- drop the notion of frags (LFS fragments) vs fsb (FFS fragments)
The code uses a complicated unity function that just makes the
code difficult to understand.
- support larger sector sizes. Fix disk address computations
to use DEV_BSIZE in the kernel as required by device drivers
and to use sector sizes in userland.
- Fix several locking bugs in lfs_bio.c and lfs_subr.c.
a struct called kernelops, which contains standard system calls
for the normal case and rump system calls for the rump case.
Make it possible to run the lfs cleaner in a library fashion (taking
the quick route with the implementation).
PR kern/16942 panic with softdep and quotas
PR kern/19565 panic: softdep_write_inodeblock: indirect pointer #1 mismatch
PR kern/26274 softdep panic: allocdirect_merge: ...
PR kern/26374 Long delay before non-root users can write to softdep partitions
PR kern/28621 1.6.x "vp != NULL" panic in ffs_softdep.c:4653 while unmounting a softdep (+quota) filesystem
PR kern/29513 FFS+Softdep panic with unfsck-able file-corruption
PR kern/31544 The ffs softdep code appears to fail to write dirty bits to disk
PR kern/31981 stopping scsi disk can cause panic (softdep)
PR kern/32116 kernel panic in softdep (assertion failure)
PR kern/32532 softdep_trackbufs deadlock
PR kern/37191 softdep: locking against myself
PR kern/40474 Kernel panic after remounting raid root with softdep
Retire softdep, pass 2. As discussed and later formally announced on the
mailing lists.
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>
systems just checked != 0, breaking MNT_GETARGS. Others worked with < 0,
but make them check against -1 too for consistency. And sprinkle some
stylish line wrapping where appropriate.
* Add lfs_balloc capability to the lfs library.
* Extend the Ifile if we run out of free inodes when creating lost+found.
* Don't roll forward if we have allocated a lost+found, to avoid
conflicts when adding new files in roll-forward.
* Make some messages slightly more verbose (e.g. include inode number,
and use pwarn() instead of printf() so the messages include the device
name when preening).
* Change superblock detection/avoidance to use the offset table in the
primary superblock, rather than looking at the contents.
* Be more verbose about various operations when passed the -d flag,
especially roll-forward.
* Be more careful about dirops during roll forward, since the cleaner can
sometimes write blocks from dirop vnodes. Detect and avoid this problem.
* Always check the free list, even if given -i; if we're going to write
it we have to check it first.
* Mark inodes dirty when blocks are found during roll forward, so the
inodes are written with the new block locations.
* Update size of inodes if blocks beyond EOF are found during roll
forward.
* Fix segment accounting for blocks and inodes found during roll
forward.
* Report statistics on roll forward: how many new/deleted/moved files
and how many updated blocks (or "nothing new").
* Don't care if the device being checked is really a device, if we have
been passed the -f flag (to facilitate automated testing).
* When writing to the disk, use the current time in the segment headers
rathern than time 0.
* When passed the -i flag, locate the partial segment containing the
Ifile inode and use that to calculate lfs_offset, lfs_curseg,
lfs_nextseg. (Again for automated testing.)
the list in order (ordering it on mount).
Regularize error messages: these are now all in ALL CAPS, with all hex
numbers (not reported in caps) prefixed by 0x. (The non-fsck-specific
messages are an exception to this all-caps rule.)