Commit Graph

1274 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ulf Lilleengen
7e7a4e1d18 - Fix spelling errors.
Approved by:    kib (mentor)
PR:             kern/124788
Submitted by:   Hywel Mallett <Hywel -at- hmallett.co.uk>
2008-06-20 19:48:18 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
f6aa3fccce Add the set and unset verbs used to set and clear attributes for
partition entries. Implement the setunset method for the MBR
scheme to control the active flag.
2008-06-18 01:13:34 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
d3532631de Finish the support for partition labels and add it to the XML. 2008-06-12 19:34:07 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
9a764aac3f Add the raw partition type to the XML. 2008-06-12 06:34:14 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
eab484f822 Add the raw partition type to the XML. 2008-06-12 06:26:36 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
a3354bb4a7 Add the raw partition type to the XML. 2008-06-12 05:56:03 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
0c132595dd Add the raw partiton type to the XML. 2008-06-12 05:28:47 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
40b075d366 Add the raw partition type to the XML. 2008-06-12 05:27:23 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ab1e8f04c8 Add the partition label and the raw partition type to the XML. 2008-06-12 04:43:34 +00:00
Ed Schouten
06d425f92e Remove the distinction between device minor and unit numbers.
Even though we got rid of device major numbers some time ago, device
drivers still need to provide unique device minor numbers to make_dev().
These numbers are only used inside the kernel. They are not related to
device major and minor numbers which are visible in devfs. These are
actually based on the inode number of the device.

It would eventually be nice to remove minor numbers entirely, but we
don't want to be too agressive here.

Because the 8-15 bits of the device number field (si_drv0) are still
reserved for the major number, there is no 1:1 mapping of the device
minor and unit numbers. Because this is now unused, remove the
restrictions on these numbers.

The MAXMAJOR definition was actually used for two purposes. It was used
to convert both the userspace and kernelspace device numbers to their
major/minor pair, which is why it is now named UMINORMASK.

minor2unit() and unit2minor() have now become useless. Both minor() and
dev2unit() now serve the same purpose. We should eventually remove some
of them, at least turning them into macro's. If devfs would become
completely minor number unaware, we could consider using si_drv0 directly,
just like si_drv1 and si_drv2.

Approved by:	philip (mentor)
2008-05-29 12:50:46 +00:00
Ulf Lilleengen
4e70f1decf - Recognize the 'volume' parameter when creating a plex.
PR:		kern/75632
Approved by:	pjd (mentor)
MFC after:	1 day
2008-05-22 10:27:03 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
9097a8e66e - Assert that we don't send new provider event for a provider which has
G_PF_WITHER flag set.
- Fix typo in assertion condition (sorry, but I forgot who report that).
2008-05-18 22:50:50 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
f02642d79e Play nice with DDB pager.
Educated by:	jhb's BSDCan presentation
2008-05-18 21:13:10 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
5db670520f Implement the G_PART_DUMPCONF method for all 6 schemes. Also call
the method for the (indent == NULL) case (i.e. the kern.geom.conftxt
sysctl). The purpose is to extend the conftxt output with scheme-
specific fields which can be used by libdisk. In particular, have
the schemes dump the xs and xt fields, which contain the backward
compatible values for class type and partition type. This allows
libdisk to work with the legacy slicers as well as with gpart and
helps/promotes migration.
2008-04-23 20:13:05 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
4d32fcb42b Add the bootcode verb for installing boot code. Boot code
is supported for the MBR, GPT and PC98 schemes, where GPT
installs boot code into the PMBR.
2008-04-13 19:54:54 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
e0fbffe617 Change the order from SI_ORDER_FIRST to SI_ORDER_ANY (within
SI_SUB_DRIVERS) to avoid loading schemes before all the GEOM
classes have been loaded and initialized. Otherwise we may
end up using mutexes that haven't been initialized (due to
g_retaste() posting an event).
2008-03-29 17:33:29 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
b03fab128b Add support for PC-9800 partition tables. 2008-03-28 17:58:55 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
856744ba93 When retasting, wither any existing GEOMs of the same class. This
allows the class to create a different GEOM for the same provider
as well as avoid that we end up with multiple GEOMs of the same
class with the same name.

For example, when a disk contains a PC98 partition table but
only MBR is supported, then the partition table can be treated
as a MBR. If support for PC98 is later loaded as a module, the
MBR scheme is pre-empted for the PC98 scheme as expected.
2008-03-28 06:31:12 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
4ffca444a5 Redefine G_PART_SCHEME_DECLARE() from populating a private linker set
to declaring a proper module. The module event handler is part of the
gpart core and will add the scheme to an internal list on module load
and will remove the scheme from the internal list on module unload.
This makes it possible to dynamically load and unload partitioning
schemes.
2008-03-23 01:31:59 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
8a8fcb0089 Add g_retaste(), which given a class will present all non-open providers
to it for tasting. This is useful when the class, through means outside
the scope of GEOM, can claim providers previously unclaimed.

The g_retaste() function posts an event which is handled by the
g_retaste_event().

Event suggested by: phk
2008-03-23 01:23:35 +00:00
Ulf Lilleengen
1cf9b83c6d - Fix a memory leak when re-discovering a gvinum configuration.
Approved by:	pjd (mentor)
MFC after:	1 week
2008-03-18 08:48:51 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
909f20c80d Add support for VTOC8 labels (aka sun disk labels). When a label does
not have VTOC information about the partitions, it will be created.
This is because the VTOC information is used for the partition type
and FreeBSD's sunlabel(8) does not create nor use VTOC information.
For this purpose, new tags have been added to support FreeBSD's
partition types.
2008-03-02 00:52:49 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
028de8786a Follow-up improvements to the handling of false positives: If the
partition table is empty, check to see if we have something that
looks sufficiently like a BPB. On non-i386 machines, the boot
sector typically doesn't contain boot code; the end of the boot
sector is all zeroes. This is also where the partition table is
for MBRs.
We only check the sector size and cluster size, as that seems to
be the most reliable across implementations, BPB versions and
platforms.
2008-02-29 22:41:36 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
6291ef2d80 Better handle false positives. The MBR differs from the boot sector
only because there's a partition table where the boot sector has
boot code. Boot sectors without boot code look like a MBR for all
practical purposes. This change adds a check for the partition table
and fails the probe when it's obvously invalid. The assumption being
that the sector contains a boot sector and not a MBR.
More checks are needed to distinguish a boot secto without boot code
from a (empty) MBR.
2008-02-28 22:30:41 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
764fa86761 geom_lvm(4) is now known as geom_linux_lvm(4). 2008-02-20 07:52:43 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
1332875338 Add a geom class to map Linux LVM logical volumes.
The logical disks will appear as /dev/lvm/<vol group>-<logical vol>, for
instance /dev/lvm/vg0-home. G_LINUX_LVM currently supports linear stripes with
segments on multiple physical disks. The metadata is read only, logical
volumes can not be allocated or resized.

Reviewed by:	Ivan Voras

Previously known as geom_lvm(4), rename requested by des, phk.
2008-02-20 07:45:36 +00:00
Scott Long
7bbd40c57e Teach the dump and minidump code to respect the maxioszie attribute of
the disk; the hard-coded assumption of 64K doesn't work in all cases.
2008-02-15 06:26:25 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
15df4265ef Unbreak build, size_t is larger on 64bit platforms. 2008-02-11 09:20:01 +00:00
Andrew Thompson
77b65eef19 Add a geom class to map Linux LVM logical volumes.
The logical disks will appear as /dev/lvm/<vol group>-<logical vol>, for
instance /dev/lvm/vg0-home. GLVM currently supports linear stripes with
segments on multiple physical disks. The metadata is read only, logical
volumes can not be allocated or resized.

Reviewed by:	Ivan Voras
2008-02-11 03:05:11 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
392ffade03 Various fixes:
o  BSD disklabels have relative offsets. Even for the BSD in MBR slice
   setup, except when the mbroffset ioctl is supported. Since we don't
   support that ioctl, bsdlabel(8) expects relative offsets. So, when
   reading an existing disklabel, correct for disklabels that mistakenly
   have the mbroffset offsets.
o  Don't take the geometry seriously, because it's untrustworthy. We do
   expect the numbers to be within range. This means that the secperunit
   field will not be computed from secpercyl and ncyls, but simply is
   the mediasize in sectors.
o  Don't enforce partitions to be aligned to track boundaries. The
   default label, constructed by bsdlabel(8), puts partition a at offset
   BBSIZE bytes, which commonly means sector 16.
2007-12-24 01:01:59 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
015a11e695 Chop DIOCGDELETE from userland up in 1024 sector chunks to give geom_disk
or any other bio chopping geom a reasonable size of work.

Check for delivered signals between chunks, because the request size
and service time is unbounded.
2007-12-16 19:38:26 +00:00
Poul-Henning Kamp
eed6cda966 Don't limit BIO_DELETE requests to MAXPHYS, they perform no data
transfers, so they are not subject to the VM system limitation.
2007-12-16 18:03:31 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
3959198cc5 Decode as many or as few partition entries as the label claims there
are. We have already checked it against the caller provided maxpart.
2007-12-09 22:44:22 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
4275d83ab5 Fix a bug in the add verb, where we failed to keep the list
of partitions in index-order. This is assumed by the APM, MBR
and BSD partitioning schemes.
2007-12-09 22:26:42 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
04a814ef90 Internal partitions can not be deleted or modified. 2007-12-08 23:08:42 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
d6bbbeebd9 Skip internal partitions in the check for (user) partitions for
the destroy command. Previously a freshly created BSD disklabel
could not be destroyed because of the internal partition.
2007-12-08 22:06:17 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
ddba264187 Add support for FS_ZFS. 2007-12-08 07:01:10 +00:00
John Baldwin
f97a705a99 Only attach to a GPT partition if it has the GPT_ENT_TYPE_FREEBSD type.
XXX: This only works currently with GEOM_GPT which only exists in 6.x.
XXX: I didn't add 'mbroffset' support for a GPT partition holding a BSD
label as I'm not sure if they use relative or absolute offsets.

MFC after:	3 days
2007-12-06 09:20:27 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
5aaa8fefdf Add a BSD disklabel backend to g_part:
o  Disklabels can have between 8 and 20 partitions (inclusive).
o  No device special file is created for the raw partition.
o  Switch ia64 to use this backend.
o  No support for boot code yet.
2007-12-06 02:32:42 +00:00
John Birrell
18b0b6d137 On some arches, openssl is built with OPENSSL_NO_CAMELLIA, so the
code here needs to depend on that too.
2007-11-19 08:59:32 +00:00
Maxim Konovalov
e70553c775 o s/resiserfs_sb/reiserfs_sb/.
Submitted by:	Ighighi
2007-11-16 19:43:26 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
b656c1b836 Save stack only when KTR_GEOM is both compiled into the kernel and enabled
in debug.ktr.mask. Because saving stack is very expensive, it's better only
to do it when one really wants to.

Reported by:	Dan Nelson
2007-10-26 06:55:00 +00:00
John Baldwin
f352a0d45f First cut at support for booting a GPT labeled disk via the BIOS bootstrap
on i386 and amd64 machines.  The overall process is that /boot/pmbr lives
in the PMBR (similar to /boot/mbr for MBR disks) and is responsible for
locating and loading /boot/gptboot.  /boot/gptboot is similar to /boot/boot
except that it groks GPT rather than MBR + bsdlabel.  Unlike /boot/boot,
/boot/gptboot lives in its own dedicated GPT partition with a new
"FreeBSD boot" type.  This partition does not have a fixed size in that
/boot/pmbr will load the entire partition into the lower 640k.  However,
it is limited in that it can only be 545k.  That's still a lot better than
the current 7.5k limit for boot2 on MBR.  gptboot mostly acts just like
boot2 in that it reads /boot.config and loads up /boot/loader.  Some more
details:
- Include uuid_equal() and uuid_is_nil() in libstand.
- Add a new 'boot' command to gpt(8) which makes a GPT disk bootable using
  /boot/pmbr and /boot/gptboot.  Note that the disk must have some free
  space for the boot partition.
  - This required exposing the backend of the 'add' function as a
    gpt_add_part() function to the rest of gpt(8).  'boot' uses this to
    create a boot partition if needed.
- Don't cripple cgbase() in the UFS boot code for /boot/gptboot so that
  it can handle a filesystem > 1.5 TB.
- /boot/gptboot has a simple loader (gptldr) that doesn't do any I/O
  unlike boot1 since /boot/pmbr loads all of gptboot up front.  The
  C portion of gptboot (gptboot.c) has been repocopied from boot2.c.
  The primary changes are to parse the GPT to find a root filesystem
  and to use 64-bit disk addresses.  Currently gptboot assumes that the
  first UFS partition on the disk is the / filesystem, but this algorithm
  will likely be improved in the future.
- Teach the biosdisk driver in /boot/loader to understand GPT tables.
  GPT partitions are identified as 'disk0pX:' (e.g. disk0p2:) which is
  similar to the /dev names the kernel uses (e.g. /dev/ad0p2).
- Add a new "freebsd-boot" alias to g_part() for the new boot UUID.

MFC after:	1 month
Discussed with:	marcel (some things might still change, but am committing
			what I have so far)
2007-10-24 21:33:00 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
a1fedf914f Add the freebsd-zfs alias. Both APM and GPT have ZFS partition
types.
2007-10-21 20:02:57 +00:00
Julian Elischer
3745c395ec Rename the kthread_xxx (e.g. kthread_create()) calls
to kproc_xxx as they actually make whole processes.
Thos makes way for us to add REAL kthread_create() and friends
that actually make theads. it turns out that most of these
calls actually end up being moved back to the thread version
when it's added. but we need to make this cosmetic change first.

I'd LOVE to do this rename in 7.0  so that we can eventually MFC the
new kthread_xxx() calls.
2007-10-20 23:23:23 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
3ea5d7ec24 When orphaning a provider, cancel events related to it.
Without this change the following situation was possible:

1. Provider is orphaned from within class' access() method on last write
   close - orphan provider event is send.
2. GEOM detects last write close on a provider and sends new provider event.
3. g_orphan_register() is called, and calls all orphan methods of attached
   consumers.
4. New provider event is executed on orphaned provider, all classes can
   taste already orphaned provider, and some may attach consumers to it.
   Those consumers will never go away, because the g_orphan_register()
   was already called.

We end up with a zombie provider.

With this change, at step 3, we will cancel new provider event.

How to repeat this problem:

	# mdconfig -a -t malloc -s 10m
	# geli init -i 0 md0
	# geli attach md0
	# newfs -L test /dev/md0.eli
	# mount /dev/ufs/test /mnt/tmp
	# geli detach -l md0.eli
	# umount /mnt/tmp
	# glabel status
            Name  Status  Components
        ufs/test  N/A     N/A

Reviewed by:	phk
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-27 20:18:34 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
17a0c19020 LINT compiled just fine for me, but it seems it breaks tinerbox way of
compiling LINT.

Approved by:	re (implicitly)
2007-09-23 15:10:48 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
f854db0bf5 Bring in the GEOM Virtualisation class, which allows to create huge GEOM
providers with limited physical storage and add physical storage as
needed.

Submitted by:	Ivan Voras
Sponsored by:	Google Summer of Code 2006
Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-09-23 07:34:23 +00:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
864cba9669 Add support for Camellia encryption algorithm.
PR:		kern/113790
Submitted by:	Yoshisato YANAGISAWA <yanagisawa@csg.is.titech.ac.jp>
Approved by:	re (bmah)
2007-09-01 06:33:02 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
0081f96ecd Have gpart synthesize a disk geometry if the underlying provider
don't have it. Some partitioning schemes, as well as file systems,
operate on the geometry and without it such schemes (e.g. MBR)
and file systems (e.g. FAT) can't be created. This is useful for
memory disks.
2007-06-17 22:19:19 +00:00