freebsd-nq/module/zfs/spa_log_spacemap.c
Matthew Macy 03fdcb9adc Make module tunables cross platform
Adds ZFS_MODULE_PARAM to abstract module parameter
setting to operating systems other than Linux.

Reviewed-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matt Macy <mmacy@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Closes #9230
2019-09-05 14:49:49 -07:00

1323 lines
47 KiB
C

/*
* CDDL HEADER START
*
* The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
* Common Development and Distribution License (the "License").
* You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
*
* You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
* or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions
* and limitations under the License.
*
* When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
* file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
* If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
* fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
* information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
*
* CDDL HEADER END
*/
/*
* Copyright (c) 2018, 2019 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
*/
#include <sys/dmu_objset.h>
#include <sys/metaslab.h>
#include <sys/metaslab_impl.h>
#include <sys/spa.h>
#include <sys/spa_impl.h>
#include <sys/spa_log_spacemap.h>
#include <sys/vdev_impl.h>
#include <sys/zap.h>
/*
* Log Space Maps
*
* Log space maps are an optimization in ZFS metadata allocations for pools
* whose workloads are primarily random-writes. Random-write workloads are also
* typically random-free, meaning that they are freeing from locations scattered
* throughout the pool. This means that each TXG we will have to append some
* FREE records to almost every metaslab. With log space maps, we hold their
* changes in memory and log them altogether in one pool-wide space map on-disk
* for persistence. As more blocks are accumulated in the log space maps and
* more unflushed changes are accounted in memory, we flush a selected group
* of metaslabs every TXG to relieve memory pressure and potential overheads
* when loading the pool. Flushing a metaslab to disk relieves memory as we
* flush any unflushed changes from memory to disk (i.e. the metaslab's space
* map) and saves import time by making old log space maps obsolete and
* eventually destroying them. [A log space map is said to be obsolete when all
* its entries have made it to their corresponding metaslab space maps].
*
* == On disk data structures used ==
*
* - The pool has a new feature flag and a new entry in the MOS. The feature
* is activated when we create the first log space map and remains active
* for the lifetime of the pool. The new entry in the MOS Directory [refer
* to DMU_POOL_LOG_SPACEMAP_ZAP] is populated with a ZAP whose key-value
* pairs are of the form <key: txg, value: log space map object for that txg>.
* This entry is our on-disk reference of the log space maps that exist in
* the pool for each TXG and it is used during import to load all the
* metaslab unflushed changes in memory. To see how this structure is first
* created and later populated refer to spa_generate_syncing_log_sm(). To see
* how it is used during import time refer to spa_ld_log_sm_metadata().
*
* - Each vdev has a new entry in its vdev_top_zap (see field
* VDEV_TOP_ZAP_MS_UNFLUSHED_PHYS_TXGS) which holds the msp_unflushed_txg of
* each metaslab in this vdev. This field is the on-disk counterpart of the
* in-memory field ms_unflushed_txg which tells us from which TXG and onwards
* the metaslab haven't had its changes flushed. During import, we use this
* to ignore any entries in the space map log that are for this metaslab but
* from a TXG before msp_unflushed_txg. At that point, we also populate its
* in-memory counterpart and from there both fields are updated every time
* we flush that metaslab.
*
* - A space map is created every TXG and, during that TXG, it is used to log
* all incoming changes (the log space map). When created, the log space map
* is referenced in memory by spa_syncing_log_sm and its object ID is inserted
* to the space map ZAP mentioned above. The log space map is closed at the
* end of the TXG and will be destroyed when it becomes fully obsolete. We
* know when a log space map has become obsolete by looking at the oldest
* (and smallest) ms_unflushed_txg in the pool. If the value of that is bigger
* than the log space map's TXG, then it means that there is no metaslab who
* doesn't have the changes from that log and we can therefore destroy it.
* [see spa_cleanup_old_sm_logs()].
*
* == Important in-memory structures ==
*
* - The per-spa field spa_metaslabs_by_flushed sorts all the metaslabs in
* the pool by their ms_unflushed_txg field. It is primarily used for three
* reasons. First of all, it is used during flushing where we try to flush
* metaslabs in-order from the oldest-flushed to the most recently flushed
* every TXG. Secondly, it helps us to lookup the ms_unflushed_txg of the
* oldest flushed metaslab to distinguish which log space maps have become
* obsolete and which ones are still relevant. Finally it tells us which
* metaslabs have unflushed changes in a pool where this feature was just
* enabled, as we don't immediately add all of the pool's metaslabs but we
* add them over time as they go through metaslab_sync(). The reason that
* we do that is to ease these pools into the behavior of the flushing
* algorithm (described later on).
*
* - The per-spa field spa_sm_logs_by_txg can be thought as the in-memory
* counterpart of the space map ZAP mentioned above. It's an AVL tree whose
* nodes represent the log space maps in the pool. This in-memory
* representation of log space maps in the pool sorts the log space maps by
* the TXG that they were created (which is also the TXG of their unflushed
* changes). It also contains the following extra information for each
* space map:
* [1] The number of metaslabs that were last flushed on that TXG. This is
* important because if that counter is zero and this is the oldest
* log then it means that it is also obsolete.
* [2] The number of blocks of that space map. This field is used by the
* block heuristic of our flushing algorithm (described later on).
* It represents how many blocks of metadata changes ZFS had to write
* to disk for that TXG.
*
* - The per-spa field spa_log_summary is a list of entries that summarizes
* the metaslab and block counts of all the nodes of the spa_sm_logs_by_txg
* AVL tree mentioned above. The reason this exists is that our flushing
* algorithm (described later) tries to estimate how many metaslabs to flush
* in each TXG by iterating over all the log space maps and looking at their
* block counts. Summarizing that information means that don't have to
* iterate through each space map, minimizing the runtime overhead of the
* flushing algorithm which would be induced in syncing context. In terms of
* implementation the log summary is used as a queue:
* * we modify or pop entries from its head when we flush metaslabs
* * we modify or append entries to its tail when we sync changes.
*
* - Each metaslab has two new range trees that hold its unflushed changes,
* ms_unflushed_allocs and ms_unflushed_frees. These are always disjoint.
*
* == Flushing algorithm ==
*
* The decision of how many metaslabs to flush on a give TXG is guided by
* two heuristics:
*
* [1] The memory heuristic -
* We keep track of the memory used by the unflushed trees from all the
* metaslabs [see sus_memused of spa_unflushed_stats] and we ensure that it
* stays below a certain threshold which is determined by an arbitrary hard
* limit and an arbitrary percentage of the system's memory [see
* spa_log_exceeds_memlimit()]. When we see that the memory usage of the
* unflushed changes are passing that threshold, we flush metaslabs, which
* empties their unflushed range trees, reducing the memory used.
*
* [2] The block heuristic -
* We try to keep the total number of blocks in the log space maps in check
* so the log doesn't grow indefinitely and we don't induce a lot of overhead
* when loading the pool. At the same time we don't want to flush a lot of
* metaslabs too often as this would defeat the purpose of the log space map.
* As a result we set a limit in the amount of blocks that we think it's
* acceptable for the log space maps to have and try not to cross it.
* [see sus_blocklimit from spa_unflushed_stats].
*
* In order to stay below the block limit every TXG we have to estimate how
* many metaslabs we need to flush based on the current rate of incoming blocks
* and our history of log space map blocks. The main idea here is to answer
* the question of how many metaslabs do we need to flush in order to get rid
* at least an X amount of log space map blocks. We can answer this question
* by iterating backwards from the oldest log space map to the newest one
* and looking at their metaslab and block counts. At this point the log summary
* mentioned above comes handy as it reduces the amount of things that we have
* to iterate (even though it may reduce the preciseness of our estimates due
* to its aggregation of data). So with that in mind, we project the incoming
* rate of the current TXG into the future and attempt to approximate how many
* metaslabs would we need to flush from now in order to avoid exceeding our
* block limit in different points in the future (granted that we would keep
* flushing the same number of metaslabs for every TXG). Then we take the
* maximum number from all these estimates to be on the safe side. For the
* exact implementation details of algorithm refer to
* spa_estimate_metaslabs_to_flush.
*/
/*
* This is used as the block size for the space maps used for the
* log space map feature. These space maps benefit from a bigger
* block size as we expect to be writing a lot of data to them at
* once.
*/
unsigned long zfs_log_sm_blksz = 1ULL << 17;
/*
* Percentage of the overall system's memory that ZFS allows to be
* used for unflushed changes (e.g. the sum of size of all the nodes
* in the unflushed trees).
*
* Note that this value is calculated over 1000000 for finer granularity
* (thus the _ppm suffix; reads as "parts per million"). As an example,
* the default of 1000 allows 0.1% of memory to be used.
*/
unsigned long zfs_unflushed_max_mem_ppm = 1000;
/*
* Specific hard-limit in memory that ZFS allows to be used for
* unflushed changes.
*/
unsigned long zfs_unflushed_max_mem_amt = 1ULL << 30;
/*
* The following tunable determines the number of blocks that can be used for
* the log space maps. It is expressed as a percentage of the total number of
* metaslabs in the pool (i.e. the default of 400 means that the number of log
* blocks is capped at 4 times the number of metaslabs).
*
* This value exists to tune our flushing algorithm, with higher values
* flushing metaslabs less often (doing less I/Os) per TXG versus lower values
* flushing metaslabs more aggressively with the upside of saving overheads
* when loading the pool. Another factor in this tradeoff is that flushing
* less often can potentially lead to better utilization of the metaslab space
* map's block size as we accumulate more changes per flush.
*
* Given that this tunable indirectly controls the flush rate (metaslabs
* flushed per txg) and that's why making it a percentage in terms of the
* number of metaslabs in the pool makes sense here.
*
* As a rule of thumb we default this tunable to 400% based on the following:
*
* 1] Assuming a constant flush rate and a constant incoming rate of log blocks
* it is reasonable to expect that the amount of obsolete entries changes
* linearly from txg to txg (e.g. the oldest log should have the most
* obsolete entries, and the most recent one the least). With this we could
* say that, at any given time, about half of the entries in the whole space
* map log are obsolete. Thus for every two entries for a metaslab in the
* log space map, only one of them is valid and actually makes it to the
* metaslab's space map.
* [factor of 2]
* 2] Each entry in the log space map is guaranteed to be two words while
* entries in metaslab space maps are generally single-word.
* [an extra factor of 2 - 400% overall]
* 3] Even if [1] and [2] are slightly less than 2 each, we haven't taken into
* account any consolidation of segments from the log space map to the
* unflushed range trees nor their history (e.g. a segment being allocated,
* then freed, then allocated again means 3 log space map entries but 0
* metaslab space map entries). Depending on the workload, we've seen ~1.8
* non-obsolete log space map entries per metaslab entry, for a total of
* ~600%. Since most of these estimates though are workload dependent, we
* default on 400% to be conservative.
*
* Thus we could say that even in the worst
* case of [1] and [2], the factor should end up being 4.
*
* That said, regardless of the number of metaslabs in the pool we need to
* provide upper and lower bounds for the log block limit.
* [see zfs_unflushed_log_block_{min,max}]
*/
unsigned long zfs_unflushed_log_block_pct = 400;
/*
* If the number of metaslabs is small and our incoming rate is high, we could
* get into a situation that we are flushing all our metaslabs every TXG. Thus
* we always allow at least this many log blocks.
*/
unsigned long zfs_unflushed_log_block_min = 1000;
/*
* If the log becomes too big, the import time of the pool can take a hit in
* terms of performance. Thus we have a hard limit in the size of the log in
* terms of blocks.
*/
unsigned long zfs_unflushed_log_block_max = (1ULL << 18);
/*
* Max # of rows allowed for the log_summary. The tradeoff here is accuracy and
* stability of the flushing algorithm (longer summary) vs its runtime overhead
* (smaller summary is faster to traverse).
*/
unsigned long zfs_max_logsm_summary_length = 10;
/*
* Tunable that sets the lower bound on the metaslabs to flush every TXG.
*
* Setting this to 0 has no effect since if the pool is idle we won't even be
* creating log space maps and therefore we won't be flushing. On the other
* hand if the pool has any incoming workload our block heuristic will start
* flushing metaslabs anyway.
*
* The point of this tunable is to be used in extreme cases where we really
* want to flush more metaslabs than our adaptable heuristic plans to flush.
*/
unsigned long zfs_min_metaslabs_to_flush = 1;
/*
* Tunable that specifies how far in the past do we want to look when trying to
* estimate the incoming log blocks for the current TXG.
*
* Setting this too high may not only increase runtime but also minimize the
* effect of the incoming rates from the most recent TXGs as we take the
* average over all the blocks that we walk
* [see spa_estimate_incoming_log_blocks].
*/
unsigned long zfs_max_log_walking = 5;
/*
* This tunable exists solely for testing purposes. It ensures that the log
* spacemaps are not flushed and destroyed during export in order for the
* relevant log spacemap import code paths to be tested (effectively simulating
* a crash).
*/
int zfs_keep_log_spacemaps_at_export = 0;
static uint64_t
spa_estimate_incoming_log_blocks(spa_t *spa)
{
ASSERT3U(spa_sync_pass(spa), ==, 1);
uint64_t steps = 0, sum = 0;
for (spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_last(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
sls != NULL && steps < zfs_max_log_walking;
sls = AVL_PREV(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, sls)) {
if (sls->sls_txg == spa_syncing_txg(spa)) {
/*
* skip the log created in this TXG as this would
* make our estimations inaccurate.
*/
continue;
}
sum += sls->sls_nblocks;
steps++;
}
return ((steps > 0) ? DIV_ROUND_UP(sum, steps) : 0);
}
uint64_t
spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa_t *spa)
{
return (spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_blocklimit);
}
void
spa_log_sm_set_blocklimit(spa_t *spa)
{
if (!spa_feature_is_active(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP)) {
ASSERT0(spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa));
return;
}
uint64_t calculated_limit =
(spa_total_metaslabs(spa) * zfs_unflushed_log_block_pct) / 100;
spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_blocklimit = MIN(MAX(calculated_limit,
zfs_unflushed_log_block_min), zfs_unflushed_log_block_max);
}
uint64_t
spa_log_sm_nblocks(spa_t *spa)
{
return (spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_nblocks);
}
/*
* Ensure that the in-memory log space map structures and the summary
* have the same block and metaslab counts.
*/
static void
spa_log_summary_verify_counts(spa_t *spa)
{
ASSERT(spa_feature_is_active(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP));
if ((zfs_flags & ZFS_DEBUG_LOG_SPACEMAP) == 0)
return;
uint64_t ms_in_avl = avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
uint64_t ms_in_summary = 0, blk_in_summary = 0;
for (log_summary_entry_t *e = list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary);
e; e = list_next(&spa->spa_log_summary, e)) {
ms_in_summary += e->lse_mscount;
blk_in_summary += e->lse_blkcount;
}
uint64_t ms_in_logs = 0, blk_in_logs = 0;
for (spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_first(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
sls; sls = AVL_NEXT(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, sls)) {
ms_in_logs += sls->sls_mscount;
blk_in_logs += sls->sls_nblocks;
}
VERIFY3U(ms_in_logs, ==, ms_in_summary);
VERIFY3U(ms_in_logs, ==, ms_in_avl);
VERIFY3U(blk_in_logs, ==, blk_in_summary);
VERIFY3U(blk_in_logs, ==, spa_log_sm_nblocks(spa));
}
static boolean_t
summary_entry_is_full(spa_t *spa, log_summary_entry_t *e)
{
uint64_t blocks_per_row = MAX(1,
DIV_ROUND_UP(spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa),
zfs_max_logsm_summary_length));
return (blocks_per_row <= e->lse_blkcount);
}
/*
* Update the log summary information to reflect the fact that a metaslab
* was flushed or destroyed (e.g due to device removal or pool export/destroy).
*
* We typically flush the oldest flushed metaslab so the first (and oldest)
* entry of the summary is updated. However if that metaslab is getting loaded
* we may flush the second oldest one which may be part of an entry later in
* the summary. Moreover, if we call into this function from metaslab_fini()
* the metaslabs probably won't be ordered by ms_unflushed_txg. Thus we ask
* for a txg as an argument so we can locate the appropriate summary entry for
* the metaslab.
*/
void
spa_log_summary_decrement_mscount(spa_t *spa, uint64_t txg)
{
/*
* We don't track summary data for read-only pools and this function
* can be called from metaslab_fini(). In that case return immediately.
*/
if (!spa_writeable(spa))
return;
log_summary_entry_t *target = NULL;
for (log_summary_entry_t *e = list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary);
e != NULL; e = list_next(&spa->spa_log_summary, e)) {
if (e->lse_start > txg)
break;
target = e;
}
if (target == NULL || target->lse_mscount == 0) {
/*
* We didn't find a summary entry for this metaslab. We must be
* at the teardown of a spa_load() attempt that got an error
* while reading the log space maps.
*/
VERIFY3S(spa_load_state(spa), ==, SPA_LOAD_ERROR);
return;
}
target->lse_mscount--;
}
/*
* Update the log summary information to reflect the fact that we destroyed
* old log space maps. Since we can only destroy the oldest log space maps,
* we decrement the block count of the oldest summary entry and potentially
* destroy it when that count hits 0.
*
* This function is called after a metaslab is flushed and typically that
* metaslab is the oldest flushed, which means that this function will
* typically decrement the block count of the first entry of the summary and
* potentially free it if the block count gets to zero (its metaslab count
* should be zero too at that point).
*
* There are certain scenarios though that don't work exactly like that so we
* need to account for them:
*
* Scenario [1]: It is possible that after we flushed the oldest flushed
* metaslab and we destroyed the oldest log space map, more recent logs had 0
* metaslabs pointing to them so we got rid of them too. This can happen due
* to metaslabs being destroyed through device removal, or because the oldest
* flushed metaslab was loading but we kept flushing more recently flushed
* metaslabs due to the memory pressure of unflushed changes. Because of that,
* we always iterate from the beginning of the summary and if blocks_gone is
* bigger than the block_count of the current entry we free that entry (we
* expect its metaslab count to be zero), we decrement blocks_gone and on to
* the next entry repeating this procedure until blocks_gone gets decremented
* to 0. Doing this also works for the typical case mentioned above.
*
* Scenario [2]: The oldest flushed metaslab isn't necessarily accounted by
* the first (and oldest) entry in the summary. If the first few entries of
* the summary were only accounting metaslabs from a device that was just
* removed, then the current oldest flushed metaslab could be accounted by an
* entry somewhere in the middle of the summary. Moreover flushing that
* metaslab will destroy all the log space maps older than its ms_unflushed_txg
* because they became obsolete after the removal. Thus, iterating as we did
* for scenario [1] works out for this case too.
*
* Scenario [3]: At times we decide to flush all the metaslabs in the pool
* in one TXG (either because we are exporting the pool or because our flushing
* heuristics decided to do so). When that happens all the log space maps get
* destroyed except the one created for the current TXG which doesn't have
* any log blocks yet. As log space maps get destroyed with every metaslab that
* we flush, entries in the summary are also destroyed. This brings a weird
* corner-case when we flush the last metaslab and the log space map of the
* current TXG is in the same summary entry with other log space maps that
* are older. When that happens we are eventually left with this one last
* summary entry whose blocks are gone (blocks_gone equals the entry's block
* count) but its metaslab count is non-zero (because it accounts all the
* metaslabs in the pool as they all got flushed). Under this scenario we can't
* free this last summary entry as it's referencing all the metaslabs in the
* pool and its block count will get incremented at the end of this sync (when
* we close the syncing log space map). Thus we just decrement its current
* block count and leave it alone. In the case that the pool gets exported,
* its metaslab count will be decremented over time as we call metaslab_fini()
* for all the metaslabs in the pool and the entry will be freed at
* spa_unload_log_sm_metadata().
*/
void
spa_log_summary_decrement_blkcount(spa_t *spa, uint64_t blocks_gone)
{
for (log_summary_entry_t *e = list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary);
e != NULL; e = list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary)) {
if (e->lse_blkcount > blocks_gone) {
/*
* Assert that we stopped at an entry that is not
* obsolete.
*/
ASSERT(e->lse_mscount != 0);
e->lse_blkcount -= blocks_gone;
blocks_gone = 0;
break;
} else if (e->lse_mscount == 0) {
/* remove obsolete entry */
blocks_gone -= e->lse_blkcount;
list_remove(&spa->spa_log_summary, e);
kmem_free(e, sizeof (log_summary_entry_t));
} else {
/* Verify that this is scenario [3] mentioned above. */
VERIFY3U(blocks_gone, ==, e->lse_blkcount);
/*
* Assert that this is scenario [3] further by ensuring
* that this is the only entry in the summary.
*/
VERIFY3P(e, ==, list_tail(&spa->spa_log_summary));
ASSERT3P(e, ==, list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary));
blocks_gone = e->lse_blkcount = 0;
break;
}
}
/*
* Ensure that there is no way we are trying to remove more blocks
* than the # of blocks in the summary.
*/
ASSERT0(blocks_gone);
}
void
spa_log_sm_decrement_mscount(spa_t *spa, uint64_t txg)
{
spa_log_sm_t target = { .sls_txg = txg };
spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_find(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg,
&target, NULL);
if (sls == NULL) {
/*
* We must be at the teardown of a spa_load() attempt that
* got an error while reading the log space maps.
*/
VERIFY3S(spa_load_state(spa), ==, SPA_LOAD_ERROR);
return;
}
ASSERT(sls->sls_mscount > 0);
sls->sls_mscount--;
}
void
spa_log_sm_increment_current_mscount(spa_t *spa)
{
spa_log_sm_t *last_sls = avl_last(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
ASSERT3U(last_sls->sls_txg, ==, spa_syncing_txg(spa));
last_sls->sls_mscount++;
}
static void
summary_add_data(spa_t *spa, uint64_t txg, uint64_t metaslabs_flushed,
uint64_t nblocks)
{
log_summary_entry_t *e = list_tail(&spa->spa_log_summary);
if (e == NULL || summary_entry_is_full(spa, e)) {
e = kmem_zalloc(sizeof (log_summary_entry_t), KM_SLEEP);
e->lse_start = txg;
list_insert_tail(&spa->spa_log_summary, e);
}
ASSERT3U(e->lse_start, <=, txg);
e->lse_mscount += metaslabs_flushed;
e->lse_blkcount += nblocks;
}
static void
spa_log_summary_add_incoming_blocks(spa_t *spa, uint64_t nblocks)
{
summary_add_data(spa, spa_syncing_txg(spa), 0, nblocks);
}
void
spa_log_summary_add_flushed_metaslab(spa_t *spa)
{
summary_add_data(spa, spa_syncing_txg(spa), 1, 0);
}
/*
* This function attempts to estimate how many metaslabs should
* we flush to satisfy our block heuristic for the log spacemap
* for the upcoming TXGs.
*
* Specifically, it first tries to estimate the number of incoming
* blocks in this TXG. Then by projecting that incoming rate to
* future TXGs and using the log summary, it figures out how many
* flushes we would need to do for future TXGs individually to
* stay below our block limit and returns the maximum number of
* flushes from those estimates.
*/
static uint64_t
spa_estimate_metaslabs_to_flush(spa_t *spa)
{
ASSERT(spa_feature_is_active(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP));
ASSERT3U(spa_sync_pass(spa), ==, 1);
ASSERT(spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa) != 0);
/*
* This variable contains the incoming rate that will be projected
* and used for our flushing estimates in the future.
*/
uint64_t incoming = spa_estimate_incoming_log_blocks(spa);
/*
* At any point in time this variable tells us how many
* TXGs in the future we are so we can make our estimations.
*/
uint64_t txgs_in_future = 1;
/*
* This variable tells us how much room do we have until we hit
* our limit. When it goes negative, it means that we've exceeded
* our limit and we need to flush.
*
* Note that since we start at the first TXG in the future (i.e.
* txgs_in_future starts from 1) we already decrement this
* variable by the incoming rate.
*/
int64_t available_blocks =
spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa) - spa_log_sm_nblocks(spa) - incoming;
/*
* This variable tells us the total number of flushes needed to
* keep the log size within the limit when we reach txgs_in_future.
*/
uint64_t total_flushes = 0;
/* Holds the current maximum of our estimates so far. */
uint64_t max_flushes_pertxg =
MIN(avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed),
zfs_min_metaslabs_to_flush);
/*
* For our estimations we only look as far in the future
* as the summary allows us.
*/
for (log_summary_entry_t *e = list_head(&spa->spa_log_summary);
e; e = list_next(&spa->spa_log_summary, e)) {
/*
* If there is still room before we exceed our limit
* then keep skipping TXGs accumulating more blocks
* based on the incoming rate until we exceed it.
*/
if (available_blocks >= 0) {
uint64_t skip_txgs = (available_blocks / incoming) + 1;
available_blocks -= (skip_txgs * incoming);
txgs_in_future += skip_txgs;
ASSERT3S(available_blocks, >=, -incoming);
}
/*
* At this point we're far enough into the future where
* the limit was just exceeded and we flush metaslabs
* based on the current entry in the summary, updating
* our available_blocks.
*/
ASSERT3S(available_blocks, <, 0);
available_blocks += e->lse_blkcount;
total_flushes += e->lse_mscount;
/*
* Keep the running maximum of the total_flushes that
* we've done so far over the number of TXGs in the
* future that we are. The idea here is to estimate
* the average number of flushes that we should do
* every TXG so that when we are that many TXGs in the
* future we stay under the limit.
*/
max_flushes_pertxg = MAX(max_flushes_pertxg,
DIV_ROUND_UP(total_flushes, txgs_in_future));
ASSERT3U(avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed), >=,
max_flushes_pertxg);
}
return (max_flushes_pertxg);
}
uint64_t
spa_log_sm_memused(spa_t *spa)
{
return (spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_memused);
}
static boolean_t
spa_log_exceeds_memlimit(spa_t *spa)
{
if (spa_log_sm_memused(spa) > zfs_unflushed_max_mem_amt)
return (B_TRUE);
uint64_t system_mem_allowed = ((physmem * PAGESIZE) *
zfs_unflushed_max_mem_ppm) / 1000000;
if (spa_log_sm_memused(spa) > system_mem_allowed)
return (B_TRUE);
return (B_FALSE);
}
boolean_t
spa_flush_all_logs_requested(spa_t *spa)
{
return (spa->spa_log_flushall_txg != 0);
}
void
spa_flush_metaslabs(spa_t *spa, dmu_tx_t *tx)
{
uint64_t txg = dmu_tx_get_txg(tx);
if (spa_sync_pass(spa) != 1)
return;
if (!spa_feature_is_active(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP))
return;
/*
* If we don't have any metaslabs with unflushed changes
* return immediately.
*/
if (avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed) == 0)
return;
/*
* During SPA export we leave a few empty TXGs to go by [see
* spa_final_dirty_txg() to understand why]. For this specific
* case, it is important to not flush any metaslabs as that
* would dirty this TXG.
*
* That said, during one of these dirty TXGs that is less or
* equal to spa_final_dirty(), spa_unload() will request that
* we try to flush all the metaslabs for that TXG before
* exporting the pool, thus we ensure that we didn't get a
* request of flushing everything before we attempt to return
* immediately.
*/
if (spa->spa_uberblock.ub_rootbp.blk_birth < txg &&
!dmu_objset_is_dirty(spa_meta_objset(spa), txg) &&
!spa_flush_all_logs_requested(spa))
return;
/*
* We need to generate a log space map before flushing because this
* will set up the in-memory data (i.e. node in spa_sm_logs_by_txg)
* for this TXG's flushed metaslab count (aka sls_mscount which is
* manipulated in many ways down the metaslab_flush() codepath).
*
* That is not to say that we may generate a log space map when we
* don't need it. If we are flushing metaslabs, that means that we
* were going to write changes to disk anyway, so even if we were
* not flushing, a log space map would have been created anyway in
* metaslab_sync().
*/
spa_generate_syncing_log_sm(spa, tx);
/*
* This variable tells us how many metaslabs we want to flush based
* on the block-heuristic of our flushing algorithm (see block comment
* of log space map feature). We also decrement this as we flush
* metaslabs and attempt to destroy old log space maps.
*/
uint64_t want_to_flush;
if (spa_flush_all_logs_requested(spa)) {
ASSERT3S(spa_state(spa), ==, POOL_STATE_EXPORTED);
want_to_flush = avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
} else {
want_to_flush = spa_estimate_metaslabs_to_flush(spa);
}
ASSERT3U(avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed), >=,
want_to_flush);
/* Used purely for verification purposes */
uint64_t visited = 0;
/*
* Ideally we would only iterate through spa_metaslabs_by_flushed
* using only one variable (curr). We can't do that because
* metaslab_flush() mutates position of curr in the AVL when
* it flushes that metaslab by moving it to the end of the tree.
* Thus we always keep track of the original next node of the
* current node (curr) in another variable (next).
*/
metaslab_t *next = NULL;
for (metaslab_t *curr = avl_first(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
curr != NULL; curr = next) {
next = AVL_NEXT(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed, curr);
/*
* If this metaslab has been flushed this txg then we've done
* a full circle over the metaslabs.
*/
if (metaslab_unflushed_txg(curr) == txg)
break;
/*
* If we are done flushing for the block heuristic and the
* unflushed changes don't exceed the memory limit just stop.
*/
if (want_to_flush == 0 && !spa_log_exceeds_memlimit(spa))
break;
mutex_enter(&curr->ms_sync_lock);
mutex_enter(&curr->ms_lock);
boolean_t flushed = metaslab_flush(curr, tx);
mutex_exit(&curr->ms_lock);
mutex_exit(&curr->ms_sync_lock);
/*
* If we failed to flush a metaslab (because it was loading),
* then we are done with the block heuristic as it's not
* possible to destroy any log space maps once you've skipped
* a metaslab. In that case we just set our counter to 0 but
* we continue looping in case there is still memory pressure
* due to unflushed changes. Note that, flushing a metaslab
* that is not the oldest flushed in the pool, will never
* destroy any log space maps [see spa_cleanup_old_sm_logs()].
*/
if (!flushed) {
want_to_flush = 0;
} else if (want_to_flush > 0) {
want_to_flush--;
}
visited++;
}
ASSERT3U(avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed), >=, visited);
}
/*
* Close the log space map for this TXG and update the block counts
* for the log's in-memory structure and the summary.
*/
void
spa_sync_close_syncing_log_sm(spa_t *spa)
{
if (spa_syncing_log_sm(spa) == NULL)
return;
ASSERT(spa_feature_is_active(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP));
spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_last(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
ASSERT3U(sls->sls_txg, ==, spa_syncing_txg(spa));
sls->sls_nblocks = space_map_nblocks(spa_syncing_log_sm(spa));
spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_nblocks += sls->sls_nblocks;
/*
* Note that we can't assert that sls_mscount is not 0,
* because there is the case where the first metaslab
* in spa_metaslabs_by_flushed is loading and we were
* not able to flush any metaslabs the current TXG.
*/
ASSERT(sls->sls_nblocks != 0);
spa_log_summary_add_incoming_blocks(spa, sls->sls_nblocks);
spa_log_summary_verify_counts(spa);
space_map_close(spa->spa_syncing_log_sm);
spa->spa_syncing_log_sm = NULL;
/*
* At this point we tried to flush as many metaslabs as we
* can as the pool is getting exported. Reset the "flush all"
* so the last few TXGs before closing the pool can be empty
* (e.g. not dirty).
*/
if (spa_flush_all_logs_requested(spa)) {
ASSERT3S(spa_state(spa), ==, POOL_STATE_EXPORTED);
spa->spa_log_flushall_txg = 0;
}
}
void
spa_cleanup_old_sm_logs(spa_t *spa, dmu_tx_t *tx)
{
objset_t *mos = spa_meta_objset(spa);
uint64_t spacemap_zap;
int error = zap_lookup(mos, DMU_POOL_DIRECTORY_OBJECT,
DMU_POOL_LOG_SPACEMAP_ZAP, sizeof (spacemap_zap), 1, &spacemap_zap);
if (error == ENOENT) {
ASSERT(avl_is_empty(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg));
return;
}
VERIFY0(error);
metaslab_t *oldest = avl_first(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
uint64_t oldest_flushed_txg = metaslab_unflushed_txg(oldest);
/* Free all log space maps older than the oldest_flushed_txg. */
for (spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_first(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
sls && sls->sls_txg < oldest_flushed_txg;
sls = avl_first(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg)) {
ASSERT0(sls->sls_mscount);
avl_remove(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, sls);
space_map_free_obj(mos, sls->sls_sm_obj, tx);
VERIFY0(zap_remove_int(mos, spacemap_zap, sls->sls_txg, tx));
spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_nblocks -= sls->sls_nblocks;
kmem_free(sls, sizeof (spa_log_sm_t));
}
}
static spa_log_sm_t *
spa_log_sm_alloc(uint64_t sm_obj, uint64_t txg)
{
spa_log_sm_t *sls = kmem_zalloc(sizeof (*sls), KM_SLEEP);
sls->sls_sm_obj = sm_obj;
sls->sls_txg = txg;
return (sls);
}
void
spa_generate_syncing_log_sm(spa_t *spa, dmu_tx_t *tx)
{
uint64_t txg = dmu_tx_get_txg(tx);
objset_t *mos = spa_meta_objset(spa);
if (spa_syncing_log_sm(spa) != NULL)
return;
if (!spa_feature_is_enabled(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP))
return;
uint64_t spacemap_zap;
int error = zap_lookup(mos, DMU_POOL_DIRECTORY_OBJECT,
DMU_POOL_LOG_SPACEMAP_ZAP, sizeof (spacemap_zap), 1, &spacemap_zap);
if (error == ENOENT) {
ASSERT(avl_is_empty(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg));
error = 0;
spacemap_zap = zap_create(mos,
DMU_OTN_ZAP_METADATA, DMU_OT_NONE, 0, tx);
VERIFY0(zap_add(mos, DMU_POOL_DIRECTORY_OBJECT,
DMU_POOL_LOG_SPACEMAP_ZAP, sizeof (spacemap_zap), 1,
&spacemap_zap, tx));
spa_feature_incr(spa, SPA_FEATURE_LOG_SPACEMAP, tx);
}
VERIFY0(error);
uint64_t sm_obj;
ASSERT3U(zap_lookup_int_key(mos, spacemap_zap, txg, &sm_obj),
==, ENOENT);
sm_obj = space_map_alloc(mos, zfs_log_sm_blksz, tx);
VERIFY0(zap_add_int_key(mos, spacemap_zap, txg, sm_obj, tx));
avl_add(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, spa_log_sm_alloc(sm_obj, txg));
/*
* We pass UINT64_MAX as the space map's representation size
* and SPA_MINBLOCKSHIFT as the shift, to make the space map
* accept any sorts of segments since there's no real advantage
* to being more restrictive (given that we're already going
* to be using 2-word entries).
*/
VERIFY0(space_map_open(&spa->spa_syncing_log_sm, mos, sm_obj,
0, UINT64_MAX, SPA_MINBLOCKSHIFT));
/*
* If the log space map feature was just enabled, the blocklimit
* has not yet been set.
*/
if (spa_log_sm_blocklimit(spa) == 0)
spa_log_sm_set_blocklimit(spa);
}
/*
* Find all the log space maps stored in the space map ZAP and sort
* them by their TXG in spa_sm_logs_by_txg.
*/
static int
spa_ld_log_sm_metadata(spa_t *spa)
{
int error;
uint64_t spacemap_zap;
ASSERT(avl_is_empty(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg));
error = zap_lookup(spa_meta_objset(spa), DMU_POOL_DIRECTORY_OBJECT,
DMU_POOL_LOG_SPACEMAP_ZAP, sizeof (spacemap_zap), 1, &spacemap_zap);
if (error == ENOENT) {
/* the space map ZAP doesn't exist yet */
return (0);
} else if (error != 0) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_log_sm_metadata(): failed at "
"zap_lookup(DMU_POOL_DIRECTORY_OBJECT) [error %d]",
error);
return (error);
}
zap_cursor_t zc;
zap_attribute_t za;
for (zap_cursor_init(&zc, spa_meta_objset(spa), spacemap_zap);
(error = zap_cursor_retrieve(&zc, &za)) == 0;
zap_cursor_advance(&zc)) {
uint64_t log_txg = zfs_strtonum(za.za_name, NULL);
spa_log_sm_t *sls =
spa_log_sm_alloc(za.za_first_integer, log_txg);
avl_add(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, sls);
}
zap_cursor_fini(&zc);
if (error != ENOENT) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_log_sm_metadata(): failed at "
"zap_cursor_retrieve(spacemap_zap) [error %d]",
error);
return (error);
}
for (metaslab_t *m = avl_first(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
m; m = AVL_NEXT(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed, m)) {
spa_log_sm_t target = { .sls_txg = metaslab_unflushed_txg(m) };
spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_find(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg,
&target, NULL);
/*
* At this point if sls is zero it means that a bug occurred
* in ZFS the last time the pool was open or earlier in the
* import code path. In general, we would have placed a
* VERIFY() here or in this case just let the kernel panic
* with NULL pointer dereference when incrementing sls_mscount,
* but since this is the import code path we can be a bit more
* lenient. Thus, for DEBUG bits we always cause a panic, while
* in production we log the error and just fail the import.
*/
ASSERT(sls != NULL);
if (sls == NULL) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_log_sm_metadata(): bug "
"encountered: could not find log spacemap for "
"TXG %ld [error %d]",
metaslab_unflushed_txg(m), ENOENT);
return (ENOENT);
}
sls->sls_mscount++;
}
return (0);
}
typedef struct spa_ld_log_sm_arg {
spa_t *slls_spa;
uint64_t slls_txg;
} spa_ld_log_sm_arg_t;
static int
spa_ld_log_sm_cb(space_map_entry_t *sme, void *arg)
{
uint64_t offset = sme->sme_offset;
uint64_t size = sme->sme_run;
uint32_t vdev_id = sme->sme_vdev;
spa_ld_log_sm_arg_t *slls = arg;
spa_t *spa = slls->slls_spa;
vdev_t *vd = vdev_lookup_top(spa, vdev_id);
/*
* If the vdev has been removed (i.e. it is indirect or a hole)
* skip this entry. The contents of this vdev have already moved
* elsewhere.
*/
if (!vdev_is_concrete(vd))
return (0);
metaslab_t *ms = vd->vdev_ms[offset >> vd->vdev_ms_shift];
ASSERT(!ms->ms_loaded);
/*
* If we have already flushed entries for this TXG to this
* metaslab's space map, then ignore it. Note that we flush
* before processing any allocations/frees for that TXG, so
* the metaslab's space map only has entries from *before*
* the unflushed TXG.
*/
if (slls->slls_txg < metaslab_unflushed_txg(ms))
return (0);
switch (sme->sme_type) {
case SM_ALLOC:
range_tree_remove_xor_add_segment(offset, offset + size,
ms->ms_unflushed_frees, ms->ms_unflushed_allocs);
break;
case SM_FREE:
range_tree_remove_xor_add_segment(offset, offset + size,
ms->ms_unflushed_allocs, ms->ms_unflushed_frees);
break;
default:
panic("invalid maptype_t");
break;
}
return (0);
}
static int
spa_ld_log_sm_data(spa_t *spa)
{
int error = 0;
/*
* If we are not going to do any writes there is no need
* to read the log space maps.
*/
if (!spa_writeable(spa))
return (0);
ASSERT0(spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_nblocks);
ASSERT0(spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_memused);
hrtime_t read_logs_starttime = gethrtime();
/* this is a no-op when we don't have space map logs */
for (spa_log_sm_t *sls = avl_first(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg);
sls; sls = AVL_NEXT(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg, sls)) {
space_map_t *sm = NULL;
error = space_map_open(&sm, spa_meta_objset(spa),
sls->sls_sm_obj, 0, UINT64_MAX, SPA_MINBLOCKSHIFT);
if (error != 0) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_log_sm_data(): failed at "
"space_map_open(obj=%llu) [error %d]",
(u_longlong_t)sls->sls_sm_obj, error);
goto out;
}
struct spa_ld_log_sm_arg vla = {
.slls_spa = spa,
.slls_txg = sls->sls_txg
};
error = space_map_iterate(sm, space_map_length(sm),
spa_ld_log_sm_cb, &vla);
if (error != 0) {
space_map_close(sm);
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_log_sm_data(): failed "
"at space_map_iterate(obj=%llu) [error %d]",
(u_longlong_t)sls->sls_sm_obj, error);
goto out;
}
ASSERT0(sls->sls_nblocks);
sls->sls_nblocks = space_map_nblocks(sm);
spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_nblocks += sls->sls_nblocks;
summary_add_data(spa, sls->sls_txg,
sls->sls_mscount, sls->sls_nblocks);
space_map_close(sm);
}
hrtime_t read_logs_endtime = gethrtime();
spa_load_note(spa,
"read %llu log space maps (%llu total blocks - blksz = %llu bytes) "
"in %lld ms", (u_longlong_t)avl_numnodes(&spa->spa_sm_logs_by_txg),
(u_longlong_t)spa_log_sm_nblocks(spa),
(u_longlong_t)zfs_log_sm_blksz,
(longlong_t)((read_logs_endtime - read_logs_starttime) / 1000000));
out:
/*
* Now that the metaslabs contain their unflushed changes:
* [1] recalculate their actual allocated space
* [2] recalculate their weights
* [3] sum up the memory usage of their unflushed range trees
* [4] optionally load them, if debug_load is set
*
* Note that even in the case where we get here because of an
* error (e.g. error != 0), we still want to update the fields
* below in order to have a proper teardown in spa_unload().
*/
for (metaslab_t *m = avl_first(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed);
m != NULL; m = AVL_NEXT(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed, m)) {
mutex_enter(&m->ms_lock);
m->ms_allocated_space = space_map_allocated(m->ms_sm) +
range_tree_space(m->ms_unflushed_allocs) -
range_tree_space(m->ms_unflushed_frees);
vdev_t *vd = m->ms_group->mg_vd;
metaslab_space_update(vd, m->ms_group->mg_class,
range_tree_space(m->ms_unflushed_allocs), 0, 0);
metaslab_space_update(vd, m->ms_group->mg_class,
-range_tree_space(m->ms_unflushed_frees), 0, 0);
ASSERT0(m->ms_weight & METASLAB_ACTIVE_MASK);
metaslab_recalculate_weight_and_sort(m);
spa->spa_unflushed_stats.sus_memused +=
metaslab_unflushed_changes_memused(m);
if (metaslab_debug_load && m->ms_sm != NULL) {
VERIFY0(metaslab_load(m));
metaslab_set_selected_txg(m, 0);
}
mutex_exit(&m->ms_lock);
}
return (error);
}
static int
spa_ld_unflushed_txgs(vdev_t *vd)
{
spa_t *spa = vd->vdev_spa;
objset_t *mos = spa_meta_objset(spa);
if (vd->vdev_top_zap == 0)
return (0);
uint64_t object = 0;
int error = zap_lookup(mos, vd->vdev_top_zap,
VDEV_TOP_ZAP_MS_UNFLUSHED_PHYS_TXGS,
sizeof (uint64_t), 1, &object);
if (error == ENOENT)
return (0);
else if (error != 0) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_unflushed_txgs(): failed at "
"zap_lookup(vdev_top_zap=%llu) [error %d]",
(u_longlong_t)vd->vdev_top_zap, error);
return (error);
}
for (uint64_t m = 0; m < vd->vdev_ms_count; m++) {
metaslab_t *ms = vd->vdev_ms[m];
ASSERT(ms != NULL);
metaslab_unflushed_phys_t entry;
uint64_t entry_size = sizeof (entry);
uint64_t entry_offset = ms->ms_id * entry_size;
error = dmu_read(mos, object,
entry_offset, entry_size, &entry, 0);
if (error != 0) {
spa_load_failed(spa, "spa_ld_unflushed_txgs(): "
"failed at dmu_read(obj=%llu) [error %d]",
(u_longlong_t)object, error);
return (error);
}
ms->ms_unflushed_txg = entry.msp_unflushed_txg;
if (ms->ms_unflushed_txg != 0) {
mutex_enter(&spa->spa_flushed_ms_lock);
avl_add(&spa->spa_metaslabs_by_flushed, ms);
mutex_exit(&spa->spa_flushed_ms_lock);
}
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Read all the log space map entries into their respective
* metaslab unflushed trees and keep them sorted by TXG in the
* SPA's metadata. In addition, setup all the metadata for the
* memory and the block heuristics.
*/
int
spa_ld_log_spacemaps(spa_t *spa)
{
int error;
spa_log_sm_set_blocklimit(spa);
for (uint64_t c = 0; c < spa->spa_root_vdev->vdev_children; c++) {
vdev_t *vd = spa->spa_root_vdev->vdev_child[c];
error = spa_ld_unflushed_txgs(vd);
if (error != 0)
return (error);
}
error = spa_ld_log_sm_metadata(spa);
if (error != 0)
return (error);
/*
* Note: we don't actually expect anything to change at this point
* but we grab the config lock so we don't fail any assertions
* when using vdev_lookup_top().
*/
spa_config_enter(spa, SCL_CONFIG, FTAG, RW_READER);
error = spa_ld_log_sm_data(spa);
spa_config_exit(spa, SCL_CONFIG, FTAG);
return (error);
}
/* BEGIN CSTYLED */
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, unflushed_max_mem_amt, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Specific hard-limit in memory that ZFS allows to be used for "
"unflushed changes");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, unflushed_max_mem_ppm, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Percentage of the overall system memory that ZFS allows to be "
"used for unflushed changes (value is calculated over 1000000 for "
"finer granularity");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, unflushed_log_block_max, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Hard limit (upper-bound) in the size of the space map log "
"in terms of blocks.");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, unflushed_log_block_min, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Lower-bound limit for the maximum amount of blocks allowed in "
"log spacemap (see zfs_unflushed_log_block_max)");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, unflushed_log_block_pct, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Tunable used to determine the number of blocks that can be used for "
"the spacemap log, expressed as a percentage of the total number of "
"metaslabs in the pool (e.g. 400 means the number of log blocks is "
"capped at 4 times the number of metaslabs)");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, max_log_walking, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"The number of past TXGs that the flushing algorithm of the log "
"spacemap feature uses to estimate incoming log blocks");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, max_logsm_summary_length, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Maximum number of rows allowed in the summary of the spacemap log");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, min_metaslabs_to_flush, ULONG, ZMOD_RW,
"Minimum number of metaslabs to flush per dirty TXG");
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM(zfs, zfs_, keep_log_spacemaps_at_export, INT, ZMOD_RW,
"Prevent the log spacemaps from being flushed and destroyed "
"during pool export/destroy");
/* END CSTYLED */