Commit Graph

1920 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Konstantin Belousov
29d03af1e4 Do not busy the UFS mount point inside VOP_RENAME(). The
kern_renameat() already starts write on the mp, which prevents
parallel unmount from proceed.  Busying mp after vn_start_write()
deadlocks the unmount.

Reported and tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-08-20 08:15:23 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
4ce90426e0 Correct the test for condition to suspend UFS filesystem during
unmount.  There is no need to suspend read-only filesystem, while we
need suspension on modificable mount point.

Reported by:	rwatson
Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-08-20 08:13:03 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
a6b5e6e32f Revision r269457 removed the Giant around mount and unmount code, but
r269533, which was tested before r269457 was committed, implicitely
relied on the Giant to protect the manipulations of the softdepmounts
list.  Use softdep global lock consistently to guarantee the list
structure now.

Insert the new struct mount_softdeps into the softdepmounts only after
it is sufficiently initialized, to prevent softdep_speedup() from
accessing bare memory.  Similarly, remove struct mount_softdeps for
the unmounted filesystem from the tailq before destroying structure
rwlock.

Reported and tested by:	pho
Reviewed by:	mckusick
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-08-12 09:33:00 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
3da0b29d99 The SUJ journal is only prepared to handle full-size block numbers, so we
have to adjust freeblk records to reflect the change to a full-size block.
For example, suppose we have a block made up of fragments 8-15 and
want to free its last two fragments. We are given a request that says:
    FREEBLK ino=5, blkno=14, lbn=0, frags=2, oldfrags=0
where frags are the number of fragments to free and oldfrags are the
number of fragments to keep. To block align it, we have to change it to
have a valid full-size blkno, so it becomes:
    FREEBLK ino=5, blkno=8, lbn=0, frags=2, oldfrags=6

Submitted by: Mikihito Takehara
Tested by:    Mikihito Takehara
Reviewed by:  Jeff Roberson
MFC after:    1 week
2014-08-07 16:53:07 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
5f9500c358 Add support for multi-threading of soft updates.
Replace a single soft updates thread with a thread per FFS-filesystem
mount point. The threads are associated with the bufdaemon process.

Reviewed by:  kib
Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
MFC after:    2 weeks
Sponsored by: Netflix
2014-08-04 22:03:58 +00:00
Warner Losh
ddd812b850 Simplify comment to remove multiple negative and passive voice. 2014-07-23 16:18:54 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
65589a29f4 Check for the cross-device cross-link attempt in the VFS, instead of
forcing filesystem VOP_LINK() methods to repeat the code.  In
tmpfs_link(), remove redundand check for the type of the source,
already done by VFS.

Note that NFS server already performs this check before calling
VOP_LINK().

Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2014-07-16 14:04:46 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
895b3782c6 Extract the code to put a filesystem into the suspended state (at the
unmount time) in the helper vfs_write_suspend_umnt().  Use it instead
of two inline copies in FFS.

Fix the bug in the FFS unmount, when suspension failed, the ufs
extattrs were not reinitialized.

Tested by:	pho
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	2 weeks
2014-07-14 09:10:00 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
7b81a399a4 In msdosfs_setattr(), add a check for result of the utimes(2)
permissions test, forgotten in r164033.

Refactor the permission checks for utimes(2) into vnode helper
function vn_utimes_perm(9), and simplify its code comparing with the
UFS origin, by writing the call to VOP_ACCESSX only once.  Use the
helper for UFS(5), tmpfs(5), devfs(5) and msdosfs(5).

Reported by:	bde
Reviewed by:	bde, trasz
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-06-17 07:11:00 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
23f6698fbd Initialize the pbuf counter for directio using SYSINIT, instead of
using a direct hook called from kern_vfs_bio_buffer_alloc().
Mark ffs_rawread.c as requiring both ffs and directio options to be
compiled into the kernel.  Add ffs_rawread.c to the list of ufs.ko
module' sources.

In addition to stopping breaking the layering violation, it also
allows to link kernel when FFS is configured as module and DIRECTIO is
enabled.

One consequence of the change is that ffs_rawread.o is always linked
into the module regardless of the DIRECTIO option.  This is similar to
the option QUOTA and ufs_quota.c.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2014-06-08 10:55:06 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
e9838c1140 don't check fs_flags for _FLAGS_UPDATED as it is stored in fs_old_flags..
If you had a UFS2 FS that didn't have it's super block at SBLOCK_UFS2,
you'll end up corrupting your FS as the superblock is updated and written
to a different location...

makefs used to put the superblock at SBLOCK_UFS1 for UFS 2 FS's causing
this issue...

Reviewed by:	silience from mckusick
MFC after:	1 week
2014-06-03 21:46:13 +00:00
Scott Long
7d155880ee Due to reasons unknown at this time, the system can be forced to write
a journal block even when there are no journal entries to be written.
Until the root cause is found, handle this case by ensuring that a
valid journal segment is always written.

Second, the data buffer used for writing journal entries was never
being scrubbed of old data.  Fix this.

Submitted by:	Takehara Mikihito
Obtained from:	Netflix, Inc.
MFC after:	3 days
2014-05-06 20:40:16 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
e24784d32a Update comment to explain search order reverted to historical order
in -r254996.

Suggested by: Pedro Giffuni <pfg@FreeBSD.org>
MFC:          3 days
2014-03-22 11:26:39 +00:00
Robert Watson
4a14441044 Update kernel inclusions of capability.h to use capsicum.h instead; some
further refinement is required as some device drivers intended to be
portable over FreeBSD versions rely on __FreeBSD_version to decide whether
to include capability.h.

MFC after:	3 weeks
2014-03-16 10:55:57 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
4803948fe2 - If we fail to do a non-blocking acquire of a buf lock while doing a
waiting sync pass we need to do a blocking acquire and restart.
   Another thread, typically the buf daemon, may have this buf locked and
   if we don't wait we can fail to sync the file.  This lead to a great
   variety of softdep panics because we rely on all dependencies being
   flushed before proceeding in several cases.

Reported by:	pho
Discussed with:	mckusick
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after:	2 weeks
2014-03-06 00:13:21 +00:00
Jeff Roberson
c13a58b022 - Gracefully handle truncation failures when trying to shrink directories.
This could cause dirhash panics since the dirhash state would be
   successfully truncated while the directory was not.

Reported by:	pho
Discussed with:	mckusick
Sponsored by:	EMC / Isilon Storage Division
MFC after:	2 weeks
2014-03-06 00:10:07 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
4896af9f55 ufs: small formatting fixes.
Cleanup some extra space.
Use of tabs vs. spaces.
No functional change.

MFC after:	3 days
Reviewed by:	mckusick
2014-03-02 02:52:34 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
be1fd82346 Fine tune filesystem block allocations under low free-space
conditions (-r254995) based on further operational experience.

Submitted by:  Dmitry Sivachenko
Fix Tested by: Dmitry Sivachenko
MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-12-30 17:04:24 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
9cd7cb1bf1 Properly handle unsigned comparison.
MFC after: 2 weeks
2013-12-30 06:19:42 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
2e436d88a3 We needlessly panic when trying to flush MKDIR_PARENT dependencies.
We had previously tried to flush all MKDIR_PARENT dependencies (and
all the NEWBLOCK pagedeps) by calling ffs_update(). However this will
only resolve these dependencies in direct blocks. So very large
directories with MKDIR_PARENT dependencies in indirect blocks had
not yet gotten flushed. As the directory is in the midst of doing a
complete sync, we simply defer the checking of the MKDIR_PARENT
dependencies until the indirect blocks have been sync'ed.

Reported by: Shawn Wallbridge of imaginaryforces.com
Tested by:   John-Mark Gurney <jmg@funkthat.com>
PR:          183424
MFC after:   2 weeks
2013-12-01 07:34:21 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
e0ce310797 fix white space...
MFC after:	1 week
2013-11-20 21:21:29 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
b6ffc3b567 fix a use after free, jsegdep_merge will free wk, avoid the next check...
CID:		1006098
Sponsored by:	Imaginary Forces
Reviewed by:	mckusick
MFC after:	1 week
2013-11-20 21:16:53 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
4b367145f7 UFS2: make di_extsize unsigned.
di_extsize is the EA size and as such it should be unsigned.
Adjust related types for consistency.

Reviewed by:	mckusick (previous version)
MFC after:	3 weeks
2013-10-24 00:33:29 +00:00
Brooks Davis
cf058082cd Allow kernels without options SOFTUPDATES to build. This should fix the
embedded tinderboxes.

Reviewed by:	emaste
2013-10-21 20:51:08 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
07599ccb28 Fix build problem on ARM (which defaults to building without soft updates).
Reported by:  Tinderbox
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-21 13:09:09 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
58941b9f15 Restructuring of the soft updates code to set it up so that the
single kernel-wide soft update lock can be replaced with a
per-filesystem soft-updates lock. This per-filesystem lock will
allow each filesystem to have its own soft-updates flushing thread
rather than being limited to a single soft-updates flushing thread
for the entire kernel.

Move soft update variables out of the ufsmount structure and into
their own mount_softdeps structure referenced by ufsmount field
um_softdep.  Eventually the per-filesystem lock will be in this
structure. For now there is simply a pointer to the kernel-wide
soft updates lock.

Change all instances of ACQUIRE_LOCK and FREE_LOCK to pass the lock
pointer in the mount_softdeps structure instead of a pointer to the
kernel-wide soft-updates lock.

Replace the five hash tables used by soft updates with per-filesystem
copies of these tables allocated in the mount_softdeps structure.

Several functions that flush dependencies when too many are allocated
in the kernel used to operate across all filesystems. They are now
parameterized to flush dependencies from a specified filesystem.
For now, we stick with the round-robin flushing strategy when the
kernel as a whole has too many dependencies allocated.

While there are many lines of changes, there should be no functional
change in the operation of soft updates.

Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-21 00:28:02 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
cc76ac5a6c Fourth of several cleanups to soft dependency implementation.
Add KASSERTS that soft dependency functions only get called
for filesystems running with soft dependencies. Calling these
functions when soft updates are not compiled into the system
become panic's.

No functional change.

Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-20 22:21:01 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
519e3c3b9f Third of several cleanups to soft dependency implementation.
Ensure that softdep_unmount() and softdep_setup_sbupdate()
only get called for filesystems running with soft dependencies.

No functional change.

Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-20 21:11:40 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
90a306d8af Second of several cleanups to soft dependency implementation.
Delete two unused functions in ffs_sofdep.c.

No functional change.

Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-20 20:52:07 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
8850120f48 First of several cleanups to soft dependency implementation.
Convert three functions exported from ffs_softdep.c to static
functions as they are not used outside of ffs_softdep.c.

No functional change.

Tested by:    Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
2013-10-20 20:41:38 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
b876c780d0 Make di_blocks unsigned in UFS1 as is the case already for UFS2.
Most of the code between UFS1 and UFS2 is shared so this change
is pretty safe. Not only this makes UFS1 and 2 consistent but it
also matches what NetBSD and MacOS X have for some years now.

Reviewed by:	mckusick
MFC after:	1 month
2013-10-14 18:17:09 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
7008be5bd7 Change the cap_rights_t type from uint64_t to a structure that we can extend
in the future in a backward compatible (API and ABI) way.

The cap_rights_t represents capability rights. We used to use one bit to
represent one right, but we are running out of spare bits. Currently the new
structure provides place for 114 rights (so 50 more than the previous
cap_rights_t), but it is possible to grow the structure to hold at least 285
rights, although we can make it even larger if 285 rights won't be enough.

The structure definition looks like this:

	struct cap_rights {
		uint64_t	cr_rights[CAP_RIGHTS_VERSION + 2];
	};

The initial CAP_RIGHTS_VERSION is 0.

The top two bits in the first element of the cr_rights[] array contain total
number of elements in the array - 2. This means if those two bits are equal to
0, we have 2 array elements.

The top two bits in all remaining array elements should be 0.
The next five bits in all array elements contain array index. Only one bit is
used and bit position in this five-bits range defines array index. This means
there can be at most five array elements in the future.

To define new right the CAPRIGHT() macro must be used. The macro takes two
arguments - an array index and a bit to set, eg.

	#define	CAP_PDKILL	CAPRIGHT(1, 0x0000000000000800ULL)

We still support aliases that combine few rights, but the rights have to belong
to the same array element, eg:

	#define	CAP_LOOKUP	CAPRIGHT(0, 0x0000000000000400ULL)
	#define	CAP_FCHMOD	CAPRIGHT(0, 0x0000000000002000ULL)

	#define	CAP_FCHMODAT	(CAP_FCHMOD | CAP_LOOKUP)

There is new API to manage the new cap_rights_t structure:

	cap_rights_t *cap_rights_init(cap_rights_t *rights, ...);
	void cap_rights_set(cap_rights_t *rights, ...);
	void cap_rights_clear(cap_rights_t *rights, ...);
	bool cap_rights_is_set(const cap_rights_t *rights, ...);

	bool cap_rights_is_valid(const cap_rights_t *rights);
	void cap_rights_merge(cap_rights_t *dst, const cap_rights_t *src);
	void cap_rights_remove(cap_rights_t *dst, const cap_rights_t *src);
	bool cap_rights_contains(const cap_rights_t *big, const cap_rights_t *little);

Capability rights to the cap_rights_init(), cap_rights_set(),
cap_rights_clear() and cap_rights_is_set() functions are provided by
separating them with commas, eg:

	cap_rights_t rights;

	cap_rights_init(&rights, CAP_READ, CAP_WRITE, CAP_FSTAT);

There is no need to terminate the list of rights, as those functions are
actually macros that take care of the termination, eg:

	#define	cap_rights_set(rights, ...)				\
		__cap_rights_set((rights), __VA_ARGS__, 0ULL)
	void __cap_rights_set(cap_rights_t *rights, ...);

Thanks to using one bit as an array index we can assert in those functions that
there are no two rights belonging to different array elements provided
together. For example this is illegal and will be detected, because CAP_LOOKUP
belongs to element 0 and CAP_PDKILL to element 1:

	cap_rights_init(&rights, CAP_LOOKUP | CAP_PDKILL);

Providing several rights that belongs to the same array's element this way is
correct, but is not advised. It should only be used for aliases definition.

This commit also breaks compatibility with some existing Capsicum system calls,
but I see no other way to do that. This should be fine as Capsicum is still
experimental and this change is not going to 9.x.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2013-09-05 00:09:56 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
2ce451f089 In looking at block layouts as part of fixing filesystem block
allocations under low free-space conditions (-r254995), determine
that old block-preference search order used before -r249782 worked
a bit better. This change reverts to that block-preference search order.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-08-28 17:46:32 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
28702816d8 A performance problem was reported in PR kern/181226:
I have 25TB Dell PERC 6 RAID5 array. When it becomes almost
    full (10-20GB free), processes which write data to it start
    eating 100% CPU and write speed drops below 1MB/sec (normally
    to gives 400MB/sec). The revision at which it first became
    apparent was http://svnweb.freebsd.org/changeset/base/249782.

The offending change reserved an area in each cylinder group to
store metadata. The new algorithm attempts to save this area for
metadata and allows its use for non-metadata only after all the
data areas have been exhausted. The size of the reserved area
defaults to half of minfree, so the filesystem reports full before
the data area can completely fill. However, in this report, the
filesystem has had minfree reduced to 1% thus forcing the metadata
area to be used for data. As the filesystem approached full, it
had only metadata areas left to allocate. The result was that
every block allocation had to scan summary data for 30,000 cylinder
groups before falling back to searching up to 30,000 metadata areas.

The fix is to give up on saving the metadata areas once the free
space reserve drops below 2%. The effect of this change is to use
the old algorithm of just accepting the first available block that
we find. Since most filesystems use the default 5% minfree, this
will have no effect on their operation. For those that want to push
to the limit, they will get their crappy block placements quickly.

Submitted by:  Dmitry Sivachenko
Fix Tested by: Dmitry Sivachenko
PR:            kern/181226
MFC after:     2 weeks
2013-08-28 17:38:05 +00:00
Ivan Voras
60dd37465a Take a very small step toward the Century of the Anchovy by increasing the
time dirhash entries stay in memory before being considered for eviction to
1 minute.
2013-08-28 10:06:20 +00:00
Kenneth D. Merry
7da1a731c6 Expand the use of stat(2) flags to allow storing some Windows/DOS
and CIFS file attributes as BSD stat(2) flags.

This work is intended to be compatible with ZFS, the Solaris CIFS
server's interaction with ZFS, somewhat compatible with MacOS X,
and of course compatible with Windows.

The Windows attributes that are implemented were chosen based on
the attributes that ZFS already supports.

The summary of the flags is as follows:

UF_SYSTEM:	Command line name: "system" or "usystem"
		ZFS name: XAT_SYSTEM, ZFS_SYSTEM
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SYSTEM

		This flag means that the file is used by the
		operating system.  FreeBSD does not enforce any
		special handling when this flag is set.

UF_SPARSE:	Command line name: "sparse" or "usparse"
		ZFS name: XAT_SPARSE, ZFS_SPARSE
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_SPARSE_FILE

		This flag means that the file is sparse.  Although
		ZFS may modify this in some situations, there is
		not generally any special handling for this flag.

UF_OFFLINE:	Command line name: "offline" or "uoffline"
		ZFS name: XAT_OFFLINE, ZFS_OFFLINE
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_OFFLINE

		This flag means that the file has been moved to
		offline storage.  FreeBSD does not have any special
		handling for this flag.

UF_REPARSE:	Command line name: "reparse" or "ureparse"
		ZFS name: XAT_REPARSE, ZFS_REPARSE
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_REPARSE_POINT

		This flag means that the file is a Windows reparse
		point.  ZFS has special handling code for reparse
		points, but we don't currently have the other
		supporting infrastructure for them.

UF_HIDDEN:	Command line name: "hidden" or "uhidden"
		ZFS name: XAT_HIDDEN, ZFS_HIDDEN
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN

		This flag means that the file may be excluded from
		a directory listing if the application honors it.
		FreeBSD has no special handling for this flag.

		The name and bit definition for UF_HIDDEN are
		identical to the definition in MacOS X.

UF_READONLY:	Command line name: "urdonly", "rdonly", "readonly"
		ZFS name: XAT_READONLY, ZFS_READONLY
		Windows: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_READONLY

		This flag means that the file may not written or
		appended, but its attributes may be changed.

		ZFS currently enforces this flag, but Illumos
		developers have discussed disabling enforcement.

		The behavior of this flag is different than MacOS X.
		MacOS X uses UF_IMMUTABLE to represent the DOS
		readonly permission, but that flag has a stronger
		meaning than the semantics of DOS readonly permissions.

UF_ARCHIVE:	Command line name: "uarch", "uarchive"
		ZFS_NAME: XAT_ARCHIVE, ZFS_ARCHIVE
		Windows name: FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE

		The UF_ARCHIVED flag means that the file has changed and
		needs to be archived.  The meaning is same as
		the Windows FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE attribute, and
		the ZFS XAT_ARCHIVE and ZFS_ARCHIVE attribute.

		msdosfs and ZFS have special handling for this flag.
		i.e. they will set it when the file changes.

sys/param.h:		Bump __FreeBSD_version to 1000047 for the
			addition of new stat(2) flags.

chflags.1:		Document the new command line flag names
			(e.g. "system", "hidden") available to the
			user.

ls.1:			Reference chflags(1) for a list of file flags
			and their meanings.

strtofflags.c:		Implement the mapping between the new
			command line flag names and new stat(2)
			flags.

chflags.2:		Document all of the new stat(2) flags, and
			explain the intended behavior in a little
			more detail.  Explain how they map to
			Windows file attributes.

			Different filesystems behave differently
			with respect to flags, so warn the
			application developer to take care when
			using them.

zfs_vnops.c:		Add support for getting and setting the
			UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY, UF_SYSTEM, UF_HIDDEN,
			UF_REPARSE, UF_OFFLINE, and UF_SPARSE flags.

			All of these flags are implemented using
			attributes that ZFS already supports, so
			the on-disk format has not changed.

			ZFS currently doesn't allow setting the
			UF_REPARSE flag, and we don't really have
			the other infrastructure to support reparse
			points.

msdosfs_denode.c,
msdosfs_vnops.c:	Add support for getting and setting
			UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM and UF_READONLY
			in MSDOSFS.

			It supported SF_ARCHIVED, but this has been
			changed to be UF_ARCHIVE, which has the same
			semantics as the DOS archive attribute instead
			of inverse semantics like SF_ARCHIVED.

			After discussion with Bruce Evans, change
			several things in the msdosfs behavior:

			Use UF_READONLY to indicate whether a file
			is writeable instead of file permissions, but
			don't actually enforce it.

			Refuse to change attributes on the root
			directory, because it is special in FAT
			filesystems, but allow most other attribute
			changes on directories.

			Don't set the archive attribute on a directory
			when its modification time is updated.
			Windows and DOS don't set the archive attribute
			in that scenario, so we are now bug-for-bug
			compatible.

smbfs_node.c,
smbfs_vnops.c:		Add support for UF_HIDDEN, UF_SYSTEM,
			UF_READONLY and UF_ARCHIVE in SMBFS.

			This is similar to changes that Apple has
			made in their version of SMBFS (as of
			smb-583.8, posted on opensource.apple.com),
			but not quite the same.

			We map SMB_FA_READONLY to UF_READONLY,
			because UF_READONLY is intended to match
			the semantics of the DOS readonly flag.
			The MacOS X code maps both UF_IMMUTABLE
			and SF_IMMUTABLE to SMB_FA_READONLY, but
			the immutable flags have stronger meaning
			than the DOS readonly bit.

stat.h:			Add definitions for UF_SYSTEM, UF_SPARSE,
			UF_OFFLINE, UF_REPARSE, UF_ARCHIVE, UF_READONLY
			and UF_HIDDEN.

			The definition of UF_HIDDEN is the same as
			the MacOS X definition.

			Add commented-out definitions of
			UF_COMPRESSED and UF_TRACKED.  They are
			defined in MacOS X (as of 10.8.2), but we
			do not implement them (yet).

ufs_vnops.c:		Add support for getting and setting
			UF_ARCHIVE, UF_HIDDEN, UF_OFFLINE, UF_READONLY,
			UF_REPARSE, UF_SPARSE, and UF_SYSTEM in UFS.
			Alphabetize the flags that are supported.

			These new flags are only stored, UFS does
			not take any action if the flag is set.

Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic
Reviewed by:	bde (earlier version)
2013-08-21 23:04:48 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
824009a16a This bug fix is in a code path in rename taken when there is a
collision between a rename and an open system call for the same
target file. Here, rename releases its vnode references, waits for
the open to finish, and then restarts by reacquiring its needed
vnode locks. In this case, rename was unlocking but failing to
release its reference to one of its held vnodes. The effect was
that even after all the actual references to the vnode had gone,
the vnode still showed active references. For files that had been
removed, their space was not reclaimed until the filesystem was
forcibly unmounted.

This bug manifested itself in the Postgres server which would
leak/lose hundreds of files per day amounting to many gigabytes of
disk space. This bug required shutting down Postgres, forcibly
unmounting its filesystem, remounting its filesystem and restarting
Postgres every few days to recover the lost space.

Reported by: Dan Thomas and Palle Girgensohn
Bug-fix by:  kib
Tested by:   Dan Thomas and Palle Girgensohn
MFC after:   2 weeks
2013-08-06 16:50:05 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
8cf85cf292 With the addition of journalled soft updates, the "newblk" structures
persist much longer than previously. Historically we had at most 100
entries; now the count may reach a million. With the increased count
we spent far too much time looking them up in the grossly undersized
newblk hash table. Configure the newblk hash table to accurately reflect
the number of entries that it must index.

Reviewed by: kib
Tested by:   Peter Holm
MFC after:   2 weeks
2013-08-05 22:02:45 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
57591d8e78 To better understand performance problems with journalled soft updates,
we need to collect the highest level of allocation for each of the
different soft update dependency structures. This change collects these
statistics and makes them available using `sysctl debug.softdep.highuse'.

Reviewed by: kib
Tested by:   Peter Holm
MFC after:   2 weeks
2013-08-05 22:01:16 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
fdd9a6f478 Update to comments describing block allocation policy.
Submitted by: Bruce Evans
2013-07-14 18:44:33 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
2aea094f65 Only copy as much bytes as there in superblock, instead of the full
block copy, when copying the superblock into the snapshot.  UFS1 does
not align superblock on the block boundary, and bcopy runs off the end
of the buffer.

Reported by:	Andre Albsmeier <Andre.Albsmeier@siemens.com>
Reviewed by:	mckusick
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	1 week
2013-07-12 18:52:33 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
53aa3d1a99 Change i_gen in UFS to an unsigned type.
Missing type change from r252435.

This fixes a "Stale NFS file handle" error.

Reported by:	Claude Bisson
Tested by:	Claude Bisson
Pointed hat:	pfg
2013-07-10 18:19:48 +00:00
Konstantin Belousov
cc3d8c35f5 There are several code sequences like
vfs_busy(mp);
      vfs_write_suspend(mp);
which are problematic if other thread starts unmount between two
calls.  The unmount starts a write, while vfs_write_suspend() drain
writers.  On the other hand, unmount drains busy references, causing
the deadlock.

Add a flag argument to vfs_write_suspend and require the callers of it
to specify VS_SKIP_UNMOUNT flag, when the call is performed not in the
mount path, i.e. the covered vnode is not locked.  The suspension is
not attempted if VS_SKIP_UNMOUNT is specified and unmount is in
progress.

Reported and tested by:	Andreas Longwitz <longwitz@incore.de>
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after:	3 weeks
2013-07-09 20:49:32 +00:00
Kirk McKusick
3f8db5b147 Make better use of metadata area by avoiding using it for data blocks
that no should no longer immediately follow their indirect blocks.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2013-07-02 21:07:08 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
5f3a9c4000 Style fix: spaces.
Cleanup the incomplete revert.

Reported by:	bde
MFC after:	4 weeks
2013-07-02 18:45:37 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
9a0aea4625 Change i_gen in UFS to an unsigned type.
Revert the simplification of the i_gen calculation.
It is still a good idea to avoid zero values and for the case
of old filesystems there is probably no advantage in using
the complete 32 bits anyways.

Discussed with:	bde
MFC after:	4 weeks
2013-07-01 21:43:40 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
bcb2f550be Change i_gen in UFS to an unsigned type.
Further simplify the i_gen calculation for older disks.
Having a zero here is not really a problem and this is more
similar to what is done in newfs_random().

Reported by:	Xin Li
MFC after:	4 weeks
2013-07-01 14:49:23 +00:00
Gleb Kurtsou
e5a5b5b64e Don't assume that UFS on-disk format of a directory is the same as
defined by <sys/dirent.h>

Always start parsing at DIRBLKSIZ aligned offset, skip first entries if
uio_offset is not DIRBLKSIZ aligned. Return EINVAL if buffer is too
small for single entry.

Preallocate buffer for cookies. Cookies will be replaced with d_off
field in struct dirent at later point.

Skip entries with zero inode number.

Stop mangling dirent in ufs_extattr_iterate_directory().

Reviewed by:	kib
Sponsored by:	Google Summer Of Code 2011
2013-07-01 04:06:40 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
60f7df4c1b Change i_gen in UFS to an unsigned type.
Missed format specifier.

Reported by:	mdf
MFC after:	4 weeks
2013-07-01 03:31:19 +00:00
Pedro F. Giffuni
eee4072f13 Change i_gen in UFS to an unsigned type.
In UFS, i_gen is a random generated value and there is not way for
it to be negative. Actually, the value of i_gen is just used to
match bit patterns and it is of not consequence if the values are
signed or not.

Following other filesystems, set it to unsigned and use it as such,

Discussed by:	mckusick
Reviewed by:	mckusick (previous version)
MFC after:	4 weeks
2013-07-01 03:00:15 +00:00