shutdown). There are still problems with device access and a PR will be
filed.
- Kill checkalias(). Allow multiple vnodes to reference a single device.
- Don't play dangerous tricks with block vnodes to ensure that only one
vnode can describe a block device. Instead, prohibit concurrent opens of
block devices. As a bonus remove the unreliable code that prevents
multiple file system mounts on the same device. It's no longer needed.
- Track opens by vnode and by device. Issue cdev_close() when the last open
goes away, instead of abusing vnode::v_usecount to tell if the device is
open.
Buffers run through copy-on-write are marked B_COWDONE. This condition
is valid until the buffer has run through bwrite() and gets cleared from
biodone().
Welcome to 4.99.39.
Reviewed by: YAMAMOTO Takashi <yamt@netbsd.org>
The general trend is to remove it from all kernel interfaces and
this is a start. In case the calling lwp is desired, curlwp should
be used.
quick consensus on tech-kern
(uint8_t instead of int8_t) - this prevents an ugly sign-extension
printing bug as well as formally undefined behavior when you mount an
unclean fs enough times.
From (my own) PR kern/28134; I've been carrying this patch for three
years, long enough to forget about it, and it's had no ill effects in
that time.
reviewed: pooka
group block buffer busy. If filesystem has any active snapshots, bawrite
can come back trying to allocate new snapshot data block from the same
cylinder group and cause deadlock.
From FreeBSD Rev. 1.117
- Instead of hooking the handler on the specdev of a mounted file system
hook directly on the `struct mount'.
- Rename from `vn_cow_*' to `fscow_*' and move to `kern/vfs_trans.c'. Use
`mount_*specific' instead of clobbering `struct mount' or `struct specinfo'.
- Replace the hand-made reader/writer lock with a krwlock.
- Keep `vn_cow_*' functions and mark as obsolete.
- Welcome to NetBSD 4.99.32 - `struct specinfo' changed size.
Reviewed by: Jason Thorpe <thorpej@netbsd.org>
knew what it was supposed to be used for and wrstuden gave a go-ahead
* while rototilling, convert file systems which went easily to
use VFS_PROTOS() instead of manually prototyping the methods
need to understand the locking around that field. Instead of setting
B_ERROR, set b_error instead. b_error is 'owned' by whoever completes
the I/O request.
fs code is a kernel buffer, pass though the length of the buffer as well.
Since the length of the userspace buffer isn'it (yet) passed through the mount
system call, add a field to the vfsops structure containing the default length.
Split sys_mount() for calls from compat code.
Ride one of the recent kernel version changes - old fs LKMs will load, but
sys_mount() will reject any attempt to use them.
- Make quota-internal functions static.
- Clean up declarations in quota.h and ufs_extern.h. quota.h now has the
description of quota criterions, on-disk structure, user-kernel interface and
declaration of init/done functions. All ufs quota related function
prototypes go to ufs_extern.h.
- New functions ufsquota_init() and ufsquota_free() create or destroy the
quota fields of `struct inode'.
- chkdq() and chkiq() always update the quota fields of `struct inode' first.
- Only ufs_access() explicitely calls getinoquota().
No objections on tech-kern@
an init method. So get rid of it and #ifdef _LKM and just always
init in the init method. Give malloc types the same treatment.
Makes file systems nicer to work with in linksetless environments
and fixes a few LKM discrepancies.