On Wed, Sep 16, 2020 at 9:02 AM Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota....@gmail.com> wrote: > > At Wed, 16 Sep 2020 08:33:06 +0530, Amit Kapila <amit.kapil...@gmail.com> > wrote in > > On Wed, Sep 16, 2020 at 7:46 AM Kyotaro Horiguchi > > <horikyota....@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Is this means lseek(SEEK_END) doesn't count blocks that are > > > write(2)'ed (by smgrextend) but not yet flushed? (I don't think so, > > > for clarity.) The nblocks cache is added just to reduce the number of > > > lseek()s and expected to always have the same value with what lseek() > > > is expected to return. > > > > > > > See comments in ReadBuffer_common() which indicates such a possibility > > ("Unfortunately, we have also seen this case occurring because of > > buggy Linux kernels that sometimes return an lseek(SEEK_END) result > > that doesn't account for a recent write."). Also, refer my previous > > email [1] on this and another email link in that email which has a > > discussion on this point. > > > > > The reason it is reliable only during recovery > > > is that the cache is not shared but the startup process is the only > > > process that changes the relation size during recovery. > > > > > > > Yes, that is why we are planning to do this optimization for recovery path. > > > > > If any other process can extend the relation while smgrtruncate is > > > running, the current DropRelFileNodeBuffers should have the chance > > > that a new buffer for extended area is allocated at a buffer location > > > where the function already have passed by, which is a disaster. > > > > > > > The relation might have extended before smgrtruncate but the newly > > added pages can be flushed by checkpointer during smgrtruncate. > > > > [1] - > > https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/CAA4eK1LH2uQWznwtonD%2Bnch76kqzemdTQAnfB06z_LXa6NTFtQ%40mail.gmail.com > > Ah! I understood that! The reason we can rely on the cahce is that the > cached value is *not* what lseek returned but how far we intended to > extend. Thank you for the explanation. > > By the way I'm not sure that actually happens, but if one smgrextend > call exnteded the relation by two or more blocks, the cache is > invalidated and succeeding smgrnblocks returns lseek()'s result. >
Can you think of any such case? I think in recovery we use XLogReadBufferExtended->ReadBufferWithoutRelcache for reading the page which seems to be extending page-by-page but there could be some case where that is not true. One idea is to run regressions and add an Assert to see if we are extending more than a block during recovery. > Don't > we need to guarantee the cache to be valid while recovery? > One possibility could be that we somehow detect that the value we are using is cached one and if so then only do this optimization. -- With Regards, Amit Kapila.