in the new NFS server for NFSv4, where it would report ENOENT
when the file actually existed on the server. This turned out
to be caused by not initializing ni_topdir before calling lookup()
and there was a rare case where the value on the stack location
assigned to ni_topdir happened to be a pointer to a ".." entry,
such that "dp == ndp->ni_topdir" succeeded in lookup().
This patch initializes ni_topdir to fix the problem.
MFC after: 5 days
significantly. Upon investigation this was caused by name cache
misses for lookups of "..". For name cache entries for non-".."
directories, the cache entry serves double duty. It maps both the
named directory plus ".." for the parent of the directory. As such,
two ctime values (one for each of the directory and its parent) need
to be saved in the name cache entry.
This patch adds an entry for ctime of the parent directory to the
name cache. It also adds an additional uma zone for large entries
with this time value, in order to minimize memory wastage.
As well, it fixes a couple of cases where the mtime of the parent
directory was being saved instead of ctime for positive name cache
entries. With this patch, Lookup RPC counts return to values similar
to pre-r230394 kernels.
Reported by: bde
Discussed with: kib
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
associated with the previous vnode (if any) associated with the target of
a rename(). Otherwise, a lookup of the target pathname concurrent with a
rename() could re-add a name cache entry after the namei(RENAME) lookup
in kern_renameat() had purged the target pathname.
MFC after: 2 weeks
instead of accepting half-constructed vnode. Previous code cannot decide
what to do with such vnode anyway, and although processing it for hash
removal, paniced later when getting rid of nullfs reference on lowervp.
While there, remove initializations from the declaration block.
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
function null_destroy_proto() from null_insmntque_dtr(). Also
apply null_destroy_proto() in null_nodeget() when we raced and a vnode
is found in the hash, so the currently allocated protonode shall be
destroyed.
Lock the vnode interlock around reassigning the v_vnlock.
In fact, this path will not be exercised after several later commits,
since null_nodeget() cannot take shared-locked lowervp at all due to
insmntque() requirements.
Reported by: rea
Tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
a new jail parameter node with the following parameters:
allow.mount.devfs:
allow mounting the devfs filesystem inside a jail
allow.mount.nullfs:
allow mounting the nullfs filesystem inside a jail
Both parameters are disabled by default (equals the behavior before
devfs and nullfs in jails). Administrators have to explicitly allow
mounting devfs and nullfs for each jail. The value "-1" of the
devfs_ruleset parameter is removed in favor of the new allow setting.
Reviewed by: jamie
Suggested by: pjd
MFC after: 2 weeks
"panic in 8.3-PRERELEASE" on Feb. 22, 2012. This panic was caused
by use of a mix of tsleep() and msleep() calls on the same event
in the new NFS server DRC code. It did "mtx_unlock(); tsleep();"
in two places, which kib@ noted introduced a slight risk that the
wakeup() would occur before the tsleep(), resulting in a 10sec
delay before waking up. This patch fixes the problem by replacing
"mtx_unlock(); tsleep();" with mtx_sleep(..PDROP..). It also
changes a nfsmsleep() call to mtx_sleep() so that the code uses
mtx_sleep() consistently within the file.
Tested by: hrs (in progress)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 5 days
Add the sysctl debug.iosize_max_clamp, enabled by default. Setting the
sysctl to zero allows to perform the SSIZE_MAX-sized i/o requests from
the usermode.
Discussed with: bde, das (previous versions)
MFC after: 1 month
A new jail(8) option "devfs_ruleset" defines the ruleset enforcement for
mounting devfs inside jails. A value of -1 disables mounting devfs in
jails, a value of zero means no restrictions. Nested jails can only
have mounting devfs disabled or inherit parent's enforcement as jails are
not allowed to view or manipulate devfs(8) rules.
Utilizes new functions introduced in r231265.
Reviewed by: jamie
MFC after: 1 month
Add support for updating the devfs mount (currently only changing the
ruleset number is supported).
Check mnt_optnew with vfs_filteropt(9).
This new option sets the specified ruleset number as the active ruleset
of the new devfs mount and applies all its rules at mount time. If the
specified ruleset doesn't exist, a new empty ruleset is created.
MFC after: 1 month
ext4 but that can be used in ext3 mode.
Also adjust the internal inode to carry the birthtime,
like in UFS, which is starting to get some use when
big inodes are available.
Right now these are just placeholders for features
to come.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
a credential structure would corrupt it. This happened when the
p argument was != NULL. However, I now realize that the copying of
open credentials should only happen for p == NULL, since that indicates
that it is a read-ahead or write-behind. This patch fixes this.
After this commit, r228827 could be reverted, but I think the code is
clearer and safer with the patch, so I am going to leave it in.
Without this patch, it was possible that a NFSv4 VOP_SETATTR() could have
changed the credentials of the caller. This would have happened if
the process doing the VOP_SETATTR() did not have the file open, but
some other process running as a different uid had the file open for writing
at the same time.
MFC after: 5 days
mnt_noasync counter to temporary remove MNTK_ASYNC mount option, which
is needed to guarantee a synchronous completion of the initiated i/o
before syscall or VOP return. Global removal of MNTK_ASYNC option is
harmful because not only i/o started from corresponding thread becomes
synchronous, but all i/o is synchronous on the filesystem which is
initiated during sync(2) or syncer activity.
Instead of removing MNTK_ASYNC from mnt_kern_flag, provide a local
thread flag to disable async i/o for current thread only. Use the
opportunity to move DOINGASYNC() macro into sys/vnode.h and
consistently use it through places which tested for MNTK_ASYNC.
Some testing demonstrated 60-70% improvements in run time for the
metadata-intensive operations on async-mounted UFS volumes, but still
with great deviation due to other reasons.
Reviewed by: mckusick
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
the original IPv4 implementation from r178888:
- Use RT_DEFAULT_FIB in the IPv4 implementation where noticed.
- Use rt*fib() KPI with explicit RT_DEFAULT_FIB where applicable in
the NFS code.
- Use the new in6_rt* KPI in TCP, gif(4), and the IPv6 network stack
where applicable.
- Split in6_rtqtimo() and in6_mtutimo() as done in IPv4 and equally
prevent multiple initializations of callouts in in6_inithead().
- Use wrapper functions where needed to preserve the current KPI to
ease MFCs. Use BURN_BRIDGES to indicate expected future cleanup.
- Fix (related) comments (both technical or style).
- Convert to rtinit() where applicable and only use custom loops where
currently not possible otherwise.
- Multicast group, most neighbor discovery address actions and faith(4)
are locked to the default FIB. Individual IPv6 addresses will only
appear in the default FIB, however redirect information and prefixes
of connected subnets are automatically propagated to all FIBs by
default (mimicking IPv4 behavior as closely as possible).
Sponsored by: Cisco Systems, Inc.
any thread doing an I/O RPC with a transfer size greater than
NFS_UDPMAXDATA will be hung indefinitely, retrying the RPC.
After a discussion on freebsd-fs@, I decided to add a warning
message for this case, as suggested by Jeremy Chadwick.
Suggested by: freebsd at jdc.parodius.com (Jeremy Chadwick)
MFC after: 2 weeks
NFS clients was reported to freebsd-fs@ under the subject "NFS
corruption in recent HEAD" on Nov. 26, 2011. This problem occurred when
a TCP mounted root fs was changed to using UDP. I believe that this
problem was caused by the change in mnt_stat.f_iosize that occurred
because rsize was decreased to the maximum supported by UDP. This
patch fixes the problem by using v_bufobj.bo_bsize instead of f_iosize,
since the latter is set to f_iosize when the vnode is allocated, but
does not change for a given vnode when f_iosize changes.
Reported by: pjd
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
appropriate timestamps. Restore the assertions which verify that
NCF_TS is set when timestamp is asked for.
Reviewed by: jhb (previous version)
MFC after: 2 weeks
we will only trust a positive name cache entry for a specified amount of
time before falling back to a LOOKUP RPC, even if the ctime for the file
handle matches the cached copy in the name cache entry. The timeout is
configured via a new 'nametimeo' mount option and defaults to 60 seconds.
It may be set to zero to disable positive name caching entirely.
Reviewed by: rmacklem
MFC after: 1 week
from TCP to UDP and the rsize/wsize/readdirsize is greater
than NFS_MAXDGRAMDATA, it is possible for a thread doing an
I/O RPC to get stuck repeatedly doing retries. This happens
because the RPC will use a resize/wsize/readdirsize that won't
work for UDP and, as such, it will keep failing indefinitely.
This patch returns an error for this case, to avoid the problem.
A discussion on freebsd-fs@ seemed to indicate that returning
an error was preferable to silently ignoring the "udp"/"mntudp"
option.
This problem was discovered while investigating a problem reported
by pjd@ via email.
MFC after: 2 weeks
entries on one client when a directory was renamed on another client. The
root cause for the stale entry being trusted is that each per-vnode nfsnode
structure has a single 'n_ctime' timestamp used to validate positive name
cache entries. However, if there are multiple entries for a single vnode,
they all share a single timestamp. To fix this, extend the name cache
to allow filesystems to optionally store a timestamp value in each name
cache entry. The NFS clients now fetch the timestamp associated with
each name cache entry and use that to validate cache hits instead of the
timestamps previously stored in the nfsnode. Another part of the fix is
that the NFS clients now use timestamps from the post-op attributes of
RPCs when adding name cache entries rather than pulling the timestamps out
of the file's attribute cache. The latter is subject to races with other
lookups updating the attribute cache concurrently. Some more details:
- Add a variant of nfsm_postop_attr() to the old NFS client that can return
a vattr structure with a copy of the post-op attributes.
- Handle lookups of "." as a special case in the NFS clients since the name
cache does not store name cache entries for ".", so we cannot get a
useful timestamp. It didn't really make much sense to recheck the
attributes on the the directory to validate the namecache hit for "."
anyway.
- ABI compat shims for the name cache routines are present in this commit
so that it is safe to MFC.
MFC after: 2 weeks
subject "Data corruption over NFS in -current". During investigation
of this, I came across an ugly bogusity in the new NFS client where
it replaced the cr_uid with the one used for the mount. This was
done so that "system operations" like the NFSv4 Renew would be
performed as the user that did the mount. However, if any other
thread shares the credential with the one doing this operation,
it could do an RPC (or just about anything else) as the wrong cr_uid.
This patch fixes the above, by using the mount credentials instead of
the one provided as an argument for this case. It appears
to have fixed Martin's problem.
This patch is needed for NFSv4 mounts and NFSv3 mounts against
some non-FreeBSD servers that do not put post operation attributes
in the NFSv3 Statfs RPC reply.
Tested by: Martin Cracauer (cracauer at cons.org)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
to read strings completely to know the actual size.
As a side effect it fixes the issue with kern.proc.args and kern.proc.env
sysctls, which didn't return the size of available data when calling
sysctl(3) with the NULL argument for oldp.
Note, in get_ps_strings(), which does actual work for proc_getargv() and
proc_getenvv(), we still have a safety limit on the size of data read in
case of a corrupted procces stack.
Suggested by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
vm_object_pip_{add,subtract}() on the swap object because the swap
object can't be destroyed while the vnode is exclusively locked.
Moreover, even if the swap object could have been destroyed during
tmpfs_nocacheread() and tmpfs_mappedwrite() this code is broken
because vm_object_pip_subtract() does not wake up the sleeping thread
that is trying to destroy the swap object.
Free invalid pages after an I/O error. There is no virtue in keeping
them around in the swap object creating more work for the page daemon.
(I believe that any non-busy page in the swap object will now always
be valid.)
vm_pager_get_pages() does not return a standard errno, so its return
value should not be returned by tmpfs without translation to an errno
value.
There is no reason for the wakeup on vpg in tmpfs_mappedwrite() to
occur with the swap object locked.
Eliminate printf()s from tmpfs_nocacheread() and tmpfs_mappedwrite().
(The swap pager already spam your console if data corruption is
imminent.)
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 weeks
the new NFSv4 server where the code follows the wrong list.
Fortunately, for these fairly rare cases, the lc_stateid[]
lists are normally empty. This patch fixes the code to
follow the correct list.
Reported by: tai.horgan at isilon.com
Discussed with: zack
MFC after: 2 weeks
would go negative after using the "-z" option to zero out the stats.
This patch fixes that by not zeroing out the srvcache_size field
for "-z", since it is the size of the cache and not a counter.
MFC after: 2 weeks
operation on POSIX shared memory objects and tmpfs. Previously, neither of
these modules correctly handled the case in which the new size of the object
or file was not a multiple of the page size. Specifically, they did not
handle partial page truncation of data stored on swap. As a result, stale
data might later be returned to an application.
Interestingly, a data inconsistency was less likely to occur under tmpfs
than POSIX shared memory objects. The reason being that a different mistake
by the tmpfs truncation operation helped avoid a data inconsistency. If the
data was still resident in memory in a PG_CACHED page, then the tmpfs
truncation operation would reactivate that page, zero the truncated portion,
and leave the page pinned in memory. More precisely, the benevolent error
was that the truncation operation didn't add the reactivated page to any of
the paging queues, effectively pinning the page. This page would remain
pinned until the file was destroyed or the page was read or written. With
this change, the page is now added to the inactive queue.
Discussed with: jhb
Reviewed by: kib (an earlier version)
MFC after: 3 weeks
The effect of this was, for clients mounted via inet6 addresses,
that the DRC cache would never have a hit in the server. It also
broke NFSv4 callbacks when an inet6 address was the only one available
in the client. This patch fixes the above, plus deletes opt_inet6.h
from a couple of files it is not needed for.
MFC after: 2 weeks
consequence sbuf_len() will return -1 for buffers which had the error
status set prior to sbuf_finish() call. This causes a problem in
pfs_read() which purposely uses a fixed size sbuf to discard bytes which
are not needed to fulfill the read request.
Work around the problem by using the full buffer length when
sbuf_finish() indicates an overflow. An overflowed sbuf with fixed size
is always full.
PR: kern/163076
Approved by: des
MFC after: 2 weeks
Several callers of null_nodeget() did the cleanup itself, but several
missed it, most prominent being null_bypass(). Remove the cleanup from
the callers, now null_nodeget() handles lowervp free itself.
Reported and tested by: pho
MFC after: 1 week
tmpfs_nocacheread(). It is both unnecessary and a pessimization. It
results in either the page being zeroed twice or zeroed first and then
overwritten by an I/O operation.
MFC after: 3 weeks
It seems strchr() and strrchr() are used more often than index() and
rindex(). Therefore, simply migrate all kernel code to use it.
For the XFS code, remove an empty line to make the code identical to
the code in the Linux kernel.
While there, remove a useless check from the code. memcchr() always
returns characters unequal to 0xff in this case, so inosused[i] ^ 0xff
can never be equal to zero. Also, the fact that memcchr() returns a
pointer instead of the number of bytes until the end, makes conversion
to an offset far more easy.
jhb@ spotted that nfscl_getstateid() might modify credentials when
called from nfsrpc_read() for the case where p != NULL, whereas
nfsrpc_read() only did a crdup() to get new credentials for p == NULL.
This bug was introduced by r195510, since pre-r195510 nfscl_getstateid()
only modified credentials for the p == NULL case. This patch modifies
nfsrpc_read()/nfsrpc_write() so that they do crdup() for the p != NULL case.
It is conceivable that this bug caused the crash reported by glebius@, but
that will not be determined for some time, since the crash occurred after
about 1month of operation.
Tested by: glebius
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
get a reply of EEXIST from an NFS server when a Mkdir RPC was retried,
for an NFS over UDP mount.
Upon investigation, it was found that the client was retransmitting
the Mkdir RPC request over UDP, but with a different xid. As such,
the retransmitted message would miss the Duplicate Request Cache
in the server, causing it to reply EEXIST. The kernel client side
UDP rpc code has two timers. The first one causes a retransmit using
the same xid and socket and was set to a fixed value of 3seconds.
(The default can be overridden via CLSET_RETRY_TIMEOUT.)
The second one creates a new socket and xid and should be larger
than the first. However, both NFS clients were setting the second
timer to nm_timeo ("timeout=<value>" mount argument), which defaulted to
1second, so the first timer would never time out.
This patch fixes both NFS clients so that they set the first timer
using nm_timeo and makes the second timer larger than the first one.
Reported by: jwd
Tested by: jwd
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks
Fix a comment from the previous commit.
Use M_ZERO instead of bzero() in ext2_vfsops.c
Add include guards from PR.
PR: 162564
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
The feature has been standard for a while in UFS as a means to reduce
fragmentation, therefore maintaining consistent performance with
filesystem aging. This is also very similar to what ext4 calls
"delayed allocation".
In his 2010 GSoC, Zheng Liu ported and benchmarked the missing
FANCY_REALLOC code to find more consistent performance improvements than
with the preallocation approach.
PR: 159233
Author: Zheng Liu <gnehzuil AT SPAMFREE gmail DOT com>
Sponsored by: Google Inc.
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
This removes the obfuscations mentioned in ext2_readwrite and
places the clustering funtion in a location similar to other
UFS-based implementations.
No performance or functional changeses are expected from
this move.
PR: kern/159232
Suggested by: bde
Approved by: jhb (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
of a devfs file descriptor in devfs_close_f(). The passed in td argument
may be NULL if the close was invoked by garbage collection of open
file descriptors in pending control messages in the socket buffer of a
UNIX domain socket after it was closed.
PR: kern/151758
Submitted by: Andrey Shidakov andrey shidakov ru
Submitted by: Ruben van Staveren ruben verweg com
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 2 weeks
difference between fi_wgen and f_seqcount, so the change is purely
cosmetic, but it makes the code easier to understand.
Submitted by: gianni
MFC after: 2 weeks
check for a UTF-8 compliant file name. Enabling this sysctl results in
an NFSv4 server that is non-RFC3530 compliant, therefore it is not enabled
by default. However, enabling this sysctl results in NFSv3 compatible
behaviour and fixes the problem reported by "dan at sunsaturn.com"
to freebsd-current@ on Nov. 14, 2011 under the subject "NFSV4 readlink_stat".
Tested by: dan at sunsaturn.com
Reviewed by: zack
MFC after: 2 weeks
of the same lock_owner4 string. As such, the handling of cleanup
of lock_owners could be simplified. This simplification permitted
the client to do a ReleaseLockOwner operation when the process that
the lock_owner4 string represents, has exited. This permits the
server to release any storage related to the lock_owner4 string
before the associated open is closed. Without this change, it
is possible to exhaust a server's storage when a long running
process opens a file and then many child processes do locking
on the file, because the open doesn't get closed. A similar patch
was applied to the Linux NFSv4 client recently so that it wouldn't
exhaust a server's storage.
Reviewed by: zack
MFC after: 2 weeks
NFS server and reuse it for writes as well to allow writes to the backing
store to be clustered.
- Use a prime number for the size of the heuristic table (1017 is not
prime).
- Move the logic to locate a heuristic entry from the table and compute
the sequential count out of VOP_READ() and into a separate routine.
- Use the logic from sequential_heuristic() in vfs_vnops.c to update the
seqcount when a sequential access is performed rather than just
increasing seqcount by 1. This lets the clustering count ramp up
faster.
- Allow for some reordering of RPCs and if it is detected leave the current
seqcount as-is rather than dropping back to a seqcount of 1. Also,
when out of order access is encountered, cut seqcount in half rather than
dropping it all the way back to 1 to further aid with reordering.
- Fix the new NFS server to properly update the next offset after a
successful VOP_READ() so that the readahead actually works.
Some of these changes came from an earlier patch by Bjorn Gronwall that was
forwarded to me by bde@.
Discussed with: bde, rmacklem, fs@
Submitted by: Bjorn Gronwall (1, 4)
MFC after: 2 weeks
vnode locking for read, readdir, readlink, getattr and access.
It is hoped that this will improve server performance for these
operations, since they will no longer be serialized for a given
file/vnode.
- Don't deduct wired pages from total usable counts because it does not
make any sense. To make things worse, on systems where swap size is
smaller than physical memory and use a lot of wired pages (e.g. ZFS),
tmpfs can suddenly have free space of 0 because of this;
- Count cached pages as available; [1]
- Don't count inactive pages as available, technically we could but that
might be too aggressive; [1]
[1] Suggested by kib@
MFC after: 1 week
client. This does not change the client's behaviour, but prepares
the code so that nfsrpc_rellockown() can be called elsewhere in a
future commit.
MFC after: 2 weeks
head nfsc_defunctlockowner. This patch simply removes the code that
loops through this always empty list, since the code no longer does
anything useful. It should not have any effect on the client's
behaviour.
MFC after: 2 weeks
nullfs. The problem is that resulting vnode is only required to be
held on return from the successfull call to vop, instead of being
referenced.
Nullfs VOP_INACTIVE() method reclaims the vnode, which in combination
with the VOP_VPTOCNP() interface means that the directory vnode
returned from VOP_VPTOCNP() is reclaimed in advance, causing
vn_fullpath() to error with EBADF or like.
Change the interface for VOP_VPTOCNP(), now the dvp must be
referenced. Convert all in-tree implementations of VOP_VPTOCNP(),
which is trivial, because vhold(9) and vref(9) are similar in the
locking prerequisites. Out-of-tree fs implementation of VOP_VPTOCNP(),
if any, should have no trouble with the fix.
Tested by: pho
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC after: 3 weeks (subject of re approval)
for regular files. Since other file types don't write into the
buffer cache, calling ncl_flush() is almost a no-op. However, it does
clear the NMODIFIED flag and this shouldn't be done by nfs_fsync() for
directories.
MFC after: 2 weeks
before the nfs_decode_args() call in the new NFS client, so
that a specfied command line value won't be overwritten.
Also, modify the calculation for small values of desiredvnodes
to avoid an unusually large value or a divide by zero crash.
It seems that the default value for nm_wcommitsize is very
conservative and may need to change at some time.
PR: kern/159351
Submitted by: onwahe at gmail.com (earlier version)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 2 weeks