unmount. There is no need to suspend read-only filesystem, while we
need suspension on modificable mount point.
Reported by: rwatson
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 1 week
unmount time) in the helper vfs_write_suspend_umnt(). Use it instead
of two inline copies in FFS.
Fix the bug in the FFS unmount, when suspension failed, the ufs
extattrs were not reinitialized.
Tested by: pho
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 2 weeks
If you had a UFS2 FS that didn't have it's super block at SBLOCK_UFS2,
you'll end up corrupting your FS as the superblock is updated and written
to a different location...
makefs used to put the superblock at SBLOCK_UFS1 for UFS 2 FS's causing
this issue...
Reviewed by: silience from mckusick
MFC after: 1 week
Ensure that softdep_unmount() and softdep_setup_sbupdate()
only get called for filesystems running with soft dependencies.
No functional change.
Tested by: Peter Holm and Scott Long
Sponsored by: Netflix
vfs_busy(mp);
vfs_write_suspend(mp);
which are problematic if other thread starts unmount between two
calls. The unmount starts a write, while vfs_write_suspend() drain
writers. On the other hand, unmount drains busy references, causing
the deadlock.
Add a flag argument to vfs_write_suspend and require the callers of it
to specify VS_SKIP_UNMOUNT flag, when the call is performed not in the
mount path, i.e. the covered vnode is not locked. The suspension is
not attempted if VS_SKIP_UNMOUNT is specified and unmount is in
progress.
Reported and tested by: Andreas Longwitz <longwitz@incore.de>
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
MFC after: 3 weeks
Revert the simplification of the i_gen calculation.
It is still a good idea to avoid zero values and for the case
of old filesystems there is probably no advantage in using
the complete 32 bits anyways.
Discussed with: bde
MFC after: 4 weeks
Further simplify the i_gen calculation for older disks.
Having a zero here is not really a problem and this is more
similar to what is done in newfs_random().
Reported by: Xin Li
MFC after: 4 weeks
In UFS, i_gen is a random generated value and there is not way for
it to be negative. Actually, the value of i_gen is just used to
match bit patterns and it is of not consequence if the values are
signed or not.
Following other filesystems, set it to unsigned and use it as such,
Discussed by: mckusick
Reviewed by: mckusick (previous version)
MFC after: 4 weeks
- Use a shared bufobj lock in getblk() and inmem().
- Convert softdep's lk to rwlock to match the bufobj lock.
- Move INFREECNT to b_flags and protect it with the buf lock.
- Remove unnecessary locking around bremfree() and BKGRDINPROG.
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Discussed with: mckusick, kib, mdf
- Don't insert BKGRDMARKER bufs into the splay or dirty/clean buf lists.
No consumers need to find them there and it complicates the tree.
These flags are all FFS specific and could be moved out of the buf
cache.
- Use pbgetvp() and pbrelvp() to associate the background and journal
bufs with the vp. Not only is this much cheaper it makes more sense
for these transient bufs.
- Fix the assertions in pbget* and pbrel*. It's not safe to check list
pointers which were never initialized. Use the BX flags instead. We
also check B_PAGING in reassignbuf() so this should cover all cases.
Discussed with: kib, mckusick, attilio
Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division
Current dqflush() panics when a dquot with with non-zero refcount is
encountered. The situation is possible, because quotas are turned off
before softdep workitem queue if flushed, due to the quota file writes
might create softdep workitems.
Make the encountering an active dquot in dqflush() not fatal, return
the error from quotaoff() instead. Ignore the quotaoff() failures
when ffs_flushfiles() is called in the course of softdep_flushfiles()
loop, until the last iteration. At the last loop, the quotas must be
closed, and because SU workitems should be already flushed, the
references to dquot are gone.
Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Reported and tested by: pho
Reviewed by: mckusick
MFC after: 2 weeks
received granular locking) but the comment present in UFS has been
copied all over other filesystems code incorrectly for several times.
Removes comments that makes no sense now.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
over just the active vnodes associated with a mount point to replace
MNT_VNODE_FOREACH_ALL in the vfs_msync, ffs_sync_lazy, and qsync
routines.
The vfs_msync routine is run every 30 seconds for every writably
mounted filesystem. It ensures that any files mmap'ed from the
filesystem with modified pages have those pages queued to be
written back to the file from which they are mapped.
The ffs_lazy_sync and qsync routines are run every 30 seconds for
every writably mounted UFS/FFS filesystem. The ffs_lazy_sync routine
ensures that any files that have been accessed in the previous
30 seconds have had their access times queued for updating in the
filesystem. The qsync routine ensures that any files with modified
quotas have those quotas queued to be written back to their
associated quota file.
In a system configured with 250,000 vnodes, less than 1000 are
typically active at any point in time. Prior to this change all
250,000 vnodes would be locked and inspected twice every minute
by the syncer. For UFS/FFS filesystems they would be locked and
inspected six times every minute (twice by each of these three
routines since each of these routines does its own pass over the
vnodes associated with a mount point). With this change the syncer
now locks and inspects only the tiny set of vnodes that are active.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 2 weeks
The primary changes are that the user of the interface no longer
needs to manage the mount-mutex locking and that the vnode that
is returned has its mutex locked (thus avoiding the need to check
to see if its is DOOMED or other possible end of life senarios).
To minimize compatibility issues for third-party developers, the
old MNT_VNODE_FOREACH interface will remain available so that this
change can be MFC'ed to 9. Following the MFC to 9, MNT_VNODE_FOREACH
will be removed in head.
The reason for this update is to prepare for the addition of the
MNT_VNODE_FOREACH_ACTIVE interface that will loop over just the
active vnodes associated with a mount point (typically less than
1% of the vnodes associated with the mount point).
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: Peter Holm
MFC after: 2 weeks
to enable the collection of counts of synchronous and asynchronous
reads and writes for its associated filesystem. The counts are
displayed using `mount -v'.
Ensure that buffers used for paging indicate the vnode from
which they are operating so that counts of paging I/O operations
from the filesystem are collected.
This checkin only adds the setting of the mount point for the
UFS/FFS filesystem, but it would be trivial to add the setting
and clearing of the mount point at filesystem mount/unmount
time for other filesystems too.
Reviewed by: kib
every 30 seconds. This spike in I/O caused the system to pause every
30 seconds which was quite annoying. So, the way that sync worked
was changed so that when a vnode was first dirtied, it was put on
a 30-second cleaning queue (see the syncer_workitem_pending queues
in kern/vfs_subr.c). If the file has not been written or deleted
after 30 seconds, the syncer pushes it out. As the syncer runs once
per second, dirty files are trickled out slowly over the 30-second
period instead of all at once by a call to sync(2).
The one drawback to this is that it does not cover the filesystem
metadata. To handle the metadata, vfs_allocate_syncvnode() is called
to create a "filesystem syncer vnode" at mount time which cycles
around the cleaning queue being sync'ed every 30 seconds. In the
original design, the only things it would sync for UFS were the
filesystem metadata: inode blocks, cylinder group bitmaps, and the
superblock (e.g., by VOP_FSYNC'ing devvp, the device vnode from
which the filesystem is mounted).
Somewhere in its path to integration with FreeBSD the flushing of
the filesystem syncer vnode got changed to sync every vnode associated
with the filesystem. The result of this change is to return to the
old filesystem-wide flush every 30-seconds behavior and makes the
whole 30-second delay per vnode useless.
This change goes back to the originally intended trickle out sync
behavior. Key to ensuring that all the intended semantics are
preserved (e.g., that all inode updates get flushed within a bounded
period of time) is that all inode modifications get pushed to their
corresponding inode blocks so that the metadata flush by the
filesystem syncer vnode gets them to the disk in a timely way.
Thanks to Konstantin Belousov (kib@) for doing the audit and commit
-r231122 which ensures that all of these updates are being made.
Reviewed by: kib
Tested by: scottl
MFC after: 2 weeks
vfs_mount_error error message facility provided by the nmount
interface.
Clean up formatting of mount warnings which still need to use
kernel printf's since they do not return errors.
Requested by: Craig Rodrigues <rodrigc@crodrigues.org>
MFC after: 2 weeks
so that it is visible to userland programs. This change enables
the `mount' command with no arguments to be able to show if a
filesystem is mounted using journaled soft updates as opposed
to just normal soft updates.
Approved by: re (bz)
(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.
filesystems to be opened for writing. This functionality used to
be special-cased for just the root filesystem, but with this change
is now available for all UFS filesystems. This change is needed for
journaled soft updates recovery.
Discussed with: Jeff Roberson
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
method, so that callers can indicate the minimum vnode
locking requirement. This will allow some file systems to choose
to return a LK_SHARED locked vnode when LK_SHARED is specified
for the flags argument. This patch only adds the flag. It
does not change any file system to use it and all callers
specify LK_EXCLUSIVE, so file system semantics are not changed.
Reviewed by: kib
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
As result, failed softdep_mount() might leave up to two vnodes on the
mp mountlist, preventing mnt_ref from going to zero.
Call ffs_flushfiles() after failed softdep_mount() to clean mountlist.
Initial report by: Garrett Cooper
Reproduced and tested by: pho
breakage for old mount(2) syscall, since most struct <filesystem>_args
embed export_args. The mount(2) is supposed to provide ABI
compatibility for pre-nmount mount(8) binaries, so restore ABI to
pre-r184588.
Requested and reviewed by: bde
MFC after: 2 weeks
LK_CANRECURSE after a lock is created. Use them to implement macros that
otherwise manipulated the flags directly. Assert that the associated
lockmgr lock is exclusively locked by the current thread when manipulating
these flags to ensure the flag updates are safe. This last change required
some minor shuffling in a few filesystems to exclusively lock a brand new
vnode slightly earlier.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 3 days
implementation in 8.0 and later as its flags field does not hold dynamic
state such as waiters flags, but is only modified in lockinit() aside
from VN_LOCK_*().
Discussed with: attilio
changed to defer the setting of VN_LOCK_ASHARE() (which clears LK_NOSHARE
in the vnode lock's flags) until after they had determined if the vnode was
a FIFO. This occurs after the vnode has been inserted a VFS hash or some
similar table, so it is possible for another thread to find this vnode via
vget() on an i-node number and block on the vnode lock. If the lockmgr
interlock (vnode interlock for vnode locks) is not held when clearing the
LK_NOSHARE flag, then the lk_flags field can be clobbered. As a result
the thread blocked on the vnode lock may never get woken up. Fix this by
holding the vnode interlock while modifying the lock flags in this case.
MFC after: 3 days
loader(8)
In r193192 loader(8) has grown an ability to pass root mount options
from fstab via vfs.root.mountfrom.options. Unfortunately, some options
that can be present in fstab are for userland only and lead to root
mounting failure when seen by kernel.
Rather than teaching loader about FFS-specific options that should be
filtered out, ffs_mount recognizes those options as valid, but ignores
and deletes[1] them.
[1] is suggested by jh.
PR: kern/141050
Reported by: many
Reviewed by: jh, bde
MFC after: 4 days