Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
perseant 4e3fced95b Merge the short-lived perseant-lfsv2 branch into the trunk.
Kernels and tools understand both v1 and v2 filesystems; newfs_lfs
generates v2 by default.  Changes for the v2 layout include:

- Segments of non-PO2 size and arbitrary block offset, so these can be
  matched to convenient physical characteristics of the partition (e.g.,
  stripe or track size and offset).

- Address by fragment instead of by disk sector, paving the way for
  non-512-byte-sector devices.  In theory fragments can be as large
  as you like, though in reality they must be smaller than MAXBSIZE in size.

- Use serial number and filesystem identifier to ensure that roll-forward
  doesn't get old data and think it's new.  Roll-forward is enabled for
  v2 filesystems, though not for v1 filesystems by default.

- The inode free list is now a tailq, paving the way for undelete (undelete
  is not yet implemented, but can be without further non-backwards-compatible
  changes to disk structures).

- Inode atime information is kept in the Ifile, instead of on the inode;
  that is, the inode is never written *just* because atime was changed.
  Because of this the inodes remain near the file data on the disk, rather
  than wandering all over as the disk is read repeatedly.  This speeds up
  repeated reads by a small but noticeable amount.

Other changes of note include:

- The ifile written by newfs_lfs can now be of arbitrary length, it is no
  longer restricted to a single indirect block.

- Fixed an old bug where ctime was changed every time a vnode was created.
  I need to look more closely to make sure that the times are only updated
  during write(2) and friends, not after-the-fact during a segment write,
  and certainly not by the cleaner.
2001-07-13 20:30:18 +00:00
perseant 31fc62d4e9 Correct accounting of lfs_avail, locked_queue_count, and locked_queue_bytes.
(PR #11468).  In the case of fragment allocation, check to see if enough
space is available before extending a fragment already scheduled for writing.

The locked_queue_* variables indicate the number of buffer headers and bytes,
respectively, that are unavailable to getnewbuf() because they are locked up
waiting for LFS to flush them; make sure that that is actually what we're
counting, i.e., never count malloced buffers, and always use b_bufsize instead
of b_bcount.

If DEBUG is defined, the periodic calls to lfs_countlocked will now complain
if either counter is incorrect.  (In the future lfs_countlocked will not need
to be called at all if DEBUG is not defined.)
2000-11-17 19:14:41 +00:00
perseant e1c9a578a8 New CHANGES files that describes briefly all nontrivial changes made to
the LFS since the 4.4lite2 code was merged into NetBSD.

TODO updated to remove everything marked DONE in 4.4, and add in a list
of more current things to do.

Get rid of comments about the cleaner syscall code and missing fragment
support from README.
1999-03-15 00:46:47 +00:00
cgd fccfa11af5 New RCS ID's, take two. they're more aesthecially pleasant, and use 'NetBSD' 1994-06-29 06:39:25 +00:00
mycroft 264b874c14 Update to 4.4-Lite fs code, with local changes. 1994-06-08 11:41:58 +00:00