• Brian Foster's avatar
    xfs: don't discard on free of unwritten extents · 84ca484e
    Brian Foster authored
    Unwritten extents by definition have not been written to until they
    are converted to normal written extents. If unwritten extents are
    freed from a file, it is therefore guaranteed that the blocks have
    not been written to since allocation (note that zero range punches
    and reallocates blocks).
    
    To cut down on online discards generated from workloads that make
    use of preallocation, skip discards of extents if they are in the
    unwritten state when the extent is freed.
    
    Note that this optimization does not apply to log recovery, during
    which all freed extents are discarded if online discard is enabled.
    Also note that it may be possible for a filesystem crash to occur
    after write completion of an unwritten extent but before unwritten
    conversion such that the extent remains unwritten after log
    recovery. Since this pseudo-inconsistency may already be possible
    after a crash (consider writing to recently allocated blocks where
    the allocation transaction is lost after a crash), this change
    shouldn't introduce any fundamental limitations that don't already
    exist. In short, on storage stacks where discards are important,
    it's good practice to run an occasional fstrim even with online
    discard enabled in the filesystem, particularly after a crash.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarBrian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarDarrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDarrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
    84ca484e
xfs_bmap.c 171 KB