The ZIL will be opened on the first write, not earlier.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Mariusz Zaborski <oshogbo@vexillium.org>
OpenZFS Pull Request: https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/11152
PR: 250934
My script to convert git commits to svn patch does not handle binary
files correctly, and r367387 committed a set of empty files as a result.
MFC with: r367387
Sponsored by: Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
lz4 port from illumos to Linux added a 16KB per-CPU cache to accommodate for
the missing 16KB malloc. FreeBSD supports this size, making the extra cache
harmful as it can't share buckets.
The use of atomic_sub_64() in zfs_zstd.c was breaking the 32-bit build on
platforms without native 64-bit atomics due to atomic_sub_64() not being
available, and no fallback being provided in _STANDALONE.
Provide a standalone stub to match atomic_add_64() using simple math.
While this is not actually atomic, it does not matter in libsa context,
since it always runs single-threaded and does not run under a scheduler.
Reviewed by: mjg (in email)
This applies:
commit c4ede65bdfca11b532403620bbf0d6e33f0c1c1d
Author: Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Oct 30 23:26:10 2020 +0100
zstd: track allocator statistics
Note that this only tracks sizes as requested by the caller.
Actual allocated space will almost always be bigger (e.g., rounded up to
the next power of 2 or page size). Additionally the allocated buffer may
be holding other areas hostage. Nonetheless, this is a starting point
for tracking memory usage in zstd.
from openzfs
Foundation copyrights, approved by emaste@. It does not include
files which carry other people's copyrights; if you're one
of those people, feel free to make similar change.
Reviewed by: emaste, imp, gbe (manpages)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26980
hese kstats are often expensive to compute so we want to avoid them
unless specifically requested.
The following kstats are affected by this change:
kstat.zfs.${pool}.multihost
kstat.zfs.${pool}.misc.state
kstat.zfs.${pool}.txgs
kstat.zfs.misc.fletcher_4_bench
kstat.zfs.misc.vdev_raidz_bench
kstat.zfs.misc.dbufs
kstat.zfs.misc.dbgmsg
PR: 249258
Reported by: mjg
Reviewed by: mjg, allanjude
Obtained from: https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/11099
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
- fix panic due to tqid overflow
- Improve libzfs_error_init messages
- Expose zfetch_max_idistance tunable
- Make dbufstat work on FreeBSD
- Fix EIO after resuming receive of new dataset over an existing one
Some vnodes come with a hack which inherits the fplookup flag despite having vops
which don't provide the routine.
Reported by: YAMAMOTO Shigeru <shigeru@os-hackers.jp>
The 32-bit counter eventually wraps to 0 which is a sentinel for invalid
id.
Make it 64-bit on LP64 platforms and 0-check otherwise.
Note: Linux counterpart uses id stored per queue instead of a global.
I did not check going that way is feasible with the goal being the
minimal fix doing the job.
Reported by: YAMAMOTO Shigeru <shigeru@os-hackers.jp>
Reviewed by: mav
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26759
Add support to the _STANDALONE environment enough bits of the kernel
that we can compile it. We still have a small zstd_shim.c since there
were 3 items that were a bit hard to nail down and may be cleaned up
in the future. These go hand in hand with a number of commits to
sys/sys in the past weeks, should this need be MFCd.
Discussed with: mmacy (in review and on IRC/Slack)
Reviewed by: freqlabs (on openzfs repo)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26218
Dynamically created OIDs automatically get this flag set.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26561
- Annotate FreeBSD sysctls with CTLFLAG_MPSAFE
- Reduce stack usage of Lua
- Don't save user FPU context in kernel threads
- Add support for procfs_list
- Code cleanup in zio_crypt
- Add DB_RF_NOPREFETCH to dbuf_read()s in dnode.c
- Drop references when skipping dmu_send due to EXDEV
- Eliminate gratuitous bzeroing in dbuf_stats_hash_table_data
- Fix legacy compat for platform IOCs
This was introduced when I merged r361287 to OpenZFS and has been fixed
there already, commit 3f6bb6e43fd68e.
Reported by: swills
Reviewed by: allanjude, freqlabs, mmacy
An upcoming change to include bitset(9) macros from vm_page.h
causes a macro name collision with vchi's custom bitset macros.
This change was performed mechanically by:
sed -i .orig s/BITSET/VCHI_BITSET/g $(grep -rl BITSET sys/contrib/vchiq)
Reviewed by: andrew
Approved by: scottl (implicit)
MFC after: 1 week
Sponsored by: Ampere Computing, Inc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26177
The pointer to vnode is already stored into f_vnode, so f_data can be
reused. Fix all found users of f_data for DTYPE_VNODE.
Provide finit_vnode() helper to initialize file of DTYPE_VNODE type.
Reviewed by: markj (previous version)
Discussed with: freqlabs (openzfs chunk)
Tested by: pho (previous version)
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Differential revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26346
This package is intended to be used with ice(4) version 0.26.16. That
update will happen in a forthcoming commit.
MFC after: 3 days
Sponsored by: Intel Corporation
Make the inlines static to avoid kernel build failure with Clang 11 on i386.
(The issue was not observed with Clang 10, currently in tree; reproduction
depends on compiler inlining choices.)
The compiler may choose not to inline 'bare' C inlines, and in that case
expects a symbol of the same name will be available. It does not
automatically define that symbol at use, because of traditional C linking
semantics. (In contrast, C++ does define it, and then deduplicates redundant
definitions at link). As we do not instantiate the C99 inline ('extern
inline ...;'), the linker errors with "undefined symbol."
Reported by: dim
Tested by: dim
Fixes: r364219
Add prng(9) as a replacement for random(9) in the kernel.
There are two major differences from random(9) and random(3):
- General prng(9) APIs (prng32(9), etc) do not guarantee an
implementation or particular sequence; they should not be used for
repeatable simulations.
- However, specific named API families are also exposed (for now: PCG),
and those are expected to be repeatable (when so-guaranteed by the named
algorithm).
Some minor differences from random(3) and earlier random(9):
- PRNG state for the general prng(9) APIs is per-CPU; this eliminates
contention on PRNG state in SMP workloads. Each PCPU generator in an
SMP system produces a unique sequence.
- Better statistical properties than the Park-Miller ("minstd") PRNG
(longer period, uniform distribution in all bits, passes
BigCrush/PractRand analysis).
- Faster than Park-Miller ("minstd") PRNG -- no division is required to
step PCG-family PRNGs.
For now, random(9) becomes a thin shim around prng32(). Eventually I
would like to mechanically switch consumers over to the explicit API.
Reviewed by: kib, markj (previous version both)
Discussed with: markm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25916