allocated to extend the file to the new size. Releasing all pages
may release pages that contains previously-written data not yet flushed
to disk. Should fix PR kern/35704
- {ffs,lfs,ext2fs}_truncate(): Even if the inode's size is the same as
the new length, call uvm_vnp_setsize(). *_truncate() may have been
called by *_write() in the error path (e.g. block allocation failure
because of quota of file system full), and at this point v_writesize
has been set to the desired size of the file and not reverted to the
old size. Not adjusting v_writesize to the real size cause
genfs_do_io() to write to disk past the real end of the file.
years ago when the kernel was modified to not alter ABI based on
DIAGNOSTIC, and now just call the respective function interfaces
(in lowercase). Plenty of mix'n match upper/lowercase has creeped
into the tree since then. Nuke the macros and convert all callsites
to lowercase.
no functional change
> Fix bug introduced in revision 1.174(*) where a NULL fspec with an MNT_UPDATE
> command would always return EINVAL. This broke fsck on root, where fsck'ing
> a dirty root would always return an error causing rc to resort in a reboot.
(*) This is "Apply the NFS exports list rototill patch" change
in ext2fs_vfsops.c rev 1.91.
> Change ffs_mount, in MNT_UPDATE case, to check dev_t's for equality
> instead of just vnode pointers. Fixes erroneous "does not match mounted
> device" errors from mount(8) in the presence of MFS /dev, init.root, &c.
Fixes LOCKDEBUG panic which is the same one mentioned in PR kern/41078
on trying to mount_ext2fs against a raw device, while that panic
seems to have another route cause around module_autoload() in
sys/miscfs/specfs/spec_vnops.c:spec_open().
check_console, veriexecclose, veriexec_delete, veriexec_file_add,
emul_find_root, coff_load_shlib (sh3 version), coff_load_shlib,
compat_20_sys_statfs, compat_20_netbsd32_statfs,
ELFNAME2(netbsd32,probe_noteless), darwin_sys_statfs,
ibcs2_sys_statfs, ibcs2_sys_statvfs, linux_sys_uselib,
osf1_sys_statfs, sunos_sys_statfs, sunos32_sys_statfs,
ultrix_sys_statfs, do_sys_mount, fss_create_files (3 of 4),
adosfs_mount, cd9660_mount, coda_ioctl, coda_mount, ext2fs_mount,
ffs_mount, filecore_mount, hfs_mount, lfs_mount, msdosfs_mount,
ntfs_mount, sysvbfs_mount, udf_mount, union_mount, sys_chflags,
sys_lchflags, sys_chmod, sys_lchmod, sys_chown, sys_lchown,
sys___posix_chown, sys___posix_lchown, sys_link, do_sys_pstatvfs,
sys_quotactl, sys_revoke, sys_truncate, do_sys_utimes, sys_extattrctl,
sys_extattr_set_file, sys_extattr_set_link, sys_extattr_get_file,
sys_extattr_get_link, sys_extattr_delete_file,
sys_extattr_delete_link, sys_extattr_list_file, sys_extattr_list_link,
sys_setxattr, sys_lsetxattr, sys_getxattr, sys_lgetxattr,
sys_listxattr, sys_llistxattr, sys_removexattr, sys_lremovexattr
All have been scrutinized (several times, in fact) and compile-tested,
but not all have been explicitly tested in action.
XXX: While I haven't (intentionally) changed the use or nonuse of
XXX: TRYEMULROOT in any of these places, I'm not convinced all the
XXX: uses are correct; an audit might be desirable.
the other routines of the same spirit.
Adjust file-system code to use it.
Keep vaccess() for KPI compatibility and to keep element of least
surprise. A "diagnostic" message warning that vaccess() is deprecated will
be printed when it's used (obviously, only in DIAGNOSTIC kernels).
No objections on tech-kern@:
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2009/06/21/msg005310.html
operations, specifically quota and block allocation from reserved space.
Modify ufs_quotactl() to accomodate passing "mp" earlier by vfs_busy()ing
it a little bit higher.
Mailing list reference:
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2009/04/26/msg004936.html
Note that the umapfs request mentioned in this thread was NOT added as
there is still on-going discussion regarding the proper implementation.
the security checks when mounting a device (VOP_ACCESS() + kauth(9) call)).
Proposed with no objections on tech-kern@:
http://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-kern/2009/04/20/msg004859.html
The vnode is always expected to be locked, so no locking is done outside
the file-system code.
run through copy-on-write. Call fscow_run() with valid data where possible.
The LP_UFSCOW hack is no longer needed to protect ffs_copyonwrite() against
endless recursion.
- Add a flag B_MODIFY to bread(), breada() and breadn(). If set the caller
intends to modify the buffer returned.
- Always run copy-on-write on buffers returned from ffs_balloc().
- Add new function ffs_getblk() that gets a buffer, assigns a new blkno,
may clear the buffer and runs copy-on-write. Process possible errors
from getblk() or fscow_run(). Part of PR kern/38664.
Welcome to 4.99.63
Reviewed by: YAMAMOTO Takashi <yamt@netbsd.org>
Make VFS hooks dynamic while we're here and say farewell to VFS_ATTACH and
VFS_HOOKS_ATTACH linksets.
As a consequence, most of the file systems can now be loaded as new style
modules.
Quick sanity check by ad@.
Simplify the mount locking. Remove all the crud to deal with recursion on
the mount lock, and crud to deal with unmount as another weirdo lock.
Hopefully this will once and for all fix the deadlocks with this. With this
commit there are two locks on each mount:
- krwlock_t mnt_unmounting. This is used to prevent unmount across critical
sections like getnewvnode(). It's only ever read locked with rw_tryenter(),
and is only ever write locked in dounmount(). A write hold can't be taken
on this lock if the current LWP could hold a vnode lock.
- kmutex_t mnt_updating. This is taken by threads updating the mount, for
example when going r/o -> r/w, and is only present to serialize updates.
In order to take this lock, a read hold must first be taken on
mnt_unmounting, and the two need to be held across the operation.
One effect of this change: previously if an unmount failed, we would make a
half hearted attempt to back out of it gracefully, but that was unlikely to
work in a lot of cases. Now while an unmount that will be aborted is in
progress, new file operations within the mount will fail instead of being
delayed. That is unlikely to be a problem though, because if the admin
requests unmount of a file system then s(he) has made a decision to deny
access to the resource.
The previous fix worked, but it opened a window where mounts could have
disappeared from mountlist while the caller was traversing it using
vfs_trybusy(). Fix that.
proclist_mutex and proclist_lock into a single adaptive mutex (proc_lock).
Implications:
- Inspecting process state requires thread context, so signals can no longer
be sent from a hardware interrupt handler. Signal activity must be
deferred to a soft interrupt or kthread.
- As the proc state locking is simplified, it's now safe to take exit()
and wait() out from under kernel_lock.
- The system spends less time at IPL_SCHED, and there is less lock activity.
- Do reference counting for 'struct mount'. Each vnode associated with a
mount takes a reference, and in turn the mount takes a reference to the
vfsops.
- Now that mounts are reference counted, replace the overcomplicated mount
locking inherited from 4.4BSD with a recursable rwlock.
Introduce a per-FS rename lock and new vfsops to manipulate it.
Get this lock while renaming. Also add another relookup() in do_sys_rename,
which is a hack to kludge around some of the worst deficiencies of
ufs_rename.
reviewed-by: pooka (and an earlier rev by ad)
posted on tech-kern with no objections.
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.