Caja I/O Primer draft ("Better Than Nothing") 2001-08-23 Darin Adler The Caja shell, and the file manager inside it, does a lot of I/O. Because of this, there are some special disciplines required when writing Caja code. No I/O on the main thread To be able to respond to the user quickly, Caja needs to be designed so that the main user input thread does not block. The basic approach is to never do any disk I/O on the main thread. In practice, Caja code does assume that some disk I/O is fast, in some cases intentionally and in other cases due to programmer sloppiness. The typical assumption is that reading files from the user's home directory and the installed files in the Caja datadir are very fast, effectively instantaneous. So the general approach is to allow I/O for files that have file system paths, assuming that the access to these files is fast, and to prohibit I/O for files that have arbitrary URIs, assuming that access to these could be arbitrarily slow. Although this works pretty well, it is based on an incorrect assumption, because with NFS and other kinds of abstract file systems, there can be arbitrarily slow parts of the file system that have file system paths. For historical reasons, threading in Caja is done through the mate-vfs asynchronous I/O abstraction rather than using threads directly. This means that all the threads are created by mate-vfs, and Caja code runs on the main thread only. Thus, the rule of thumb is that synchronous mate-vfs operations like the ones in are illegal in most Caja code. Similarly, it's illegal to ask for a piece of information, say a file size, and then wait until it arrives. The program's main thread must be allowed to get back to the main loop and start asking for user input again. How CajaFile is used to do this The CajaFile class presents an API for scheduling this asynchronous I/O and dealing with the uncertainty of when the information will be available. (It also does a few other things, but that's the main service it provides.) When you want information about a particular file or directory, you get the CajaFile object for that item using caja_file_get. This operation, like most CajaFile operations, is not allowed to do any disk I/O. Once you have a CajaFile object, you can ask it questions like "What is your file type?" by calling functions like caja_file_get_file_type. However, for a newly created CajaFile object the answer is almost certainly "I don't know." Each function defines a default, which is the answer given for "I don't know." For example, caja_file_get_type will return MATE_VFS_FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN if it doesn't yet know the type. It's worth taking a side trip to discuss the nature of the CajaFile API. Since these classes are a private part of the Caja implementation, we make no effort to have the API be "complete" in an abstract sense. Instead we add operations as necessary and give them the semantics that are most handy for our purposes. For example, we could have a caja_file_get_size that returns a special distinguishable value to mean "I don't know" or a separate boolean instead of returning 0 for files where the size is unknown. This is entirely motivated by pragmatic concerns. The intent is that we tweak these calls as needed if the semantics aren't good enough. Back to the newly created CajaFile object. If you actually need to get the type, you need to arrange for that information to be fetched from the file system. There are two ways to make this request. If you are planning to display the type on an ongoing basis then you want to tell the CajaFile that you'll be monitoring the file's type and want to know about changes to it. If you just need one-time information about the type then you'll want to be informed when the type is discovered. The calls used for this are caja_file_monitor_add and caja_file_call_when_ready respectively. Both of these calls take a list of information needed about a file. If all you need is the file type, for example, you would pass a list containing just CAJA_FILE_ATTRIBUTE_FILE_TYPE (the attributes are defined in caja-file-attributes.h). Not every call has a corresponding file attribute type. We add new ones as needed. If you do a caja_file_monitor_add, you also typically connect to the CajaFile object's changed signal. Each time any monitored attribute changes, a changed signal is emitted. The caller typically caches the value of the attribute that was last seen (for example, what's displayed on screen) and does a quick check to see if the attribute it cares about has changed. If you do a caja_file_call_when_ready, you don't typically need to connect to the changed signal, because your callback function will be called when and if the requested information is ready. Both a monitor and a callback can be cancelled. For ease of use, neither requires that you store an ID for canceling. Instead, the monitor function uses an arbitrary client pointer, which can be any kind of pointer that's known to not conflict with other monitorers. Usually, this is a pointer to the monitoring object, but it can also be, for example, a pointer to a global variable. The call_when_ready function uses the callback function and callback data to identify the particular callback to cancel. One advantage of the monitor API is that it also lets the CajaFile framework know that the file should be monitored for changes made outside Caja. This is how we know when to ask FAM to monitor a file or directory for us. Lets review a few of the concepts: 1) Nearly all CajaFile operations, like caja_file_get_type, are not allowed to do any disk I/O. 2) To cause the actual I/O to be done, callers need to use set up either a monitor or a callback. 3) The actual I/O is done by asynchronous mate-vfs calls, so the work is done on another thread. To work with an entire directory of files at once, you use a CajaDirectory object. With the CajaDirectory object you can monitor a whole set of CajaFile objects at once, and you can connect to a single "files_changed" signal that gets emitted whenever files within the directory are modified. That way you don't have to connect separately to each file you want to monitor. These calls are also the mechanism for finding out which files are in a directory. In most other respects, they are like the CajaFile calls. Caching, the good and the bad Another feature of the CajaFile class is the caching. If you keep around a CajaFile object, it keeps around information about the last known state of that file. Thus, if you call caja_file_get_type, you might well get file type of the file found at this location the last time you looked, rather than the information about what the file type is now, or "unknown". There are some problems with this, though. The first problem is that if wrong information is cached, you need some way to "goose" the CajaFile object and get it to grab new information. This is trickier than it might sound, because we don't want to constantly distrust information we received just moments before. To handle this, we have the caja_file_invalidate_attributes and caja_file_invalidate_all_attributes calls, as well as the caja_directory_force_reload call. If some code in Caja makes a change to a file that's known to affect the cached information, it can call one of these to inform the CajaFile framework. Changes that are made through the framework itself are automatically understood, so usually these calls aren't necessary. The second problem is that it's hard to predict when information will and won't be cached. The current rule that's implemented is that no information is cached if no one retains a reference to the CajaFile object. This means that someone else holding a CajaFile object can subtly affect the semantics of whether you have new data or not. Calling caja_file_call_when_ready or caja_file_monitor_add will not invalidate the cache, but rather will return you the already cached information. These problems are less pronounced when FAM is in use. With FAM, any monitored file is highly likely to have accurate information, because changes to the file will be noticed by FAM, and that in turn will trigger new I/O to determine what the new status of the file is. Operations that change the file You'll note that up until this point, I've only discussed getting information about the file, not making changes to it. CajaFile also contains some APIs for making changes. There are two kinds of these. The calls that change metadata are examples of the first kind. These calls make changes to the internal state right away and schedule I/O to write the changes out to the file system. There's no way to detect if the I/O succeeds or fails, and as far as the client code is concerned the change takes place right away. The calls that make other kinds of file system change are examples of of the second kind. These calls take a CajaFileOperationCallback. They are all cancellable, and they give a callback when the operation completes, whether it succeeds or fails. Files that move When a file is moved, and the CajaFile framework knows it, then the CajaFile and CajaDirectory objects follow the file rather than staying stuck to the path. This has a direct influence on the user interface of Caja -- if you move a directory, already-open windows and property windows will follow the directory around. This means that keeping around a CajaFile object and keeping around a URI for a file have different semantics, and there are cases where one is the better choice and cases where the other is. Icons The current implementation of the Caja icon factory uses synchronous I/O to get the icons and ignores these guidelines. The only reason this doesn't ruin the Caja user experience is that it also refuses to even try to fetch icons from URIs that don't correspond to file system paths, which for most cases means it limits itself to reading from the high-speed local disk. Don't ask me what the repercussions of this are for NFS; do the research and tell me instead! Slowness caused by asynchronous operations One danger in all this asynchronous I/O is that you might end up doing repeated drawing and updating. If you go to display a file right after asking for information about it, you might immediately show an "unknown file type" icon. Then, milliseconds later, you may complete the I/O and discover more information about the file, including the appropriate icon. So you end up drawing the icon twice. There are a number of strategies for preventing this problem. One of them is to allow a bit of hysteresis and wait some fixed amount of time after requesting the I/O before displaying the "unknown" state. One strategy that's used in Caja is to wait until some basic information is available until displaying anything. This might make the program overall be faster, but it might make it seem slower, because you don't see things right away. [What other strategies are used in Caja now for this?] How to make Caja slow If you add I/O to the functions in CajaFile that are used simply to fetch cached file information, you can make Caja incredibly I/O intensive. On the other hand, the CajaFile API does not provide a way to do arbitrary file reads, for example. So it can be tricky to add features to Caja, since you first have to educate CajaFile about how to do the I/O asynchronously and cache it, then request the information and have some way to deal with the time when it's not yet known. Adding new kinds of I/O usually involves working on the Caja I/O state machine in caja-directory-async.c. If we changed Caja to use threading instead of using mate-vfs asychronous operations, I'm pretty sure that most of the changes would be here in this file. That's because the external API used for CajaFile wouldn't really have a reason to change. In either case, you'd want to schedule work to be done, and get called back when the work is complete. [We probably need more about caja-directory-async.c here.] Future direction Some have suggested that by using threading directly in Caja rather than using it indirectly through the mate-vfs async. calls, we could simplify the I/O code in Caja. It's possible this would make a big improvement, but it's also possible that this would primarily affect the internals and implementation details of CajaFile and still leave the rest of the Caja code the same. That's all for now This is a very rough early draft of this document. Let me know about other topics that would be useful to be covered in here. -- Darin