malloc types into a structure, a pointer to which is passed around,
instead of an int constant. Allow the limit to be adjusted when the
malloc type is defined, or with a function call, as suggested by
Jonathan Stone.
kqueue provides a stateful and efficient event notification framework
currently supported events include socket, file, directory, fifo,
pipe, tty and device changes, and monitoring of processes and signals
kqueue is supported by all writable filesystems in NetBSD tree
(with exception of Coda) and all device drivers supporting poll(2)
based on work done by Jonathan Lemon for FreeBSD
initial NetBSD port done by Luke Mewburn and Jason Thorpe
add a flag that specify if the file can be truncated safely or not
to nfsm_loadattr and friends. when it isn't safe, just mark the nfsnode
as "should be truncated later".
ok'ed by Frank van der Linden and Chuck Silvers.
close kern/18036.
routers dropping the packet
(seems to be a problem with Cisco and its "helper-address" feature;
a Cabletron SSR I tested with didn't have this problem)
PGO_LOCKED getpages request. So, just make the lock fail and tell
the caller that there is no pages available if we can't acquire it.
The caller will call us again soon without PGO_LOCKED. Reviewed by chuq.
set via NFSV3SATTRTIME_TOSERVER and not NFSV3SATTRTIME_TOCLIENT,
add VA_UTIMES_NULL to the va_vflags. This reflects our policy
where we're much more liberal about who can set a & m times to 'now'
than we are about who can set them to a specific time.
Should close PR 15597 from Martin Husemann. Patch is based on the
one Matthias Drochner gave in the PR.
clean and without writable mappings. if we try to flush dirty pages past
EOF to the server when NMODIFIED is clear, we'll update the attrcache before
doing the write, which will try to free the pages past EOF and deadlock.
to deal with this, we write-protect pages before we send them to the server,
and restrict ourselves to creating read-only mappings if NMODIFIED isn't set.
score another one for enami.
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.
rather than using home-grown code to find a free reserved socket.
this also results in nfs pcb's having the INP_ANONPORT and INP_LOWPORT flags
set, which is useful for netstat(1) to know.
frank's scheme, with one new twist: don't wait until we've totally run
out of free pages before committing, but instead notice when we've built
up a largish range of uncommitted pages and commit only the older half of
the range, which is likely to already be on disk on the server.
struct nfssvc_sock.
Affected only when a recordmark of RPC over TCP is fragmented to
multiple mbufs. I do not know whether this code has ever been executed :)
and confusion about the actual filesize. From Matt Dillon's
similar change in FreeBSD.
XXX n_size is really redundant in -current and must die. This commit
XXX is more of a placeholder for a pullup into the 1.5 branch.
uint32_t namei_hash(const char *p, const char **ep)
which determines the equivalent MI hash32_str() hash for p.
If *ep != NULL, calculate the hash to the character before ep.
If *ep == NULL, calculate the has to the first / or NUL found, and
point *ep to that location.
- Use namei_hash() to calculate cn_hash in lookup() and relookup().
Hash distribution goes from 35-40% to 55-70%, with similar profiled
time spent in cache_lookup() and cache_enter() on my P3-600.
- Use namei_hash() to calculate cn_hash in nfs_readdirplusrpc(),
insetad of homegrown code (that differed from that in lookup() !)
namei_hash() has better spread and is faster than previous code
(which used a non-constant multiplication).
hash32_buf() to obtain a 32 bit hash. On some tests I ran I obtained
a 30x improvement in hash distribution and a 6x reduction in time spent
in nfs_nget().
- remove special treatment of pager_map mappings in pmaps. this is
required now, since I've removed the globals that expose the address range.
pager_map now uses pmap_kenter_pa() instead of pmap_enter(), so there's
no longer any need to special-case it.
- eliminate struct uvm_vnode by moving its fields into struct vnode.
- rewrite the pageout path. the pager is now responsible for handling the
high-level requests instead of only getting control after a bunch of work
has already been done on its behalf. this will allow us to UBCify LFS,
which needs tighter control over its pages than other filesystems do.
writing a page to disk no longer requires making it read-only, which
allows us to write wired pages without causing all kinds of havoc.
- use a new PG_PAGEOUT flag to indicate that a page should be freed
on behalf of the pagedaemon when it's unlocked. this flag is very similar
to PG_RELEASED, but unlike PG_RELEASED, PG_PAGEOUT can be cleared if the
pageout fails due to eg. an indirect-block buffer being locked.
this allows us to remove the "version" field from struct vm_page,
and together with shrinking "loan_count" from 32 bits to 16,
struct vm_page is now 4 bytes smaller.
- no longer use PG_RELEASED for swap-backed pages. if the page is busy
because it's being paged out, we can't release the swap slot to be
reallocated until that write is complete, but unlike with vnodes we
don't keep a count of in-progress writes so there's no good way to
know when the write is done. instead, when we need to free a busy
swap-backed page, just sleep until we can get it busy ourselves.
- implement a fast-path for extending writes which allows us to avoid
zeroing new pages. this substantially reduces cpu usage.
- encapsulate the data used by the genfs code in a struct genfs_node,
which must be the first element of the filesystem-specific vnode data
for filesystems which use genfs_{get,put}pages().
- eliminate many of the UVM pagerops, since they aren't needed anymore
now that the pager "put" operation is a higher-level operation.
- enhance the genfs code to allow NFS to use the genfs_{get,put}pages
instead of a modified copy.
- clean up struct vnode by removing all the fields that used to be used by
the vfs_cluster.c code (which we don't use anymore with UBC).
- remove kmem_object and mb_object since they were useless.
instead of allocating pages to these objects, we now just allocate
pages with no object. such pages are mapped in the kernel until they
are freed, so we can use the mapping to find the page to free it.
this allows us to remove splvm() protection in several places.
The sum of all these changes improves write throughput on my
decstation 5000/200 to within 1% of the rate of NetBSD 1.5
and reduces the elapsed time for "make release" of a NetBSD 1.5
source tree on my 128MB pc to 10% less than a 1.5 kernel took.
adjusted via sysctl. file systems that have hash tables which are
sized based on the value of this variable now resize those hash tables
using the new value. the max number of FFS softdeps is also recalculated.
convert various file systems to use the <sys/queue.h> macros for
their hash tables.
of nfs_niothreads instead of hard-coding 4.
This change has the advantage that the default can be specified
at compile time. If the root filesystem is mounted over NFS
we don't have an opportunity to use the syscall to limit the
number of threads. Useful on small-memory machines.
the value of "next-server" from the DHCP (or BOOTP) reply. This is
not the DHCP server's IP address (except by chance), so instead of
"server" make it print "next-server".
prevents us losing the locked state of the old vnode.
fvdl thinks the old vnode is certain to be locked at this point. I've put in
a KASSERT to be on the safe side.
This seems to fix PR kern/12661.
vfs_busy'ing just before the dounmount() call. This is to avoid
sleeping with the mountlist_slock held -- but we must acquire
syncer_lock before vfs_busy because the syncer itself uses
syncer_lock -> vfs_busy locking order.
the mapping is:
VM_PAGER_OK 0
VM_PAGER_BAD <unused>
VM_PAGER_FAIL <unused>
VM_PAGER_PEND 0 (see below)
VM_PAGER_ERROR EIO
VM_PAGER_AGAIN EAGAIN
VM_PAGER_UNLOCK EBUSY
VM_PAGER_REFAULT ERESTART
for async i/o requests, it used to be possible for the request to
be convert to sync, and the pager would return VM_PAGER_OK or VM_PAGER_PEND
to indicate whether the caller should perform post-i/o cleanup.
this is no longer allowed; pagers must now return 0 to indicate that
the async i/o was successfully started, and the caller never needs to
worry about doing the post-i/o cleanup.
- in the cases where we skip over the i/o loop, increment npages by ridx
so that when the cleanup code starts processing the pgs array at index 0
it'll actually process all of the pages.
- process the PG_RELEASED flag when unbusying pages.
- add some missing MP locking.
- use MIN() and MAX() instead of min() and max() since the latter are
functions which take arguments of type "int" but we call them with
values of type "off_t", so the values could be truncated.
problem reported by msaitoh@netbsd.org. NOTE: These are marked XXXUBC
since the code that allocates the bufs is new with UBC, but it may be
the case that bp->b_proc needs to be intialized to curproc (it's used
in a call to nfs_sigintr()).
- fix math when skipping writing pages that just need a commit.
- clear the needcommit stuff and PG_RDONLY flags on pages returned for
overwrite requests as well as for normal write faults.
- bail out of nfs_write() if we get an error.
- remove a bogus attempt to clean up after failed uiomove()s.
- bring over a workaround for a lock-ordering problem from the genfs code.
- add some missing MP locking.
passed it down to the appropriate usrreq function, and this
allows usage for contexts that need to be explicitly different
from curproc (like in the NFS code when binding to a reserved port).
if we do this for VBLK vnodes which are in use by softdep mounts,
brelse() will mark the buffer B_INVAL as well, which makes the
softdep code very unhappy.
havoc if the server erroneously uses the same filehandle for
different files. This changes back revision 1.28; the PR that
that revision fixed doesn't apply anymore, it has been verified
not to be a problem with this change.