Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
perseant ddfb1dbb92 For synchronous writes, keep separate i/o counters for each write, so
processes don't have to wait for one another to finish (e.g., nfsd seems
to be a little happier now, though I haven't measured the difference).
Synchronous checkpoints, however, must always wait for all i/o to finish.

Take the contents of the callback functions and have them run in thread
context instead (aiodoned thread).  lfs_iocount no longer has to be
protected in splbio(), and quite a bit less of the segment construction
loop needs to be in splbio() as well.

If lfs_markv is handed a block that is not the correct size according to
the inode, refuse to process it.  (Formerly it was extended to the "correct"
size.)  This is possibly more prone to deadlock, but less prone to corruption.

lfs_segclean now outright refuses to clean segments that appear to have live
bytes in them.  Again this may be more prone to deadlock but avoids
corruption.

Replace ufsspec_close and ufsfifo_close with LFS equivalents; this means
that no UFS functions need to know about LFS_ITIMES any more.  Remove
the reference from ufs/inode.h.

Tested on i386, test-compiled on alpha.
2002-06-16 00:13:15 +00:00
lukem 2565646230 don't need <sys/types.h> when including <sys/param.h> 2001-11-15 09:47:59 +00:00
lukem ec6245465a add RCSID 2001-11-08 02:39:06 +00:00
lukem 99147a7648 remove #include <ufs/ufs/quota.h> where it was just to appease
<ufs/ufs/inode.h>, since the latter now includes the former.  leave the former
in source that obviously uses specific bits of it (for completeness.)
2001-10-26 05:56:06 +00:00
perseant 4e3fced95b Merge the short-lived perseant-lfsv2 branch into the trunk.
Kernels and tools understand both v1 and v2 filesystems; newfs_lfs
generates v2 by default.  Changes for the v2 layout include:

- Segments of non-PO2 size and arbitrary block offset, so these can be
  matched to convenient physical characteristics of the partition (e.g.,
  stripe or track size and offset).

- Address by fragment instead of by disk sector, paving the way for
  non-512-byte-sector devices.  In theory fragments can be as large
  as you like, though in reality they must be smaller than MAXBSIZE in size.

- Use serial number and filesystem identifier to ensure that roll-forward
  doesn't get old data and think it's new.  Roll-forward is enabled for
  v2 filesystems, though not for v1 filesystems by default.

- The inode free list is now a tailq, paving the way for undelete (undelete
  is not yet implemented, but can be without further non-backwards-compatible
  changes to disk structures).

- Inode atime information is kept in the Ifile, instead of on the inode;
  that is, the inode is never written *just* because atime was changed.
  Because of this the inodes remain near the file data on the disk, rather
  than wandering all over as the disk is read repeatedly.  This speeds up
  repeated reads by a small but noticeable amount.

Other changes of note include:

- The ifile written by newfs_lfs can now be of arbitrary length, it is no
  longer restricted to a single indirect block.

- Fixed an old bug where ctime was changed every time a vnode was created.
  I need to look more closely to make sure that the times are only updated
  during write(2) and friends, not after-the-fact during a segment write,
  and certainly not by the cleaner.
2001-07-13 20:30:18 +00:00
christos bf4fd5e39c don't include lfs_extern.h; ufs/inode.h does too. 2001-02-04 21:51:19 +00:00
perseant 77b518b85d Use u_int32_t instead of u_long to compute LFS checksums, since the
checksum is stored in a u_int32_t.
2000-11-25 02:39:34 +00:00
perseant 9c7f8050f4 Various bug-fixes to LFS, to wit:
Kernel:

* Add runtime quantity lfs_ravail, the number of disk-blocks reserved
  for writing.  Writes to the filesystem first reserve a maximum amount
  of blocks before their write is allowed to proceed; after the blocks
  are allocated the reserved total is reduced by a corresponding amount.

  If the lfs_reserve function cannot immediately reserve the requested
  number of blocks, the inode is unlocked, and the thread sleeps until
  the cleaner has made enough space available for the blocks to be
  reserved.  In this way large files can be written to the filesystem
  (or, smaller files can be written to a nearly-full but thoroughly
  clean filesystem) and the cleaner can still function properly.

* Remove explicit switching on dlfs_minfreeseg from the kernel code; it
  is now merely a fs-creation parameter used to compute dlfs_avail and
  dlfs_bfree (and used by fsck_lfs(8) to check their accuracy).  Its
  former role is better assumed by a properly computed dlfs_avail.

* Bounds-check inode numbers submitted through lfs_bmapv and lfs_markv.
  This prevents a panic, but, if the cleaner is feeding the filesystem
  the wrong data, you are still in a world of hurt.

* Cleanup: remove explicit references of DEV_BSIZE in favor of
  btodb()/dbtob().

lfs_cleanerd:

* Make -n mean "send N segments' blocks through a single call to
  lfs_markv".  Previously it had meant "clean N segments though N calls
  to lfs_markv, before looking again to see if more need to be cleaned".
  The new behavior gives better packing of direct data on disk with as
  little metadata as possible, largely alleviating the problem that the
  cleaner can consume more disk through inefficient use of metadata than
  it frees by moving dirty data away from clean "holes" to produce
  entirely clean segments.

* Make -b mean "read as many segments as necessary to write N segments
  of dirty data back to disk", rather than its former meaning of "read
  as many segments as necessary to free N segments worth of space".  The
  new meaning, combined with the new -n behavior described above,
  further aids in cleaning storage efficiency as entire segments can be
  written at once, using as few blocks as possible for segment summaries
  and inode blocks.

* Make the cleaner take note of segments which could not be cleaned due
  to error, and not attempt to clean them until they are entirely free
  of dirty blocks.  This prevents the case in which a cleanerd running
  with -n 1 and without -b (formerly the default) would spin trying
  repeatedly to clean a corrupt segment, while the remaining space
  filled and deadlocked the filesystem.

* Update the lfs_cleanerd manual page to describe all the options,
  including the changes mentioned here (in particular, the -b and -n
  flags were previously undocumented).

fsck_lfs:

* Check, and optionally fix, lfs_avail (to an exact figure) and
  lfs_bfree (within a margin of error) in pass 5.

newfs_lfs:

* Reduce the default dlfs_minfreeseg to 1/20 of the total segments.

* Add a warning if the sgs disklabel field is 16 (the default for FFS'
  cpg, but not usually desirable for LFS' sgs: 5--8 is a better range).

* Change the calculation of lfs_avail and lfs_bfree, corresponding to
  the kernel changes mentioned above.

mount_lfs:

* Add -N and -b options to pass corresponding -n and -b options to
  lfs_cleanerd.

* Default to calling lfs_cleanerd with "-b -n 4".


[All of these changes were largely tested in the 1.5 branch, with the
idea that they (along with previous un-pulled-up work) could be applied
to the branch while it was still in ALPHA2; however my test system has
experienced corruption on another filesystem (/dev/console has gone
missing :^), and, while I believe this unrelated to the LFS changes, I
cannot with good conscience request that the changes be pulled up.]
2000-09-09 04:49:54 +00:00
augustss 169ac5b3c1 Remove register declarations. 2000-03-30 12:41:09 +00:00
perseant 1cacaa295f Change lfs_sb_cksum to use offsetof() instead of an inlined version.
Fix lfs_vref/lfs_vunredf to ignore VXLOCKed vnodes that are also being
flushed.

Improve the debugging messages somewhat.
1999-03-25 21:54:10 +00:00
perseant 1b8f5ea3c3 New sources should leave the LFS in a more-or-less working state. Changes
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.
1999-03-10 00:20:00 +00:00
pk 37109879dc PR#6032: define fixed sized on-disk superblock structure. 1998-09-11 21:27:12 +00:00
fvdl e5bc90f40c Merge with Lite2 + local changes 1998-03-01 02:20:01 +00:00
lukem 319d918511 prototype lfs_cksum ifndef KERNEL 1997-09-15 06:44:48 +00:00
christos 7e24291099 Protect include in lfs_cksum.c so that it can be used by userland programs. 1996-02-16 02:22:05 +00:00
christos 7bd9e243f3 lfs prototypes 1996-02-09 22:28:45 +00:00
mycroft a63cb01c7d Sync with CSRG. 1994-12-14 13:03:35 +00:00
cgd 2f658e4b73 c syntax 1994-09-20 06:45:17 +00:00
cgd fccfa11af5 New RCS ID's, take two. they're more aesthecially pleasant, and use 'NetBSD' 1994-06-29 06:39:25 +00:00
mycroft 264b874c14 Update to 4.4-Lite fs code, with local changes. 1994-06-08 11:41:58 +00:00