On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 06:49:57AM -0700, Peter Eisentraut wrote: > On 25.05.24 04:01, Jelte Fennema-Nio wrote: >> Is this the only reason why you're suggesting adding fsync=full, >> instead of simply always setting F_FULLFSYNC when fsync=true on MacOS. >> If so, I'm not sure we really gain anything by this tri-state. I think >> people either care about data loss on power loss, or they don't. I >> doubt many people want his third intermediate option, which afaict >> basically means lose data on powerloss less often than fsync=false but >> still lose data most of the time. > > I agree, two states should be enough. It could basically just be > > pg_fsync(int fd) > { > #if macos > fcntl(fd, F_FULLFSYNC); > #else > fsync(fd); > #endif > }
IIUC with this approach, anyone who is using a file system that fails fcntl(F_FULLSYNC) with ENOSUPP would have to turn fsync off. That might be the right thing to do since having a third option that sends the data to the disk cache but doesn't provide any real guarantees if you lose power may not be worth much. However, if such a file system _did_ provide such guarantees with just fsync(), then it would be unfortunate to force people to turn fsync off. But this could very well all be hypothetical, for all I know... In any case, I agree that we should probably use F_FULLFSYNC by default on macOS. -- nathan