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ioctl_xfs_commit_range(2) — Linux manual page

NAME |SYNOPSIS |DESCRIPTION |RETURN VALUE |ERRORS |CONFORMING TO |USE CASES |NOTES |SEE ALSO |COLOPHON

IOCTL-XFS-COMMIT-RANGE(2)  System Calls ManualIOCTL-XFS-COMMIT-RANGE(2)

NAME        top

       ioctl_xfs_commit_range - conditionally exchange the contents of       parts of two files ioctl_xfs_start_commit - prepare to exchange       the contents of two files

SYNOPSIS        top

#include <sys/ioctl.h>#include <xfs/xfs_fs.h>int ioctl(intfile2_fd, XFS_IOC_START_COMMIT, structxfs_commit_range *arg);int ioctl(intfile2_fd, XFS_IOC_COMMIT_RANGE, structxfs_commit_range *arg);

DESCRIPTION        top

       Given a range of bytes in a first filefile1_fdand a second range       of bytes in a second filefile2_fd, thisioctl(2) exchanges the       contents of the two ranges iffile2_fdpasses certain freshness       criteria.       Before exchanging the contents, the program must call theXFS_IOC_START_COMMITioctl to sample freshness data forfile2_fd.       If the sampled metadata does not match the file metadata at commit       time,XFS_IOC_COMMIT_RANGEwill returnEBUSY.       Exchanges are atomic with regards to concurrent file operations.       Implementations must guarantee that readers see either the old       contents or the new contents in their entirety, even if the system       fails.       The system call parameters are conveyed in structures of the       following form:           struct xfs_commit_range {               __s32    file1_fd;               __u32    pad;               __u64    file1_offset;               __u64    file2_offset;               __u64    length;               __u64    flags;               __u64    file2_freshness[5];           };       The fieldpad must be zero.       The fieldsfile1_fd,file1_offset, andlength define the first       range of bytes to be exchanged.       The fieldsfile2_fd,file2_offset, andlength define the second       range of bytes to be exchanged.       The fieldfile2_freshness is an opaque field whose contents are       determined by the kernel.  These file attributes are used to       confirm thatfile2_fdhas not changed by another thread since the       current thread began staging its own update.       Both files must be from the same filesystem mount.  If the two       file descriptors represent the same file, the byte ranges must not       overlap.  Most disk-based filesystems require that the starts of       both ranges must be aligned to the file block size.  If this is       the case, the ends of the ranges must also be so aligned unless       theXFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_TO_EOFflag is set.       The fieldflags control the behavior of the exchange operation.XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_TO_EOF                  Ignore thelength parameter.  All bytes infile1_fd                  fromfile1_offset to EOF are moved tofile2_fd, and                  file2's size is set to (file2_offset+(file1_length-file1_offset)).  Meanwhile, all bytes in file2 fromfile2_offset to EOF are moved to file1 and file1's size                  is set to (file1_offset+(file2_length-file2_offset)).XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_DSYNC                  Ensure that all modified in-core data in both file                  ranges and all metadata updates pertaining to the                  exchange operation are flushed to persistent storage                  before the call returns.  Opening either file                  descriptor withO_SYNCorO_DSYNCwill have the same                  effect.XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_FILE1_WRITTEN                  Only exchange sub-ranges offile1_fd that are known to                  contain data written by application software.  Each                  sub-range may be expanded (both upwards and downwards)                  to align with the file allocation unit.  For files on                  the data device, this is one filesystem block.  For                  files on the realtime device, this is the realtime                  extent size.  This facility can be used to implement                  fast atomic scatter-gather writes of any complexity for                  software-defined storage targets if all writes are                  aligned to the file allocation unit.XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_DRY_RUN                  Check the parameters and the feasibility of the                  operation, but do not change anything.

RETURN VALUE        top

       On error, -1 is returned, anderrno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS        top

       Error codes can be one of, but are not limited to, the following:EBADFfile1_fd is not open for reading and writing or is open for              append-only writes; orfile2_fd is not open for reading and              writing or is open for append-only writes.EBUSYThe file2 inode number and timestamps supplied do not matchfile2_fd.EINVALThe parameters are not correct for these files.  This error              can also appear if either file descriptor represents a              device, FIFO, or socket.  Disk filesystems generally              require the offset and length arguments to be aligned to              the fundamental block sizes of both files.EIOAn I/O error occurred.EISDIROne of the files is a directory.ENOMEMThe kernel was unable to allocate sufficient memory to              perform the operation.ENOSPCThere is not enough free space in the filesystem exchange              the contents safely.EOPNOTSUPP              The filesystem does not support exchanging bytes between              the two files.EPERMfile1_fd orfile2_fd are immutable.ETXTBSY              One of the files is a swap file.EUCLEAN              The filesystem is corrupt.EXDEVfile1_fd andfile2_fd are not on the same mounted              filesystem.

CONFORMING TO        top

       This API is XFS-specific.

USE CASES        top

       Several use cases are imagined for this system call.  Coordination       between multiple threads is performed by the kernel.       The first is a filesystem defragmenter, which copies the contents       of a file into another file and wishes to exchange the space       mappings of the two files, provided that the original file has not       changed.       An example program might look like this:           int fd = open("/some/file", O_RDWR);           int temp_fd = open("/some", O_TMPFILE | O_RDWR);           struct stat sb;           struct xfs_commit_range args = {               .flags = XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_TO_EOF,           };           /* gather file2's freshness information */           ioctl(fd, XFS_IOC_START_COMMIT, &args);           fstat(fd, &sb);           /* make a fresh copy of the file with terrible alignment to avoid reflink */           clone_file_range(fd, NULL, temp_fd, NULL, 1, 0);           clone_file_range(fd, NULL, temp_fd, NULL, sb.st_size - 1, 0);           /* commit the entire update */           args.file1_fd = temp_fd;           ret = ioctl(fd, XFS_IOC_COMMIT_RANGE, &args);           if (ret && errno == EBUSY)               printf("file changed while defrag was underway\n");       The second is a data storage program that wants to commit non-       contiguous updates to a file atomically.  This program cannot       coordinate updates to the file and therefore relies on the kernel       to reject the COMMIT_RANGE command if the file has been updated by       someone else.  This can be done by creating a temporary file,       callingFICLONE(2) to share the contents, and staging the updates       into the temporary file.  TheFULL_FILESflag is recommended for       this purpose.  The temporary file can be deleted or punched out       afterwards.       An example program might look like this:           int fd = open("/some/file", O_RDWR);           int temp_fd = open("/some", O_TMPFILE | O_RDWR);           struct xfs_commit_range args = {               .flags = XFS_EXCHANGE_RANGE_TO_EOF,           };           /* gather file2's freshness information */           ioctl(fd, XFS_IOC_START_COMMIT, &args);           ioctl(temp_fd, FICLONE, fd);           /* append 1MB of records */           lseek(temp_fd, 0, SEEK_END);           write(temp_fd, data1, 1000000);           /* update record index */           pwrite(temp_fd, data1, 600, 98765);           pwrite(temp_fd, data2, 320, 54321);           pwrite(temp_fd, data2, 15, 0);           /* commit the entire update */           args.file1_fd = temp_fd;           ret = ioctl(fd, XFS_IOC_COMMIT_RANGE, &args);           if (ret && errno == EBUSY)               printf("file changed before commit; will roll back\n");

NOTES        top

       Some filesystems may limit the amount of data or the number of       extents that can be exchanged in a single call.

SEE ALSO        top

ioctl(2)

COLOPHON        top

       This page is part of thexfsprogs (utilities for XFS filesystems)       project.  Information about the project can be found at        ⟨http://xfs.org/⟩.  If you have a bug report for this manual page,       send it to linux-xfs@vger.kernel.org.  This page was obtained from       the project's upstream Git repository       ⟨https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/fs/xfs/xfsprogs-dev.git⟩ on       2025-08-11.  (At that time, the date of the most recent commit       that was found in the repository was 2025-06-23.)  If you discover       any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page, or you       believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for the page,       or you have corrections or improvements to the information in this       COLOPHON (which isnot part of the original manual page), send a       mail to man-pages@man7.orgXFS                             2024-02-18IOCTL-XFS-COMMIT-RANGE(2)

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