cp --reflink opens the target file for O_WRONLY before invoking the
(BTRFS) ioctl for clone file, but for copy offload over the network
the SMB2 specification requires that the target file be open O_RDWR.
I may be able to upgrade the target file handle on the fly by
reopening it in cifs.ko, and of course I can write an SMB2/SMB3
specific copy command, but it would be preferable to allow use of cp
--reflink since so many people are familiar with it.
There is quite a bit of flexibility in server side copy offload -
more than cp an offer, especially when using SMB3 or later dialects
(e.g. in number of chunks sent at one time, chunk size, attributes
copied, and even whether to use T10 style offload), but still it would
be nice to support "cp --reflink" over the network. Any ideas on
this?
After looking at copy.c in coreutils for cp - I couldn't think of any
trivial way to force cp to open the target RW.
Ideas?
--
Thanks,
Steve
On Wed, 16 Oct 2013 18:36:19 -0500
Steve French <[email protected]> wrote:
> cp --reflink opens the target file for O_WRONLY before invoking the
> (BTRFS) ioctl for clone file, but for copy offload over the network
> the SMB2 specification requires that the target file be open O_RDWR.
>
> I may be able to upgrade the target file handle on the fly by
> reopening it in cifs.ko, and of course I can write an SMB2/SMB3
> specific copy command, but it would be preferable to allow use of cp
> --reflink since so many people are familiar with it.
>
> There is quite a bit of flexibility in server side copy offload -
> more than cp an offer, especially when using SMB3 or later dialects
> (e.g. in number of chunks sent at one time, chunk size, attributes
> copied, and even whether to use T10 style offload), but still it would
> be nice to support "cp --reflink" over the network. Any ideas on
> this?
>
> After looking at copy.c in coreutils for cp - I couldn't think of any
> trivial way to force cp to open the target RW.
>
> Ideas?
You should be able to avoid this by using FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK_WRITE
instead of FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK on the wire. The former doesn't require
read access on the target, while the latter does. See [MS-SMB2] 2.2.31
and smbtorture's copy_chunk_bad_access test.
Samba only supported FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK until now, as that's what
Windows Server 2k12 uses for copies initiated by Explorer. I've just
sent out the trivial patches adding FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK_WRITE support.
Cheers, David
I think it would not matter which ioctl is used if the target file is
not opened with flag O_RDWR.
Perhaps cifs.ko can make the decision to change O_WRONLY
to O_RDWR based on the flag and location of the source and
destination files.
On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 5:45 AM, David Disseldorp <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Oct 2013 18:36:19 -0500
> Steve French <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> cp --reflink opens the target file for O_WRONLY before invoking the
>> (BTRFS) ioctl for clone file, but for copy offload over the network
>> the SMB2 specification requires that the target file be open O_RDWR.
>>
>> I may be able to upgrade the target file handle on the fly by
>> reopening it in cifs.ko, and of course I can write an SMB2/SMB3
>> specific copy command, but it would be preferable to allow use of cp
>> --reflink since so many people are familiar with it.
>>
>> There is quite a bit of flexibility in server side copy offload -
>> more than cp an offer, especially when using SMB3 or later dialects
>> (e.g. in number of chunks sent at one time, chunk size, attributes
>> copied, and even whether to use T10 style offload), but still it would
>> be nice to support "cp --reflink" over the network. Any ideas on
>> this?
>>
>> After looking at copy.c in coreutils for cp - I couldn't think of any
>> trivial way to force cp to open the target RW.
>>
>> Ideas?
>
> You should be able to avoid this by using FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK_WRITE
> instead of FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK on the wire. The former doesn't require
> read access on the target, while the latter does. See [MS-SMB2] 2.2.31
> and smbtorture's copy_chunk_bad_access test.
>
> Samba only supported FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK until now, as that's what
> Windows Server 2k12 uses for copies initiated by Explorer. I've just
> sent out the trivial patches adding FSCTL_SRV_COPYCHUNK_WRITE support.
>
> Cheers, David
> --
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