mounted (is it Joliet, RockRidge, High Sierra) based on bootverbose.
Most file systems don't generate log messages based on details of the
file system superblock, and these log messages disrupt sysinstall output
during a new install from CD. We may want to explore exposing this
status information using nmount() at some point.
MFC after: 3 days
on my P3, microbenchmarks show the unrolled version is 78x faster. In
actual use (recursive ls), this gives an average of 9% improvement in
system time and 2% improvement in wall time.
called in "open", causing mmap() to fail.
Where possible, pass size of file to vnode_create_vobject() rather
than having it find it out the hard way via VOP_LOOKUP
Reviewed by: phk
mmap() on NTFS files was hosed, returning pages offset from the
start of the disk rather than the start of the file. (ie, "cp" of
a 1-block file would get you a copy of the boot sector, not the
data in the file.) The solution isn't ideal, but gives a functioning
filesystem.
Cached vnode lookup was also broken, resulting in vnode haemorrhage.
A lookup on the same file twice would give you two vnodes, and the
resulting cached pages.
Just recently, mmap() was broken due to a lack of a call to
vnode_create_vobject() in ntfs_open().
Discussed with: phk@
with NFS.
We are moving responsibility for creating the vnode_pager object into
the filesystems which own the vnode, and this is one of the places
we have to cover.
We call vnode_create_vobject() directly because we own the vnode.
If we can get the size easily, pass it as an argument to save the
call to VOP_GETATTR() in vnode_create_vobject()
and KASSERT coverage.
After this check there is only one "nasty" cast in this code but there
is a KASSERT to protect against the wrong argument structure behind
that cast.
Un-inlining the meat of VOP_FOO() saves 35kB of text segment on a typical
kernel with no change in performance.
We also now run the checking and tracing on VOP's which have been layered
by nullfs, umapfs, deadfs or unionfs.
Add new (non-inline) VOP_FOO_AP() functions which take a "struct
foo_args" argument and does everything the VOP_FOO() macros
used to do with checks and debugging code.
Add KASSERT to VOP_FOO_AP() check for argument type being
correct.
Slim down VOP_FOO() inline functions to just stuff arguments
into the struct foo_args and call VOP_FOO_AP().
Put function pointer to VOP_FOO_AP() into vop_foo_desc structure
and make VCALL() use it instead of the current offsetoff() hack.
Retire vcall() which implemented the offsetoff()
Make deadfs and unionfs use VOP_FOO_AP() calls instead of
VCALL(), we know which specific call we want already.
Remove unneeded arguments to VCALL() in nullfs and umapfs bypass
functions.
Remove unused vdesc_offset and VOFFSET().
Generally improve style/readability of the generated code.
I'm not sure why a credential was added to these in the first place, it is
not used anywhere and it doesn't make much sense:
The credentials for syncing a file (ability to write to the
file) should be checked at the system call level.
Credentials for syncing one or more filesystems ("none")
should be checked at the system call level as well.
If the filesystem implementation needs a particular credential
to carry out the syncing it would logically have to the
cached mount credential, or a credential cached along with
any delayed write data.
Discussed with: rwatson