Source file src/internal/poll/copy_file_range_linux.go
1 // Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 package poll 6 7 import ( 8 "internal/syscall/unix" 9 "sync" 10 "syscall" 11 ) 12 13 var isKernelVersionGE53 = sync.OnceValue(func() bool { 14 major, minor := unix.KernelVersion() 15 // copy_file_range(2) is broken in various ways on kernels older than 5.3, 16 // see https://go.dev/issue/42400 and 17 // https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/copy_file_range.2.html#VERSIONS 18 return major > 5 || (major == 5 && minor >= 3) 19 }) 20 21 const maxCopyFileRangeRound = 1 << 30 22 23 // CopyFileRange copies at most remain bytes of data from src to dst, using 24 // the copy_file_range system call. dst and src must refer to regular files. 25 func CopyFileRange(dst, src *FD, remain int64) (written int64, handled bool, err error) { 26 if !isKernelVersionGE53() { 27 return 0, false, nil 28 } 29 30 for remain > 0 { 31 max := remain 32 if max > maxCopyFileRangeRound { 33 max = maxCopyFileRangeRound 34 } 35 n, err := copyFileRange(dst, src, int(max)) 36 switch err { 37 case syscall.ENOSYS: 38 // copy_file_range(2) was introduced in Linux 4.5. 39 // Go supports Linux >= 2.6.33, so the system call 40 // may not be present. 41 // 42 // If we see ENOSYS, we have certainly not transferred 43 // any data, so we can tell the caller that we 44 // couldn't handle the transfer and let them fall 45 // back to more generic code. 46 return 0, false, nil 47 case syscall.EXDEV, syscall.EINVAL, syscall.EIO, syscall.EOPNOTSUPP, syscall.EPERM: 48 // Prior to Linux 5.3, it was not possible to 49 // copy_file_range across file systems. Similarly to 50 // the ENOSYS case above, if we see EXDEV, we have 51 // not transferred any data, and we can let the caller 52 // fall back to generic code. 53 // 54 // As for EINVAL, that is what we see if, for example, 55 // dst or src refer to a pipe rather than a regular 56 // file. This is another case where no data has been 57 // transferred, so we consider it unhandled. 58 // 59 // If src and dst are on CIFS, we can see EIO. 60 // See issue #42334. 61 // 62 // If the file is on NFS, we can see EOPNOTSUPP. 63 // See issue #40731. 64 // 65 // If the process is running inside a Docker container, 66 // we might see EPERM instead of ENOSYS. See issue 67 // #40893. Since EPERM might also be a legitimate error, 68 // don't mark copy_file_range(2) as unsupported. 69 return 0, false, nil 70 case nil: 71 if n == 0 { 72 // If we did not read any bytes at all, 73 // then this file may be in a file system 74 // where copy_file_range silently fails. 75 // https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/20210126233840.GG4626@dread.disaster.area/T/#m05753578c7f7882f6e9ffe01f981bc223edef2b0 76 if written == 0 { 77 return 0, false, nil 78 } 79 // Otherwise src is at EOF, which means 80 // we are done. 81 return written, true, nil 82 } 83 remain -= n 84 written += n 85 default: 86 return written, true, err 87 } 88 } 89 return written, true, nil 90 } 91 92 // copyFileRange performs one round of copy_file_range(2). 93 func copyFileRange(dst, src *FD, max int) (written int64, err error) { 94 // The signature of copy_file_range(2) is: 95 // 96 // ssize_t copy_file_range(int fd_in, loff_t *off_in, 97 // int fd_out, loff_t *off_out, 98 // size_t len, unsigned int flags); 99 // 100 // Note that in the call to unix.CopyFileRange below, we use nil 101 // values for off_in and off_out. For the system call, this means 102 // "use and update the file offsets". That is why we must acquire 103 // locks for both file descriptors (and why this whole machinery is 104 // in the internal/poll package to begin with). 105 if err := dst.writeLock(); err != nil { 106 return 0, err 107 } 108 defer dst.writeUnlock() 109 if err := src.readLock(); err != nil { 110 return 0, err 111 } 112 defer src.readUnlock() 113 var n int 114 for { 115 n, err = unix.CopyFileRange(src.Sysfd, nil, dst.Sysfd, nil, max, 0) 116 if err != syscall.EINTR { 117 break 118 } 119 } 120 return int64(n), err 121 } 122