from being inactivated under some conditions. Removed vnodes are now
inactivated when the VDIROP flag is cleared, and to prevent block
accounting problems this clearing has been postponed until
lfs_segunlock.
dirop writing. In particular, lfs_writevnodes now writes all buffers from
a flushed vnode whether cleaning or not, and the same with the Ifile; and
lfs_segwrite does not attempt to write data from other non-cleaning vnodes,
even if a vnode is being flushed.
default, as the copyright on the main file (ffs_softdep.c) is such
that is has been put into gnusrc. options SOFTDEP will pull this
in. This code also contains the trickle syncer.
Bump version number to 1.4O
system crashed, inodes could be allocated that were not referenced. (Though
not a serious problem, it evidences itself in phase 4 of fsck_lfs.) Fix
this by marking if_daddr with UNASSIGNED before the inodes are actually
written; at mount time the ifile is checked for UNASSIGNED entries and
any that are found are linked back into the free list. (The latter
functionality should move into the roll-forward agent when it materializes.)
post-mortem of a production machine. Also, take the active dirop
count off of the fs and make it global (since it is measuring a global
resource) and tie the threshold value LFS_MAXDIROP to desiredvnodes.
filesystem. In particular,
- Fix mknod deadlock, described in PR 8172.
- Enable lfs_mountroot.
- Make lfs_writevnodes treat filesystems mounted on lfs device nodes properly,
by flushing that device rather than trying to add blocks to the device inode.
This, in combination with lfs boot blocks, will allow operation of an all-lfs
system.
a bug in fragment extension that could run the count negative. Also, don't
overcount for inodes, and don't count segment summaries. Thus, for empty
segments the live bytes count should now be exactly zero.
on (nodes which are not marked IN_MODIFIED/IN_CLEANING, but which have dirty
buffers), by marking them with the appropriate flag if dirtybuffers were added
while the write was in progress.
conditions. Also change the default setting of lfs_clean_vnhead to 0, which
seems to make the locking problems go away (although this is difficult to
test as I can't reliably reproduce them).
then immediately reloaded, their dinodes were located in an inode block
which was not on disk at the advertized location, nor in the cache (although
it would be flushed to disk next segment write). Fix this by using getblk()
instead of lfs_newbuf() for inode blocks.
in turn forces a flush of the vnode, whether or not it is involved in a dirop.
(This can happen during a remove or rmdir, when the directory is shrunk.)
Because of the nature of dirops, however, flushing a vnode involved in a dirop
is disallowed (and was marked with a panic). This patch has lfs_truncate
call a specialized vinvalbuf that only invalidates buffers following the new
end-of-file, and thus does not require a flush. Also the panic is demoted,
in case I missed any other path to lfs_vflush.
namely, toggle whether vnodes loaded only for cleaning (as opposed to
normal filesystem use) are freed to the *head* of the vnode free list,
rather than the tail. This should avoid a possible cache flushing
effect, if the cleaner cleans a segment containing a large number of
live inodes.
if we are short on vnodes, lfs_vflush from another process can grab a
vnode that lfs_markv has already processed but not yet written; but
lfs_markv holds the seglock. When lfs_vflush gets around to writing it,
the context for copyin is gone. So, now lfs_markv calls copyin itself,
rather than having lfs_writeseg do it.
include:
- DIROP segregation is enabled, and greater care is taken
to make sure that a checkpoint completes. Fsck is not
needed to remount the filesystem.
- Several checks to make sure that the LFS subsystem does not
overuse various resources (memory, in particular).
- The cleaner routines, lfs_markv in particular, are completely
rewritten. A buffer overflow is removed. Greater care is taken
to ensure that inodes come from where lfs_cleanerd say they come
from (so we know nothing has changed since lfs_bmapv was called).
- Fragment allocation is fixed, so that writes beyond end-of-file
do the right thing.
- added an "union inode_ext" to struct inode, for the per-fs extentions.
For now only ext2fs uses it.
- i_din is now an union:
union {
struct dinode ffs_din; /* 128 bytes of the on-disk dinode. */
struct ext2fs_dinode e2fs_din; /* 128 bytes of the on-disk dinode. */
} i_din
Added a lot of #define i_ffs_* and i_e2fs_* to access the fields.
- Added two macros: FFS_ITIMES and EXT2FS_ITIMES. ITIMES calls the rigth
macro, depending on the time of the inode. ITIMES is used where necessary,
FFS_ITIMES and EXT2FS_ITIMES in other places.