* Remove the "lwp *" argument that was added to vget(). Turns out
that nothing actually used it!
* Remove the "lwp *" arguments that were added to VFS_ROOT(), VFS_VGET(),
and VFS_FHTOVP(); all they did was pass it to vget() (which, as noted
above, didn't use it).
* Remove all of the "lwp *" arguments to internal functions that were added
just to appease the above.
be inserted into ktrace records. The general change has been to replace
"struct proc *" with "struct lwp *" in various function prototypes, pass
the lwp through and use l_proc to get the process pointer when needed.
Bump the kernel rev up to 1.6V
filesystem (and other things that needed to be fixed before the tests
would complete), to wit:
* Include the fs ident in the filehandle; improve stale filehandle checks.
* Change definition of blksize() to use the on-dinode size instead of
the inode's i_size, so that fsck_lfs will work properly again.
* Use b_interlock in lfs_vtruncbuf.
* Postpone dirop reclamation until after the seglock has been released,
so that lfs_truncate is not called with the segment lock held.
* Don't loop in lfs_fsync(), just write everything and wait.
* Be more careful about the interlock/uobjlock in lfs_putpages: when we
lose this lock, we have to resynchronize dirtiness of pages in each
block.
* Be sure to always write indirect blocks and update metadata in
lfs_putpages; fixes a bug that caused blocks to be accounted to the
wrong segment.
first step towards per-device MAXPHYS, and has the beneficial side effect
of allowing clustering to MAXPHYS even on systems that need to run with
a reduced MAXBSIZE to get more metadata buffers.
- Under chroot it displays only the visible filesystems with appropriate paths.
- The statfs f_mntonname gets adjusted to contain the real path from root.
- While was there, fixed a bug in ext2fs, locking problems with vfs_getfsstat(),
and factored out some of the vfsop statfs() code to copy_statfs_info(). This
fixes the problem where some filesystems forgot to set fsid.
- Made coda look more like a normal fs.
to determine if this filesystem was mounted by an older kernel after
having been mounted by a newer one, to avoid some summary mismatches.
* Reinstate support for 4.2 cylinder groups (read-only, as it was before).
64 bit block pointers, extended attribute storage, and a few
other things.
This commit does not yet include the code to manipulate the extended
storage (for e.g. ACLs), this will be done later.
Originally written by Kirk McKusick and Network Associates Laboratories for
FreeBSD.
of segments to mark. However, this may be much more than lfs_nseg.
Originally this wasn't a big problem, since only the structures in the
diskblock were changed, but nowadays there's a mirror of the segflags
in the in-core superblock. This problem caused the code to walk
way past the end of that allocated area, causing memory corruption
in other kernel structures. So, use lfs_nseg as the maximum, as it should be.
While here, simplify the loop; it had become an obfuscated piece of
code overtime.
when the filesystem is unmounted, relocking the Ifile when its lock is
draining. (We can't use vfs_busy() since the process is sleeping for a
good long time.) Clean up / organize lfs.h, while I'm here.
In lfs_update_single, assert that disk addresses are either negative, or
are still positive when converted to int32_t, to prevent recurrence of a
negative/positive block problem.
checking the memq.
Take greater care not to dirty the Ifile vnode when unmounting the filesystem.
This should fix a "(vp->v_flag & VONWORKLST) == 0" assertion panic in vgonel
that could occur when unmounting.
Do not allow the Ifile to be mapped for writing.
direct and indirect block pointers are not valid in the case of shortlinks.
while i'm here, move duplicated code in lfs_vget/fastvget into a new
function, lfs_vinit.
Note however that blocks can be added to the Ifile even when the segment
block is held because of inodes' atime. Do not panic with "dirty blocks"
if these blocks are present.
be expanded to cover other per-fs and subsystem-wide data as well.
Fix a case of IN_MODIFIED being set without updating lfs_uinodes, resulting
in a "lfs_uinodes < 0" panic.
Fix a deadlock in lfs_putpages arising from the need to busy all pages in a
block; unbusy any that had already been busied before starting over.
always true) and accompanying dead code.
- When constructing write clusters in lfs_writeseg, if the block we are
about to add is itself a cluster from GOP_WRITE, don't put a cluster
in a cluster, just write the GOP_WRITE cluster on its own. This seems
to represent a slight performance gain on my test machine.
- Charge someone's rusage for writes on LFSes. It's difficult to tell
who the "right" process to charge is; just charge whoever triggered
the write.
where the cleaner is trying to write, instead of tying up the "live"
buffers (or pages).
Fix a bug in the LFS_UBC case where oversized buffers would not be
checksummed correctly, causing uncleanable segments.
Make sure that wakeup(fs->lfs_iocount) is done if fs->lfs_iocount is 1
as well as 0, since we wait in some places for it to drop to 1.
Activate all pages that make it into lfs_gop_write without the segment
lock held, since they must have been dirtied very recently, even if
PG_DELWRI is not set.
actually happens.
Add a new fcntl call that will write the minimum necessary to checkpoint
(i.e., for on-disk directory structure to be consistent, not including
updates to file data) so that the cleaner can clean segments more quickly
without sacrificing three-way commit for cleaning.
either as a mysterious UVM error or as "panic: dirty bufs". Verify
maximum size in lfs_malloc.
Teach lfs_updatemeta and lfs_shellsort about oversized cluster blocks from
lfs_gop_write.
When unwiring pages in lfs_gop_write, deactivate them, under the theory
that the pagedaemon wanted to free them last we knew.