to see if additional write requests will arrive that can be coalesced and
clustered with earlier ones. When doing so, it must determine whether
the two requests are made by credentials with the same access writes, so
as not to coalesce improperly. NFSW_SAMECRED() implements a test of two
credentials using a binary compare.
Replace NFSW_SAMECRED() macro with nfsrv_samecred() function, which is
aware of the contents and layout of a struct ucred, rather than a simple
binary compare. While the binary compare works when ucred is simply a
zero'd and embedded 'struct ucred' in the NFS descriptor, it will work
less well when the ucred associated with an NFS descriptor is "real", so
has defined and populated reference count, mutex, etc.
MFC after: 1 week
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
zero'ing their length (copied from m_adj where this code came from
after the equivalent change there has had time to soak)
Noticed by: Coverity Prevent analysis tool
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
be made holding the NFS server mutex. To clean this up, introduce a
version of the function, nfsrv_access_withgiant(), that expects the
NFS server mutex to already have been dropped and Giant acquired.
Wrap nfsrv_access() around this. This permits callers to more
efficiently check access if they're in a code block performing VFS
operations, and can be substitited for the nfsrv_access() call that
triggered this bug.
PR: 73807, 73208
MFC after: 1 week
Initialize b_bufobj for all buffers.
Make incore() and gbincore() take a bufobj instead of a vnode.
Make inmem() local to vfs_bio.c
Change a lot of VI_[UN]LOCK(bp->b_vp) to BO_[UN]LOCK(bp->b_bufobj)
also VI_MTX() to BO_MTX(),
Make buf_vlist_add() take a bufobj instead of a vnode.
Eliminate other uses of bp->b_vp where bp->b_bufobj will do.
Various minor polishing: remove "register", turn panic into KASSERT,
use new function declarations, TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE() etc.
failure in the NFS server would result in a leaked instance of the NFS
server subsystem lock. Liberally sprinkle assertions in all target
labels for error unwinding to assert the desired locking state.
RELENG_5_3 candidate.
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: Wilkinson, Alex <alex dot wilkinson at dsto dot defence dot gov dot au>
prevent leakage of Giant. With INVARIANTS, this results in an
assertion failure following execution of the RPC. Without INVARIANTS,
it could result in problems if the NFS server is killed causing nfsd
to return to user space holding Giant.
Feet provided by: brueffer
for unknown events.
A number of modules return EINVAL in this instance, and I have left
those alone for now and instead taught MOD_QUIESCE to accept this
as "didn't do anything".
to dup_sockaddr() was renamed to sodupsockaddr(), the argument was
changed from '1' to 'M_WAITOK', which changed the semantics. This
resulted in a WITNESS warning about a potential sleep while holding the
NFS server mutex. Now this will no longer happen, restoring a possible
bug present in the original code (setting RC_NAM even though the malloc
to copy the addres may fail). bde observes that the flag names here
should probably not be the same as the malloc flags for name space
reasons.
Bumped into by: kuriyama
- Lock down low hanging fruit use of sb_flags with socket buffer
lock.
- Lock down low hanging fruit use of so_state with socket lock.
- Lock down low hanging fruit use of so_options.
- Lock down low-hanging fruit use of sb_lowwat and sb_hiwat with
socket buffer lock.
- Annotate situations in which we unlock the socket lock and then
grab the receive socket buffer lock, which are currently actually
the same lock. Depending on how we want to play our cards, we
may want to coallesce these lock uses to reduce overhead.
- Convert a if()->panic() into a KASSERT relating to so_state in
soaccept().
- Remove a number of splnet()/splx() references.
More complex merging of socket and socket buffer locking to
follow.
The big lines are:
NODEV -> NULL
NOUDEV -> NODEV
udev_t -> dev_t
udev2dev() -> findcdev()
Various minor adjustments including handling of userland access to kernel
space struct cdev etc.
Add two additional pairs of assertions, one at the end of the NFS
server event loop, and one one exit from the NFS daemon, that
assert that if debug.mpsafenet is enabled, Giant is not held, and
that if it is not enabled, Giant will be held. This is intended
to support debugging scenarios where Giant is "leaked" during NFS
processing.
install nfssvc(). It also updates the argument count, but did so
without setting SYF_MPSAFE, effectively removing the MPSAFE flag even
when syscalls.master indicates it doesn't require Giant. This change
forces the modevent to set MPSAFE as a flag to its internal notion of
an argument coutn.
Note: this duplication of information is a bad thing, but is a more
general problem I'm not currently willing to address.
a vnode. Not bumped into with asserts in the main tree because we
run the NFS server with Giant by default. Discovered by inspection.
Complete annotations of Giant acquisition/release to note that it's
only because of VFS that we acquire Giant in most places in the NFS
server.
subsystem lock to avoid tripping over an assertion regarding whether
the lock is held or not. This is likely to be the cause of a panic
tripped over by Andrea Campi.
mechanism so that early processing on mbufs can be performed before
a context switch to the NFS server threads. Because of this, if
the socket code is running without Giant, the NFS server also needs
to be able to run the upcall code without relying on the presence on
Giant. This change modifies the NFS server to run using a "giant
code lock" covering operation of the whole subsystem. Work is in
progress to move to data-based locking as part of the NFSv4 server
changes.
Introduce an NFS server subsystem lock, 'nfsd_mtx', and a set of
macros to operate on the lock:
NFSD_LOCK_ASSERT() Assert nfsd_mtx owned by current thread
NFSD_UNLOCK_ASSERT() Assert nfsd_mtx not owned by current thread
NFSD_LOCK_DONTCARE() Advisory: this function doesn't care
NFSD_LOCK() Lock nfsd_mtx
NFSD_UNLOCK() Unlock nfsd_mtx
Constify a number of global variables/structures in the NFS server
code, as they are not modified and contain constants only:
nfsrvv2_procid nfsrv_nfsv3_procid nonidempotent
nfsv2_repstat nfsv2_type nfsrv_nfsv3_procid
nfsrvv2_procid nfsrv_v2errmap nfsv3err_null
nfsv3err_getattr nfsv3err_setattr nfsv3err_lookup
nfsv3err_access nfsv3err_readlink nfsv3err_read
nfsv3err_write nfsv3err_create nfsv3err_mkdir
nfsv3err_symlink nfsv3err_mknod nfsv3err_remove
nfsv3err_rmdir nfsv3err_rename nfsv3err_link
nfsv3err_readdir nfsv3err_readdirplus nfsv3err_fsstat
nfsv3err_fsinfo nfsv3err_pathconf nfsv3err_commit
nfsrv_v3errmap
There are additional structures that should be constified but due
to their being passed into general purpose functions without const
arguments, I have not yet converted.
In general, acquire nfsd_mtx when accessing any of the global NFS
structures, including struct nfssvc_sock, struct nfsd, struct
nfsrv_descript.
Release nfsd_mtx whenever calling into VFS, and acquire Giant for
calls into VFS. Giant is not required for any part of the
operation of the NFS server with the exception of calls into VFS.
Giant will never by acquired in the upcall code path. However, it
may operate entirely covered by Giant, or not. If debug.mpsafenet
is set to 0, the system calls will acquire Giant across all
operations, and the upcall will assert Giant. As such, by default,
this enables locking and allows us to test assertions, but should not
cause any substantial new amount of code to be run without Giant.
Bugs should manifest in the form of lock assertion failures for now.
This approach is similar (but not identical) to modifications to the
BSD/OS NFS server code snapshot provided by BSDi as part of their
SMPng snapshot. The strategy is almost the same (single lock over
the NFS server), but differs in the following ways:
- Our NFS client and server code bases don't overlap, which means
both fewer bugs and easier locking (thanks Peter!). Also means
NFSD_*() as opposed to NFS_*().
- We make broad use of assertions, whereas the BSD/OS code does not.
- Made slightly different choices about how to handle macros building
packets but operating with side effects.
- We acquire Giant only when entering VFS from the NFS server daemon
threads.
- Serious bugs in BSD/OS implementation corrected -- the snapshot we
received was clearly a work in progress.
Based on ideas from: BSDi SMPng Snapshot
Reviewed by: rick@snowhite.cis.uoguelph.ca
Extensive testing by: kris
FreeBSD, we can have a negative available space value, but the
corresponding fields in the NFS protocol are unsigned. So
trnucate the value to 0 if it's negative, so that the client
doesn't receive absurdly high values.
Tested by: cognet
clock precision on i386. This is a NOP change on i386. But this stops
the mount_nfs units from suddenly changing to units of 1/20 of a second
(vs the normal 1/10 of a second) if HZ is increased.
functions in kern_socket.c.
Rename the "canwait" field to "mflags" and pass M_WAITOK and M_NOWAIT
in from the caller context rather than "1" or "0".
Correct mflags pass into mac_init_socket() from previous commit to not
include M_ZERO.
Submitted by: sam
will not actually be set even though we're calling sosetopt. sosetopt
calls down to a single ctloutput function if the name or level is
implemented by a specific protocol.
Submitted by: pete@isilon.com
short read operations at the end of a file to not have the "eof"
flag set as they should. The problem is that the requested read
count was compared against the rounded-up reply data length instead
of the actual reply data length. This bug appears to have been
introduced in revision 1.78 (June 1999). It causes first-time reads
of certain file sizes (e.g 4094 bytes) to fail with EIO on a RedHat
9.0 NFSv3 client.
MFC after: 1 week
when serving up more than about 32 active files. For details see
section 6.3 (pg 111) of Daniel Ellard and Margo Seltzer, ``NFS
Tricks and Benchmarking Traps'' in the Proceedings of the Usenix
2003 Freenix Track, June 9-14, 2003 pg 101-114.
Obtained from: Daniel Ellard <ellard@eecs.harvard.edu>
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.