to verify that the device is at least as big as the superblock claims
the filesystem is supposed to be, and if it's not then fail the mount.
this should help reduce the type of confusion reported in PR 13228.
deal with shortages of the VM maps where the backing pages are mapped
(usually kmem_map). Try to deal with this:
* Group all information about the backend allocator for a pool in a
separate structure. The pool references this structure, rather than
the individual fields.
* Change the pool_init() API accordingly, and adjust all callers.
* Link all pools using the same backend allocator on a list.
* The backend allocator is responsible for waiting for physical memory
to become available, but will still fail if it cannot callocate KVA
space for the pages. If this happens, carefully drain all pools using
the same backend allocator, so that some KVA space can be freed.
* Change pool_reclaim() to indicate if it actually succeeded in freeing
some pages, and use that information to make draining easier and more
efficient.
* Get rid of PR_URGENT. There was only one use of it, and it could be
dealt with by the caller.
From art@openbsd.org.
in f_bfree, which is added to f_bavail.
Fixes problem with statfs reporting too much free space for filesystems
which have files pending to be freed by softdeps.
date: 2002/02/07 00:54:32; author: mckusick; state: Exp; lines: +10 -7
Occationally deleted files would hang around for hours or days
without being reclaimed. This bug was introduced in revision 1.95
dealing with filenames placed in newly allocated directory blocks,
thus is not present in 4.X systems. The bug is triggered when a
new entry is made in a directory after the data block containing
the original new entry has been written, but before the inode
that references the data block has been written.
Submitted by: Bill Fenner <fenner@research.att.com>
This should fix NetBSD PR 15531.
do not mark the filesystem clean, as this will mean that one or more
files were likely not completely removed (will show up as unconnected
in fsck). Prevents filesystems from being marked clean while they're
not until this problem has been figured out.
would result in a vop_inactive call for the vnode each time, resulting
in vinvalbuf->fsync. The original softdep code avoided the fsync
in vinvalbuf by not calling it if there were no dirty blocks. This
was changed in NetBSD. Also, flush_inodedeps was changed to mark
the inode as modified so that it would do an inode update and flush the
last one. This combination basically caused a sync write for each removed
file in an rm -rf (showing up delayed from the syncer a lot of the time).
If called from vinvalbuf (FSYNC_RECLAIM), and there were no dirty blocks
or pages to begin with, still do everything as normal, so that possible dirty
blocks in transit to disk are properly waited for, etc, but don't pass
UPDATE_WAIT to VOP_UPDATE, since there is no need for it in that case.
from Kirk McKusick. They implement taking pending block/inode frees
into account for the sake of correct statfs() numbers, and adding
a new softdep type (newdirblk) to correctly handle newly allocated
directory blocks.
Minor additional changes: 1) swap the newly introduced fs_pendinginodes
and fs_pendingblock fields in ffs_sb_swap, and 2) declare lkt_held
in the debug version of the softdep lock structure volatile, as it
can be modified from interrupt context #ifdef DEBUG.
was wrong, so fix it right this time. undo the previous change and
instead, replace the troublesome VOP_FSYNC()s with code that just flushes
the particular indirect blocks that we allocated. this resolves the
softdeps for those blocks. then we can change the pointer for
the first indirect block we allocated to zero, write that, and finally
invalidate all the indirect blocks we've touched. also, wait until
after we finish all this before freeing any blocks we allocated.
fixes PRs 14413 and 14423.