62 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
gleb
1abdbf7023 Use implementation independent inoNN_t scalars for on-disk UFS structures
Approved by:	mdf (mentor)
2011-11-09 07:48:48 +00:00
mckusick
40b131bdaf Add an FFS specific mount option to allow a filesystem checker
(typically fsck_ffs) to register that it wishes to use FFS specific
sysctl's to update the filesystem. This ensures that two checkers
cannot run on a given filesystem at the same time and that no other
process accidentally or maliciously uses the filesystem updating
sysctls inappropriately. This functionality is needed by the
journaling soft-updates recovery code.
2011-07-15 16:20:33 +00:00
jeff
6ba8b7f04c Implement fully asynchronous partial truncation with softupdates journaling
to resolve errors which can cause corruption on recovery with the old
synchronous mechanism.

 - Append partial truncation freework structures to indirdeps while
   truncation is proceeding.  These prevent new block pointers from
   becoming valid until truncation completes and serialize truncations.
 - On completion of a partial truncate journal work waits for zeroed
   pointers to hit indirects.
 - softdep_journal_freeblocks() handles last frag allocation and last
   block zeroing.
 - vtruncbuf/ffs_page_remove moved into softdep_*_freeblocks() so it
   is only implemented in one place.
 - Block allocation failure handling moved up one level so it does not
   proceed with buf locks held.  This permits us to do more extensive
   reclaims when filesystem space is exhausted.
 - softdep_sync_metadata() is broken into two parts, the first executes
   once at the start of ffs_syncvnode() and flushes truncations and
   inode dependencies.  The second is called on each locked buf.  This
   eliminates excessive looping and rollbacks.
 - Improve the mechanism in process_worklist_item() that handles
   acquiring vnode locks for handle_workitem_remove() so that it works
   more generally and does not loop excessively over the same worklist
   items on each call.
 - Don't corrupt directories by zeroing the tail in fsck.  This is only
   done for regular files.
 - Push a fsync complete record for files that need it so the checker
   knows a truncation in the journal is no longer valid.

Discussed with:	mckusick, kib (ffs_pages_remove and ffs_truncate parts)
Tested by:	pho
2011-06-10 22:48:35 +00:00
kib
c95c81bfad Use the native sector size of the device backing the UFS volume for SU+J
journal blocks, instead of hard coding 512 byte sector size. Journal need
to atomically write the block, that can only be guaranteed at the device
sector size, not larger. Attempt to write less then sector size results in
driver errors.

Note that this is the first structure in UFS that depends on the
sector size. Other elements are written in the units of fragments.

In collaboration with:	pho
Reviewed by:	jeff
Tested by:	bz, pho
2011-02-12 12:52:12 +00:00
kib
17dccd1898 Add kernel side support for BIO_DELETE/TRIM on UFS.
The FS_TRIM fs flag indicates that administrator requested issuing of
TRIM commands for the volume. UFS will only send the command to disk
if the disk reports GEOM::candelete attribute.

Since disk queue is reordered, data block is marked as free in the bitmap
only after TRIM command completed. Due to need to sleep waiting for
i/o to finish, TRIM bio_done routine schedules taskqueue to set the
bitmap bit.

Based on the patch by:	mckusick
Reviewed by:	mckusick, pjd
Tested by:	pho
MFC after:	1 month
2010-12-29 12:25:28 +00:00
kib
a16cecf311 Add function lbn_offset to calculate offset of the indirect block of
given level.

Reviewed by:	jeff
Tested by:	pho
2010-11-11 11:35:42 +00:00
mckusick
dd70ac636a Update comments in soft updates code to more fully describe
the addition of journalling. Only functional change is to
tighten a KASSERT.

Reviewed by:	jeff Roberson
2010-09-14 18:04:05 +00:00
jeff
a574495410 - Merge soft-updates journaling from projects/suj/head into head. This
brings in support for an optional intent log which eliminates the need
   for background fsck on unclean shutdown.

Sponsored by:   iXsystems, Yahoo!, and Juniper.
With help from: McKusick and Peter Holm
2010-04-24 07:05:35 +00:00
mckusick
e7471d443b One last pass to get all the unsigned comparisons correct. 2010-02-11 18:14:53 +00:00
mckusick
d533f2ac8c This fix corrects a problem in the file system that treats large
inode numbers as negative rather than unsigned. For a default
(16K block) file system, this bug began to show up at a file system
size above about 16Tb.

To fully handle this problem, newfs must be updated to ensure that
it will never create a filesystem with more than 2^32 inodes. That
patch will be forthcoming soon.

Reported by: Scott Burns, John Kilburg, Bruce Evans
Followup by: Jeff Roberson
PR:          133980
MFC after:   2 weeks
2010-02-10 20:10:35 +00:00
mckusick
0cddeb2cb4 Background:
When renaming a directory it passes through several intermediate
states. First its new name will be created causing it to have two
names (from possibly different parents). Next, if it has different
parents, its value of ".." will be changed from pointing to the old
parent to pointing to the new parent. Concurrently, its old name
will be removed bringing it back into a consistent state. When fsck
encounters an extra name for a directory, it offers to remove the
"extraneous hard link"; when it finds that the names have been
changed but the update to ".." has not happened, it offers to rewrite
".." to point at the correct parent. Both of these changes were
considered unexpected so would cause fsck in preen mode or fsck in
background mode to fail with the need to run fsck manually to fix
these problems. Fsck running in preen mode or background mode now
corrects these expected inconsistencies that arise during directory
rename. The functionality added with this update is used by fsck
running in background mode to make these fixes.

Solution:

This update adds three new fsck sysctl commands to support background
fsck in correcting expected inconsistencies that arise from incomplete
directory rename operations. They are:

setcwd(dirinode) - set the current directory to dirinode in the
    filesystem associated with the snapshot.
setdotdot(oldvalue, newvalue) - Verify that the inode number for ".."
    in the current directory is oldvalue then change it to newvalue.
unlink(nameptr, oldvalue) - Verify that the inode number associated
    with nameptr in the current directory is oldvalue then unlink it.

As with all other fsck sysctls, these new ones may only be used by
processes with appropriate priviledge.

Reported by:    	jeff
Security issues:	rwatson
2010-01-11 20:44:05 +00:00
trasz
f04a989f2d Implement NFSv4 ACL support for UFS.
Reviewed by:	rwatson
2009-12-21 19:39:10 +00:00
rodrigc
4e4b0a667c Fix comments to replace SBSIZE with SBLOCKSIZE, since SBSIZE
was renamed to SBLOCKSIZE in version 1.33

Reviewed by:	mckusick
2008-05-24 20:44:14 +00:00
pjd
036e929548 Add gjournal specific code to the UFS file system:
- Add FS_GJOURNAL flag which enables gjournal support on a file system.
- Add cg_unrefs field to the cylinder group structure which holds
  number of unreferenced (orphaned) inodes in the given cylinder group.
- Add fs_unrefs field to the super block structure which holds
  total number of unreferenced (orphaned) inodes.
- When file or a directory is orphaned (last reference is removed, but
  object is still open), increase fs_unrefs and cg_unrefs fields,
  which is a hint for fsck in which cylinder groups looks for such
  (orphaned) objects.
- When file is last closed, decrease {fs,cg}_unrefs fields.
- Add VV_DELETED vnode flag which points at orphaned objects.

Sponsored by:	home.pl
2006-10-31 21:48:54 +00:00
delphij
b62e1ca825 The recomputation of file system summary at mount time can be a
very slow process, especially for large file systems that is just
recovered from a crash.

Since the summary is already re-sync'ed every 30 second, we will
not lag behind too much after a crash.  With this consideration
in mind, it is more reasonable to transfer the responsibility to
background fsck, to reduce the delay after a crash.

Add a new sysctl variable, vfs.ffs.compute_summary_at_mount, to
control this behavior.  When set to nonzero, we will get the
"old" behavior, that the summary is computed immediately at mount
time.

Add five new sysctl variables to adjust ndir, nbfree, nifree,
nffree and numclusters respectively.  Teach fsck_ffs about these
API, however, intentionally not to check the existence, since
kernels without these sysctls must have recomputed the summary
and hence no adjustments are necessary.

This change has eliminated the usual tens of minutes of delay of
mounting large dirty volumes.

Reviewed by:	mckusick
MFC After:	1 week
2005-02-20 08:02:15 +00:00
jeff
c49793b453 - Mark the struct fs members that require the ufsmount mutex.
- Define some macros for manipulating the fs_active bitmap.

Sponsored By:	Isilon Systems, Inc.
2005-01-24 10:03:17 +00:00
imp
f0bf889d0d /* -> /*- for license, minor formatting changes 2005-01-07 02:29:27 +00:00
njl
8b9984e218 Fix fsbtodb() for UFS1. This fixes an overflow for file sizes >1 TB,
allowing for sizes up to 4 TB.  This doesn't affect UFS2 since b is already
a 64 bit type, coincidental with daddr_t.

Submitted by:	bde
2004-10-09 20:16:06 +00:00
jhb
e4ddba3ab3 Generalize the UFS bad magic value used to determine when a filesystem
has only been partly initialized via newfs(8) so that it applies to both
UFS1 and UFS2.

Submitted by:	"Xin LI" delphij at frontfree dot net
MFC:		maybe?
2004-08-19 11:09:13 +00:00
krion
2ca388c921 - Fix typo
Approved by:	tobez
2004-05-31 16:55:12 +00:00
imp
cbeab61b3a Remove advertising clause from University of California Regent's
license, per letter dated July 22, 1999 and irc message from Robert
Watson saying that clause 3 can be removed from those files with an
NAI copyright that also have only a University of California
copyrights.

Approved by: core, rwatson
2004-04-07 03:47:21 +00:00
mux
3ceb770141 Fix the remaining warnings of growfs(8) on my sparc64 box with
WARNS=6.  I don't change the WARNS level in the Makefile because I
didn't tested this on other archs.

The fs.h fix was suggested by:	marcel
Reviewed by:	md5(1)
2004-04-03 23:30:59 +00:00
wes
546aec2dd6 Write the UFS2 superblock with a 'BAD' magic number at the beginning
of newfs, to signify the newfs operation has not yet completed.  Re-
write the superblock with the correct magic number once all of the
cylinder groups have been created to show the operation has finished.

Sponsored by:	St. Bernard Software
2003-11-16 07:08:27 +00:00
mckusick
e6aeffdeb5 This patch fixes a bug in the logical block calculation macros so
that they convert to 64-bit values before shifting rather than
afterwards. Once fixed, they can be used rather than inline expanded.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2003-02-22 00:19:26 +00:00
marcel
111c003344 o Improve wording of the comment that accompanies fs_pad. The
padding is not specific to non-i386 architectures. It is
   caused by non-i386 specific alignment requirements of
   fs_swuid,
o  Add a CTASSERT to catch a change in the size of struct fs
   at compile-time rather than run-time.

Ok'd: gordon
Tested on: i386 ia64
2003-01-10 06:59:34 +00:00
gordon
2af32f18dc Fix superblock alignment problems on non-i386 platforms. Also change fs_uuid
to fs_swuid, making it more descriptive.

Submitted by:	marcel
Reviewed by:	peter
Pointy hat to:	gordon
2003-01-09 23:53:30 +00:00
gordon
f1018f664a Steal some space from fs_fsmnt to create fs_volname and fs_uuid. The volname
will be used to support volume names with the help of a GEOM module (to be
committed). uuid will be used to deal with conflicting volume names (which
doesn't work just yet).

Approved by:	mckusick@
2003-01-08 22:53:54 +00:00
mckusick
9251693096 Create a new 32-bit fs_flags word in the superblock. Add code to move
the old 8-bit fs_old_flags to the new location the first time that the
filesystem is mounted by a new kernel. One of the unused flags in
fs_old_flags is used to indicate that the flags have been moved.
Leave the fs_old_flags word intact so that it will work properly if
used on an old kernel.

Change the fs_sblockloc superblock location field to be in units
of bytes instead of in units of filesystem fragments. The old units
did not work properly when the fragment size exceeeded the superblock
size (8192). Update old fs_sblockloc values at the same time that
the flags are moved.

Suggested by:	BOUWSMA Barry <freebsd-misuser@netscum.dyndns.dk>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-11-27 02:18:58 +00:00
rwatson
9c6b9f51d1 Define two new superblock file system flags:
FS_ACLS		Administrative enable/disable of extended ACL support
FS_MULTILABEL	Administrative flag to indicate to the MAC Framework
		that objects in the file system are individually
		labeled using extended attributes.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
Reviewed by:	(in principal) mckusick, phk
2002-10-14 17:07:11 +00:00
mckusick
88d85c15ef This commit adds basic support for the UFS2 filesystem. The UFS2
filesystem expands the inode to 256 bytes to make space for 64-bit
block pointers. It also adds a file-creation time field, an ability
to use jumbo blocks per inode to allow extent like pointer density,
and space for extended attributes (up to twice the filesystem block
size worth of attributes, e.g., on a 16K filesystem, there is space
for 32K of attributes). UFS2 fully supports and runs existing UFS1
filesystems. New filesystems built using newfs can be built in either
UFS1 or UFS2 format using the -O option. In this commit UFS1 is
the default format, so if you want to build UFS2 format filesystems,
you must specify -O 2. This default will be changed to UFS2 when
UFS2 proves itself to be stable. In this commit the boot code for
reading UFS2 filesystems is not compiled (see /sys/boot/common/ufsread.c)
as there is insufficient space in the boot block. Once the size of the
boot block is increased, this code can be defined.

Things to note: the definition of SBSIZE has changed to SBLOCKSIZE.
The header file <ufs/ufs/dinode.h> must be included before
<ufs/ffs/fs.h> so as to get the definitions of ufs2_daddr_t and
ufs_lbn_t.

Still TODO:
Verify that the first level bootstraps work for all the architectures.
Convert the utility ffsinfo to understand UFS2 and test growfs.
Add support for the extended attribute storage. Update soft updates
to ensure integrity of extended attribute storage. Switch the
current extended attribute interfaces to use the extended attribute
storage. Add the extent like functionality (framework is there,
but is currently never used).

Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Reviewed by:	Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@freebsd.org>
2002-06-21 06:18:05 +00:00
trhodes
28d42899b7 More s/file system/filesystem/g 2002-05-16 21:28:32 +00:00
phk
e27fed0950 ARGH! SBLOCK is not unused. Try to get this right.
BBSIZE belongs in <sys/disklabel.h> (but shouldn't be a constant).

Define SBLOCK again, using the right math.

Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-05-12 20:21:40 +00:00
phk
4aa59982cb Remove #define for BBOFF, it is assumed == 0 so many places that we might
as well forget about it.  In fact the only thing which used it was the
SBOFF macro.

Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-05-12 20:00:21 +00:00
phk
57e4ad9a8b Remove unused BBLOCK and SBLOCK #defines.
Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-05-12 19:56:31 +00:00
phk
65c4a4cb9d Move the FFS parameter MAXFRAG from <sys/param.h> to <ufs/ffs/fs.h>
Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-04-03 20:39:27 +00:00
mckusick
4e7dcb216b Fix a bug introduced in ffs_snapshot.c -r1.25 and fs.h -r1.26
which caused incomplete snapshots to be taken. When background
fsck would run on these snapshots, the result would be files
being incorrectly released which would subsequently panic the
kernel with ``handle_workitem_freefile: inodedep survived'',
``handle_written_inodeblock: live inodedep'', and
``handle_workitem_remove: lost inodedep'' errors.
2002-01-17 08:33:32 +00:00
mckusick
eeb2a6d271 Change the atomic_set_char to atomic_set_int and atomic_clear_char
to atomic_clear_int to ease the implementation for the sparc64.

Requested by:	Jake Burkholder <jake@locore.ca>
2001-12-18 18:05:17 +00:00
iedowse
64972486c2 Move the new superblock field `fs_active' into the region of the
superblock that is already set up to handle pointer types. This
fixes an accidental change in the superblock size on 64-bit platforms
caused by revision 1.24.
2001-12-16 18:51:11 +00:00
mckusick
735db38be3 Minimize the time necessary to suspend operations on a filesystem
when taking a snapshot. The two time consuming operations are
scanning all the filesystem bitmaps to determine which blocks
are in use and scanning all the other snapshots so as to be able
to expunge their blocks from the view of the current snapshot.
The bitmap scanning is broken into two passes. Before suspending
the filesystem all bitmaps are scanned. After the suspension,
those bitmaps that changed after being scanned the first time
are rescanned. Typically there are few bitmaps that need to be
rescanned. The expunging of other snapshots is now done after
the suspension is released by observing that we can easily
identify any blocks that were allocated to them after the
suspension (they will be maked as `not needing to be copied'
in the just created snapshot). For all the gory details, see
the ``Running fsck in the Background'' paper in the Usenix
BSDCon 2002 Conference Proceedings, pages 55-64.
2001-12-14 00:15:06 +00:00
peter
57a6887663 Use a fixed type for times in on-disk structures for ufs rather than
something that could potentially change like time_t.
2001-07-16 00:55:27 +00:00
mckusick
d8ef9cc3b5 When running with soft updates, track the number of blocks and files
that are committed to being freed and reflect these blocks in the
counts returned by statfs (and thus also by the `df' command). This
change allows programs such as those that do news expiration to
know when to stop if they are trying to create a certain percentage
of free space. Note that this change does not solve the much harder
problem of making this to-be-freed space available to applications
that want it (thus on a nearly full filesystem, you may still
encounter out-of-space conditions even though the free space will
show up eventually). Hopefully this harder problem will be the
subject of a future enhancement.
2001-05-08 07:42:20 +00:00
mckusick
6a7a6ab20d This checkin adds support in ufs/ffs for the FS_NEEDSFSCK flag.
It is described in ufs/ffs/fs.h as follows:

/*
 * Filesystem flags.
 *
 * Note that the FS_NEEDSFSCK flag is set and cleared only by the
 * fsck utility. It is set when background fsck finds an unexpected
 * inconsistency which requires a traditional foreground fsck to be
 * run. Such inconsistencies should only be found after an uncorrectable
 * disk error. A foreground fsck will clear the FS_NEEDSFSCK flag when
 * it has successfully cleaned up the filesystem. The kernel uses this
 * flag to enforce that inconsistent filesystems be mounted read-only.
 */
#define FS_UNCLEAN    0x01	/* filesystem not clean at mount */
#define FS_DOSOFTDEP  0x02	/* filesystem using soft dependencies */
#define FS_NEEDSFSCK  0x04	/* filesystem needs sync fsck before mount */
2001-04-14 05:26:28 +00:00
mckusick
3931e94b1f Directory layout preference improvements from Grigoriy Orlov <gluk@ptci.ru>.
His description of the problem and solution follow. My own tests show
speedups on typical filesystem intensive workloads of 5% to 12% which
is very impressive considering the small amount of code change involved.

------

  One day I noticed that some file operations run much faster on
small file systems then on big ones. I've looked at the ffs
algorithms, thought about them, and redesigned the dirpref algorithm.

  First I want to describe the results of my tests. These results are old
and I have improved the algorithm after these tests were done. Nevertheless
they show how big the perfomance speedup may be. I have done two file/directory
intensive tests on a two OpenBSD systems with old and new dirpref algorithm.
The first test is "tar -xzf ports.tar.gz", the second is "rm -rf ports".
The ports.tar.gz file is the ports collection from the OpenBSD 2.8 release.
It contains 6596 directories and 13868 files. The test systems are:

1. Celeron-450, 128Mb, two IDE drives, the system at wd0, file system for
   test is at wd1. Size of test file system is 8 Gb, number of cg=991,
   size of cg is 8m, block size = 8k, fragment size = 1k OpenBSD-current
   from Dec 2000 with BUFCACHEPERCENT=35

2. PIII-600, 128Mb, two IBM DTLA-307045 IDE drives at i815e, the system
   at wd0, file system for test is at wd1. Size of test file system is 40 Gb,
   number of cg=5324, size of cg is 8m, block size = 8k, fragment size = 1k
   OpenBSD-current from Dec 2000 with BUFCACHEPERCENT=50

You can get more info about the test systems and methods at:
http://www.ptci.ru/gluk/dirpref/old/dirpref.html

                              Test Results

             tar -xzf ports.tar.gz               rm -rf ports
  mode  old dirpref new dirpref speedup old dirprefnew dirpref speedup
                             First system
 normal     667         472      1.41       477        331       1.44
 async      285         144      1.98       130         14       9.29
 sync       768         616      1.25       477        334       1.43
 softdep    413         252      1.64       241         38       6.34
                             Second system
 normal     329         81       4.06       263.5       93.5     2.81
 async      302         25.7    11.75       112          2.26   49.56
 sync       281         57.0     4.93       263         90.5     2.9
 softdep    341         40.6     8.4        284          4.76   59.66

"old dirpref" and "new dirpref" columns give a test time in seconds.
speedup - speed increasement in times, ie. old dirpref / new dirpref.

------

Algorithm description

The old dirpref algorithm is described in comments:

/*
 * Find a cylinder to place a directory.
 *
 * The policy implemented by this algorithm is to select from
 * among those cylinder groups with above the average number of
 * free inodes, the one with the smallest number of directories.
 */

A new directory is allocated in a different cylinder groups than its
parent directory resulting in a directory tree that is spreaded across
all the cylinder groups. This spreading out results in a non-optimal
access to the directories and files. When we have a small filesystem
it is not a problem but when the filesystem is big then perfomance
degradation becomes very apparent.

What I mean by a big file system ?

  1. A big filesystem is a filesystem which occupy 20-30 or more percent
     of total drive space, i.e. first and last cylinder are physically
     located relatively far from each other.
  2. It has a relatively large number of cylinder groups, for example
     more cylinder groups than 50% of the buffers in the buffer cache.

The first results in long access times, while the second results in
many buffers being used by metadata operations. Such operations use
cylinder group blocks and on-disk inode blocks. The cylinder group
block (fs->fs_cblkno) contains struct cg, inode and block bit maps.
It is 2k in size for the default filesystem parameters. If new and
parent directories are located in different cylinder groups then the
system performs more input/output operations and uses more buffers.
On filesystems with many cylinder groups, lots of cache buffers are
used for metadata operations.

My solution for this problem is very simple. I allocate many directories
in one cylinder group. I also do some things, so that the new allocation
method does not cause excessive fragmentation and all directory inodes
will not be located at a location far from its file's inodes and data.
The algorithm is:
/*
 * Find a cylinder group to place a directory.
 *
 * The policy implemented by this algorithm is to allocate a
 * directory inode in the same cylinder group as its parent
 * directory, but also to reserve space for its files inodes
 * and data. Restrict the number of directories which may be
 * allocated one after another in the same cylinder group
 * without intervening allocation of files.
 *
 * If we allocate a first level directory then force allocation
 * in another cylinder group.
 */

  My early versions of dirpref give me a good results for a wide range of
file operations and different filesystem capacities except one case:
those applications that create their entire directory structure first
and only later fill this structure with files.

  My solution for such and similar cases is to limit a number of
directories which may be created one after another in the same cylinder
group without intervening file creations. For this purpose, I allocate
an array of counters at mount time. This array is linked to the superblock
fs->fs_contigdirs[cg]. Each time a directory is created the counter
increases and each time a file is created the counter decreases. A 60Gb
filesystem with 8mb/cg requires 10kb of memory for the counters array.

  The maxcontigdirs is a maximum number of directories which may be created
without an intervening file creation. I found in my tests that the best
performance occurs when I restrict the number of directories in one cylinder
group such that all its files may be located in the same cylinder group.
There may be some deterioration in performance if all the file inodes
are in the same cylinder group as its containing directory, but their
data partially resides in a different cylinder group. The maxcontigdirs
value is calculated to try to prevent this condition. Since there is
no way to know how many files and directories will be allocated later
I added two optimization parameters in superblock/tunefs. They are:

        int32_t  fs_avgfilesize;   /* expected average file size */
        int32_t  fs_avgfpdir;      /* expected # of files per directory */

These parameters have reasonable defaults but may be tweeked for special
uses of a filesystem. They are only necessary in rare cases like better
tuning a filesystem being used to store a squid cache.

I have been using this algorithm for about 3 months. I have done
a lot of testing on filesystems with different capacities, average
filesize, average number of files per directory, and so on. I think
this algorithm has no negative impact on filesystem perfomance. It
works better than the default one in all cases. The new dirpref
will greatly improve untarring/removing/coping of big directories,
decrease load on cvs servers and much more. The new dirpref doesn't
speedup a compilation process, but also doesn't slow it down.

Obtained from:	Grigoriy Orlov <gluk@ptci.ru>
2001-04-10 08:38:59 +00:00
mckusick
69603157de Add kernel support for running fsck on active filesystems. 2001-03-21 04:09:01 +00:00
mckusick
61db3f4296 Fixes to track snapshot copy-on-write checking in the specinfo
structure rather than assuming that the device vnode would reside
in the FFS filesystem (which is obviously a broken assumption with
the device filesystem).
2001-03-07 07:09:55 +00:00
iedowse
5cc8ff22fa The ffs superblock includes a 128-byte region for use by temporary
in-core pointers to summary information. An array in this region
(fs_csp) could overflow on filesystems with a very large number of
cylinder groups (~16000 on i386 with 8k blocks). When this happens,
other fields in the superblock get corrupted, and fsck refuses to
check the filesystem.

Solve this problem by replacing the fs_csp array in 'struct fs'
with a single pointer, and add padding to keep the length of the
128-byte region fixed. Update the kernel and userland utilities
to use just this single pointer.

With this change, the kernel no longer makes use of the superblock
fields 'fs_csshift' and 'fs_csmask'. Add a comment to newfs/mkfs.c
to indicate that these fields must be calculated for compatibility
with older kernels.

Reviewed by:	mckusick
2001-01-15 18:30:40 +00:00
mckusick
5e6b00a0a7 Get userland visible flags added for snapshots to give a few days
advance preparation for them to get migrated into place so that
subsequent changes in utilities will not fail to compile for lack
of up-to-date header files in /usr/include.
2000-07-04 04:58:34 +00:00
mckusick
a02c1c5b8a Use 64-bit math to calculate if we have hit our freespace limit.
Necessary for coherent results on filesystems bigger than 0.5Tb.
2000-03-17 03:44:47 +00:00
peter
3b842d34e8 $Id$ -> $FreeBSD$ 1999-08-28 01:08:13 +00:00
julian
10c5ccc30a Reviewed by: dyson@freebsd.org (john Dyson), dg@root.com (david greenman)
Submitted by:	Kirk McKusick (mcKusick@mckusick.com)
Obtained from:  WHistle development tree
1998-03-08 09:59:44 +00:00