When we cross into a different subvol when doing a lookup we will run the orhpan
cleanup. If this fails however we do not drop the ref to the inode we were
looking up before we return an error, which leads to busy inodes on umount.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Dave pointed out a problem where if you filled up a file system as much as
possible you couldn't remove any files. The whole unlink reservation thing is
convoluted because it tries to guess if it's going to add space to unlink
something or not, and has all these odd uncommented cases where it simply does
not try. So to fix this I've added a way to conditionally steal from the global
reserve if we can't make our normal reservation. If we have more than half the
space in the global reserve free we will go ahead and steal from the global
reserve. With this patch Dave's reproducer now works and I can rm all the files
on the file system. Thanks,
Reported-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The reason we introduce per-subvolume ordered extent list is the same
as the per-subvolume delalloc inode list.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
When we create a snapshot, we need flush all delalloc inodes in the
fs, just flushing the inodes in the source tree is OK. So we introduce
per-subvolume delalloc inode list.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
btrfs_read_fs_root_no_name() already checks if btrfs_root_refs()
is zero and returns ENOENT in this case. There is no need to do
it again in six places.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Behrens <sbehrens@giantdisaster.de>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"This is an assortment of crash fixes"
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: stop all workers before cleaning up roots
Btrfs: fix use-after-free bug during umount
Btrfs: init relocate extent_io_tree with a mapping
btrfs: Drop inode if inode root is NULL
Btrfs: don't delete fs_roots until after we cleanup the transaction
There is a path where btrfs_drop_inode() is called with its inode's root
is NULL: In btrfs_new_inode(), when btrfs_set_inode_index() fails,
iput() is called. We should handle this case before taking look at the
root->root_item.
Signed-off-by: Naohiro Aota <naota@elisp.net>
Reviewed-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Currently there is no way to truncate partial page where the end
truncate point is not at the end of the page. This is because it was not
needed and the functionality was enough for file system truncate
operation to work properly. However more file systems now support punch
hole feature and it can benefit from mm supporting truncating page just
up to the certain point.
Specifically, with this functionality truncate_inode_pages_range() can
be changed so it supports truncating partial page at the end of the
range (currently it will BUG_ON() if 'end' is not at the end of the
page).
This commit changes the invalidatepage() address space operation
prototype to accept range to be invalidated and update all the instances
for it.
We also change the block_invalidatepage() in the same way and actually
make a use of the new length argument implementing range invalidation.
Actual file system implementations will follow except the file systems
where the changes are really simple and should not change the behaviour
in any way .Implementation for truncate_page_range() which will be able
to accept page unaligned ranges will follow as well.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Czerner <lczerner@redhat.com>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Hugh Dickins <hughd@google.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"Miao Xie has been very busy, fixing races and enospc problems and many
other small but important pieces.
Alexandre Oliva discovered some problems with how our error handling
was interacting with the block layer and for now has disabled our
partial handling of sub-page writes. The real sub-page work is in a
series of patches from IBM that we still need to integrate and test.
The code Alexandre has turned off was really incomplete.
Josef has more error handling fixes and an important fix for the new
skinny extent format.
This also has my fix for the tracepoint crash from late in 3.9. It's
the first stage in a larger clean up to get rid of btrfs_bio and make
a proper bioset for all the items we need to tack into the bio. For
now the bioset only holds our mirror_num and stripe_index, but for the
next merge window I'll shuffle more in."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (25 commits)
Btrfs: use a btrfs bioset instead of abusing bio internals
Btrfs: make sure roots are assigned before freeing their nodes
Btrfs: explicitly use global_block_rsv for quota_tree
btrfs: do away with non-whole_page extent I/O
Btrfs: don't invoke btrfs_invalidate_inodes() in the spin lock context
Btrfs: remove BUG_ON() in btrfs_read_fs_tree_no_radix()
Btrfs: pause the space balance when remounting to R/O
Btrfs: fix unprotected root node of the subvolume's inode rb-tree
Btrfs: fix accessing a freed tree root
Btrfs: return errno if possible when we fail to allocate memory
Btrfs: update the global reserve if it is empty
Btrfs: don't steal the reserved space from the global reserve if their space type is different
Btrfs: optimize the error handle of use_block_rsv()
Btrfs: don't use global block reservation for inode cache truncation
Btrfs: don't abort the current transaction if there is no enough space for inode cache
Correct allowed raid levels on balance.
Btrfs: fix possible memory leak in replace_path()
Btrfs: fix possible memory leak in the find_parent_nodes()
Btrfs: don't allow device replace on RAID5/RAID6
Btrfs: handle running extent ops with skinny metadata
...
Btrfs has been pointer tagging bi_private and using bi_bdev
to store the stripe index and mirror number of failed IOs.
As bios bubble back up through the call chain, we use these
to decide if and how to retry our IOs. They are also used
to count IO failures on a per device basis.
Recently a bio tracepoint was added lead to crashes because
we were abusing bi_bdev.
This commit adds a btrfs bioset, and creates explicit fields
for the mirror number and stripe index. The plan is to
extend this structure for all of the fields currently in
struct btrfs_bio, which will mean one less kmalloc in
our IO path.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Reported-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
The root node of the rb-tree may be changed, so we should get it under
the lock. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
inode_tree_del() will move the tree root into the dead root list, and
then the tree will be destroyed by the cleaner. So if we remove the
delayed node which is cached in the inode after inode_tree_del(),
we may access a freed tree root. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We need to set return value explicitly, otherwise we'll lose the error
value.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs update from Chris Mason:
"These are mostly fixes. The biggest exceptions are Josef's skinny
extents and Jan Schmidt's code to rebuild our quota indexes if they
get out of sync (or you enable quotas on an existing filesystem).
The skinny extents are off by default because they are a new variation
on the extent allocation tree format. btrfstune -x enables them, and
the new format makes the extent allocation tree about 30% smaller.
I rebased this a few days ago to rework Dave Sterba's crc checks on
the super block, but almost all of these go back to rc6, since I
though 3.9 was due any minute.
The biggest missing fix is the tracepoint bug that was hit late in
3.9. I ran into problems with that in overnight testing and I'm still
tracking it down. I'll definitely have that fixed for rc2."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (101 commits)
Btrfs: allow superblock mismatch from older mkfs
btrfs: enhance superblock checks
btrfs: fix misleading variable name for flags
btrfs: use unsigned long type for extent state bits
Btrfs: improve the loop of scrub_stripe
btrfs: read entire device info under lock
btrfs: remove unused gfp mask parameter from release_extent_buffer callchain
btrfs: handle errors returned from get_tree_block_key
btrfs: make static code static & remove dead code
Btrfs: deal with errors in write_dev_supers
Btrfs: remove almost all of the BUG()'s from tree-log.c
Btrfs: deal with free space cache errors while replaying log
Btrfs: automatic rescan after "quota enable" command
Btrfs: rescan for qgroups
Btrfs: split btrfs_qgroup_account_ref into four functions
Btrfs: allocate new chunks if the space is not enough for global rsv
Btrfs: separate sequence numbers for delayed ref tracking and tree mod log
btrfs: move leak debug code to functions
Btrfs: return free space in cow error path
Btrfs: set UUID in root_item for created trees
...
Big patch, but all it does is add statics to functions which
are in fact static, then remove the associated dead-code fallout.
removed functions:
btrfs_iref_to_path()
__btrfs_lookup_delayed_deletion_item()
__btrfs_search_delayed_insertion_item()
__btrfs_search_delayed_deletion_item()
find_eb_for_page()
btrfs_find_block_group()
range_straddles_pages()
extent_range_uptodate()
btrfs_file_extent_length()
btrfs_scrub_cancel_devid()
btrfs_start_transaction_lflush()
btrfs_print_tree() is left because it is used for debugging.
btrfs_start_transaction_lflush() and btrfs_reada_detach() are
left for symmetry.
ulist.c functions are left, another patch will take care of those.
Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Replace some BUG_ONs with proper handling and take allocated space back to
free space cache for later use.
We don't have to worry about extent maps since they'd be freed in releasepage
path.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This is the same as the fix from commit
Btrfs: fix bad extent logging
but for O_DIRECT. I missed this when I fixed the problem originally, we were
still using the em for the orig_start and orig_block_len, which would be the
merged extent. We need to use the actual extent from the on disk file extent
item, which we have to lookup to make sure it's ok to nocow anyway so just pass
in some pointers to hold this info. Thanks,
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
If argument 'trans' is unnecessary in the function where
fixup_low_keys() is called, 'trans' is deleted.
Signed-off-by: Tsutomu Itoh <t-itoh@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
__btrfs_unlink_inode() aborts its transaction when it sees errors after
it removes the directory item. But it missed the case where
btrfs_del_dir_entries_in_log() returns an error. If this happens then
the unlink appears to fail but the items have been removed without
updating the directory size. The directory then has leaked bytes in
i_size and can never be removed.
Adding the missing transaction abort at least makes this failure
consistent with the other failure cases.
I noticed this while reading the code after someone on irc reported
having a directory with i_size but no entries. I tested it by forcing
btrfs_del_dir_entries_in_log() to return -ENOMEM.
Signed-off-by: Zach Brown <zab@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
A user sent me a btrfs-image of a file system that was panicing on mount during
the log recovery. I had originally thought these problems were from a bug in
the free space cache code, but that was just a symptom of the problem. The
problem is if your application does something like this
[prealloc][prealloc][prealloc]
the internal extent maps will merge those all together into one extent map, even
though on disk they are 3 separate extents. So if you go to write into one of
these ranges the extent map will be right since we use the physical extent when
doing the write, but when we log the extents they will use the wrong sizes for
the remainder prealloc space. If this doesn't happen to trip up the free space
cache (which it won't in a lot of cases) then you will get bogus entries in your
extent tree which will screw stuff up later. The data and such will still work,
but everything else is broken. This patch fixes this by not allowing extents
that are on the modified list to be merged. This has the side effect that we
are no longer adding everything to the modified list all the time, which means
we now have to call btrfs_drop_extents every time we log an extent into the
tree. So this allows me to drop all this speciality code I was using to get
around calling btrfs_drop_extents. With this patch the testcase I've created no
longer creates a bogus file system after replaying the log. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
When logging changed extents I was logging ram_bytes as the current length,
which isn't correct, it's supposed to be the ram bytes of the original extent.
This is for compression where even if we split the extent we need to know the
ram bytes so when we uncompress the extent we know how big it will be. This was
still working out right with compression for some reason but I think we were
getting lucky. It was definitely off for prealloc which is why I noticed it,
btrfsck was complaining about it. With this patch btrfsck no longer complains
after a log replay. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The messages
btrfs: unlinked 123 orphans
btrfs: truncated 456 orphans
are not useful to regular users and raise questions whether there are
problems with the filesystem.
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
With more than one btrfs volume mounted, it can be very difficult to find
out which volume is hitting an error. btrfs_error() will print this, but
it is currently rigged as more of a fatal error handler, while many of
the printk()s are currently for debugging and yet-unhandled cases.
This patch just changes the functions where the device information is
already available. Some cases remain where the root or fs_info is not
passed to the function emitting the error.
This may introduce some confusion with volumes backed by multiple devices
emitting errors referring to the primary device in the set instead of the
one on which the error occurred.
Use btrfs_printk(fs_info, format, ...) rather than writing the device
string every time, and introduce macro wrappers ala XFS for brevity.
Since the function already cannot be used for continuations, print a
newline as part of the btrfs_printk() message rather than at each caller.
Signed-off-by: Simon Kirby <sim@hostway.ca>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We currently store the first key of the tree block inside the reference for the
tree block in the extent tree. This takes up quite a bit of space. Make a new
key type for metadata which holds the level as the offset and completely removes
storing the btrfs_tree_block_info inside the extent ref. This reduces the size
from 51 bytes to 33 bytes per extent reference for each tree block. In practice
this results in a 30-35% decrease in the size of our extent tree, which means we
COW less and can keep more of the extent tree in memory which makes our heavy
metadata operations go much faster. This is not an automatic format change, you
must enable it at mkfs time or with btrfstune. This patch deals with having
metadata stored as either the old format or the new format so it is easy to
convert. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"We've had a busy two weeks of bug fixing. The biggest patches in here
are some long standing early-enospc problems (Josef) and a very old
race where compression and mmap combine forces to lose writes (me).
I'm fairly sure the mmap bug goes all the way back to the introduction
of the compression code, which is proof that fsx doesn't trigger every
possible mmap corner after all.
I'm sure you'll notice one of these is from this morning, it's a small
and isolated use-after-free fix in our scrub error reporting. I
double checked it here."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: don't drop path when printing out tree errors in scrub
Btrfs: fix wrong return value of btrfs_lookup_csum()
Btrfs: fix wrong reservation of csums
Btrfs: fix double free in the btrfs_qgroup_account_ref()
Btrfs: limit the global reserve to 512mb
Btrfs: hold the ordered operations mutex when waiting on ordered extents
Btrfs: fix space accounting for unlink and rename
Btrfs: fix space leak when we fail to reserve metadata space
Btrfs: fix EIO from btrfs send in is_extent_unchanged for punched holes
Btrfs: fix race between mmap writes and compression
Btrfs: fix memory leak in btrfs_create_tree()
Btrfs: fix locking on ROOT_REPLACE operations in tree mod log
Btrfs: fix missing qgroup reservation before fallocating
Btrfs: handle a bogus chunk tree nicely
Btrfs: update to use fs_state bit
We reserve the space for csums only when we write data into a file, in
the other cases, such as tree log, log replay, we don't do reservation,
so we can use the reservation of the transaction handle just for the former.
And for the latter, we should use the tree's own reservation. But the
function - btrfs_csum_file_blocks() didn't differentiate between these
two types of the cases, fix it.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We are way over-reserving for unlink and rename. Rename is just some random
huge number and unlink accounts for tree log operations that don't actually
happen during unlink, not to mention the tree log doesn't take from the trans
block rsv anyway so it's completely useless. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Btrfs uses page_mkwrite to ensure stable pages during
crc calculations and mmap workloads. We call clear_page_dirty_for_io
before we do any crcs, and this forces any application with the file
mapped to wait for the crc to finish before it is allowed to change
the file.
With compression on, the clear_page_dirty_for_io step is happening after
we've compressed the pages. This means the applications might be
changing the pages while we are compressing them, and some of those
modifications might not hit the disk.
This commit adds the clear_page_dirty_for_io before compression starts
and makes sure to redirty the page if we have to fallback to
uncompressed IO as well.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Reported-by: Alexandre Oliva <oliva@gnu.org>
cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"Eric's rcu barrier patch fixes a long standing problem with our
unmount code hanging on to devices in workqueue helpers. Liu Bo
nailed down a difficult assertion for in-memory extent mappings."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: fix warning of free_extent_map
Btrfs: fix warning when creating snapshots
Btrfs: return as soon as possible when edquot happens
Btrfs: return EIO if we have extent tree corruption
btrfs: use rcu_barrier() to wait for bdev puts at unmount
Btrfs: remove btrfs_try_spin_lock
Btrfs: get better concurrency for snapshot-aware defrag work
Using spinning case instead of blocking will result in better concurrency
overall.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"These are scattered fixes and one performance improvement. The
biggest functional change is in how we throttle metadata changes. The
new code bumps our average file creation rate up by ~13% in fs_mark,
and lowers CPU usage.
Stefan bisected out a regression in our allocation code that made
balance loop on extents larger than 256MB."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: improve the delayed inode throttling
Btrfs: fix a mismerge in btrfs_balance()
Btrfs: enforce min_bytes parameter during extent allocation
Btrfs: allow running defrag in parallel to administrative tasks
Btrfs: avoid deadlock on transaction waiting list
Btrfs: do not BUG_ON on aborted situation
Btrfs: do not BUG_ON in prepare_to_reloc
Btrfs: free all recorded tree blocks on error
Btrfs: build up error handling for merge_reloc_roots
Btrfs: check for NULL pointer in updating reloc roots
Btrfs: fix unclosed transaction handler when the async transaction commitment fails
Btrfs: fix wrong handle at error path of create_snapshot() when the commit fails
Btrfs: use set_nlink if our i_nlink is 0
Commit 24542bf7ea changed preallocation of
extents to cap the max size we try to allocate. It's a valid change,
but the extent reservation code is also used by balance, and that
can't tolerate a smaller extent being allocated.
__btrfs_prealloc_file_range already has a min_size parameter, which is
used by relocation to request a specific extent size. This commit
adds an extra check to enforce that minimum extent size.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Reported-by: Stefan Behrens <sbehrens@giantdisaster.de>
Pull btrfs update from Chris Mason:
"The biggest feature in the pull is the new (and still experimental)
raid56 code that David Woodhouse started long ago. I'm still working
on the parity logging setup that will avoid inconsistent parity after
a crash, so this is only for testing right now. But, I'd really like
to get it out to a broader audience to hammer out any performance
issues or other problems.
scrub does not yet correct errors on raid5/6 either.
Josef has another pass at fsync performance. The big change here is
to combine waiting for metadata with waiting for data, which is a big
latency win. It is also step one toward using atomics from the
hardware during a commit.
Mark Fasheh has a new way to use btrfs send/receive to send only the
metadata changes. SUSE is using this to make snapper more efficient
at finding changes between snapshosts.
Snapshot-aware defrag is also included.
Otherwise we have a large number of fixes and cleanups. Eric Sandeen
wins the award for removing the most lines, and I'm hoping we steal
this idea from XFS over and over again."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (118 commits)
btrfs: fixup/remove module.h usage as required
Btrfs: delete inline extents when we find them during logging
btrfs: try harder to allocate raid56 stripe cache
Btrfs: cleanup to make the function btrfs_delalloc_reserve_metadata more logic
Btrfs: don't call btrfs_qgroup_free if just btrfs_qgroup_reserve fails
Btrfs: remove reduplicate check about root in the function btrfs_clean_quota_tree
Btrfs: return ENOMEM rather than use BUG_ON when btrfs_alloc_path fails
Btrfs: fix missing deleted items in btrfs_clean_quota_tree
btrfs: use only inline_pages from extent buffer
Btrfs: fix wrong reserved space when deleting a snapshot/subvolume
Btrfs: fix wrong reserved space in qgroup during snap/subv creation
Btrfs: remove unnecessary dget_parent/dput when creating the pending snapshot
btrfs: remove a printk from scan_one_device
Btrfs: fix NULL pointer after aborting a transaction
Btrfs: fix memory leak of log roots
Btrfs: copy everything if we've created an inline extent
btrfs: cleanup for open-coded alignment
Btrfs: do not change inode flags in rename
Btrfs: use reserved space for creating a snapshot
clear chunk_alloc flag on retryable failure
...
I noticed while looking into a tree logging bug that we aren't logging inline
extents properly. Since this requires copying and it shouldn't happen too often
just force us to copy everything for the inode into the tree log when we have an
inline extent. With this patch we have valid data after a crash when we write
an inline extent. Thanks,
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull vfs pile (part one) from Al Viro:
"Assorted stuff - cleaning namei.c up a bit, fixing ->d_name/->d_parent
locking violations, etc.
The most visible changes here are death of FS_REVAL_DOT (replaced with
"has ->d_weak_revalidate()") and a new helper getting from struct file
to inode. Some bits of preparation to xattr method interface changes.
Misc patches by various people sent this cycle *and* ocfs2 fixes from
several cycles ago that should've been upstream right then.
PS: the next vfs pile will be xattr stuff."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs: (46 commits)
saner proc_get_inode() calling conventions
proc: avoid extra pde_put() in proc_fill_super()
fs: change return values from -EACCES to -EPERM
fs/exec.c: make bprm_mm_init() static
ocfs2/dlm: use GFP_ATOMIC inside a spin_lock
ocfs2: fix possible use-after-free with AIO
ocfs2: Fix oops in ocfs2_fast_symlink_readpage() code path
get_empty_filp()/alloc_file() leave both ->f_pos and ->f_version zero
target: writev() on single-element vector is pointless
export kernel_write(), convert open-coded instances
fs: encode_fh: return FILEID_INVALID if invalid fid_type
kill f_vfsmnt
vfs: kill FS_REVAL_DOT by adding a d_weak_revalidate dentry op
nfsd: handle vfs_getattr errors in acl protocol
switch vfs_getattr() to struct path
default SET_PERSONALITY() in linux/elf.h
ceph: prepopulate inodes only when request is aborted
d_hash_and_lookup(): export, switch open-coded instances
9p: switch v9fs_set_create_acl() to inode+fid, do it before d_instantiate()
9p: split dropping the acls from v9fs_set_create_acl()
...
Though most of the btrfs codes are using ALIGN macro for page alignment,
there are still some codes using open-coded alignment like the
following:
------
u64 mask = ((u64)root->stripesize - 1);
u64 ret = (val + mask) & ~mask;
------
Or even hidden one:
------
num_bytes = (end - start + blocksize) & ~(blocksize - 1);
------
Sometimes these open-coded alignment is not so easy to understand for
newbie like me.
This commit changes the open-coded alignment to the ALIGN macro for a
better readability.
Also there is a previous patch from David Sterba with similar changes,
but the patch is for 3.2 kernel and seems not merged.
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-btrfs/msg12747.html
Cc: David Sterba <dave@jikos.cz>
Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Before we forced to change a file's NOCOW and COMPRESS flag due to
the parent directory's, but this ends up a bad idea, because it
confuses end users a lot about file's NOCOW status, eg. if someone
change a file to NOCOW via 'chattr' and then rename it in the current
directory which is without NOCOW attribute, the file will lose the
NOCOW flag silently.
This diables 'change flags in rename', so from now on we'll only
inherit flags from the parent directory on creation stage while in
other places we can use 'chattr' to set NOCOW or COMPRESS flags.
Reported-by: Marios Titas <redneb8888@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
A user reported hitting the BUG_ON() in btrfs_finished_ordered_io() where we had
csums on a NOCOW extent. This can happen if we have NODATACOW set but not
NODATASUM set, which can happen in two cases, either we mount with -o nodatacow
and then write into preallocated space, or chattr +C a directory and move a file
into that directory. Liu has fixed the move case in a different place, but this
fixes the mount -o nodatacow case. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
When running the 083th case of xfstests on the filesystem with
"compress-force=lzo", the following WARNINGs were triggered.
WARNING: at fs/btrfs/inode.c:7908
WARNING: at fs/btrfs/inode.c:7909
WARNING: at fs/btrfs/inode.c:7911
WARNING: at fs/btrfs/extent-tree.c:4510
WARNING: at fs/btrfs/extent-tree.c:4511
This problem was introduced by the patch "Btrfs: fix deadlock due
to unsubmitted". In this patch, there are two bugs which caused
the above problem.
The 1st one is a off-by-one bug, if the DIO write return 0, it is
also a short write, we need release the reserved space for it. But
we didn't do it in that patch. Fix it by change "ret > 0" to
"ret >= 0".
The 2nd one is ->outstanding_extents was increased twice when
a short write happened. As we know, ->outstanding_extents is
a counter to keep track of the number of extent items we may
use duo to delalloc, when we reserve the free space for a
delalloc write, we assume that the write will introduce just
one extent item, so we increase ->outstanding_extents by 1 at
that time. And then we will increase it every time we split the
write, it is done at the beginning of btrfs_get_blocks_direct().
So when a short write happens, we needn't increase
->outstanding_extents again. But this patch done.
In order to fix the 2nd problem, I re-write the logic for
->outstanding_extents operation. We don't increase it at the
beginning of btrfs_get_blocks_direct(), instead, we just
increase it when the split actually happens.
Reported-by: Mitch Harder <mitch.harder@sabayonlinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
This comes from one of btrfs's project ideas,
As we defragment files, we break any sharing from other snapshots.
The balancing code will preserve the sharing, and defrag needs to grow this
as well.
Now we're able to fill the blank with this patch, in which we make full use of
backref walking stuff.
Here is the basic idea,
o set the writeback ranges started by defragment with flag EXTENT_DEFRAG
o at endio, after we finish updating fs tree, we use backref walking to find
all parents of the ranges and re-link them with the new COWed file layout by
adding corresponding backrefs.
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Very large fallocate requests are cpu bound and result in extents with a
repeating pattern of ever decreasing size:
$ time fallocate -l 1T file
real 0m13.039s
( an excerpt of the extents from btrfs-debug-tree: )
prealloc data disk byte 1536292564992 nr 397312
prealloc data disk byte 1536292962304 nr 196608
prealloc data disk byte 1536293158912 nr 98304
prealloc data disk byte 1536293257216 nr 49152
prealloc data disk byte 1536293306368 nr 24576
prealloc data disk byte 1536293330944 nr 12288
prealloc data disk byte 1536293343232 nr 8192
prealloc data disk byte 1536293351424 nr 4096
prealloc data disk byte 1536293355520 nr 4096
prealloc data disk byte 1536293359616 nr 4096
The excessive cpu use comes from __btrfs_prealloc_file_range() trying to
allocate the entire remaining size after each extent is allocated.
btrfs_reserve_extent() repeatedly cuts this requested size in half until
it gets down to the size that the allocators can return. We limit the
problem for now by capping each reservation at 256 meg.
The small extents come from a masking bug when decreasing the requested
reservation size. The high 32bits are cleared and the remaining low
bits might happen to reserve a small size. Fix this by using
round_down() which properly casts the mask.
After these fixes huge fallocate requests are fast and result in nice
large extents:
$ time fallocate -l 1T file
real 0m0.082s
prealloc data disk byte 1112425889792 nr 268435456
prealloc data disk byte 1112694325248 nr 268435456
prealloc data disk byte 1112962760704 nr 268435456
Reported-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Zach Brown <zab@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Right now inode cache inode is treated as the same as space cache
inode, ie. keep inode in memory till putting super.
But this leads to an awkward situation.
If we're going to delete a snapshot/subvolume, btrfs will not
actually delete it and return free space, but will add it to dead
roots list until the last inode on this snap/subvol being destroyed.
Then we'll fetch deleted roots and cleanup them via cleaner thread.
So here is the problem, if we enable inode cache option, each
snap/subvol has a cached inode which is used to store inode allcation
information. And this cache inode will be kept in memory, as the above
said. So with inode cache, snap/subvol can only be added into
dead roots list during freeing roots stage in umount, so that we can
ONLY get space back after another remount(we cleanup dead roots on mount).
But the real thing is we'll no more use the snap/subvol if we mark it
deleted, so we can safely iput its cache inode when we delete snap/subvol.
Another thing is that we need to change the rules of droping inode, we
don't keep snap/subvol's cache inode in memory till end so that we can
add snap/subvol into dead roots list in time.
Reported-by: Mitch Harder <mitch.harder@sabayonlinux.org>
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This idea is from ext4. By this patch, we can make the dio write parallel,
and improve the performance. But because we can not update isize without
i_mutex, the unlocked dio write just can be done in front of the EOF.
We needn't worry about the race between dio write and truncate, because the
truncate need wait untill all the dio write end.
And we also needn't worry about the race between dio write and punch hole,
because we have extent lock to protect our operation.
I ran fio to test the performance of this feature.
== Hardware ==
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E7500 @ 2.93GHz
Mem: 2GB
SSD: Intel X25-M 120GB (Test Partition: 60GB)
== config file ==
[global]
ioengine=psync
direct=1
bs=4k
size=32G
runtime=60
directory=/mnt/btrfs/
filename=testfile
group_reporting
thread
[file1]
numjobs=1 # 2 4
rw=randwrite
== result (KBps) ==
write 1 2 4
lock 24936 24738 24726
nolock 24962 30866 32101
== result (iops) ==
write 1 2 4
lock 6234 6184 6181
nolock 6240 7716 8025
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Currently, we can do unlocked dio reads, but the following race
is possible:
dio_read_task truncate_task
->btrfs_setattr()
->btrfs_direct_IO
->__blockdev_direct_IO
->btrfs_get_block
->btrfs_truncate()
#alloc truncated blocks
#to other inode
->submit_io()
#INFORMATION LEAK
In order to avoid this problem, we must serialize unlocked dio reads with
truncate. There are two approaches:
- use extent lock to protect the extent that we truncate
- use inode_dio_wait() to make sure the truncating task will wait for
the read DIO.
If we use the 1st one, we will meet the endless truncation problem due to
the nonlocked read DIO after we implement the nonlocked write DIO. It is
because we still need invoke inode_dio_wait() avoid the race between write
DIO and truncation. By that time, we have to introduce
btrfs_inode_{block, resume}_nolock_dio()
again. That is we have to implement this patch again, so I choose the 2nd
way to fix the problem.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The deadlock problem happened when running fsstress(a test program in LTP).
Steps to reproduce:
# mkfs.btrfs -b 100M <partition>
# mount <partition> <mnt>
# <Path>/fsstress -p 3 -n 10000000 -d <mnt>
The reason is:
btrfs_direct_IO()
|->do_direct_IO()
|->get_page()
|->get_blocks()
| |->btrfs_delalloc_resereve_space()
| |->btrfs_add_ordered_extent() ------- Add a new ordered extent
|->dio_send_cur_page(page0) -------------- We didn't submit bio here
|->get_page()
|->get_blocks()
|->btrfs_delalloc_resereve_space()
|->flush_space()
|->btrfs_start_ordered_extent()
|->wait_event() ---------- Wait the completion of
the ordered extent that is
mentioned above
But because we didn't submit the bio that is mentioned above, the ordered
extent can not complete, we would wait for its completion forever.
There are two methods which can fix this deadlock problem:
1. submit the bio before we invoke get_blocks()
2. reserve the space before we do dio
Though the 1st is the simplest way, we need modify the code of VFS, and it
is likely to break contiguous requests, and introduce performance regression
for the other filesystems.
So we have to choose the 2nd way.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Cc: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
I noticed we were getting lots of warnings with xfstest 83 because we have
reservations outstanding. This is because we moved the orphan add outside
of the truncate, but we don't actually cleanup our reservation if something
fails. This fixes the problem and I no longer see warnings. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Sometimes xfstest 83 will fail to remount the scratch device because we've
gotten ourselves so full that we cannot cleanup the orphan items. In this
case check to see if we're doing the orphan cleanup and if we are allow us
to steal our reservation from the global block rsv. With this patch I've
not been able to reproduce the failed mount problem. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
I noticed we would deadlock if we aborted a transaction while doing
compressed io. This is because we don't unlock our pages if something goes
horribly wrong. To fix this we need to make sure that we call
extent_clear_unlock_delalloc in order to unlock all the pages. If we have
to cow in the async submission thread we need to make sure to unlock our
locked_page as the cow error path will not unlock the locked page as it
depends on the caller to unlock that page. With this patch we no longer
deadlock on the page lock when we have an aborted transaction. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Dave sent me a panic where we were doing the orphan cleanup and panic'ed
trying to release our reservation from the orphan block rsv. The reason for
this is because our orphan block rsv had been free'd out from underneath us
because the transaction commit found that there were no orphan inodes
according to its count and decided to free it. This is incorrect so make
sure we inc the orphan inodes count so the accounting is all done properly.
This would also cause the warning in the orphan commit code normally if you
had any orphans to cleanup as they would only decrement the orphan count so
you'd get a negative orphan count which could cause problems during runtime.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
When a transaction aborts or there's an EIO on an ordered extent or any
error really we will not free up the space we reserved for this ordered
extent. This results in warnings from the block group cache cleanup in the
case of a transaction abort, or leaking space in the case of EIO on an
ordered extent. Fix this up by free'ing the reserved space if we have an
error at all trying to complete an ordered extent. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We need not use a global lock to protect the delalloc_bytes of the
inode, just use its own lock. In this way, we can reduce the lock
contention and ->delalloc_lock will just protect delalloc inode
list.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
fs_info->delalloc_bytes is accessed very frequently, so use percpu
counter instead of the u64 variant for it to reduce the lock
contention.
This patch also fixed the problem that we access the variant
without the lock protection.At worst, we would not flush the
delalloc inodes, and just return ENOSPC error when we still have
some free space in the fs.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The header file will then be installed under /usr/include/linux so that
userspace applications can refer to Btrfs ioctls by name and use the same
structs used internally in the kernel.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This reverts commit 2794ed013b.
Wasn't supposed to get used in btrfs_mknod, it was supposed to be in
btrfs_create, which was done in commit
9185aa587b.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
btrfs_start_delalloc_inodes() needn't traverse and flush the delalloc inodes
repeatedly. It is because we can regard the data that the users write after
we start delalloc inodes flush as the one which is after the delalloc inodes
flush is done, and we can flush it next time.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The API in tree log code has done sort of changes, and it proves that
we can benifit from using token, so do the same thing here.
function_graph tracer's timer shows that it costs nearly half time
of before(39.788us -> 22.391us).
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Since we don't actually copy the extent information from the source tree in
the fast case we don't need to wait for ordered io to be completed in order
to fsync, we just need to wait for the io to be completed. So when we're
logging our file just attach all of the ordered extents to the log, and then
when the log syncs just wait for IO_DONE on the ordered extents and then
write the super. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Use wrapper page_offset to get byte-offset into filesystem object for page.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <liubo2009@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We're running into having 50-100 orphans left over with xfstests 83
because of ENOSPC when trying to start the transaction for the inode update.
But in fact, it makes no sense in updating the inode for the new size while
we're deleting the stupid thing. This patch fixes this problem.
Reported-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This builds on David Woodhouse's original Btrfs raid5/6 implementation.
The code has changed quite a bit, blame Chris Mason for any bugs.
Read/modify/write is done after the higher levels of the filesystem have
prepared a given bio. This means the higher layers are not responsible
for building full stripes, and they don't need to query for the topology
of the extents that may get allocated during delayed allocation runs.
It also means different files can easily share the same stripe.
But, it does expose us to incorrect parity if we crash or lose power
while doing a read/modify/write cycle. This will be addressed in a
later commit.
Scrub is unable to repair crc errors on raid5/6 chunks.
Discard does not work on raid5/6 (yet)
The stripe size is fixed at 64KiB per disk. This will be tunable
in a later commit.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
We'll want to merge writes so they can fill a full RAID[56] stripe, but
not necessarily reads.
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"It turns out that we had two crc bugs when running fsx-linux in a
loop. Many thanks to Josef, Miao Xie, and Dave Sterba for nailing it
all down. Miao also has a new OOM fix in this v2 pull as well.
Ilya fixed a regression Liu Bo found in the balance ioctls for pausing
and resuming a running balance across drives.
Josef's orphan truncate patch fixes an obscure corruption we'd see
during xfstests.
Arne's patches address problems with subvolume quotas. If the user
destroys quota groups incorrectly the FS will refuse to mount.
The rest are smaller fixes and plugs for memory leaks."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (30 commits)
Btrfs: fix repeated delalloc work allocation
Btrfs: fix wrong max device number for single profile
Btrfs: fix missed transaction->aborted check
Btrfs: Add ACCESS_ONCE() to transaction->abort accesses
Btrfs: put csums on the right ordered extent
Btrfs: use right range to find checksum for compressed extents
Btrfs: fix panic when recovering tree log
Btrfs: do not allow logged extents to be merged or removed
Btrfs: fix a regression in balance usage filter
Btrfs: prevent qgroup destroy when there are still relations
Btrfs: ignore orphan qgroup relations
Btrfs: reorder locks and sanity checks in btrfs_ioctl_defrag
Btrfs: fix unlock order in btrfs_ioctl_rm_dev
Btrfs: fix unlock order in btrfs_ioctl_resize
Btrfs: fix "mutually exclusive op is running" error code
Btrfs: bring back balance pause/resume logic
btrfs: update timestamps on truncate()
btrfs: fix btrfs_cont_expand() freeing IS_ERR em
Btrfs: fix a bug when llseek for delalloc bytes behind prealloc extents
Btrfs: fix off-by-one in lseek
...
btrfs_start_delalloc_inodes() locks the delalloc_inodes list, fetches the
first inode, unlocks the list, triggers btrfs_alloc_delalloc_work/
btrfs_queue_worker for this inode, and then it locks the list, checks the
head of the list again. But because we don't delete the first inode that it
deals with before, it will fetch the same inode. As a result, this function
allocates a huge amount of btrfs_delalloc_work structures, and OOM happens.
Fix this problem by splice this delalloc list.
Reported-by: Alex Lyakas <alex.btrfs@zadarastorage.com>
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
truncate() vs. ftruncate() differ in the VFS; truncate()
doesn't set (ATTR_CTIME | ATTR_MTIME), and it's up to the
fs to do the timestamp updates if the size changes.
Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com>
btrfs_cont_expand() tries to free an IS_ERR em as it gets an error from
btrfs_get_extent() and breaks out of its loop.
An instance of -EEXIST was reported in the wild:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=874407
I have no idea if that -EEXIST is surprising, or not. Regardless, this
error handling should be cleaned up to handle other reasonable errors
(ENOMEM, EIO; whatever).
This seemed to be the only buggy freeing of the relatively rare IS_ERR
em so I opted to fix the caller rather than teach free_extent_map() to
use IS_ERR_OR_NULL().
Signed-off-by: Zach Brown <zab@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@toxicpanda.com>
xfstests case 285 complains.
It it because btrfs did not try to find unwritten delalloc
bytes(only dirty pages, not yet writeback) behind prealloc
extents, it ends up finding nothing while we're with SEEK_DATA.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Running xfstests 83 in a loop would sometimes fail the fsck. This happens
because if we invalidate a page that already has an ordered extent setup for
it we will complete the ordered extent ourselves, assuming that the truncate
will clean everything up. The problem with this is there is plenty of time
for the truncate to fail after we've done this work. So to fix this we need
to add the orphan item first to make sure the cleanup gets done properly,
and then we can truncate the pagecache and all that stuff and be safe. This
fixes the btrfsck failures I was seeing while running 83 in a loop. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The code that relied on that flag was ripped out of btrfs quite some
time ago, and never added back. Josef indicated that he was going to
take a different approach to the problem in btrfs, and that we
could just eliminate this flag.
Cc: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Users report a bug, the reproducer is:
$ mkfs.btrfs /dev/loop0
$ mount /dev/loop0 /mnt/btrfs/
$ mkdir /mnt/btrfs/dir
$ chattr +C /mnt/btrfs/dir/
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/btrfs/dir/foo bs=4K count=10;
$ lsattr /mnt/btrfs/dir/foo
---------------C- /mnt/btrfs/dir/foo
$ filefrag /mnt/btrfs/dir/foo
/mnt/btrfs/dir/foo: 1 extent found ---> an extent
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/btrfs/dir/foo bs=4K count=1 seek=5 conv=notrunc,nocreat; sync
$ filefrag /mnt/btrfs/dir/foo
/mnt/btrfs/dir/foo: 3 extents found ---> with nocow, btrfs breaks the extent into three parts
The new created file should not only inherit the NODATACOW flag, but also
honor NODATASUM flag, because we must do COW on a file extent with checksum.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
The handling for directory crc hash overflows was fairly obscure,
split_leaf returns EOVERFLOW when we try to extend the item and that is
supposed to bubble up to userland. For a while it did so, but along the
way we added better handling of errors and forced the FS readonly if we
hit IO errors during the directory insertion.
Along the way, we started testing only for EEXIST and the EOVERFLOW case
was dropped. The end result is that we may force the FS readonly if we
catch a directory hash bucket overflow.
This fixes a few problem spots. First I add tests for EOVERFLOW in the
places where we can safely just return the error up the chain.
btrfs_rename is harder though, because it tries to insert the new
directory item only after it has already unlinked anything the rename
was going to overwrite. Rather than adding very complex logic, I added
a helper to test for the hash overflow case early while it is still safe
to bail out.
Snapshot and subvolume creation had a similar problem, so they are using
the new helper now too.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Reported-by: Pascal Junod <pascal@junod.info>
When a new file is created with btrfs_create(), the inode will initially be
created with permissions 0666 and later on in btrfs_init_acl() it will be
adapted to mask out the umask bits. The problem is that this change won't make
it into the btrfs_inode unless there's another change to the inode (e.g. writing
content changing the size or touching the file changing the mtime.)
This fix adds a call to btrfs_update_inode() to btrfs_create() to make sure that
the change will not get lost if the in-memory inode is flushed before other
changes are made to the file.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
This starts a transaction and dirties the inode everytime we call it, which
is super expensive if you have a write heavy workload. We will be updating
the inode when the IO completes and we reserve the space for the inode
update when we reserve space for the write, so there is no chance of loss of
information or enospc issues. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
We don't really need to copy extents from the source tree since we have all
of the information already available to us in the extent_map tree. So
instead just write the extents straight to the log tree and don't bother to
copy the extent items from the source tree.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
We are going to use EM's to log extents in the future, so we need to not
mark them as prealloc if they aren't actually prealloc extents. Instead
mark them with FILLING so we know to ammend mod_start/mod_len and that way
we don't confuse the extent logging code. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
If we've written to a prealloc extent we need to know the original block len
for the extent. We can't figure this out currently since ->block_len is
just set to the extent length. So introduce ->orig_block_len so that we
know how many bytes were in the original extent for proper extent logging
that future patches will need. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
The tree logging stuff needs the csums to be on the ordered extents in order
to log them properly, so mark that we're sync and inline the csum creation
so we don't have to wait on the csumming to be done when logging extents
that are still in flight. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Currently we copy all the file information into the log, inode item, the
refs, xattrs etc. Except most of this doesn't change from fsync to fsync,
just the inode item changes. So set a flag if an xattr changes or a link is
added, and otherwise only log the inode item. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
ret variant may be set to 0 if we read page successfully, but it might be
released before we lock it again. On this case, if we fail to allocate a
new page, we will return 0, it is wrong, fix it.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
If we runt the direct IO, we should not run auto defrag, because it may
introduce buffered IO vs direcIO problem, and make direct IO slow down.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Refactor it by checking whether the inode has been created and needs to be
dropped (drop_inode_on_err) and also if the err variable is set. That way the
variable doesn't need to be set on each and every error handling block.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
When a new file is created with btrfs_create(), the inode will initially be
created with permissions 0666 and later on in btrfs_init_acl() it will be
adapted to mask out the umask bits. The problem is that this change won't make
it into the btrfs_inode unless there's another change to the inode (e.g. writing
content changing the size or touching the file changing the mtime.)
This fix adds a call to btrfs_update_inode() to btrfs_create() to make sure that
the change will not get lost if the in-memory inode is flushed before other
changes are made to the file.
Signed-off-by: Filipe Brandenburger <filbranden@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
When the flag not supported is specified, it is necessary to return the error
to the caller.
So, we add the validity check of the fiemap's flag.
Signed-off-by: Tsutomu Itoh <t-itoh@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
With the addition of the device replace procedure, it is possible
for btrfs_map_bio(READ) to report an error. This happens when the
specific mirror is requested which is located on the target disk,
and the copy operation has not yet copied this block. Hence the
block cannot be read and this error state is indicated by
returning EIO.
Some background information follows now. A new mirror is added
while the device replace procedure is running.
btrfs_get_num_copies() returns one more, and
btrfs_map_bio(GET_READ_MIRROR) adds one more mirror if a disk
location is involved that was already handled by the device
replace copy operation. The assigned mirror num is the highest
mirror number, e.g. the value 3 in case of RAID1.
If btrfs_map_bio() is invoked with mirror_num == 0 (i.e., select
any mirror), the copy on the target drive is never selected
because that disk shall be able to perform the write requests as
quickly as possible. The parallel execution of read requests would
only slow down the disk copy procedure. Second case is that
btrfs_map_bio() is called with mirror_num > 0. This is done from
the repair code only. In this case, the highest mirror num is
assigned to the target disk, since it is used last. And when this
mirror is not available because the copy procedure has not yet
handled this area, an error is returned. Everywhere in the code
the handling of such errors is added now.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Behrens <sbehrens@giantdisaster.de>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
This is required for the device replace procedure in a later step.
Two calling functions also had to be changed to have the fs_info
pointer: repair_io_failure() and scrub_setup_recheck_block().
Signed-off-by: Stefan Behrens <sbehrens@giantdisaster.de>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
- 'nr' is no more used.
- btrfs_btree_balance_dirty() and __btrfs_btree_balance_dirty() can share
a bunch of code.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Just use WARN_ON rather than an if containing only WARN_ON(1).
A simplified version of the semantic patch that makes this transformation
is as follows: (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/)
// <smpl>
@@
expression e;
@@
- if (e) WARN_ON(1);
+ WARN_ON(e);
// </smpl>
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Use WARN rather than printk followed by WARN_ON(1), for conciseness.
A simplified version of the semantic patch that makes this transformation
is as follows: (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr/)
// <smpl>
@@
expression list es;
@@
-printk(
+WARN(1,
es);
-WARN_ON(1);
// </smpl>
Signed-off-by: Julia Lawall <Julia.Lawall@lip6.fr>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
If we flush inodes with pending delalloc in a transaction, we may join
the same transaction handler more than 2 times.
The reason is:
Task use_count of trans handle
commit_transaction 1
|-> btrfs_start_delalloc_inodes 1
|-> run_delalloc_nocow 1
|-> join_transaction 2
|-> cow_file_range 2
|-> join_transaction 3
In fact, cow_file_range needn't join the transaction again because the caller
have joined the transaction, so we fix this problem by this way.
Reported-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
This patch introduce a new worker pool named "flush_workers", and if we
want to force all the inode with pending delalloc to the disks, we can
queue those inodes into the work queue of the worker pool, in this way,
those inodes will be flushed by multi-task.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
In some places(such as: evicting inode), we just can not flush the reserved
space of delalloc, flushing the delayed directory index and delayed inode
is OK, but we don't try to flush those things and just go back when there is
no enough space to be reserved. This patch fixes this problem.
We defined 3 types of the flush operations: NO_FLUSH, FLUSH_LIMIT and FLUSH_ALL.
If we can in the transaction, we should not flush anything, or the deadlock
would happen, so use NO_FLUSH. If we flushing the reserved space of delalloc
would cause deadlock, use FLUSH_LIMIT. In the other cases, FLUSH_ALL is used,
and we will flush all things.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"This has our series of fixes for the next rc. The biggest batch is
from Jan Schmidt, fixing up some problems in our subvolume quota code
and fixing btrfs send/receive to work with the new extended inode
refs."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: do not bug when we fail to commit the transaction
Btrfs: fix memory leak when cloning root's node
Btrfs: Use btrfs_update_inode_fallback when creating a snapshot
Btrfs: Send: preserve ownership (uid and gid) also for symlinks.
Btrfs: fix deadlock caused by the nested chunk allocation
btrfs: Return EINVAL when length to trim is less than FSB
Btrfs: fix memory leak in btrfs_quota_enable()
Btrfs: send correct rdev and mode in btrfs-send
Btrfs: extended inode refs support for send mechanism
Btrfs: Fix wrong error handling code
Fix a sign bug causing invalid memory access in the ino_paths ioctl.
Btrfs: comment for loop in tree_mod_log_insert_move
Btrfs: fix extent buffer reference for tree mod log roots
Btrfs: determine level of old roots
Btrfs: tree mod log's old roots could still be part of the tree
Btrfs: fix a tree mod logging issue for root replacement operations
Btrfs: don't put removals from push_node_left into tree mod log twice
On a really full file system I was getting ENOSPC back from
btrfs_update_inode when trying to update the parent inode when creating a
snapshot. Just use the fallback method so we can update the inode and not
have to worry about having a delayed ref. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs update from Chris Mason:
"This is a large pull, with the bulk of the updates coming from:
- Hole punching
- send/receive fixes
- fsync performance
- Disk format extension allowing more hardlinks inside a single
directory (btrfs-progs patch required to enable the compat bit for
this one)
I'm cooking more unrelated RAID code, but I wanted to make sure this
original batch makes it in. The largest updates here are relatively
old and have been in testing for some time."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (121 commits)
btrfs: init ref_index to zero in add_inode_ref
Btrfs: remove repeated eb->pages check in, disk-io.c/csum_dirty_buffer
Btrfs: fix page leakage
Btrfs: do not warn_on when we cannot alloc a page for an extent buffer
Btrfs: don't bug on enomem in readpage
Btrfs: cleanup pages properly when ENOMEM in compression
Btrfs: make filesystem read-only when submitting barrier fails
Btrfs: detect corrupted filesystem after write I/O errors
Btrfs: make compress and nodatacow mount options mutually exclusive
btrfs: fix message printing
Btrfs: don't bother committing delayed inode updates when fsyncing
btrfs: move inline function code to header file
Btrfs: remove unnecessary IS_ERR in bio_readpage_error()
btrfs: remove unused function btrfs_insert_some_items()
Btrfs: don't commit instead of overcommitting
Btrfs: confirmation of value is added before trace_btrfs_get_extent() is called
Btrfs: be smarter about dropping things from the tree log
Btrfs: don't lookup csums for prealloc extents
Btrfs: cache extent state when writing out dirty metadata pages
Btrfs: do not hold the file extent leaf locked when adding extent item
...
We should confirm the value of extent_map before calling
trace_btrfs_get_extent() because the value of extent_map has the
possibility of NULL.
Signed-off-by: Tsutomu Itoh <t-itoh@jp.fujitsu.com>
For some reason we unlock everything except the leaf we are on, set the path
blocking and then add the extent item for the extent we just finished
writing. I can't for the life of me figure out why we would want to do
this, and the history doesn't really indicate that there was a real reason
for it, so just remove it. This will reduce our tree lock contention on
heavy writes. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This patch add a type field into the transaction handle structure,
in this way, we needn't implement various end-transaction functions
and can make the code more simple and readable.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
This patch adds basic support for extended inode refs. This includes support
for link and unlink of the refs, which basically gets us support for rename
as well.
Inode creation does not need changing - extended refs are only added after
the ref array is full.
Signed-off-by: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.de>
A subvolume cannot be deleted via rmdir, but the error code ENOTEMPTY
is confusing. Return EPERM instead, as this is not permitted.
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Pull vfs update from Al Viro:
- big one - consolidation of descriptor-related logics; almost all of
that is moved to fs/file.c
(BTW, I'm seriously tempted to rename the result to fd.c. As it is,
we have a situation when file_table.c is about handling of struct
file and file.c is about handling of descriptor tables; the reasons
are historical - file_table.c used to be about a static array of
struct file we used to have way back).
A lot of stray ends got cleaned up and converted to saner primitives,
disgusting mess in android/binder.c is still disgusting, but at least
doesn't poke so much in descriptor table guts anymore. A bunch of
relatively minor races got fixed in process, plus an ext4 struct file
leak.
- related thing - fget_light() partially unuglified; see fdget() in
there (and yes, it generates the code as good as we used to have).
- also related - bits of Cyrill's procfs stuff that got entangled into
that work; _not_ all of it, just the initial move to fs/proc/fd.c and
switch of fdinfo to seq_file.
- Alex's fs/coredump.c spiltoff - the same story, had been easier to
take that commit than mess with conflicts. The rest is a separate
pile, this was just a mechanical code movement.
- a few misc patches all over the place. Not all for this cycle,
there'll be more (and quite a few currently sit in akpm's tree)."
Fix up trivial conflicts in the android binder driver, and some fairly
simple conflicts due to two different changes to the sock_alloc_file()
interface ("take descriptor handling from sock_alloc_file() to callers"
vs "net: Providing protocol type via system.sockprotoname xattr of
/proc/PID/fd entries" adding a dentry name to the socket)
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs: (72 commits)
MAX_LFS_FILESIZE should be a loff_t
compat: fs: Generic compat_sys_sendfile implementation
fs: push rcu_barrier() from deactivate_locked_super() to filesystems
btrfs: reada_extent doesn't need kref for refcount
coredump: move core dump functionality into its own file
coredump: prevent double-free on an error path in core dumper
usb/gadget: fix misannotations
fcntl: fix misannotations
ceph: don't abuse d_delete() on failure exits
hypfs: ->d_parent is never NULL or negative
vfs: delete surplus inode NULL check
switch simple cases of fget_light to fdget
new helpers: fdget()/fdput()
switch o2hb_region_dev_write() to fget_light()
proc_map_files_readdir(): don't bother with grabbing files
make get_file() return its argument
vhost_set_vring(): turn pollstart/pollstop into bool
switch prctl_set_mm_exe_file() to fget_light()
switch xfs_find_handle() to fget_light()
switch xfs_swapext() to fget_light()
...
There's no reason to call rcu_barrier() on every
deactivate_locked_super(). We only need to make sure that all delayed rcu
free inodes are flushed before we destroy related cache.
Removing rcu_barrier() from deactivate_locked_super() affects some fast
paths. E.g. on my machine exit_group() of a last process in IPC
namespace takes 0.07538s. rcu_barrier() takes 0.05188s of that time.
Signed-off-by: Kirill A. Shutemov <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Pull user namespace changes from Eric Biederman:
"This is a mostly modest set of changes to enable basic user namespace
support. This allows the code to code to compile with user namespaces
enabled and removes the assumption there is only the initial user
namespace. Everything is converted except for the most complex of the
filesystems: autofs4, 9p, afs, ceph, cifs, coda, fuse, gfs2, ncpfs,
nfs, ocfs2 and xfs as those patches need a bit more review.
The strategy is to push kuid_t and kgid_t values are far down into
subsystems and filesystems as reasonable. Leaving the make_kuid and
from_kuid operations to happen at the edge of userspace, as the values
come off the disk, and as the values come in from the network.
Letting compile type incompatible compile errors (present when user
namespaces are enabled) guide me to find the issues.
The most tricky areas have been the places where we had an implicit
union of uid and gid values and were storing them in an unsigned int.
Those places were converted into explicit unions. I made certain to
handle those places with simple trivial patches.
Out of that work I discovered we have generic interfaces for storing
quota by projid. I had never heard of the project identifiers before.
Adding full user namespace support for project identifiers accounts
for most of the code size growth in my git tree.
Ultimately there will be work to relax privlige checks from
"capable(FOO)" to "ns_capable(user_ns, FOO)" where it is safe allowing
root in a user names to do those things that today we only forbid to
non-root users because it will confuse suid root applications.
While I was pushing kuid_t and kgid_t changes deep into the audit code
I made a few other cleanups. I capitalized on the fact we process
netlink messages in the context of the message sender. I removed
usage of NETLINK_CRED, and started directly using current->tty.
Some of these patches have also made it into maintainer trees, with no
problems from identical code from different trees showing up in
linux-next.
After reading through all of this code I feel like I might be able to
win a game of kernel trivial pursuit."
Fix up some fairly trivial conflicts in netfilter uid/git logging code.
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/ebiederm/user-namespace: (107 commits)
userns: Convert the ufs filesystem to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert the udf filesystem to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert ubifs to use kuid/kgid
userns: Convert squashfs to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert reiserfs to use kuid and kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert jfs to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert jffs2 to use kuid and kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert hpfs to use kuid and kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert btrfs to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert bfs to use kuid/kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert affs to use kuid/kgid wherwe appropriate
userns: On alpha modify linux_to_osf_stat to use convert from kuids and kgids
userns: On ia64 deal with current_uid and current_gid being kuid and kgid
userns: On ppc convert current_uid from a kuid before printing.
userns: Convert s390 getting uid and gid system calls to use kuid and kgid
userns: Convert s390 hypfs to use kuid and kgid where appropriate
userns: Convert binder ipc to use kuids
userns: Teach security_path_chown to take kuids and kgids
userns: Add user namespace support to IMA
userns: Convert EVM to deal with kuids and kgids in it's hmac computation
...
When we wrote some data by compress mode into a btrfs filesystem which was full
of the fragments, the kernel will report:
BTRFS warning (device xxx): Aborting unused transaction.
The reason is:
We can not find a long enough free space to store the compressed data because
of the fragmentary free space, and the compressed data can not be splited,
so the kernel outputed the above message.
In fact, btrfs can deal with this problem very well: it fall back to
uncompressed IO, split the uncompressed data into small ones, and then
store them into to the fragmentary free space. So we shouldn't output the
above warning message.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Wade Cline reported a problem where he was getting garbage and warnings when
writing to a preallocated range via O_DIRECT. This is because we weren't
creating our normal pinned extent_map for the range we were writing to,
which was causing all sorts of issues. This patch fixes the problem and
makes his testcase much happier. Thanks,
Reported-by: Wade Cline <clinew@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
When we delete a inode, we will remove all the delayed items including delayed
inode update, and then truncate all the relative metadata. If there is lots of
metadata, we will end the current transaction, and start a new transaction to
truncate the left metadata. In this way, we will leave a inode item that its
link counter is > 0, and also may leave some directory index items in fs/file tree
after the current transaction ends. In other words, the metadata in this fs/file tree
is inconsistent. If we create a snapshot for this tree now, we will find a inode with
corrupted metadata in the new snapshot, and we won't continue to drop the left metadata,
because its link counter is not 0.
We fix this problem by updating the inode item before the current transaction ends.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
We're going to use this flag EXTENT_DEFRAG to indicate which range
belongs to defragment so that we can implement snapshow-aware defrag:
We set the EXTENT_DEFRAG flag when dirtying the extents that need
defragmented, so later on writeback thread can differentiate between
normal writeback and writeback started by defragmentation.
Original-Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Sometimes we need choose the method of the reservation according to the type
of the block reservation, such as the reservation for the delayed inode update.
Now we identify the type just by comparing the address of the reservation
variants, it is very ugly if it is a temporary one because we need compare it
with all the common reservation variants. So we add a new "type" field to keep
the type the reservation variants.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
I audited all users of btrfs_drop_extents and found that nobody actually uses
the hint_byte argument. I'm sure it was used for something at some point but
it's not used now, and the way the pinning works the disk bytenr would never be
immediately useful anyway so lets just remove it. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
This is based on Josef's "Btrfs: turbo charge fsync".
The current btrfs checks if an inode is in log by comparing
root's last_log_commit to inode's last_sub_trans[2].
But the problem is that this root->last_log_commit is shared among
inodes.
Say we have N inodes to be logged, after the first inode,
root's last_log_commit is updated and the N-1 remained files will
be skipped.
This fixes the bug by keeping a local copy of root's last_log_commit
inside each inode and this local copy will be maintained itself.
[1]: we regard each log transaction as a subset of btrfs's transaction,
i.e. sub_trans
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
This is based on Josef's "Btrfs: turbo charge fsync".
The above Josef's patch performs very good in random sync write test,
because we won't have too much extents to merge.
However, it does not performs good on the test:
dd if=/dev/zero of=foobar bs=4k count=12500 oflag=sync
The reason is when we do sequencial sync write, we need to merge the
current extent just with the previous one, so that we can get accumulated
extents to log:
A(4k) --> AA(8k) --> AAA(12k) --> AAAA(16k) ...
So we'll have to flush more and more checksum into log tree, which is the
bottleneck according to my tests.
But we can avoid this by telling fsync the real extents that are needed
to be logged.
With this, I did the above dd sync write test (size=50m),
w/o (orig) w/ (josef's) w/ (this)
SATA 104KB/s 109KB/s 121KB/s
ramdisk 1.5MB/s 1.5MB/s 10.7MB/s (613%)
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
We will stop and restart a transaction every time we move to a different leaf
when truncating a file. This is for enospc reasons, but really we could
probably get away with doing this a little better by actually working until we
hit an ENOSPC. So add a ->failfast flag to the block_rsv and set it when we do
truncates which will fail as soon as the block rsv runs out of space, and then
at that point we can stop and restart the transaction and refill the block rsv
and carry on. This will make rm'ing of a file with lots of extents a bit
faster. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
At least for the vm workload. Currently on fsync we will
1) Truncate all items in the log tree for the given inode if they exist
and
2) Copy all items for a given inode into the log
The problem with this is that for things like VMs you can have lots of
extents from the fragmented writing behavior, and worst yet you may have
only modified a few extents, not the entire thing. This patch fixes this
problem by tracking which transid modified our extent, and then when we do
the tree logging we find all of the extents we've modified in our current
transaction, sort them and commit them. We also only truncate up to the
xattrs of the inode and copy that stuff in normally, and then just drop any
extents in the range we have that exist in the log already. Here are some
numbers of a 50 meg fio job that does random writes and fsync()s after every
write
Original Patched
SATA drive 82KB/s 140KB/s
Fusion drive 431KB/s 2532KB/s
So around 2-6 times faster depending on your hardware. There are a few
corner cases, for example if you truncate at all we have to do it the old
way since there is no way to be sure what is in the log is ok. This
probably could be done smarter, but if you write-fsync-truncate-write-fsync
you deserve what you get. All this work is in RAM of course so if your
inode gets evicted from cache and you read it in and fsync it we'll do it
the slow way if we are still in the same transaction that we last modified
the inode in.
The biggest cool part of this is that it requires no changes to the recovery
code, so if you fsync with this patch and crash and load an old kernel, it
will run the recovery and be a-ok. I have tested this pretty thoroughly
with an fsync tester and everything comes back fine, as well as xfstests.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
There is a completely impossible situation to hit where you can preallocate
a file, fsync it, write into the preallocated region, have the transaction
commit twice and then fsync and then immediately lose power and lose all of
the contents of the write. This patch fixes this just so I feel better
about the situation and because it is lightweight, we just update the
last_trans when we finish an ordered IO and we don't update the inode
itself. This way we are completely safe and I feel better. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Pull the trivial tree from Jiri Kosina:
"Tiny usual fixes all over the place"
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jikos/trivial: (34 commits)
doc: fix old config name of kprobetrace
fs/fs-writeback.c: cleanup riteback_sb_inodes kerneldoc
btrfs: fix the commment for the action flags in delayed-ref.h
btrfs: fix trivial typo for the comment of BTRFS_FREE_INO_OBJECTID
vfs: fix kerneldoc for generic_fh_to_parent()
treewide: fix comment/printk/variable typos
ipr: fix small coding style issues
doc: fix broken utf8 encoding
nfs: comment fix
platform/x86: fix asus_laptop.wled_type module parameter
mfd: printk/comment fixes
doc: getdelays.c: remember to close() socket on error in create_nl_socket()
doc: aliasing-test: close fd on write error
mmc: fix comment typos
dma: fix comments
spi: fix comment/printk typos in spi
Coccinelle: fix typo in memdup_user.cocci
tmiofb: missing NULL pointer checks
tools: perf: Fix typo in tools/perf
tools/testing: fix comment / output typos
...
Cc: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Acked-by: Serge Hallyn <serge.hallyn@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"I've split out the big send/receive update from my last pull request
and now have just the fixes in my for-linus branch. The send/recv
branch will wander over to linux-next shortly though.
The largest patches in this pull are Josef's patches to fix DIO
locking problems and his patch to fix a crash during balance. They
are both well tested.
The rest are smaller fixes that we've had queued. The last rc came
out while I was hacking new and exciting ways to recover from a
misplaced rm -rf on my dev box, so these missed rc3."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (25 commits)
Btrfs: fix that repair code is spuriously executed for transid failures
Btrfs: fix ordered extent leak when failing to start a transaction
Btrfs: fix a dio write regression
Btrfs: fix deadlock with freeze and sync V2
Btrfs: revert checksum error statistic which can cause a BUG()
Btrfs: remove superblock writing after fatal error
Btrfs: allow delayed refs to be merged
Btrfs: fix enospc problems when deleting a subvol
Btrfs: fix wrong mtime and ctime when creating snapshots
Btrfs: fix race in run_clustered_refs
Btrfs: don't run __tree_mod_log_free_eb on leaves
Btrfs: increase the size of the free space cache
Btrfs: barrier before waitqueue_active
Btrfs: fix deadlock in wait_for_more_refs
btrfs: fix second lock in btrfs_delete_delayed_items()
Btrfs: don't allocate a seperate csums array for direct reads
Btrfs: do not strdup non existent strings
Btrfs: do not use missing devices when showing devname
Btrfs: fix that error value is changed by mistake
Btrfs: lock extents as we map them in DIO
...
We cannot just return error before freeing ordered extent and releasing reserved
space when we fail to start a transacion.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
This bug is introduced by commit 3b8bde746f6f9bd36a9f05f5f3b6e334318176a9
(Btrfs: lock extents as we map them in DIO).
In dio write, we should unlock the section which we didn't do IO on in case that
we fall back to buffered write. But we need to not only unlock the section
but also cleanup reserved space for the section.
This bug was found while running xfstests 133, with this 133 no longer complains.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Subvol delete is a special kind of awful where we use the global reserve to
cover the ENOSPC requirements. The problem is once we're done removing
everything we do a btrfs_update_inode(), which by default will try to do the
delayed update stuff which will use it's own reserve. There will be no
space in this reserve and we'll return ENOSPC. So instead use
btrfs_update_inode_fallback() which will just fallback to updating the inode
item in the case of enospc. This is fine because the global reserve covers
the space requirements for this. With this patch I can now delete a subvol
on a problem image Dave Sterba sent me. Thanks,
Reported-by: David Sterba <dave@jikos.cz>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
We need a barrir before calling waitqueue_active otherwise we will miss
wakeups. So in places that do atomic_dec(); then atomic_read() use
atomic_dec_return() which imply a memory barrier (see memory-barriers.txt)
and then add an explicit memory barrier everywhere else that need them.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We've been allocating a big array for csums instead of storing them in the
io_tree like we do for buffered reads because previously we were locking the
entire range, so we didn't have an extent state for each sector of the
range. But now that we do the range locking as we map the buffers we can
limit the mapping lenght to sectorsize and use the private part of the
io_tree for our csums. This allows us to avoid an extra memory allocation
for direct reads which could incur latency. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
A deadlock in xfstests 113 was uncovered by commit
d187663ef2
This is because we would not return EIOCBQUEUED for short AIO reads, instead
we'd wait for the DIO to complete and then return the amount of data we
transferred, which would allow our stuff to unlock the remaning amount. But
with this change this no longer happens, so if we have a short AIO read (for
example if we try to read past EOF), we could leave the section from EOF to
the end of where we tried to read locked. Fixing this is tricky since there
is no clear way to know exactly how much data DIO truly submitted for IO, so
to make this less hard on ourselves and less combersome we need to lock the
extents as we try to map them, and then we unlock any areas we didn't
actually map. This makes us completely safe from deadlocks and reliance on
a particular behavior of the DIO code. This also lays the groundwork for
allowing us to use the normal csum storage method for reads which means we
can remove an allocation. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
The pdflush thread is long gone, so this patch removes references to pdflush
from btrfs comments.
Cc: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Cc: linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Pull second vfs pile from Al Viro:
"The stuff in there: fsfreeze deadlock fixes by Jan (essentially, the
deadlock reproduced by xfstests 068), symlink and hardlink restriction
patches, plus assorted cleanups and fixes.
Note that another fsfreeze deadlock (emergency thaw one) is *not*
dealt with - the series by Fernando conflicts a lot with Jan's, breaks
userland ABI (FIFREEZE semantics gets changed) and trades the deadlock
for massive vfsmount leak; this is going to be handled next cycle.
There probably will be another pull request, but that stuff won't be
in it."
Fix up trivial conflicts due to unrelated changes next to each other in
drivers/{staging/gdm72xx/usb_boot.c, usb/gadget/storage_common.c}
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs: (54 commits)
delousing target_core_file a bit
Documentation: Correct s_umount state for freeze_fs/unfreeze_fs
fs: Remove old freezing mechanism
ext2: Implement freezing
btrfs: Convert to new freezing mechanism
nilfs2: Convert to new freezing mechanism
ntfs: Convert to new freezing mechanism
fuse: Convert to new freezing mechanism
gfs2: Convert to new freezing mechanism
ocfs2: Convert to new freezing mechanism
xfs: Convert to new freezing code
ext4: Convert to new freezing mechanism
fs: Protect write paths by sb_start_write - sb_end_write
fs: Skip atime update on frozen filesystem
fs: Add freezing handling to mnt_want_write() / mnt_drop_write()
fs: Improve filesystem freezing handling
switch the protection of percpu_counter list to spinlock
nfsd: Push mnt_want_write() outside of i_mutex
btrfs: Push mnt_want_write() outside of i_mutex
fat: Push mnt_want_write() outside of i_mutex
...
We convert btrfs_file_aio_write() to use new freeze check. We also add proper
freeze protection to btrfs_page_mkwrite(). We also add freeze protection to
the transaction mechanism to avoid starting transactions on frozen filesystem.
At minimum this is necessary to stop iput() of unlinked file to change frozen
filesystem during truncation.
Checks in cleaner_kthread() and transaction_kthread() can be safely removed
since btrfs_freeze() will lock the mutexes and thus block the threads (and they
shouldn't have anything to do anyway).
CC: linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org
CC: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Pull large btrfs update from Chris Mason:
"This pull request is very large, and the two main features in here
have been under testing/devel for quite a while.
We have subvolume quotas from the strato developers. This enables
full tracking of how many blocks are allocated to each subvolume (and
all snapshots) and you can set limits on a per-subvolume basis. You
can also create quota groups and toss multiple subvolumes into a big
group. It's everything you need to be a web hosting company and give
each user their own subvolume.
The userland side of the quotas is being refreshed, they'll send out
details on where to grab it soon.
Next is the kernel side of btrfs send/receive from Alexander Block.
This leverages the same infrastructure as the quota code to figure out
relationships between blocks and their owners. It can then compute
the difference between two snapshots and sends the diffs in a neutral
format into userland.
The basic model:
create a snapshot
send that snapshot as the initial backup
make changes
create a second snapshot
send the incremental as a backup
delete the first snapshot
(use the second snapshot for the next incremental)
The receive portion is all in userland, and in the 'next' branch of my
btrfs-progs repo.
There's still some work to do in terms of optimizing the send side
from kernel to userland. The really important part is figuring out
how two snapshots are different, and this is where we are
concentrating right now. The initial send of a dataset is a little
slower than tar, but the incremental sends are dramatically faster
than what rsync can do.
On top of all of that, we have a nice queue of fixes, cleanups and
optimizations."
Fix up trivial modify/del conflict in fs/btrfs/ioctl.c
Also fix up semantic conflict in fs/btrfs/send.c: the interface to
dentry_open() changed in commit 765927b2d5 ("switch dentry_open() to
struct path, make it grab references itself"), and since it now grabs
whatever references it needs, we should no longer do the mntget() on the
mnt (and we need to dput() the dentry reference we took).
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (65 commits)
Btrfs: uninit variable fixes in send/receive
Btrfs: introduce BTRFS_IOC_SEND for btrfs send/receive
Btrfs: add btrfs_compare_trees function
Btrfs: introduce subvol uuids and times
Btrfs: make iref_to_path non static
Btrfs: add a barrier before a waitqueue_active check
Btrfs: call the ordered free operation without any locks held
Btrfs: Check INCOMPAT flags on remount and add helper function
Btrfs: add helper for tree enumeration
btrfs: allow cross-subvolume file clone
Btrfs: improve multi-thread buffer read
Btrfs: make btrfs's allocation smoothly with preallocation
Btrfs: lock the transition from dirty to writeback for an eb
Btrfs: fix potential race in extent buffer freeing
Btrfs: don't return true in releasepage unless we actually freed the eb
Btrfs: suppress printk() if all device I/O stats are zero
Btrfs: remove unwanted printk() for btrfs device I/O stats
Btrfs: rewrite BTRFS_SETGET_FUNCS
Btrfs: zero unused bytes in inode item
Btrfs: kill free_space pointer from inode structure
...
Conflicts:
fs/btrfs/ioctl.c
This is the kernel portion of btrfs send/receive
Conflicts:
fs/btrfs/Makefile
fs/btrfs/backref.h
fs/btrfs/ctree.c
fs/btrfs/ioctl.c
fs/btrfs/ioctl.h
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
This patch introduces uuids for subvolumes. Each
subvolume has it's own uuid. In case it was snapshotted,
it also contains parent_uuid. In case it was received,
it also contains received_uuid.
It also introduces subvolume ctime/otime/stime/rtime. The
first two are comparable to the times found in inodes. otime
is the origin/creation time and ctime is the change time.
stime/rtime are only valid on received subvolumes.
stime is the time of the subvolume when it was
sent. rtime is the time of the subvolume when it was
received.
Additionally to the times, we have a transid for each
time. They are updated at the same place as the times.
btrfs receive uses stransid and rtransid to find out
if a received subvolume changed in the meantime.
If an older kernel mounts a filesystem with the
extented fields, all fields become invalid. The next
mount with a new kernel will detect this and reset the
fields.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Block <ablock84@googlemail.com>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dave@jikos.cz>
Reviewed-by: Arne Jansen <sensille@gmx.net>
Reviewed-by: Jan Schmidt <list.btrfs@jan-o-sch.net>
Reviewed-by: Alex Lyakas <alex.bolshoy.btrfs@gmail.com>
The otime field is not zeroed, so users will see random otime in an old
filesystem with a new kernel which has otime support in the future.
The reserved bytes are also not zeroed, and we'll have compatibility
issue if we make use of those bytes.
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizefan@huawei.com>
Inodes always allocate free space with BTRFS_BLOCK_GROUP_DATA type,
which means every inode has the same BTRFS_I(inode)->free_space pointer.
This shrinks struct btrfs_inode by 4 bytes (or 8 bytes on 64 bits).
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizefan@huawei.com>
Since root can be fetched via BTRFS_I macro directly, we can save an args
for btrfs_is_free_space_inode().
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <liubo2009@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
We didn't check error of btrfs_update_inode(), but that error looks
easy to bubble back up.
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Tsutomu Itoh <t-itoh@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Before the update_time inode operation was indroduced, it was
not possible to prevent updates of atime on RO subvolumes. VFS
was only able to check for RO on the mount, but did not know
anything about btrfs subvolumes.
btrfs_update_time does now check if the root is RO and skip
updating of times.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Block <ablock84@googlemail.com>
boolean "does it have to be exclusive?" flag is passed instead;
Local filesystem should just ignore it - the object is guaranteed
not to be there yet.
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Just the flags; only NFS cares even about that, but there are
legitimate uses for such argument. And getting rid of that
completely would require splitting ->lookup() into a couple
of methods (at least), so let's leave that alone for now...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Pull btrfs updates from Chris Mason:
"I held off on my rc5 pull because I hit an oops during log recovery
after a crash. I wanted to make sure it wasn't a regression because
we have some logging fixes in here.
It turns out that a commit during the merge window just made it much
more likely to trigger directory logging instead of full commits,
which exposed an old bug.
The new backref walking code got some additional fixes. This should
be the final set of them.
Josef fixed up a corner where our O_DIRECT writes and buffered reads
could expose old file contents (not stale, just not the most recent).
He and Liu Bo fixed crashes during tree log recover as well.
Ilya fixed errors while we resume disk balancing operations on
readonly mounts."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: run delayed directory updates during log replay
Btrfs: hold a ref on the inode during writepages
Btrfs: fix tree log remove space corner case
Btrfs: fix wrong check during log recovery
Btrfs: use _IOR for BTRFS_IOC_SUBVOL_GETFLAGS
Btrfs: resume balance on rw (re)mounts properly
Btrfs: restore restriper state on all mounts
Btrfs: fix dio write vs buffered read race
Btrfs: don't count I/O statistic read errors for missing devices
Btrfs: resolve tree mod log locking issue in btrfs_next_leaf
Btrfs: fix tree mod log rewind of ADD operations
Btrfs: leave critical region in btrfs_find_all_roots as soon as possible
Btrfs: always put insert_ptr modifications into the tree mod log
Btrfs: fix tree mod log for root replacements at leaf level
Btrfs: support root level changes in __resolve_indirect_ref
Btrfs: avoid waiting for delayed refs when we must not
When we're evicting an inode during log recovery, we need to ensure that the inode
is not in orphan state any more, which means inode's run_time flags has _no_
BTRFS_INODE_HAS_ORPHAN_ITEM. Thus, the BUG_ON was triggered because of a wrong
check for the flags.
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <liubo2009@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fusionio.com>
Miao pointed out there's a problem with mixing dio writes and buffered
reads. If the read happens between us invalidating the page range and
actually locking the extent we can bring in pages into page cache. Then
once the write finishes if somebody tries to read again it will just find
uptodate pages and we'll read stale data. So we need to lock the extent and
check for uptodate bits in the range. If there are uptodate bits we need to
unlock and invalidate again. This will keep this race from happening since
we will hold the extent locked until we create the ordered extent, and then
teh read side always waits for ordered extents. There was also a race in
how we updated i_size, previously we were relying on the generic DIO stuff
to adjust the i_size after the DIO had completed, but this happens outside
of the extent lock which means reads could come in and not see the updated
i_size. So instead move this work into where we create the extents, and
then this way the update ordered i_size stuff works properly in the endio
handlers. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"This is a small pull with btrfs fixes. The biggest of the bunch is
another fix for the new backref walking code.
We're still hammering out one btrfs dio vs buffered reads problem, but
that one will have to wait for the next rc."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: delay iput with async extents
Btrfs: add a missing spin_lock
Btrfs: don't assume to be on the correct extent in add_all_parents
Btrfs: introduce btrfs_next_old_item
There is some concern that these iput()'s could be the final iputs and could
induce lockups on people waiting on writeback. This would happen in the
rare case that we don't create ordered extents because of an error, but it
is theoretically possible and we already have a mechanism to deal with this
so just make them delayed iputs to negate any worry.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
Pull btrfs update from Chris Mason:
"The dates look like I had to rebase this morning because there was a
compiler warning for a printk arg that I had missed earlier.
These are all fixes, including one to prevent using stale pointers for
device names, and lots of fixes around transaction abort cleanups
(Josef, Liu Bo).
Jan Schmidt also sent in a number of fixes for the new reference
number tracking code.
Liu Bo beat me to updating the MAINTAINERS file. Since he thought to
also fix the git url, I kept his commit."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (24 commits)
Btrfs: update MAINTAINERS info for BTRFS FILE SYSTEM
Btrfs: destroy the items of the delayed inodes in error handling routine
Btrfs: make sure that we've made everything in pinned tree clean
Btrfs: avoid memory leak of extent state in error handling routine
Btrfs: do not resize a seeding device
Btrfs: fix missing inherited flag in rename
Btrfs: fix incompat flags setting
Btrfs: fix defrag regression
Btrfs: call filemap_fdatawrite twice for compression
Btrfs: keep inode pinned when compressing writes
Btrfs: implement ->show_devname
Btrfs: use rcu to protect device->name
Btrfs: unlock everything properly in the error case for nocow
Btrfs: fix btrfs_destroy_marked_extents
Btrfs: abort the transaction if the commit fails
Btrfs: wake up transaction waiters when aborting a transaction
Btrfs: fix locking in btrfs_destroy_delayed_refs
Btrfs: pass locked_page into extent_clear_unlock_delalloc if theres an error
Btrfs: fix race in tree mod log addition
Btrfs: add btrfs_next_old_leaf
...
When we move a file into a directory with compression flag, we need to
inherite BTRFS_INODE_COMPRESS and clear BTRFS_INODE_NOCOMPRESS as well.
But if we move a file into a directory without compression flag, we need
to clear both of them.
It is the way how our setflags deals with compression flag, so keep
the same behaviour here.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <liubo2009@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@fusionio.com>
I removed this in an earlier commit and I was wrong. Because compression
can return from filemap_fdatawrite() without having actually set any of it's
pages as writeback() it can make filemap_fdatawait() do essentially nothing,
and then we won't find any ordered extents because they may not have been
created yet. So not only does this make fsync() completely useless, but it
will also screw up if you truncate on a non-page aligned offset since we
zero out the end and then wait on ordered extents and then call drop caches.
We can drop the cache before the io completes and then we try to unpin the
extent we just wrote we won't find it and everything goes sideways. So fix
this by putting it back and put a giant comment there to keep me from trying
to remove it in the future. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
A user reported lots of problems using compression on the new code and it
turns out part of the problem was that igrab() was failing when we added a
new ordered extent. This is because when writing out an inode under
compression we immediately return without actually doing anything to the
pages, and then in another thread at some point down the line actually do
the ordered dance. The problem is between the point that we start writeback
and we actually add the ordered extent we could be trying to reclaim the
inode, which makes igrab() return NULL. So we need to do an igrab() when we
create the async extent and then drop it when we are done with it. This
makes sure we stay pinned in memory until the ordered extent can get a
reference on it and we are good to go. With this patch we no longer panic
in btrfs_finish_ordered_io(). Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
I was getting hung on umount when a transaction was aborted because a range
of one of the free space inodes was still locked. This is because the nocow
stuff doesn't unlock anything on error. This fixed the problem and I
verified that is what was happening. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
While doing my enospc work I got a transaction abortion that resulted in a
panic when we tried to unlock_page() an already unlocked page. This is
because we aren't calling extent_clear_unlock_delalloc with the locked page
so it was unlocking all the pages in the range. This is wrong since
__extent_writepage expects to have the page locked still unless we return
*page_started as 1. This should keep us from panicing. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Pull vfs changes from Al Viro.
"A lot of misc stuff. The obvious groups:
* Miklos' atomic_open series; kills the damn abuse of
->d_revalidate() by NFS, which was the major stumbling block for
all work in that area.
* ripping security_file_mmap() and dealing with deadlocks in the
area; sanitizing the neighborhood of vm_mmap()/vm_munmap() in
general.
* ->encode_fh() switched to saner API; insane fake dentry in
mm/cleancache.c gone.
* assorted annotations in fs (endianness, __user)
* parts of Artem's ->s_dirty work (jff2 and reiserfs parts)
* ->update_time() work from Josef.
* other bits and pieces all over the place.
Normally it would've been in two or three pull requests, but
signal.git stuff had eaten a lot of time during this cycle ;-/"
Fix up trivial conflicts in Documentation/filesystems/vfs.txt (the
'truncate_range' inode method was removed by the VM changes, the VFS
update adds an 'update_time()' method), and in fs/btrfs/ulist.[ch] (due
to sparse fix added twice, with other changes nearby).
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/viro/vfs: (95 commits)
nfs: don't open in ->d_revalidate
vfs: retry last component if opening stale dentry
vfs: nameidata_to_filp(): don't throw away file on error
vfs: nameidata_to_filp(): inline __dentry_open()
vfs: do_dentry_open(): don't put filp
vfs: split __dentry_open()
vfs: do_last() common post lookup
vfs: do_last(): add audit_inode before open
vfs: do_last(): only return EISDIR for O_CREAT
vfs: do_last(): check LOOKUP_DIRECTORY
vfs: do_last(): make ENOENT exit RCU safe
vfs: make follow_link check RCU safe
vfs: do_last(): use inode variable
vfs: do_last(): inline walk_component()
vfs: do_last(): make exit RCU safe
vfs: split do_lookup()
Btrfs: move over to use ->update_time
fs: introduce inode operation ->update_time
reiserfs: get rid of resierfs_sync_super
reiserfs: mark the superblock as dirty a bit later
...
Btrfs had been doing it's own file_update_time so we could catch ENOSPC
properly, so just update our btrfs_update_time to work with the new stuff and
then we'll be fancy later. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Pull btrfs updates from Chris Mason:
"This includes a fairly large change from Josef around data writeback
completion. Before, the writeback wasn't completed until the metadata
insertions for the extent were done, and this made for fairly large
latency spikes on the last page of each ordered extent.
We already had a separate mechanism for tracking pending metadata
insertions, so Josef just needed to tweak things a little to end
writeback earlier on the page. Overall it makes us much friendly to
memory reclaim and lowers latencies quite a lot for synchronous IO.
Jan Schmidt has finished some background work required to track btree
blocks as they go through changes in ownership. It's the missing
piece he needed for both btrfs send/receive and subvolume quotas.
Neither of those are ready yet, but the new tracking code is included
here. Most of the time, the new code is off. It is only used by
scrub and other backref walkers.
Stefan Behrens has added io failure tracking. This includes counters
for which drives are causing the most trouble so the admin (or an
automated tool) can choose to kick them out. We're tracking IO
errors, crc errors, and generation checks we do on each metadata
block.
RAID5/6 did miss the cut this time because I'm having trouble with
corruptions. I'll nail it down next week and post as a beta testing
before 3.6"
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (58 commits)
Btrfs: fix tree mod log rewinded level and rewinding of moved keys
Btrfs: fix tree mod log del_ptr
Btrfs: add tree_mod_dont_log helper
Btrfs: add missing spin_lock for insertion into tree mod log
Btrfs: add inodes before dropping the extent lock in find_all_leafs
Btrfs: use delayed ref sequence numbers for all fs-tree updates
Btrfs: fix false positive in check-integrity on unmount
Btrfs: fix runtime warning in check-integrity check data mode
Btrfs: set ioprio of scrub readahead to idle
Btrfs: fix return code in drop_objectid_items
Btrfs: check to see if the inode is in the log before fsyncing
Btrfs: return value of btrfs_read_buffer is checked correctly
Btrfs: read device stats on mount, write modified ones during commit
Btrfs: add ioctl to get and reset the device stats
Btrfs: add device counters for detected IO and checksum errors
btrfs: Drop unused function btrfs_abort_devices()
Btrfs: fix the same inode id problem when doing auto defragment
Btrfs: fall back to non-inline if we don't have enough space
Btrfs: fix how we deal with the orphan block rsv
Btrfs: convert the inode bit field to use the actual bit operations
...
If cow_file_range_inline fails with ENOSPC we abort the transaction which
isn't very nice. This really shouldn't be happening anyways but there's no
sense in making it a horrible error when we can easily just go allocate
normal data space for this stuff. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Ceph was hitting this race where we would remove an inode from the per-root
orphan list before we would release the space we had reserved for the inode.
We actually don't need a list or anything, we just need to make sure the
root doesn't try to free up the orphan reserve until after the inodes have
released their reservations. So use an atomic counter instead of a list on
the root and only decrement the counter after we've released our
reservation. I've tested this as well as several others and we no longer
see the warnings that you would see while running ceph. Thanks,
Btrfs: fix how we deal with the orphan block rsv
Ceph was hitting this race where we would remove an inode from the per-root
orphan list before we would release the space we had reserved for the inode.
We actually don't need a list or anything, we just need to make sure the
root doesn't try to free up the orphan reserve until after the inodes have
released their reservations. So use an atomic counter instead of a list on
the root and only decrement the counter after we've released our
reservation. I've tested this as well as several others and we no longer
see the warnings that you would see while running ceph. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Miao pointed this out while I was working on an orphan problem that messing
with a bitfield where different ranges are protected by different locks
doesn't work out right. Turns out we've been doing this forever where we
have different parts of the bit field protected by either no lock at all or
different locks which could cause all sorts of weird problems including the
issue I was hitting. So instead make a runtime_flags thing that we use the
normal bit operations on that are all atomic so we can keep having our
no/different locking for the different flags and then make force_compress
it's own thing so it can be treated normally. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
We noticed that the ordered extent completion doesn't really rely on having
a page and that it could be done independantly of ending the writeback on a
page. This patch makes us not do the threaded endio stuff for normal
buffered writes and direct writes so we can end page writeback as soon as
possible (in irq context) and only start threads to do the ordered work when
it is actually done. Compression needs to be reworked some to take
advantage of this as well, but atm it has to do a find_get_page in its endio
handler so it must be done in its own thread. This makes direct writes
quite a bit faster. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
We've been keeping around the inode sequence number in hopes that somebody
would use it, but nobody uses it and people actually use i_version which
serves the same purpose, so use i_version where we used the incore inode's
sequence number and that way the sequence is updated properly across the
board, and not just in file write. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux)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=oLXf
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge tag 'writeback' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wfg/linux
Pull writeback tree from Wu Fengguang:
"Mainly from Jan Kara to avoid iput() in the flusher threads."
* tag 'writeback' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wfg/linux:
writeback: Avoid iput() from flusher thread
vfs: Rename end_writeback() to clear_inode()
vfs: Move waiting for inode writeback from end_writeback() to evict_inode()
writeback: Refactor writeback_single_inode()
writeback: Remove wb->list_lock from writeback_single_inode()
writeback: Separate inode requeueing after writeback
writeback: Move I_DIRTY_PAGES handling
writeback: Move requeueing when I_SYNC set to writeback_sb_inodes()
writeback: Move clearing of I_SYNC into inode_sync_complete()
writeback: initialize global_dirty_limit
fs: remove 8 bytes of padding from struct writeback_control on 64 bit builds
mm: page-writeback.c: local functions should not be exposed globally
After we moved inode_sync_wait() from end_writeback() it doesn't make sense
to call the function end_writeback() anymore. Rename it to clear_inode()
which well says what the function really does - set I_CLEAR flag.
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Fengguang Wu <fengguang.wu@intel.com>
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
"This has our collection of bug fixes. I missed the last rc because I
thought our patches were making NFS crash during my xfs test runs.
Turns out it was an NFS client bug fixed by someone else while I tried
to bisect it.
All of these fixes are small, but some are fairly high impact. The
biggest are fixes for our mount -o remount handling, a deadlock due to
GFP_KERNEL allocations in readdir, and a RAID10 error handling bug.
This was tested against both 3.3 and Linus' master as of this morning."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (26 commits)
Btrfs: reduce lock contention during extent insertion
Btrfs: avoid deadlocks from GFP_KERNEL allocations during btrfs_real_readdir
Btrfs: Fix space checking during fs resize
Btrfs: fix block_rsv and space_info lock ordering
Btrfs: Prevent root_list corruption
Btrfs: fix repair code for RAID10
Btrfs: do not start delalloc inodes during sync
Btrfs: fix that check_int_data mount option was ignored
Btrfs: don't count CRC or header errors twice while scrubbing
Btrfs: fix btrfs_ioctl_dev_info() crash on missing device
btrfs: don't return EINTR
Btrfs: double unlock bug in error handling
Btrfs: always store the mirror we read the eb from
fs/btrfs/volumes.c: add missing free_fs_devices
btrfs: fix early abort in 'remount'
Btrfs: fix max chunk size check in chunk allocator
Btrfs: add missing read locks in backref.c
Btrfs: don't call free_extent_buffer twice in iterate_irefs
Btrfs: Make free_ipath() deal gracefully with NULL pointers
Btrfs: avoid possible use-after-free in clear_extent_bit()
...
Btrfs has an optimization where it will preallocate dentries during
readdir to fill in enough information to open the inode without an extra
lookup.
But, we're calling d_alloc, which is doing GFP_KERNEL allocations, and
that leads to deadlocks because our readdir code has tree locks held.
For now, disable this optimization. We'll fix the gfp mask in the next
merge window.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
A user reported a panic where we were trying to fix a bad mirror but the
mirror number we were giving was 0, which is invalid. This is because we
don't do the transid verification until after the read, so as far as the
read code is concerned the read was a success. So instead store the mirror
we read from so that if there is some failure post read we know which mirror
to try next and which mirror needs to be fixed if we find a good copy of the
block. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
When inserting into the radix tree returns EEXIST, get the existing
entry without giving up the spinlock in between.
There was a race for both the zones trees and the extent tree.
Signed-off-by: Arne Jansen <sensille@gmx.net>
Follow those instructions, and you'll trigger a warning in the
beginning of d_set_d_op():
# mkfs.btrfs /dev/loop3
# mount /dev/loop3 /mnt
# btrfs sub create /mnt/sub
# btrfs sub snap /mnt /mnt/snap
# touch /mnt/snap/sub
touch: cannot touch `tmp': Permission denied
__d_alloc() set d_op to sb->s_d_op (btrfs_dentry_operations), and
then simple_lookup() reset it to simple_dentry_operations, which
triggered the warning.
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
Pull btrfs fixes and features from Chris Mason:
"We've merged in the error handling patches from SuSE. These are
already shipping in the sles kernel, and they give btrfs the ability
to abort transactions and go readonly on errors. It involves a lot of
churn as they clarify BUG_ONs, and remove the ones we now properly
deal with.
Josef reworked the way our metadata interacts with the page cache.
page->private now points to the btrfs extent_buffer object, which
makes everything faster. He changed it so we write an whole extent
buffer at a time instead of allowing individual pages to go down,,
which will be important for the raid5/6 code (for the 3.5 merge
window ;)
Josef also made us more aggressive about dropping pages for metadata
blocks that were freed due to COW. Overall, our metadata caching is
much faster now.
We've integrated my patch for metadata bigger than the page size.
This allows metadata blocks up to 64KB in size. In practice 16K and
32K seem to work best. For workloads with lots of metadata, this cuts
down the size of the extent allocation tree dramatically and fragments
much less.
Scrub was updated to support the larger block sizes, which ended up
being a fairly large change (thanks Stefan Behrens).
We also have an assortment of fixes and updates, especially to the
balancing code (Ilya Dryomov), the back ref walker (Jan Schmidt) and
the defragging code (Liu Bo)."
Fixed up trivial conflicts in fs/btrfs/scrub.c that were just due to
removal of the second argument to k[un]map_atomic() in commit
7ac687d9e0.
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (75 commits)
Btrfs: update the checks for mixed block groups with big metadata blocks
Btrfs: update to the right index of defragment
Btrfs: do not bother to defrag an extent if it is a big real extent
Btrfs: add a check to decide if we should defrag the range
Btrfs: fix recursive defragment with autodefrag option
Btrfs: fix the mismatch of page->mapping
Btrfs: fix race between direct io and autodefrag
Btrfs: fix deadlock during allocating chunks
Btrfs: show useful info in space reservation tracepoint
Btrfs: don't use crc items bigger than 4KB
Btrfs: flush out and clean up any block device pages during mount
btrfs: disallow unequal data/metadata blocksize for mixed block groups
Btrfs: enhance superblock sanity checks
Btrfs: change scrub to support big blocks
Btrfs: minor cleanup in scrub
Btrfs: introduce common define for max number of mirrors
Btrfs: fix infinite loop in btrfs_shrink_device()
Btrfs: fix memory leak in resolver code
Btrfs: allow dup for data chunks in mixed mode
Btrfs: validate target profiles only if we are going to use them
...
$ mkfs.btrfs disk
$ mount disk /mnt -o autodefrag
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/foobar bs=4k count=10 2>/dev/null && sync
$ for i in `seq 9 -2 0`; do dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/foobar bs=4k count=1 \
seek=$i conv=notrunc 2> /dev/null; done && sync
then we'll get to defrag "foobar" again and again.
So does option "-o autodefrag,compress".
Reasons:
When the cleaner kthread gets to fetch inodes from the defrag tree and defrag
them, it will dirty pages and submit them, this will comes to another DATA COW
where the processing inode will be inserted to the defrag tree again.
This patch sets a rule for COW code, i.e. insert an inode when we're really
going to make some defragments.
Signed-off-by: Liu Bo <liubo2009@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
This patch simplifies how we track our extent buffers. Previously we could exit
writepages with only having written half of an extent buffer, which meant we had
to track the state of the pages and the state of the extent buffers differently.
Now we only read in entire extent buffers and write out entire extent buffers,
this allows us to simply set bits in our bflags to indicate the state of the eb
and we no longer have to do things like track uptodate with our iotree. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
We have been passing nothing but (u64)-1 to find_free_extent for search_end in
all of the callers, so it's completely useless, and we've always been passing 0
in as search_start, so just remove them as function arguments and move
search_start into find_free_extent. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
btrfs currently handles most errors with BUG_ON. This patch is a work-in-
progress but aims to handle most errors other than internal logic
errors and ENOMEM more gracefully.
This iteration prevents most crashes but can run into lockups with
the page lock on occasion when the timing "works out."
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
This is called from only one place - create_subvol() which passes errors
safely back out to it's caller, btrfs_mksubvol where they are handled.
Additionally, btrfs_create_subvol_root() itself bug's needlessly from error
return of btrfs_update_inode(). Since create_subvol() was fixed to catch
errors we can bubble this one up too.
Signed-off-by: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.com>
set_extent_bit can do exclusive locking but only when called by lock_extent*,
Drop the exclusive bits argument except when called by lock_extent.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
lock_extent and unlock_extent are always called with GFP_NOFS, drop the
argument and use GFP_NOFS consistently.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
This pushes failures from the submit_bio_hook callbacks,
btrfs_submit_bio_hook and btree_submit_bio_hook into the callers, including
callers of submit_one_bio where it catches the failures with BUG_ON.
It also pushes up through the ->readpage_io_failed_hook to
end_bio_extent_writepage where the error is already caught with BUG_ON.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
In submit_extent_page, there's a visually noisy if statement that, in
the midst of other conditions, does the tree dependency for tree->ops
and tree->ops->merge_bio_hook before calling it, and then another
condition afterwards. If an error is returned from merge_bio_hook,
there's no way to catch it. It's considered a routine "1" return
value instead of a failure.
This patch factors out the dependency check into a new local merge_bio
routine and BUG's on an error. The if statement is less noisy as a side-
effect.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
btrfs_submit_bio_hook currently calls btrfs_bio_wq_end_io in either case
of an if statement that determines one of the arguments.
This patch moves the function call outside of the if statement and uses it
to only determine the different argument. This allows us to catch an
error in one place in a more visually obvious way.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
Quoth Chris:
"This is later than I wanted because I got backed up running through
btrfs bugs from the Oracle QA teams. But they are all bug fixes that
we've queued and tested since rc1.
Nothing in particular stands out, this just reflects bug fixing and QA
done in parallel by all the btrfs developers. The most user visible
of these is:
Btrfs: clear the extent uptodate bits during parent transid failures
Because that helps deal with out of date drives (say an iscsi disk
that has gone away and come back). The old code wasn't always
properly retrying the other mirror for this type of failure."
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (24 commits)
Btrfs: fix compiler warnings on 32 bit systems
Btrfs: increase the global block reserve estimates
Btrfs: clear the extent uptodate bits during parent transid failures
Btrfs: add extra sanity checks on the path names in btrfs_mksubvol
Btrfs: make sure we update latest_bdev
Btrfs: improve error handling for btrfs_insert_dir_item callers
Btrfs: be less strict on finding next node in clear_extent_bit
Btrfs: fix a bug on overcommit stuff
Btrfs: kick out redundant stuff in convert_extent_bit
Btrfs: skip states when they does not contain bits to clear
Btrfs: check return value of lookup_extent_mapping() correctly
Btrfs: fix deadlock on page lock when doing auto-defragment
Btrfs: fix return value check of extent_io_ops
btrfs: honor umask when creating subvol root
btrfs: silence warning in raid array setup
btrfs: fix structs where bitfields and spinlock/atomic share 8B word
btrfs: delalloc for page dirtied out-of-band in fixup worker
Btrfs: fix memory leak in load_free_space_cache()
btrfs: don't check DUP chunks twice
Btrfs: fix trim 0 bytes after a device delete
...
This allows us to gracefully continue if we aren't able to insert
directory items, both for normal files/dirs and snapshots.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
We encountered an issue that was easily observable on s/390 systems but
could really happen anywhere. The timing just seemed to hit reliably
on s/390 with limited memory.
The gist is that when an unexpected set_page_dirty() happened, we'd
run into the BUG() in btrfs_writepage_fixup_worker since it wasn't
properly set up for delalloc.
This patch does the following:
- Performs the missing delalloc in the fixup worker
- Allow the start hook to return -EBUSY which informs __extent_writepage
that it should mark the page skipped and not to redirty it. This is
required since the fixup worker can fail with -ENOSPC and the page
will have already been redirtied. That causes an Oops in
drop_outstanding_extents later. Retrying the fixup worker could
lead to an infinite loop. Deferring the page redirty also saves us
some cycles since the page would be stuck in a resubmit-redirty loop
until the fixup worker completes. It's not harmful, just wasteful.
- If the fixup worker fails, we mark the page and mapping as errored,
and end the writeback, similar to what we would do had the page
actually been submitted to writeback.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: fix reservations in btrfs_page_mkwrite
Btrfs: advance window_start if we're using a bitmap
btrfs: mask out gfp flags in releasepage
Btrfs: fix enospc error caused by wrong checks of the chunk
Btrfs: do not defrag a file partially
Btrfs: fix warning for 32-bit build of fs/btrfs/check-integrity.c
Btrfs: use cluster->window_start when allocating from a cluster bitmap
Btrfs: Check for NULL page in extent_range_uptodate
btrfs: Fix busyloops in transaction waiting code
Btrfs: make sure a bitmap has enough bytes
Btrfs: fix uninit warning in backref.c
Josef fixed btrfs_page_mkwrite to properly release reserved
extents if there was an error. But if we fail to get a reservation
and we fail to dirty the inode (for ENOSPC reasons), we'll end up
trying to release a reservation we never had.
This makes sure we only release if we were able to reserve.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (62 commits)
Btrfs: use larger system chunks
Btrfs: add a delalloc mutex to inodes for delalloc reservations
Btrfs: space leak tracepoints
Btrfs: protect orphan block rsv with spin_lock
Btrfs: add allocator tracepoints
Btrfs: don't call btrfs_throttle in file write
Btrfs: release space on error in page_mkwrite
Btrfs: fix btrfsck error 400 when truncating a compressed
Btrfs: do not use btrfs_end_transaction_throttle everywhere
Btrfs: add balance progress reporting
Btrfs: allow for resuming restriper after it was paused
Btrfs: allow for canceling restriper
Btrfs: allow for pausing restriper
Btrfs: add skip_balance mount option
Btrfs: recover balance on mount
Btrfs: save balance parameters to disk
Btrfs: soft profile changing mode (aka soft convert)
Btrfs: implement online profile changing
Btrfs: do not reduce profile in do_chunk_alloc()
Btrfs: virtual address space subset filter
...
Fix up trivial conflict in fs/btrfs/ioctl.c due to the use of the new
mnt_drop_write_file() helper.
I was using i_mutex for this, but we're getting bogus lockdep warnings by doing
that and theres no real way to get rid of those, so just stop using i_mutex to
protect delalloc metadata reservations and use a delalloc mutex instead. This
shouldn't be contended often at all, only if you are writing and mmap writing to
the file at the same time. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
We've been seeing warnings coming out of the orphan commit stuff forever from
ceph. Turns out it's because we're racing with checking if the orphan block
reserve is set, because we clear it outside of the spin_lock. So leave the
normal fastpath checks where they are, but take the spin_lock and _recheck_ to
make sure we haven't had an orphan block rsv added in the meantime. Then clear
the root's orphan block rsv and release the lock. With this patch a user said
the warnings went away and they usually showed up pretty soon after he started
ceph. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
If updating the inode gave us an ENOSPC we were just returning in page_mkwrite,
which is a problem since we make our reservation right before trying to update
the inode, so fix the out label so that we actually free our reservation.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Reproduce steps:
# mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdb5
# mount /dev/sdb5 -o compress=lzo /mnt
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/tmpfile bs=128K count=1
# sync
# truncate -s 64K /mnt/tmpfile
root 5 inode 257 errors 400
This is because of the wrong if condition, which is used to check if we should
subtract the bytes of the dropped range from i_blocks/i_bytes of i-node or not.
When we truncate a compressed extent, btrfs substracts the bytes of the whole
extent, it's wrong. We should substract the real size that we truncate, no
matter it is a compressed extent or not. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
A user reported a problem where things like open with O_CREAT would take up to
30 seconds when he had nfs activity on the same mount. This is because all of
our quick metadata operations, like create, symlink etc all do
btrfs_end_transaction_throttle, which if the transaction is blocked will wait
for the commit to complete before it returns. This adds a ridiculous amount of
latency and isn't really needed. The normal btrfs_end_transaction will mark the
transaction as blocked and wake the transaction kthread up if it thinks the
transaction needs to end (this being in the running out of global reserve space
scenario), and this is all that is really needed since we've already done
everything we're going to do, we just need to return. This should help people
with the latency they were seeing when using synchronous heavy workloads.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jikos/trivial: (53 commits)
Kconfig: acpi: Fix typo in comment.
misc latin1 to utf8 conversions
devres: Fix a typo in devm_kfree comment
btrfs: free-space-cache.c: remove extra semicolon.
fat: Spelling s/obsolate/obsolete/g
SCSI, pmcraid: Fix spelling error in a pmcraid_err() call
tools/power turbostat: update fields in manpage
mac80211: drop spelling fix
types.h: fix comment spelling for 'architectures'
typo fixes: aera -> area, exntension -> extension
devices.txt: Fix typo of 'VMware'.
sis900: Fix enum typo 'sis900_rx_bufer_status'
decompress_bunzip2: remove invalid vi modeline
treewide: Fix comment and string typo 'bufer'
hyper-v: Update MAINTAINERS
treewide: Fix typos in various parts of the kernel, and fix some comments.
clockevents: drop unknown Kconfig symbol GENERIC_CLOCKEVENTS_MIGR
gpio: Kconfig: drop unknown symbol 'CS5535_GPIO'
leds: Kconfig: Fix typo 'D2NET_V2'
sound: Kconfig: drop unknown symbol ARCH_CLPS7500
...
Fix up trivial conflicts in arch/powerpc/platforms/40x/Kconfig (some new
kconfig additions, close to removed commented-out old ones)
There's code in btrfs_get_extent that should never be used. This patch turns
a WARN_ON(1) into a BUG(), hoping we can remove the transaction code from
btrfs_get_extent soon.
Signed-off-by: Jan Schmidt <list.btrfs@jan-o-sch.net>
vfs_create() ignores everything outside of 16bit subset of its
mode argument; switching it to umode_t is obviously equivalent
and it's the only caller of the method
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
vfs_mkdir() gets int, but immediately drops everything that might not
fit into umode_t and that's the only caller of ->mkdir()...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Seeing that just about every destructor got that INIT_LIST_HEAD() copied into
it, there is no point whatsoever keeping this INIT_LIST_HEAD in inode_init_once();
the cost of taking it into inode_init_always() will be negligible for pipes
and sockets and negative for everything else. Not to mention the removal of
boilerplate code from ->destroy_inode() instances...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: call d_instantiate after all ops are setup
Btrfs: fix worker lock misuse in find_worker
This closes races where btrfs is calling d_instantiate too soon during
inode creation. All of the callers of btrfs_add_nondir are updated to
instantiate after the inode is fully setup in memory.
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Add a for_cow parameter to add_delayed_*_ref and pass the appropriate value
from every call site. The for_cow parameter will later on be used to
determine if a ref will change anything with respect to qgroups.
Delayed refs coming from relocation are always counted as for_cow, as they
don't change subvol quota.
Also pass in the fs_info for later use.
btrfs_find_all_roots() will use this as an optimization, as changes that are
for_cow will not change anything with respect to which root points to a
certain leaf. Thus, we don't need to add the current sequence number to
those delayed refs.
Signed-off-by: Arne Jansen <sensille@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Jan Schmidt <list.btrfs@jan-o-sch.net>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: unplug every once and a while
Btrfs: deal with NULL srv_rsv in the delalloc inode reservation code
Btrfs: only set cache_generation if we setup the block group
Btrfs: don't panic if orphan item already exists
Btrfs: fix leaked space in truncate
Btrfs: fix how we do delalloc reservations and how we free reservations on error
Btrfs: deal with enospc from dirtying inodes properly
Btrfs: fix num_workers_starting bug and other bugs in async thread
BTRFS: Establish i_ops before calling d_instantiate
Btrfs: add a cond_resched() into the worker loop
Btrfs: fix ctime update of on-disk inode
btrfs: keep orphans for subvolume deletion
Btrfs: fix inaccurate available space on raid0 profile
Btrfs: fix wrong disk space information of the files
Btrfs: fix wrong i_size when truncating a file to a larger size
Btrfs: fix btrfs_end_bio to deal with write errors to a single mirror
* 'for-linus-3.2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
btrfs: lower the dirty balance poll interval
I've been hitting this BUG_ON() in btrfs_orphan_add when running xfstest 269 in
a loop. This is because we will add an orphan item, do the truncate, the
truncate will fail for whatever reason (*cough*ENOSPC*cough*) and then we're
left with an orphan item still in the fs. Then we come back later to do another
truncate and it blows up because we already have an orphan item. This is ok so
just fix the BUG_ON() to only BUG() if ret is not EEXIST. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
We were occasionaly leaking space when running xfstest 269. This is because if
we failed to start the transaction in the truncate loop we'd just goto out, but
we need to break so that the inode is removed from the orphan list and the space
is properly freed. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Running xfstests 269 with some tracing my scripts kept spitting out errors about
releasing bytes that we didn't actually have reserved. This took me down a huge
rabbit hole and it turns out the way we deal with reserved_extents is wrong,
we need to only be setting it if the reservation succeeds, otherwise the free()
method will come in and unreserve space that isn't actually reserved yet, which
can lead to other warnings and such. The math was all working out right in the
end, but it caused all sorts of other issues in addition to making my scripts
yell and scream and generally make it impossible for me to track down the
original issue I was looking for. The other problem is with our error handling
in the reservation code. There are two cases that we need to deal with
1) We raced with free. In this case free won't free anything because csum_bytes
is modified before we dro the lock in our reservation path, so free rightly
doesn't release any space because the reservation code may be depending on that
reservation. However if we fail, we need the reservation side to do the free at
that point since that space is no longer in use. So as it stands the code was
doing this fine and it worked out, except in case #2
2) We don't race with free. Nobody comes in and changes anything, and our
reservation fails. In this case we didn't reserve anything anyway and we just
need to clean up csum_bytes but not free anything. So we keep track of
csum_bytes before we drop the lock and if it hasn't changed we know we can just
decrement csum_bytes and carry on.
Because of the case where we can race with free()'s since we have to drop our
spin_lock to do the reservation, I'm going to serialize all reservations with
the i_mutex. We already get this for free in the heavy use paths, truncate and
file write all hold the i_mutex, just needed to add it to page_mkwrite and
various ioctl/balance things. With this patch my space leak scripts no longer
scream bloody murder. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Now that we're properly keeping track of delayed inode space we've been getting
a lot of warnings out of btrfs_dirty_inode() when running xfstest 83. This is
because a bunch of people call mark_inode_dirty, which is void so we can't
return ENOSPC. This needs to be fixed in a few areas
1) file_update_time - this updates the mtime and such when writing to a file,
which will call mark_inode_dirty. So copy file_update_time into btrfs so we can
call btrfs_dirty_inode directly and return an error if we get one appropriately.
2) fix symlinks to use btrfs_setattr for ->setattr. For some reason we weren't
setting ->setattr for symlinks, even though we should have been. This catches
one of the cases where we were getting errors in mark_inode_dirty.
3) Fix btrfs_setattr and btrfs_setsize to call btrfs_dirty_inode directly
instead of mark_inode_dirty. This lets us return errors properly for truncate
and chown/anything related to setattr.
4) Add a new btrfs_fs_dirty_inode which will just call btrfs_dirty_inode and
print an error if we have one. The only remaining user we can't control for
this is touch_atime(), but we don't really want to keep people from walking
down the tree if we don't have space to save the atime update, so just complain
but don't worry about it.
With this patch xfstests 83 complains a handful of times instead of hundreds of
times. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
The Smack LSM hook for security_d_instantiate checks
the inode's i_op->getxattr value to determine if the
containing filesystem supports extended attributes.
The BTRFS filesystem sets the inode's i_op value only
after it has instantiated the inode. This results in
Smack incorrectly giving new BTRFS inodes attributes
from the filesystem defaults on the assumption that
values can't be stored on the filesystem. This patch
moves the assignment of inode operation vectors ahead
of the calls to d_instantiate, letting Smack know that
the filesystem supports extended attributes. There
should be no impact on the performance or behavior of
BTRFS.
Signed-off-by: Casey Schaufler <casey@schaufler-ca.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Since we have the free space caches, btrfs_orphan_cleanup also runs for
the tree_root. Unfortunately this also cleans up the orphans used to mark
subvol deletions in progress.
Currently if a subvol deletion gets interrupted twice by umount/mount, the
deletion will not be continued and the space permanently lost, though it
would be possible to write a tool to recover those lost subvol deletions.
This patch checks if the orphan belongs to a subvol (dead root) and skips
the deletion.
Signed-off-by: Arne Jansen <sensille@gmx.net>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Btrfsck report errors after the 83th case of xfstests was run, The error
number is 400, it means the used disk space of the file is wrong.
The reason of this bug is that:
The file truncation may fail when the space of the file system is not enough,
and leave some file extents, whose offset are beyond the end of the files.
When we want to expand those files, we will drop those file extents, and
put in dummy file extents, and then we should update the i-node. But btrfs
forgets to do it.
This patch adds the forgotten i-node update.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Btrfsck report error 100 after the 83th case of xfstests was run, it means
the i_size of the file is wrong.
The reason of this bug is that:
Btrfs increased i_size of the file at the beginning, but it failed to expand
the file, and failed to update the i_size to the old size because there is no
enough space in the file system, so we found a wrong i_size.
This patch fixes this bug by updating the i_size just when we pass the file
expanding and get enough space to update i-node.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
The below patch fixes some typos in various parts of the kernel, as well as fixes some comments.
Please let me know if I missed anything, and I will try to get it changed and resent.
Signed-off-by: Justin P. Mattock <justinmattock@gmail.com>
Acked-by: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@xenotime.net>
Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: fix meta data raid-repair merge problem
Btrfs: skip allocation attempt from empty cluster
Btrfs: skip block groups without enough space for a cluster
Btrfs: start search for new cluster at the beginning
Btrfs: reset cluster's max_size when creating bitmap
Btrfs: initialize new bitmaps' list
Btrfs: fix oops when calling statfs on readonly device
Btrfs: Don't error on resizing FS to same size
Btrfs: fix deadlock on metadata reservation when evicting a inode
Fix URL of btrfs-progs git repository in docs
btrfs scrub: handle -ENOMEM from init_ipath()
When I ran the xfstests, I found the test tasks was blocked on meta-data
reservation.
By debugging, I found the reason of this bug:
start transaction
|
v
reserve meta-data space
|
v
flush delay allocation -> iput inode -> evict inode
^ |
| v
wait for delay allocation flush <- reserve meta-data space
And besides that, the flush on evicting inode will block the thread, which
is reclaiming the memory, and make oom happen easily.
Fix this bug by skipping the flush step when evicting inode.
Signed-off-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
Btrfs: remove free-space-cache.c WARN during log replay
Btrfs: sectorsize align offsets in fiemap
Btrfs: clear pages dirty for io and set them extent mapped
Btrfs: wait on caching if we're loading the free space cache
Btrfs: prefix resize related printks with btrfs:
btrfs: fix stat blocks accounting
Btrfs: avoid unnecessary bitmap search for cluster setup
Btrfs: fix to search one more bitmap for cluster setup
btrfs: mirror_num should be int, not u64
btrfs: Fix up 32/64-bit compatibility for new ioctls
Btrfs: fix barrier flushes
Btrfs: fix tree corruption after multi-thread snapshots and inode_cache flush
Round inode bytes and delalloc bytes up to real blocksize before
converting to sector size. Otherwise eg. files smaller than 512
are reported with zero blocks due to incorrect rounding.
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
btrfs: rename the option to nospace_cache
Btrfs: handle bio_add_page failure gracefully in scrub
Btrfs: fix deadlock caused by the race between relocation
Btrfs: only map pages if we know we need them when reading the space cache
Btrfs: fix orphan backref nodes
Btrfs: Abstract similar code for btrfs_block_rsv_add{, _noflush}
Btrfs: fix unreleased path in btrfs_orphan_cleanup()
Btrfs: fix no reserved space for writing out inode cache
Btrfs: fix nocow when deleting the item
Btrfs: tweak the delayed inode reservations again
Btrfs: rework error handling in btrfs_mount()
Btrfs: close devices on all error paths in open_ctree()
Btrfs: avoid null dereference and leaks when bailing from open_ctree()
Btrfs: fix subvol_name leak on error in btrfs_mount()
Btrfs: fix memory leak in btrfs_parse_early_options()
Btrfs: fix our reservations for updating an inode when completing io
Btrfs: fix oops on NULL trans handle in btrfs_truncate
btrfs: fix double-free 'tree_root' in 'btrfs_mount()'
When we did stress test for the space relocation, the deadlock happened.
By debugging, We found it was caused by the carelessness that we forgot
to unlock the read lock of the extent buffers in btrfs_orphan_cleanup()
before we end the transaction handle, so the transaction commit task waited
the task, which called btrfs_orphan_cleanup(), to unlock the extent buffer,
but that task waited the commit task to end the transaction commit, and
the deadlock happened. Fix it.
Signed-ff-by: Miao Xie <miaox@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Josef sent along an incremental to the inode reservation
code to make sure we try and fall back to directly updating
the inode item if things go horribly wrong.
This reworks that patch slightly, adding a fallback function
that will always try to update the inode item directly without
going through the delayed_inode code.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
People have been reporting ENOSPC crashes in finish_ordered_io. This is because
we try to steal from the delalloc block rsv to satisfy a reservation to update
the inode. The problem with this is we don't explicitly save space for updating
the inode when doing delalloc. This is kind of a problem and we've gotten away
with this because way back when we just stole from the delalloc reserve without
any questions, and this worked out fine because generally speaking the leaf had
been modified either by the mtime update when we did the original write or
because we just updated the leaf when we inserted the file extent item, only on
rare occasions had the leaf not actually been modified, and that was still ok
because we'd just use a block or two out of the over-reservation that is
delalloc.
Then came the delayed inode stuff. This is amazing, except it wants a full
reservation for updating the inode since it may do it at some point down the
road after we've written the blocks and we have to recow everything again. This
worked out because the delayed inode stuff just stole from the global reserve,
that is until recently when I changed that because it caused other problems.
So here we are, we're doing everything right and being screwed for it. So take
an extra reservation for the inode at delalloc reservation time and carry it
through the life of the delalloc reservation. If we need it we can steal it in
the delayed inode stuff. If we have already stolen it try and do a normal
metadata reservation. If that fails try to steal from the delalloc reservation.
If _that_ fails we'll get a WARN_ON() so I can start thinking of a better way to
solve this and in the meantime we'll steal from the global reserve.
With this patch I ran xfstests 13 in a loop for a couple of hours and didn't see
any problems.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
If we fail to reserve space in the transaction during truncate, we can
error out with a NULL trans handle. The cleanup code needs an extra
check to make sure we aren't trying to use the bad handle.
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs: (114 commits)
Btrfs: check for a null fs root when writing to the backup root log
Btrfs: fix race during transaction joins
Btrfs: fix a potential btrfs_bio leak on scrub fixups
Btrfs: rename btrfs_bio multi -> bbio for consistency
Btrfs: stop leaking btrfs_bios on readahead
Btrfs: stop the readahead threads on failed mount
Btrfs: fix extent_buffer leak in the metadata IO error handling
Btrfs: fix the new inspection ioctls for 32 bit compat
Btrfs: fix delayed insertion reservation
Btrfs: ClearPageError during writepage and clean_tree_block
Btrfs: be smarter about committing the transaction in reserve_metadata_bytes
Btrfs: make a delayed_block_rsv for the delayed item insertion
Btrfs: add a log of past tree roots
btrfs: separate superblock items out of fs_info
Btrfs: use the global reserve when truncating the free space cache inode
Btrfs: release metadata from global reserve if we have to fallback for unlink
Btrfs: make sure to flush queued bios if write_cache_pages waits
Btrfs: fix extent pinning bugs in the tree log
Btrfs: make sure btrfs_remove_free_space doesn't leak EAGAIN
Btrfs: don't wait as long for more batches during SSD log commit
...
fs_info has now ~9kb, more than fits into one page. This will cause
mount failure when memory is too fragmented. Top space consumers are
super block structures super_copy and super_for_commit, ~2.8kb each.
Allocate them dynamically. fs_info will be ~3.5kb. (measured on x86_64)
Add a wrapper for freeing fs_info and all of it's dynamically allocated
members.
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.cz>
I fixed a problem where we weren't reserving space for an orphan item when we
had to fallback to using the global reserve for an unlink, but I introduced
another problem. I was migrating the bytes from the transaction reserve to the
global reserve and then releasing from the global reserve in
btrfs_end_transaction(). The problem with this is that a migrate will jack up
the size for the destination, but leave the size alone for the source, with the
idea that you can do a release normally on the source and it all washes out, and
then you can do a release again on the destination and it works out right. My
way was skipping the release on the trans_block_rsv which still had the jacked
up size from our original reservation. So instead release manually from the
global reserve if this transaction was using it, and then set the
trans->block_rsv back to the trans_block_rsv so that btrfs_end_transaction
cleans everything up properly. With this patch xfstest 83 doesn't emit warnings
about leaking space. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Replace remaining direct i_nlink updates with a new set_nlink()
updater function.
Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <mszeredi@suse.cz>
Tested-by: Toshiyuki Okajima <toshi.okajima@jp.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
To reproduce the bug:
# mount -o nodatacow /dev/sda7 /mnt/
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/tmp bs=4K count=1
1+0 records in
1+0 records out
4096 bytes (4.1 kB) copied, 0.000136115 s, 30.1 MB/s
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/tmp bs=4K count=1 conv=notrunc oflag=direct
dd: writing `/mnt/tmp': Input/output error
1+0 records in
0+0 records out
btrfs_ordered_update_i_size() may return 1, but btrfs_endio_direct_write()
mistakenly takes it as an error.
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
It's not a big deal if we fail to allocate the array, and instead of
panic we can just give up compressing.
Signed-off-by: Li Zefan <lizf@cn.fujitsu.com>
Currently btrfs_block_rsv_check does 2 things, it will either refill a block
reserve like in the truncate or refill case, or it will check to see if there is
enough space in the global reserve and possibly refill it. However because of
overcommit we could be well overcommitting ourselves just to try and refill the
global reserve, when really we should just be committing the transaction. So
breack this out into btrfs_block_rsv_refill and btrfs_block_rsv_check. Refill
will try to reserve more metadata if it can and btrfs_block_rsv_check will not,
it will only tell you if the factor of the total space is still reserved.
Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
In __unlink_start_trans() if we don't have enough room for a reservation we will
check to see if the unlink will free up space. If it does that's great, but we
will still could add an orphan item, so we need to reserve enough space to add
the orphan item. Do this and migrate the space the global reserve so it all
works out right. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Our unlink reservations were a bit much, we were reserving 10 and I only count 8
possible items we're touching, so comment what we're reserving for and fix the
count value. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Yeah yeah I know this is how we used to do it and then I changed it, but damnit
I'm changing it back. The fact is that writing out checksums will modify
metadata, which could cause us to dirty a block group we've already written out,
so we have to truncate it and all of it's checksums and re-write it which will
write new checksums which could dirty a blockg roup that has already been
written and you see where I'm going with this? This can cause unmount or really
anything that depends on a transaction to commit to take it's sweet damned time
to happen. So go back to the way it was, only this time we're specifically
setting NODATACOW because we can't go through the COW pathway anyway and we're
doing our own built-in cow'ing by truncating the free space cache. The other
new thing is once we truncate the old cache and preallocate the new space, we
don't need to do that song and dance at all for the rest of the transaction, we
can just overwrite the existing space with the new cache if the block group
changes for whatever reason, and the NODATACOW will let us do this fine. So
keep track of which transaction we last cleared our cache in and if we cleared
it in this transaction just say we're all setup and carry on. This survives
xfstests and stress.sh.
The inode cache will continue to use the normal csum infrastructure since it
only gets written once and there will be no more modifications to the fs tree in
a transaction commit.
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
I noticed while running xfstests 83 that if we didn't have enough space to
delete our inode the orphan cleanup would just loop. This is because it keeps
finding the same orphan item and keeps trying to kill it but can't because we
don't get an error back from iput for deleting the inode. So keep track of the
last guy we tried to kill, if it's the same as the one we're trying to kill
currently we know we are having problems and can just error out. I don't have a
way to test this so look hard and make sure it's right. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Xfstests 83 really stresses our ENOSPC since it uses a 100mb fs which ends up
with the mixed block group stuff. Because of this we can run into a situation
where we don't have enough space to delete inodes, or even worse we can't free
the inodes when we next mount the fs which causes the orphan code to lose its
mind. So if we fail to make our reservation, steal from the global reserve.
The global reserve will end up taking up the entire rest of the free space on
the fs in this worst case so there really is no other option. With this patch
test 83 doesn't freak out. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
In fixing how we deal with bad inodes, we had a regression in the orphan cleanup
code, since it expects to get a bad inode back. So fix it to deal with getting
-ESTALE back by deleting the orphan item manually and moving on. Thanks,
Reported-by: Simon Kirby <sim@hostway.ca>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Johannes pointed out we were allocating only kernel pages for doing writes,
which is kind of a big deal if you are on 32bit and have more than a gig of ram.
So fix our allocations to use the mapping's gfp but still clear __GFP_FS so we
don't re-enter. Thanks,
Reported-by: Johannes Weiner <jweiner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
The only thing that we need to have a trans handle for is in
reserve_metadata_bytes and thats to know how much flushing we can do. So
instead of passing it around, just check current->journal_info for a
trans_handle so we know if we can commit a transaction to try and free up space
or not. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>
Since free space inodes now use normal checksumming we need to make sure to
account for their metadata use. So reserve metadata space, and then if we fail
to write out the metadata we can just release it, otherwise it will be freed up
when the io completes. Thanks,
Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>