in mnt_optnew. This is needed so that the old mount(2) syscall
works and that is needed so that amd(8) works. The code was
basically just cribbed from sys/nfsclient/nfs_vfsops.c with minor
changes. This patch is mainly to fix the new NFS client so that
amd(8) works with it. Thanks go to Craig Rodrigues for helping with
this.
Tested by: Craig Rodrigues (for amd)
MFC after: 2 weeks
- 77115: Implement support for O_DIRECT.
- 98425: Fix a performance issue introduced in 70131 that was causing
reads before writes even when writing full blocks.
- 98658: Rename the BALLOC flags from B_* to BA_* to avoid confusion with
the struct buf B_ flags.
- 100344: Merge the BA_ and IO_ flags so so that they may both be used in
the same flags word. This merger is possible by assigning the IO_ flags
to the low sixteen bits and the BA_ flags the high sixteen bits.
- 105422: Fix a file-rewrite performance case.
- 129545: Implement IO_INVAL in VOP_WRITE() by marking the buffer as
"no cache".
- Readd the DOINGASYNC() macro and use it to control asynchronous writes.
Change i-node updates to honor DOINGASYNC() instead of always being
synchronous.
- Use a PRIV_VFS_RETAINSUGID check instead of checking cr_uid against 0
directly when deciding whether or not to clear suid and sgid bits.
Submitted by: Pedro F. Giffuni giffunip at yahoo
NFS client (which I guess is no longer experimental). The fstype "newnfs"
is now "nfs" and the regular/old NFS client is now fstype "oldnfs".
Although mounts via fstype "nfs" will usually work without userland
changes, an updated mount_nfs(8) binary is needed for kernels built with
"options NFSCL" but not "options NFSCLIENT". Updated mount_nfs(8) and
mount(8) binaries are needed to do mounts for fstype "oldnfs".
The GENERIC kernel configs have been changed to use options
NFSCL and NFSD (the new client and server) instead of NFSCLIENT and NFSSERVER.
For kernels being used on diskless NFS root systems, "options NFSCL"
must be in the kernel config.
Discussed on freebsd-fs@.
when building kernels that don't have "options NFS_ROOT"
specified. I plan on moving the functions that use these
data structures into the shared code in sys/nfs/nfs_diskless.c
in a future commit. At that time, these definitions will no
longer be needed in nfs_vfsops.c and nfs_clvfsops.c.
MFC after: 2 weeks
same diskless NFS root code as the regular client, which
was moved to sys/nfs by r221032. This fixes the newnfs
client so that it can do an NFSv3 diskless root file system.
MFC after: 2 weeks
set the f_flags field of "struct statfs". This had the interesting
effect of making the NFSv4 mounts "disappear" after r221014,
since NFSMNT_NFSV4 and MNT_IGNORE became the same bit.
MFC after: 2 weeks
"struct nfs_args" as the regular NFS client. This is needed
so that the old mount(2) syscall will work and it makes
sharing of the diskless NFS root code easier. Eary in the
porting exercise I introduced a new revision of nfs_args, but
didn't actually need it, thanks to nmount(2). I re-introduced the
NFSMNT_KERB flag, since it does essentially the same thing and
the old one would not have been used because it never worked.
I also added a few new NFSMNT_xxx flags to sys/nfsclient/nfs_args.h
that are used by the experimental NFS client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
nm_maxfilesize. This value rarely, if ever, changes
and the nm_mtx mutex is locked/unlocked earlier in
the function, which should be sufficient to avoid
getting a stale cached value for it. There is a
discussion w.r.t. what these tests should be, but
I've left them basically the same as the regular
NFS client for now.
Suggested by: pjd
MFC after: 2 weeks
so that it won't try and use vp->v_mount to do an RPC during
a forced dismount. There needs to be at least one more kernel
commit, plus a change to the umount(8) command before forced
dismounts will work for the experimental NFS client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
experimental NFS client to take care of overflows for the calls
above the buffer cache layer in a manner similar to r220876.
Thanks go to dillon at apollo.backplane.com for providing the
snippet of code that does this.
MFC after: 2 weeks
experimental NFS client to take care of overflows. Thanks
go to dillon at apollo.backplane.com for providing the
snippet of code that does this.
MFC after: 2 weeks
within the experimental NFS client. Mostly add mutex locking
and use the same rsize, wsize during the operation by keeping
a local copy of it. This is another change that brings it
closer to the regular NFS client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
adding the check to nfsrpc_close() isn't useful. Also,
the check in nfscl_getcl() must be more involved, since
it needs to check before and after the acquisition of
the refcnt on nfsc_lock, while the mutex that protects
the client state data is held.
for a case that will probably never happen. It can only
happen if a server were to successfully lookup a file, but not
return attributes for that file. Although technically allowed
by the NFSv3 RFC, I doubt any server would ever do this.
However, if it did, the client would have not vput()'d the
new vnode when it needed to do so.
MFC after: 2 weeks
that would be needed if, in the future, nfscl_loadattrcache()
were to return an error. Currently nfscl_loadattrcache()
never returns an error, so these cases never currently happen.
MFC after: 2 weeks
experimental NFS client's vnode op functions to make
them compatible with the regular NFS client. I'll admit
I'm not sure that the mutex locks around the assignments
are needed, but the regular client has them, so I added them.
Also, add handling of the case of partial attributes in
setattr to be compatible with the regular client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
functions, so that threads don't get stuck in them during
a forced dismount. nfs_sync/VFS_SYNC() needs this, since it is
called by dounmount() before VFS_UNMOUNT(). The nfscl_nget()
case makes sure that a thread doing an VOP_OPEN() or
VOP_ADVLOCK() call doesn't get blocked before attempting
the RPC. Attempting RPCs don't block, since they all
fail once a forced dismount is in progress.
The third one at the beginning of nfsrpc_close()
is done so threads don't get blocked while doing VOP_INACTIVE()
as the vnodes are cleared out.
With these three changes plus a change to the umount(1)
command so that it doesn't do "sync()" for the forced case
seem to make forced dismounts work for the experimental NFS
client.
MFC after: 2 weeks
message that was generated when doing experimental NFS client
mounts. I put that message in because the krpc would hang with
the default size for mounts that used large rsize/wsize values.
Since the bug that caused these hangs was fixed by r213756,
I think the message is no longer needed.
MFC after: 2 weeks
same as the regular NFS client for NFSv3. The main one is making
use of a reserved port# the default. Also, set the retry limit
for TCP the same and fix the code so that it doesn't disable
readdirplus for NFSv4.
MFC after: 2 weeks
threads in the same manner as the regular NFS client after
r214026 was committed. This resolves the lors fixed by r214026
and its predecessors for the regular client.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
to determine if a file system supports NFSv4 ACLs. Since
VOP_PATHCONF() must be called with a locked vnode, the function
is called before nfsvno_fillattr() and the result is passed in
as an extra argument.
MFC after: 2 weeks
crossing of server mount points properly. The functions
nfsvno_fillattr() and nfsv4_fillattr() were modified to
take the extra arguments that are the mount point, a flag
to indicate that it is a file system root and the mounted
on fileno. The mount point argument needs to be busy when
nfsvno_fillattr() is called, since the vp argument is not
locked.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
mount point crossings correctly. It was testing the wrong flag.
Also, try harder to make sure that the fsid is different than
the one assigned to the client mount point, by hashing the
server's fsid (just to create a different value deterministically)
when it is the same.
MFC after: 2 weeks
of NFSv2 getting an error return from VOP_MKNOD(). Without this
patch, the server file system remains busy after an NFSv2
VOP_MKNOD() fails.
MFC after: 2 weeks
the experimental NFS server, so that it doesn't leak memory
when unloaded. However, unloading the NFSv4 server is not
recommended, since all NFSv4 state will be lost by the unload
and clients will have to recover the state after a server
reload/restart as if the server crashed/rebooted.
MFC after: 2 weeks
VOP_LOOKUP() returned. This fixes a bug in the experimental
NFS server for the case where VFS_VGET() fails returning EOPNOTSUPP
in the ReaddirPlus RPC, forcing the use of VOP_LOOKUP() instead.
MFC after: 2 weeks
workaround for fdescfs to not panic when ncookies is not NULL, similar
to the one committed as r152254, but simpler, due to fdescfs_readdir()
not calling vfs_read_dirent().
PR: kern/156177
MFC after: 1 week
bit fileid's in NFSv2 and NFSv3. Without this fix, invalid casting (and sign
extension) was creating problems for any fileid greater than 2^31.
We discovered this because we have test clusters with more than 2 billion
allocated files and 64-bit ino_t's (and friend structures).
Reviewed by: rmacklem
Approved by: zml (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
root directory of msdosfs mount. The VFS code would handle deletion
case itself too, assuming VV_ROOT flag is not lost. The msdosfs_rename()
should also note attempt to rename root via doscheckpath() or different
mount point check leading to EXDEV. Nonetheless, keep the checks for now.
The change is inspired by NetBSD change referenced in PR, but return
EBUSY like kern_unlinkat() does.
PR: kern/152079
MFC after: 1 week
- Hold the proc lock while changing the state from PRS_NEW to PRS_NORMAL
in fork to honor the locking requirements. While here, expand the scope
of the PROC_LOCK() on the new process (p2) to avoid some LORs. Previously
the code was locking the new child process (p2) after it had locked the
parent process (p1). However, when locking two processes, the safe order
is to lock the child first, then the parent.
- Fix various places that were checking p_state against PRS_NEW without
having the process locked to use PROC_LOCK(). Every place was already
locking the process, just after the PRS_NEW check.
- Remove or reduce the use of PROC_SLOCK() for places that were checking
p_state against PRS_NEW. The PROC_LOCK() alone is sufficient for reading
the current state.
- Reorder fill_kinfo_proc() slightly so it only acquires PROC_SLOCK() once.
MFC after: 1 week
PMC/SYSV/...).
No FreeBSD version bump, the userland application to query the features will
be committed last and can serve as an indication of the availablility if
needed.
Sponsored by: Google Summer of Code 2010
Submitted by: kibab
Reviewed by: arch@ (parts by rwatson, trasz, jhb)
X-MFC after: to be determined in last commit with code from this project
file's last accessed, modified, and changed times:
TMPFS_NODE_ACCESSED and TMPFS_NODE_CHANGED should be set unconditionally
in tmpfs_remove() without regard to the number of hard links to the file.
Otherwise, after the last directory entry for a file has been removed, a
process that still has the file open could read stale values for the last
accessed and changed times with fstat(2).
Similarly, tmpfs_close() should update the time-related fields even if all
directory entries for a file have been removed. In this case, the effect
is that the time-related fields will have values that are later than
expected. They will correspond to the time at which fstat(2) is called.
In collaboration with: kib
MFC after: 1 week
VNET socket push back:
try to minimize the number of places where we have to switch vnets
and narrow down the time we stay switched. Add assertions to the
socket code to catch possibly unset vnets as seen in r204147.
While this reduces the number of vnet recursion in some places like
NFS, POSIX local sockets and some netgraph, .. recursions are
impossible to fix.
The current expectations are documented at the beginning of
uipc_socket.c along with the other information there.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by: CK Software GmbH
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: zec
Tested by: Mikolaj Golub (to.my.trociny gmail.com)
MFC after: 2 weeks