Commit Graph

554 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
alfred
8f5153c3ea Remove M_TRYWAIT/M_WAITOK/M_WAIT. Callers should use 0.
Merge M_NOWAIT/M_DONTWAIT into a single flag M_NOWAIT.
2003-01-21 08:56:16 +00:00
dillon
f745d7818c Bow to the whining masses and change a union back into void *. Retain
removal of unnecessary casts and throw in some minor cleanups to see if
anyone complains, just for the hell of it.
2003-01-13 00:33:17 +00:00
dillon
cc74fcf3ae Change struct file f_data to un_data, a union of the correct struct
pointer types, and remove a huge number of casts from code using it.

Change struct xfile xf_data to xun_data (ABI is still compatible).

If we need to add a #define for f_data and xf_data we can, but I don't
think it will be necessary.  There are no operational changes in this
commit.
2003-01-12 01:37:13 +00:00
marcel
3a03ca2bac o Improve wording of the comment that accompanies fs_pad. The
padding is not specific to non-i386 architectures. It is
   caused by non-i386 specific alignment requirements of
   fs_swuid,
o  Add a CTASSERT to catch a change in the size of struct fs
   at compile-time rather than run-time.

Ok'd: gordon
Tested on: i386 ia64
2003-01-10 06:59:34 +00:00
gordon
aac503d279 Fix superblock alignment problems on non-i386 platforms. Also change fs_uuid
to fs_swuid, making it more descriptive.

Submitted by:	marcel
Reviewed by:	peter
Pointy hat to:	gordon
2003-01-09 23:53:30 +00:00
gordon
1e409a3c16 Steal some space from fs_fsmnt to create fs_volname and fs_uuid. The volname
will be used to support volume names with the help of a GEOM module (to be
committed). uuid will be used to deal with conflicting volume names (which
doesn't work just yet).

Approved by:	mckusick@
2003-01-08 22:53:54 +00:00
mckusick
2a5e37fb36 This patch fixes a problem caused by applications that rapidly and
repeatedly truncate the same file. Each time the file is truncated,
a buffer is grabbed to store the indirect block numbers that need
to be freed. Those blocks cannot be freed until the inode claiming
them is written to disk. Thus, the number of buffers being held by
soft updates explodes and in extreme cases can run the kernel out
of buffers. The problem can be avoided by doing an fsync on the
file every debug.maxindirdep truncates (currently defaulted to 50).
The fsync causes the inode to be written so that the held buffers
can be freed. The check for excessive buffers is checked as part
of the existing hook for excessive dependencies (softdep_slowdown)
in the truncate code.

Reported by:	David Schultz <dschultz@uclink.Berkeley.EDU>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
MFC after:	3 weeks
2003-01-07 18:23:50 +00:00
phk
262752db65 Convert calls to BUF_STRATEGY to VOP_STRATEGY calls. This is a no-op since
all BUF_STRATEGY did in the first place was call VOP_STRATEGY.
2003-01-03 06:32:15 +00:00
schweikh
c353aec149 Correct typos, mostly s/ a / an / where appropriate. Some whitespace cleanup,
especially in troff files.
2003-01-01 18:49:04 +00:00
alfred
b392ddb13c When compiling the kernel do not implicitly include filedesc.h from proc.h,
this was causing filedesc work to be very painful.
In order to make this work split out sigio definitions to thier own header
(sigio.h) which is included from proc.h for the time being.
2003-01-01 01:56:19 +00:00
phk
a4e170bf98 Use three UMA zones for FFS/UFS inodes instead of malloc space.
Since inodes are currently 144 bytes, this will save 112 bytes per
inode.  This can amount to up to 10MByte on large systems.
2002-12-27 11:05:05 +00:00
phk
278f80f047 Move the allocation of the inode contents into ffs_vfsops.c rather than
passing malloc types around.
2002-12-27 10:23:03 +00:00
phk
d5d14b6639 Make ffs_mountfs() static.
Remove the malloctype from the ufs mount structure, instead add a callback
to the storage method for freeing inodes: UFS_IFREE().

Add vfs_ifree() method function which frees an inode.

Unvariablelize the malloc type used for allocating inodes.
2002-12-27 10:06:37 +00:00
mckusick
7cb5f30273 Fix corruption introduced in previous delta.
Reported by:	Aurelien Nephtali <aurelien.nephtali@wanadoo.fr>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-12-18 19:50:28 +00:00
mckusick
b9258ea622 Keep comments consistent with the code. Minor optimization.
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-12-18 07:19:41 +00:00
mckusick
c672e33652 Cosmetic cleanup of unsigned buglets.
Submitted by:	Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-12-18 00:53:45 +00:00
phk
22091b591c Remove unused lockcnt variable.
Approved by:	mckusick
2002-12-17 20:23:51 +00:00
mckusick
21828370a6 Update to previous change (1.54) to use an approperly wide inode field
so as to work correctly on 64-bit platforms.

Reported-by:	Jake Burkholder <jake@locore.ca>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by:	Ian Dowse <iedowse@maths.tcd.ie>
2002-12-15 19:25:59 +00:00
mckusick
ccbf68d08a Only the most recent snapshot contains the complete list of blocks
that were copied in all of the earlier snapshots, thus its precomputed
list must be used in the copyonwrite test. Using incomplete lists may
lead to deadlock. Also do not include the blocks used for the indirect
pointers in the indirect pointers as this may lead to inconsistent
snapshots.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by:	re
2002-12-14 01:36:59 +00:00
trhodes
fa1ee68d6b Remove the comment about dump(8) not working properly with snapshots.
Discussed with:	mckusick
Approved by:	re (rwatson)
2002-12-12 00:31:45 +00:00
mckusick
003b1d4e1f More tightly verify the preference returned for the new inode.
Submitted by:	Kris Kennaway <kris@obsecurity.org>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by:	re
2002-12-06 02:08:46 +00:00
mckusick
813635733d Have to use bread() rather than UFS_BALLOC() when obtaining a
previously allocated block as the previous use of the block may
have fallen out of the cache. Failure to reread its contents cause
zeroed results to be written instead of the proper contents.
Conversely, when the block is going to be entirely filled in, it
is not necessary reread the old contents.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by:	re
2002-12-03 18:19:27 +00:00
mckusick
da6c53c214 Add a check to disable the previous patch so that future filesystems
that choose to place their superblocks in non-standard locations will
not get them smashed.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-30 19:04:57 +00:00
mckusick
381a0527ce Remove a race condition / deadlock from snapshots. When
converting from individual vnode locks to the snapshot
lock, be sure to pass any waiting processes along to the
new lock as well. This transfer is done by a new function
in the lock manager, transferlockers(from_lock, to_lock);
Thanks to Lamont Granquist <lamont@scriptkiddie.org> for
his help in pounding on snapshots beyond all reason and
finding this deadlock.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-30 19:00:51 +00:00
mckusick
bcfb4926b4 Fix two deadlocks in snapshots:
1) Release the snapshot file lock while suspending the system. Otherwise
   a process trying to read the lock may block on its containing directory
   preventing the suspension from completing. Thanks to Sean Kelly
   <smkelly@zombie.org> for finding this deadlock.

2) Replace some bdwrite's with bawrite's so as not to fill all the
   buffers with dirty data. The buffers could not be cleaned as the
   snapshot vnode was locked hence the system could deadlock when
   making snapshots of really massive filesystems. Thanks to
   Hidetoshi Shimokawa <simokawa@sat.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp> for figuring
   this out.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-30 07:27:12 +00:00
mckusick
f9d427bdcf Check to make sure that the fs_sblockloc field was properly updated
before using it to write the superblock. This is to guard against
accidentally trashing the disklabel if the superblock format missed
being upgraded by the new kernel.

Reported by:	Sam Leffler <sam@errno.com>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
Approved by:	Murray Stokely <murray@FreeBSD.org>
2002-11-29 19:20:15 +00:00
mckusick
559c7a3a76 Create a new 32-bit fs_flags word in the superblock. Add code to move
the old 8-bit fs_old_flags to the new location the first time that the
filesystem is mounted by a new kernel. One of the unused flags in
fs_old_flags is used to indicate that the flags have been moved.
Leave the fs_old_flags word intact so that it will work properly if
used on an old kernel.

Change the fs_sblockloc superblock location field to be in units
of bytes instead of in units of filesystem fragments. The old units
did not work properly when the fragment size exceeeded the superblock
size (8192). Update old fs_sblockloc values at the same time that
the flags are moved.

Suggested by:	BOUWSMA Barry <freebsd-misuser@netscum.dyndns.dk>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-27 02:18:58 +00:00
mckusick
df9371ce6e The target for the maximum number of dependencies has been cut
in half because of reports that under heavy load the kernel could
exhaust its memory pool. The limit is now (desiredvnodes * 4)
rather than (desiredvnodes * 8), so it will still scale with
larger systems, just not as quickly.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-20 05:16:11 +00:00
mckusick
c3dc919f24 If an error occurs while writing a buffer, then the data will
not have hit the disk and the dependencies cannot be unrolled.
In this case, the system will mark the buffer as dirty again so
that the write can be retried in the future. When the write
succeeds or the system gives up on the buffer and marks it as
invalid (B_INVAL), the dependencies will be cleared.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-20 05:14:16 +00:00
peter
074b811e7a Do not assume that time_t is an int.
Approved by:	re (jhb)
2002-11-15 22:36:57 +00:00
rwatson
4c962d6afa Slightly change the semantics of vnode labels for MAC: rather than
"refreshing" the label on the vnode before use, just get the label
right from inception.  For single-label file systems, set the label
in the generic VFS getnewvnode() code; for multi-label file systems,
leave the labeling up to the file system.  With UFS1/2, this means
reading the extended attribute during vfs_vget() as the inode is
pulled off disk, rather than hitting the extended attributes
frequently during operations later, improving performance.  This
also corrects sematics for shared vnode locks, which were not
previously present in the system.  This chances the cache
coherrency properties WRT out-of-band access to label data, but in
an acceptable form.  With UFS1, there is a small race condition
during automatic extended attribute start -- this is not present
with UFS2, and occurs because EAs aren't available at vnode
inception.  We'll introduce a work around for this shortly.

Approved by:	re
Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2002-10-26 14:38:24 +00:00
mckusick
20aa9ff7f7 Within ufs, the ffs_sync and ffs_fsync functions did not always
check for and/or report I/O errors. The result is that a VFS_SYNC
or VOP_FSYNC called with MNT_WAIT could loop infinitely on ufs in
the presence of a hard error writing a disk sector or in a filesystem
full condition. This patch ensures that I/O errors will always be
checked and returned.  This patch also ensures that every call to
VFS_SYNC or VOP_FSYNC with MNT_WAIT set checks for and takes
appropriate action when an error is returned.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-25 00:20:37 +00:00
mckusick
3a605e8a8d We must be careful to avoid recursive copy-on-write faults when
trying to clean up during disk-full senarios.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-23 21:47:02 +00:00
mckusick
24e96c98fe Missplaced FREE_LOCK causes a panic when hit while taking a snapshot.
Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-23 05:14:06 +00:00
mckusick
f30e5172d8 This update further fine tunes the locking of snapshot vnodes in
the ffs_copyonwrite routine to avoid a deadlock between the syncer
daemon trying to sync out a snapshot vnode and the bufdaemon
trying to write out a buffer containing the snapshot inode.
With any luck this will be the last snapshot race condition.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-22 01:23:00 +00:00
mckusick
922a8d984b This update is a performance improvement when allocating blocks on
a full filesystem. Previously, if the allocation failed, we had to
fsync the file before rolling back any partial allocation of indirect
blocks. Most block allocation requests only need to allocate a single
data block and if that allocation fails, there is nothing to unroll.
So, before doing the fsync, we check to see if any rollback will
really be necessary. If none is necessary, then we simply return.
This update eliminates the flurry of disk activity that got triggered
whenever a filesystem would run out of space.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-22 01:14:25 +00:00
mckusick
b2806c8ec0 This checkin reimplements the io-request priority hack in a way
that works in the new threaded kernel. It was commented out of
the disksort routine earlier this year for the reasons given in
kern/subr_disklabel.c (which is where this code used to reside
before it moved to kern/subr_disk.c):

----------------------------
revision 1.65
date: 2002/04/22 06:53:20;  author: phk;  state: Exp;  lines: +5 -0
Comment out Kirks io-request priority hack until we can do this in a
civilized way which doesn't cause grief.

The problem is that it is not generally safe to cast a "struct bio
*" to a "struct buf *".  Things like ccd, vinum, ata-raid and GEOM
constructs bio's which are not entrails of a struct buf.

Also, curthread may or may not have anything to do with the I/O request
at hand.

The correct solution can either be to tag struct bio's with a
priority derived from the requesting threads nice and have disksort
act on this field, this wouldn't address the "silly-seek syndrome"
where two equal processes bang the diskheads from one edge to the
other of the disk repeatedly.

Alternatively, and probably better: a sleep should be introduced
either at the time the I/O is requested or at the time it is completed
where we can be sure to sleep in the right thread.

The sleep also needs to be in constant timeunits, 1/hz can be practicaly
any sub-second size, at high HZ the current code practically doesn't
do anything.
----------------------------

As suggested in this comment, it is no longer located in the disk sort
routine, but rather now resides in spec_strategy where the disk operations
are being queued by the thread that is associated with the process that
is really requesting the I/O. At that point, the disk queues are not
visible, so the I/O for positively niced processes is always slowed
down whether or not there is other activity on the disk.

On the issue of scaling HZ, I believe that the current scheme is
better than using a fixed quantum of time. As machines and I/O
subsystems get faster, the resolution on the clock also rises.
So, ten years from now we will be slowing things down for shorter
periods of time, but the proportional effect on the system will
be about the same as it is today. So, I view this as a feature
rather than a drawback. Hence this patch sticks with using HZ.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
Reviewed by:	Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@critter.freebsd.dk>
2002-10-22 00:59:49 +00:00
dillon
92cbd15999 Fix a file-rewrite performance case for UFS[2]. When rewriting portions
of a file in chunks that are less then the filesystem block size, if the
data is not already cached the system will perform a read-before-write.
The problem is that it does this on a block-by-block basis, breaking up the
I/Os and making clustering impossible for the writes.  Programs such
as INN using cyclic file buffers suffer greatly.  This problem is only going
to get worse as we use larger and larger filesystem block sizes.

The solution is to extend the sequential heuristic so UFS[2] can perform
a far larger read and readahead when dealing with this case.

(note: maximum disk write bandwidth is 27MB/sec thru filesystem)
(note: filesystem blocksize in test is 8K (1K frag))
dd if=/dev/zero of=test.dat bs=1k count=2m conv=notrunc

Before:  (note half of these are reads)
      tty             da0              da1             acd0             cpu
 tin tout  KB/t tps  MB/s   KB/t tps  MB/s   KB/t tps  MB/s  us ni sy in id
   0   76 14.21 598  8.30   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   0  0  7  1 92
   0   76 14.09 813 11.19   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   0  0  9  5 86
   0   76 14.28 821 11.45   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   0  0  8  1 91

After:	(note half of these are reads)
      tty             da0              da1             acd0             cpu
 tin tout  KB/t tps  MB/s   KB/t tps  MB/s   KB/t tps  MB/s  us ni sy in id
   0   76 63.62 434 26.99   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   0  0 18  1 80
   0   76 63.58 424 26.30   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   0  0 17  2 82
   0   76 63.82 438 27.32   0.00   0  0.00   0.00   0  0.00   1  0 19  2 79

Reviewed by:	mckusick
Approved by:	re
X-MFC after:	immediately (was heavily tested in -stable for 4 months)
2002-10-18 22:52:41 +00:00
mckusick
7cbefc4a92 Change locking so that all snapshots on a particular filesystem share
a common lock. This change avoids a deadlock between snapshots when
separate requests cause them to deadlock checking each other for a
need to copy blocks that are close enough together that they fall
into the same indirect block. Although I had anticipated a slowdown
from contention for the single lock, my filesystem benchmarks show
no measurable change in throughput on a uniprocessor system with
three active snapshots. I conjecture that this result is because
every copy-on-write fault must check all the active snapshots, so
the process was inherently serial already. This change removes the
last of the deadlocks of which I am aware in snapshots.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-16 00:19:23 +00:00
rwatson
b8bdb4853a If the FS_MULTILABEL flag is set in a UFS or UFS2 superblock,
automatically set MNT_MULTILABEL in the mount flags.

If FS_ACLS is set in a UFS or UFS2 superblock, automatically
set MNT_ACLS in the mount flags.

If either of these flags is set, but the appropriate kernel option
to support the features associated with the flag isn't available,
then print a warning at mount-time.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
2002-10-15 20:00:06 +00:00
mckusick
3f02dd225f When reading or writing the extended attributes of a special device
or fifo in UFS2, the normal ufs_strategy routine needs to be used
rather than the spec_strategy or fifo_strategy routine. Thus the
ffsext_strategy routine is interposed in the ffs_vnops vectors for
special devices and fifo's to pick off this special case. Otherwise
it simply falls through to the usual spec_strategy or fifo_strategy
routine.

Submitted by:	Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-14 23:18:09 +00:00
rwatson
77cb21f957 Define two new superblock file system flags:
FS_ACLS		Administrative enable/disable of extended ACL support
FS_MULTILABEL	Administrative flag to indicate to the MAC Framework
		that objects in the file system are individually
		labeled using extended attributes.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Reviewed by:	(in principal) mckusick, phk
2002-10-14 17:07:11 +00:00
mckusick
e4f1c0487a Regularize the vop_stdlock'ing protocol across all the filesystems
that use it. Specifically, vop_stdlock uses the lock pointed to by
vp->v_vnlock. By default, getnewvnode sets up vp->v_vnlock to
reference vp->v_lock. Filesystems that wish to use the default
do not need to allocate a lock at the front of their node structure
(as some still did) or do a lockinit. They can simply start using
vn_lock/VOP_UNLOCK. Filesystems that wish to manage their own locks,
but still use the vop_stdlock functions (such as nullfs) can simply
replace vp->v_vnlock with a pointer to the lock that they wish to
have used for the vnode. Such filesystems are responsible for
setting the vp->v_vnlock back to the default in their vop_reclaim
routine (e.g., vp->v_vnlock = &vp->v_lock).

In theory, this set of changes cleans up the existing filesystem
lock interface and should have no function change to the existing
locking scheme.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-14 03:20:36 +00:00
mux
108f8fb2a6 Fix build of 64 bit platforms. 2002-10-09 12:19:36 +00:00
mckusick
d8c510659f When creating a snapshot, create a list of initially allocated blocks.
Whenever doing a copy-on-write check, first look in the list of
initially allocated blocks to see if it is there. If so, no further
check is needed. If not, fall through and do the full check. This
change eliminates one of two known deadlocks caused by snapshots.
Handling the second deadlock will be the subject of another check-in.
This change also reduces the cost of the copy-on-write check by
speeding up the verification of frequently checked blocks.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-09 06:13:48 +00:00
mckusick
aed23845d2 The appropriate units for disk block addresses are always DEV_BSIZE,
even when the underlying device has a larger sector size. Therefore,
the filesystem code should not (and with this patch does not) try to
use the underlying sector size when doing disk block address calculations.

This patch fixes problems in -current when using the swap-based
memory-disk device (mdconfig -a -t swap ...). This bugfix is not
relevant to -stable as -stable does not have the memory-disk device.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-10-09 04:01:23 +00:00
jeff
1860a011ba - Remove LK_INTERLOCK from the vn_lock() in ffs_snapshot().
Pointy hat to:	me
Found by:	green
2002-10-08 21:00:52 +00:00
dd
515b3c8c27 size_t is not a struct (fix mislabelling in a comment). 2002-10-02 05:15:34 +00:00
jmallett
4991b48519 When spamming me with a printf(9), under DIAGNOSTIC, at least be nice enough
to include a newline.

MFC after:	4 days
Sponsored by:	Bright Path Solutions
2002-09-28 19:04:49 +00:00
phk
2175ba2a2d Be consistent about "static" functions: if the function is marked
static in its prototype, mark it static at the definition too.

Inspired by:    FlexeLint warning #512
2002-09-28 17:15:38 +00:00