Hi,
linux has supported nanosecond order file's timestamp since 2.5.48.
However current file timestamp is got by current_fs_time() and
is only updated once a tick. It can't say true nanosecond accuracy.
In addition, gettimeofday() before a file operation updating
{a,c,m}time would outstrip file's timestamp because of the difference
about time source between gettimeofday() and file's timestamp.
A certain kind of application would corrupted by this problem.
I attached a most simple patch fixing this problem here. However
it has several problems and I don't say it can be applied as is.
The most big two problems is the following:
- It would cause performance regression, especially in
not TSC capable system.
- Is gettimeofday()'s monotonicity reliable on all systems?
The relative discussion:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2010/7/13/443
Does anybody have good idea? Should it be tunable, for example?
Thanks,
Satoru
Index: linux-2.6.36-rc3/kernel/time.c
===================================================================
--- linux-2.6.36-rc3.orig/kernel/time.c 2010-08-31 16:07:43.000000000 +0900
+++ linux-2.6.36-rc3/kernel/time.c 2010-08-31 16:08:11.000000000 +0900
@@ -227,7 +227,8 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE1(adjtimex, struct timex _
*/
struct timespec current_fs_time(struct super_block *sb)
{
- struct timespec now = current_kernel_time();
+ struct timespec now;
+ getnstimeofday(&now);
return timespec_trunc(now, sb->s_time_gran);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(current_fs_time);