with I/O requests in flight on kernels compiled with "options INVARIANTS".
Also, make it obvious it's not right to call g_valid_obj() (and macros
using it, e.g. G_VALID_CONSUMER()) without topology lock held.
Approved by: re (kib)
Reported by: pho
the device, which means refcount on periph drivers never drops,
which means cam_sim_free() never returns, which results in umass
sleeping there ad infinitum.
Submitted by: pjd
Reviewed by: scottl, pjd
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
Sponsored by: FreeBSD Foundation
In particular following functions KPI results modified:
- bufobj_invalbuf()
- bufsync()
and BO_SYNC() "virtual method" of the buffer objects set.
Main consumers of bufobj functions are affected by this change too and,
in particular, functions which changed their KPI are:
- vinvalbuf()
- g_vfs_close()
Due to the KPI breakage, __FreeBSD_version will be bumped in a later
commit.
As a side note, please consider just temporary the 'curthread' argument
passing to VOP_SYNC() (in bufsync()) as it will be axed out ASAP
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Giovanni Trematerra <giovanni dot trematerra at gmail dot com>
file are after snaplock, while other ffs device buffers are before
snaplock in global lock order. By itself, this could cause deadlock
when bdwrite() tries to flush dirty buffers on snapshotted ffs. If,
during the flush, COW activity for snapshot needs to allocate block
and ffs_alloccg() selects the cylinder group that is being written
by bdwrite(), then kernel would panic due to recursive buffer lock
acquision.
Avoid dealing with buffers in bdwrite() that are from other side of
snaplock divisor in the lock order then the buffer being written. Add
new BOP, bop_bdwrite(), to do dirty buffer flushing for same vnode in
the bdwrite(). Default implementation, bufbdflush(), refactors the code
from bdwrite(). For ffs device buffers, specialized implementation is
used.
Reviewed by: tegge, jeff, Russell Cattelan (cattelan xfs org, xfs changes)
Tested by: Peter Holm
X-MFC after: 3 weeks (if ever: it changes ABI)
patch from kan@).
Pull bufobj_invalbuf() out of vinvalbuf() and make g_vfs call it on
close. This is not yet a generally safe function, but for this very
specific use it is safe. This solves the problem with buffers not
being flushed by unmount or after failed mount attempts.