand Jain wrote on 2015/11/26 14:07 +0800: > > > On 11/26/2015 10:02 AM, Qu Wenruo wrote: >> >> >> Anand Jain wrote on 2015/11/25 20:08 +0800: >>> Sometimes users may want to have a btrfs to be supported on multiple >>> kernel version. A simple example, USB drive can be used with multiple >>> system running different kernel versions. Or in a data center a SAN >>> LUN could be mounted on any system with different kernel version. >>> >>> Thanks for providing comments and feedback. >>> Further to it, here below is a set of patch which will introduce, to >>> specify a kernel version so that default features can be set based on >>> what features were supported at that kernel version. >> >> With the new -O comp= option, the concern on user who want to make a >> btrfs for newer kernel is hugely reduced. > > NO!. actually new option -O comp= provides no concern for users who > want to create _a btrfs disk layout which is compatible with more > than one kernel_. above there are two examples of it. Why you can't give a higher kernel version than current kernel? > >> But I still prefer such feature align to be done only when specified by >> user, instead of automatically. (yeah, already told for several times >> though) >> Warning should be enough for user, sometimes too automatic is not good, > > As said before. > We need latest btrfs-progs on older kernels, for obvious reasons of > btrfs-progs bug fixes. We don't have to back port fixes even on > btrfs-progs as we already do it in btrfs kernel. A btrfs-progs should > work on any kernel with the "default features as prescribed for that > kernel". > > Let's say if we don't do this automatic then, latest btrfs-progs > with default mkfs.btfs && mount fails. But a user upgrading btrfs-progs > for fsck bug fixes, shouldn't find 'default mkfs.btfs && mount' > failing. Nor they have to use a "new" set of mkfs option to create all > default FS for a LTS kernel. > > Default features based on btrfs-progs version instead of kernel > version- makes NO sense. Kernel version never makes sense, especially for non-vanilla. And unfortunately, most of kernels used in stable distribution is not vanilla. And that's the *POINT1*. That's why I stand against kernel version based detection. You can use stable /sys/fs/btrfs/features/, but kernel version? Not an option even as fallback. > And adding a warning for not using latest > features which is not in their running kernel is pointless. You didn't get the point of what to WARN. Not warning user they are not using latest features, but warning some features may prevent the fs being mounted for current kernel. >That's _not_ a backward kernel compatible tool. > > btrfs-progs should work "for the kernel". We should avoid adding too > much intelligence into btrfs-progs. I have fixed too many issues and > redesigned progs in this area. Too many bugs were mainly because of the > idea of copy and maintain same code on btrfs-progs and btrfs-kernel > approach for progs. (ref wiki and my email before). Thats a wrong > approach. Totally agree with this point. Too many non-sense in btrfs-progs codes copied from kernel, and due to lack of update, it's very buggy now. Just check volume.c for allocating data chunk. But I didn't see the point related to the feature auto align here. > I don't understand- if the purpose of both of these isn't > same what is the point in maintaining same code? It won't save in > efforts mainly because its like developing a distributed FS where > two parties has to be communicated to be in sync. Which is like using > the canon to shoo a crow. > But if the reason was fuse like kernel-free FS (no one said that > though) then its better to do it as a separate project. > >> especially for tests. > > It depends whats being tested kernel OR progs? Its kernel not progs. No, both kernel and progs. Just from Dave, even with his typo: "xfstests is not jsut for testing kernel changes - it tests all of the filesystem utilities for regressions, too. And so when inadvertant changes in default behaviour occur, it detects those regressions too." > Automatic will keep default feature constant for a given kernel > version. Further, for testing using a known set of options is even > better. Yeah, known set of options get unknown on different kernels, thanks to the hidden feature align. Unless you specify it by -O options. That's the *POINT2*: Default auto feature align are making mkfs.btrfs behavior *unpredictable*. Before auto feature align, QA/end-user only needs to check the btrfs-progs announcement to know the default behavior change. And after it, wow, QA testers will need to check the feature matrix to know what's the default feature on their kernel, not to mention it may even be wrong due to more unpredictable kernel version. That's why I strongly recommend to make it just a warning other than default behavior. > >> A lot of btrfs-progs change, like recent disabling mixed-bg for small >> volume has already cause regression in generic/077 testcase. >> And Dave is already fed up with such problem from btrfs... > > I don't know what's the regression about. But in my experience with > some xfstest test cases.. xfstests depend too much on cli output > strings which is easy thing to do but a wrong approach. Check this patch and its following, definitely not UI but default behavior, just as you are going to change. https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/7679381/ Thanks, Qu > Those cli outputs and its format are NOT APIs, those are UIs. Instead > it should have used return code/ FS test interface. This will let > developers with free hands to change, otherwise you need to update the > test cases every time you change the cli _output_. > >> Especially such auto-detection will make default behavior more unstable, >> at least not a good idea for me. > > As above. We design with end-user and their use cases in mind. Not for > a test suite. If test suite breaks.. fix it. > > Thanks, Anand > >> Beside this, I'm curious how other filesystm user tools handle such >> kernel mismatch, or do they? > >> Thanks, >> Qu >> >> >>> >>> First of all to let user know what features was supported at what kernel >>> version. Patch 1/7 updates -O list-all which will list the feature with >>> version. >>> >>> As we didn't maintain the sysfs and progs feature names consistent, so >>> to avoid confusion Patch 2/7 displays sysfs feature name as well again >>> in the list-all output. >>> >>> Next, Patch 3,4,5/7 are helper functions. >>> >>> Patch 6,7/7 provides the -O comp= for mkfs.btrfs and >>> btrfs-convert respectively >>> >>> Thanks, Anand >>> >>> Anand Jain (7): >>> btrfs-progs: show the version for -O list-all >>> btrfs-progs: add kernel alias for each of the features in the list >>> btrfs-progs: make is_numerical non static >>> btrfs-progs: check for numerical in version_to_code() >>> btrfs-progs: introduce framework version to features >>> btrfs-progs: add -O comp= option for mkfs.btrfs >>> btrfs-progs: add -O comp= option for btrfs-convert >>> >>> btrfs-convert.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ >>> cmds-replace.c | 11 ----------- >>> mkfs.c | 24 ++++++++++++++++++++++-- >>> utils.c | 58 >>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- >>> utils.h | 2 ++ >>> 5 files changed, 98 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) >>> >> >> >> -- >> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in >> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > >