NetBSD/sys/miscfs/nullfs/null_vnops.c

770 lines
22 KiB
C

/* $NetBSD: null_vnops.c,v 1.12 1997/10/06 09:32:33 thorpej Exp $ */
/*
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* John Heidemann of the UCLA Ficus project.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
* must display the following acknowledgement:
* This product includes software developed by the University of
* California, Berkeley and its contributors.
* 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*
* @(#)null_vnops.c 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/10/93
*
* Ancestors:
* @(#)lofs_vnops.c 1.2 (Berkeley) 6/18/92
* Id: lofs_vnops.c,v 1.11 1992/05/30 10:05:43 jsp Exp
* ...and...
* @(#)null_vnodeops.c 1.20 92/07/07 UCLA Ficus project
*/
/*
* Null Layer
*
* (See mount_null(8) for more information.)
*
* The null layer duplicates a portion of the file system
* name space under a new name. In this respect, it is
* similar to the loopback file system. It differs from
* the loopback fs in two respects: it is implemented using
* a stackable layers techniques, and it's "null-node"s stack above
* all lower-layer vnodes, not just over directory vnodes.
*
* The null layer has two purposes. First, it serves as a demonstration
* of layering by proving a layer which does nothing. (It actually
* does everything the loopback file system does, which is slightly
* more than nothing.) Second, the null layer can serve as a prototype
* layer. Since it provides all necessary layer framework,
* new file system layers can be created very easily be starting
* with a null layer.
*
* The remainder of this man page examines the null layer as a basis
* for constructing new layers.
*
*
* INSTANTIATING NEW NULL LAYERS
*
* New null layers are created with mount_null(8).
* Mount_null(8) takes two arguments, the pathname
* of the lower vfs (target-pn) and the pathname where the null
* layer will appear in the namespace (alias-pn). After
* the null layer is put into place, the contents
* of target-pn subtree will be aliased under alias-pn.
*
*
* OPERATION OF A NULL LAYER
*
* The null layer is the minimum file system layer,
* simply bypassing all possible operations to the lower layer
* for processing there. The majority of its activity centers
* on the bypass routine, though which nearly all vnode operations
* pass.
*
* The bypass routine accepts arbitrary vnode operations for
* handling by the lower layer. It begins by examing vnode
* operation arguments and replacing any null-nodes by their
* lower-layer equivlants. It then invokes the operation
* on the lower layer. Finally, it replaces the null-nodes
* in the arguments and, if a vnode is return by the operation,
* stacks a null-node on top of the returned vnode.
*
* Although bypass handles most operations,
* vop_getattr, _inactive, _reclaim, and _print are not bypassed.
* Vop_getattr must change the fsid being returned.
* Vop_inactive and vop_reclaim are not bypassed so that
* they can handle freeing null-layer specific data.
* Vop_print is not bypassed to avoid excessive debugging
* information.
*
*
* INSTANTIATING VNODE STACKS
*
* Mounting associates the null layer with a lower layer,
* effect stacking two VFSes. Vnode stacks are instead
* created on demand as files are accessed.
*
* The initial mount creates a single vnode stack for the
* root of the new null layer. All other vnode stacks
* are created as a result of vnode operations on
* this or other null vnode stacks.
*
* New vnode stacks come into existance as a result of
* an operation which returns a vnode.
* The bypass routine stacks a null-node above the new
* vnode before returning it to the caller.
*
* For example, imagine mounting a null layer with
* "mount_null /usr/include /dev/layer/null".
* Changing directory to /dev/layer/null will assign
* the root null-node (which was created when the null layer was mounted).
* Now consider opening "sys". A vop_lookup would be
* done on the root null-node. This operation would bypass through
* to the lower layer which would return a vnode representing
* the UFS "sys". Null_bypass then builds a null-node
* aliasing the UFS "sys" and returns this to the caller.
* Later operations on the null-node "sys" will repeat this
* process when constructing other vnode stacks.
*
*
* CREATING OTHER FILE SYSTEM LAYERS
*
* One of the easiest ways to construct new file system layers is to make
* a copy of the null layer, rename all files and variables, and
* then begin modifing the copy. Sed can be used to easily rename
* all variables.
*
* The umap layer is an example of a layer descended from the
* null layer.
*
*
* INVOKING OPERATIONS ON LOWER LAYERS
*
* There are two techniques to invoke operations on a lower layer
* when the operation cannot be completely bypassed. Each method
* is appropriate in different situations. In both cases,
* it is the responsibility of the aliasing layer to make
* the operation arguments "correct" for the lower layer
* by mapping an vnode arguments to the lower layer.
*
* The first approach is to call the aliasing layer's bypass routine.
* This method is most suitable when you wish to invoke the operation
* currently being hanldled on the lower layer. It has the advantage
* that the bypass routine already must do argument mapping.
* An example of this is null_getattrs in the null layer.
*
* A second approach is to directly invoked vnode operations on
* the lower layer with the VOP_OPERATIONNAME interface.
* The advantage of this method is that it is easy to invoke
* arbitrary operations on the lower layer. The disadvantage
* is that vnodes arguments must be manualy mapped.
*
*/
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
#include <sys/namei.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/buf.h>
#include <miscfs/nullfs/null.h>
int null_bug_bypass = 0; /* for debugging: enables bypass printf'ing */
int null_bypass __P((void *));
int null_getattr __P((void *));
int null_inactive __P((void *));
int null_reclaim __P((void *));
int null_print __P((void *));
int null_strategy __P((void *));
int null_bwrite __P((void *));
int null_lock __P((void *));
int null_unlock __P((void *));
int null_islocked __P((void *));
int null_lookup __P((void *));
/*
* This is the 10-Apr-92 bypass routine.
* This version has been optimized for speed, throwing away some
* safety checks. It should still always work, but it's not as
* robust to programmer errors.
* Define SAFETY to include some error checking code.
*
* In general, we map all vnodes going down and unmap them on the way back.
* As an exception to this, vnodes can be marked "unmapped" by setting
* the Nth bit in operation's vdesc_flags.
*
* Also, some BSD vnode operations have the side effect of vrele'ing
* their arguments. With stacking, the reference counts are held
* by the upper node, not the lower one, so we must handle these
* side-effects here. This is not of concern in Sun-derived systems
* since there are no such side-effects.
*
* This makes the following assumptions:
* - only one returned vpp
* - no INOUT vpp's (Sun's vop_open has one of these)
* - the vnode operation vector of the first vnode should be used
* to determine what implementation of the op should be invoked
* - all mapped vnodes are of our vnode-type (NEEDSWORK:
* problems on rmdir'ing mount points and renaming?)
*/
int
null_bypass(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_generic_args /* {
struct vnodeop_desc *a_desc;
<other random data follows, presumably>
} */ *ap = v;
register struct vnode **this_vp_p;
int error;
struct vnode *old_vps[VDESC_MAX_VPS];
struct vnode **vps_p[VDESC_MAX_VPS];
struct vnode ***vppp;
struct vnodeop_desc *descp = ap->a_desc;
int reles, i;
if (null_bug_bypass)
printf ("null_bypass: %s\n", descp->vdesc_name);
#ifdef SAFETY
/*
* We require at least one vp.
*/
if (descp->vdesc_vp_offsets == NULL ||
descp->vdesc_vp_offsets[0] == VDESC_NO_OFFSET)
panic ("null_bypass: no vp's in map.\n");
#endif
/*
* Map the vnodes going in.
* Later, we'll invoke the operation based on
* the first mapped vnode's operation vector.
*/
reles = descp->vdesc_flags;
for (i = 0; i < VDESC_MAX_VPS; reles >>= 1, i++) {
if (descp->vdesc_vp_offsets[i] == VDESC_NO_OFFSET)
break; /* bail out at end of list */
vps_p[i] = this_vp_p =
VOPARG_OFFSETTO(struct vnode**,descp->vdesc_vp_offsets[i],ap);
/*
* We're not guaranteed that any but the first vnode
* are of our type. Check for and don't map any
* that aren't. (We must always map first vp or vclean fails.)
*/
if (i && (*this_vp_p == NULLVP ||
(*this_vp_p)->v_op != null_vnodeop_p)) {
old_vps[i] = NULLVP;
} else {
old_vps[i] = *this_vp_p;
*(vps_p[i]) = NULLVPTOLOWERVP(*this_vp_p);
/*
* XXX - Several operations have the side effect
* of vrele'ing their vp's. We must account for
* that. (This should go away in the future.)
*/
if (reles & 1)
VREF(*this_vp_p);
}
}
/*
* Call the operation on the lower layer
* with the modified argument structure.
*/
error = VCALL(*(vps_p[0]), descp->vdesc_offset, ap);
/*
* Maintain the illusion of call-by-value
* by restoring vnodes in the argument structure
* to their original value.
*/
reles = descp->vdesc_flags;
for (i = 0; i < VDESC_MAX_VPS; reles >>= 1, i++) {
if (descp->vdesc_vp_offsets[i] == VDESC_NO_OFFSET)
break; /* bail out at end of list */
if (old_vps[i] != NULLVP) {
*(vps_p[i]) = old_vps[i];
if (reles & 1) {
/* they really vput them, so we must drop
our locks (but mark underneath as
unlocked first).
Beware of vnode duplication--put it once,
and rele the rest. Check this
by looking at our upper flag. */
if (VTONULL(*(vps_p[i]))->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) {
VTONULL(*(vps_p[i]))->null_flags &= ~NULL_LLOCK;
vput(*(vps_p[i]));
} else
vrele(*(vps_p[i]));
}
}
}
/*
* Map the possible out-going vpp
* (Assumes that the lower layer always returns
* a VREF'ed vpp unless it gets an error.)
*/
if (descp->vdesc_vpp_offset != VDESC_NO_OFFSET &&
!(descp->vdesc_flags & VDESC_NOMAP_VPP) &&
!error) {
/*
* XXX - even though some ops have vpp returned vp's,
* several ops actually vrele this before returning.
* We must avoid these ops.
* (This should go away when these ops are regularized.)
*/
if (descp->vdesc_flags & VDESC_VPP_WILLRELE)
goto out;
vppp = VOPARG_OFFSETTO(struct vnode***,
descp->vdesc_vpp_offset,ap);
/*
* This assumes that **vppp is a locked vnode (it is always
* so as of this writing, NetBSD-current 1995/02/16)
*/
/*
* (don't want to lock it if being called on behalf
* of lookup--it plays weird locking games depending
* on whether or not it's looking up ".", "..", etc.
*/
error = null_node_create(old_vps[0]->v_mount, **vppp, *vppp,
descp == &vop_lookup_desc ? 0 : 1);
}
out:
return (error);
}
/*
* We handle getattr only to change the fsid.
*/
int
null_getattr(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_getattr_args /* {
struct vnode *a_vp;
struct vattr *a_vap;
struct ucred *a_cred;
struct proc *a_p;
} */ *ap = v;
int error;
if ((error = null_bypass(ap)) != 0)
return (error);
/* Requires that arguments be restored. */
ap->a_vap->va_fsid = ap->a_vp->v_mount->mnt_stat.f_fsid.val[0];
return (0);
}
int
null_inactive(v)
void *v;
{
/*
* Do nothing (and _don't_ bypass).
* Wait to vrele lowervp until reclaim,
* so that until then our null_node is in the
* cache and reusable.
*
* NEEDSWORK: Someday, consider inactive'ing
* the lowervp and then trying to reactivate it
* with capabilities (v_id)
* like they do in the name lookup cache code.
* That's too much work for now.
*/
return (0);
}
int
null_reclaim(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_reclaim_args /* {
struct vnode *a_vp;
} */ *ap = v;
struct vnode *vp = ap->a_vp;
struct null_node *xp = VTONULL(vp);
struct vnode *lowervp = xp->null_lowervp;
/*
* Note: in vop_reclaim, vp->v_op == dead_vnodeop_p,
* so we can't call VOPs on ourself.
*/
/* After this assignment, this node will not be re-used. */
xp->null_lowervp = NULL;
LIST_REMOVE(xp, null_hash);
FREE(vp->v_data, M_TEMP);
vp->v_data = NULL;
vrele (lowervp);
return (0);
}
int
null_print(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_print_args /* {
struct vnode *a_vp;
} */ *ap = v;
register struct vnode *vp = ap->a_vp;
register struct null_node *nn = VTONULL(vp);
printf ("\ttag VT_NULLFS, vp=%p, lowervp=%p\n", vp, NULLVPTOLOWERVP(vp));
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
printf("%s%s owner pid %d retpc %p retret %p\n",
(nn->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) ? "(LOCKED) " : "",
(nn->null_flags & NULL_LLOCK) ? "(LLOCK) " : "",
nn->null_pid, nn->null_lockpc, nn->null_lockpc2);
#else
printf("%s%s\n",
(nn->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) ? "(LOCKED) " : "",
(nn->null_flags & NULL_LLOCK) ? "(LLOCK) " : "");
#endif
vprint("nullfs lowervp", NULLVPTOLOWERVP(vp));
return (0);
}
/*
* XXX - vop_strategy must be hand coded because it has no
* vnode in its arguments.
* This goes away with a merged VM/buffer cache.
*/
int
null_strategy(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_strategy_args /* {
struct buf *a_bp;
} */ *ap = v;
struct buf *bp = ap->a_bp;
int error;
struct vnode *savedvp;
savedvp = bp->b_vp;
bp->b_vp = NULLVPTOLOWERVP(bp->b_vp);
error = VOP_STRATEGY(bp);
bp->b_vp = savedvp;
return (error);
}
/*
* XXX - like vop_strategy, vop_bwrite must be hand coded because it has no
* vnode in its arguments.
* This goes away with a merged VM/buffer cache.
*/
int
null_bwrite(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_bwrite_args /* {
struct buf *a_bp;
} */ *ap = v;
struct buf *bp = ap->a_bp;
int error;
struct vnode *savedvp;
savedvp = bp->b_vp;
bp->b_vp = NULLVPTOLOWERVP(bp->b_vp);
error = VOP_BWRITE(bp);
bp->b_vp = savedvp;
return (error);
}
/*
* We need a separate null lock routine, to avoid deadlocks at reclaim time.
* If a process holds the lower-vnode locked when it tries to reclaim
* the null upper-vnode, _and_ null_bypass is used as the locking operation,
* then a process can end up locking against itself.
* This has been observed when a null mount is set up to "tunnel" beneath a
* union mount (that setup is useful if you still wish to be able to access
* the non-union version of either the above or below union layer)
*/
int
null_lock(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_lock_args *ap = v;
struct vnode *vp = ap->a_vp;
struct null_node *nn;
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
vprint("null_lock_e", ap->a_vp);
printf("retpc=%p, retretpc=%p\n", RETURN_PC(0), RETURN_PC(1));
#endif
start:
while (vp->v_flag & VXLOCK) {
vp->v_flag |= VXWANT;
tsleep((caddr_t)vp, PINOD, "nulllock1", 0);
}
nn = VTONULL(vp);
if ((nn->null_flags & NULL_LLOCK) == 0 &&
(vp->v_usecount != 0)) {
/*
* only lock underlying node if we haven't locked it yet
* for null ops, and our refcount is nonzero. If usecount
* is zero, we are probably being reclaimed so we need to
* keep our hands off the lower node.
*/
VOP_LOCK(nn->null_lowervp);
nn->null_flags |= NULL_LLOCK;
}
if (nn->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) {
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
if (curproc && nn->null_pid == curproc->p_pid &&
nn->null_pid > -1 && curproc->p_pid > -1) {
vprint("self-lock", vp);
panic("null: locking against myself");
}
#endif
nn->null_flags |= NULL_WANTED;
tsleep((caddr_t)nn, PINOD, "nulllock2", 0);
goto start;
}
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
if (curproc)
nn->null_pid = curproc->p_pid;
else
nn->null_pid = -1;
nn->null_lockpc = RETURN_PC(0);
nn->null_lockpc2 = RETURN_PC(1);
#endif
nn->null_flags |= NULL_LOCKED;
return (0);
}
int
null_unlock(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_lock_args *ap = v;
struct null_node *nn = VTONULL(ap->a_vp);
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
vprint("null_unlock_e", ap->a_vp);
#endif
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
if ((nn->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) == 0) {
vprint("null_unlock", ap->a_vp);
panic("null: unlocking unlocked node");
}
if (curproc && nn->null_pid != curproc->p_pid &&
curproc->p_pid > -1 && nn->null_pid > -1) {
vprint("null_unlock", ap->a_vp);
panic("null: unlocking other process's null node");
}
#endif
nn->null_flags &= ~NULL_LOCKED;
if ((nn->null_flags & NULL_LLOCK) != 0)
VOP_UNLOCK(nn->null_lowervp);
nn->null_flags &= ~NULL_LLOCK;
if (nn->null_flags & NULL_WANTED) {
nn->null_flags &= ~NULL_WANTED;
wakeup((caddr_t)nn);
}
#ifdef DIAGNOSTIC
nn->null_pid = 0;
nn->null_lockpc = nn->null_lockpc2 = 0;
#endif
return (0);
}
int
null_islocked(v)
void *v;
{
struct vop_islocked_args *ap = v;
return ((VTONULL(ap->a_vp)->null_flags & NULL_LOCKED) ? 1 : 0);
}
int
null_lookup(v)
void *v;
{
register struct vop_lookup_args /* {
struct vnodeop_desc *a_desc;
struct vnode *a_dvp;
struct vnode **a_vpp;
struct componentname *a_cnp;
} */ *ap = v;
register int error;
register struct vnode *dvp;
int flags = ap->a_cnp->cn_flags;
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
printf("null_lookup: dvp=%p, name='%s'\n",
ap->a_dvp, ap->a_cnp->cn_nameptr);
#endif
/*
* the starting dir (ap->a_dvp) comes in locked.
*/
/* set LOCKPARENT to hold on to it until done below */
ap->a_cnp->cn_flags |= LOCKPARENT;
error = null_bypass(ap);
if (!(flags & LOCKPARENT))
ap->a_cnp->cn_flags &= ~LOCKPARENT;
if (error)
/*
* starting dir is still locked/has been relocked
* on error return.
*/
return error;
if (ap->a_dvp != *ap->a_vpp) {
/*
* Lookup returns node locked; we mark both lower and
* upper nodes as locked by setting the lower lock
* flag (it came back locked), and then call lock to
* set upper lock flag & record pid, etc. see
* null_node_create()
*/
VTONULL(*ap->a_vpp)->null_flags |= NULL_LLOCK;
dvp = ap->a_dvp;
if (flags & ISDOTDOT) {
/*
* If we're looking up `..' and this isn't the
* last component, then the starting directory
* ("parent") is _unlocked_ as a side-effect
* of lookups. This is to avoid deadlocks:
* lock order is always parent, child, so
* looking up `..' requires dropping the lock
* on the starting directory.
*/
/* see ufs_lookup() for hairy ugly locking protocol
examples */
/*
* underlying starting dir comes back locked if flags &
* LOCKPARENT (which we artificially set above) and
* ISLASTCN.
*/
if (flags & ISLASTCN) {
VTONULL(dvp)->null_flags |= NULL_LLOCK; /* no-op, right? */
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
if (!VOP_ISLOCKED(VTONULL(dvp)->null_lowervp)) {
vprint("lowerdvp not locked after lookup\n", dvp);
panic("null_lookup not locked");
}
#endif
} else {
VTONULL(dvp)->null_flags &= ~NULL_LLOCK;
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
if (VOP_ISLOCKED(VTONULL(dvp)->null_lowervp)) {
vprint("lowerdvp locked after lookup?\n", dvp);
panic("null_lookup locked");
}
#endif
}
/*
* locking order: drop lock on lower-in-tree
* element, then get lock on higher-in-tree
* element, then (if needed) re-fetch lower
* lock. No need for vget() since we hold a
* refcount to the starting directory
*/
VOP_UNLOCK(dvp);
VOP_LOCK(*ap->a_vpp);
/*
* we should return our directory locked if
* (flags & LOCKPARENT) and (flags & ISLASTCN)
*/
if ((flags & LOCKPARENT) && (flags & ISLASTCN))
VOP_LOCK(dvp);
} else {
/*
* Normal directory locking order: we hold the starting
* directory locked; now lock our layer of the target.
*/
VOP_LOCK(*ap->a_vpp);
/*
* underlying starting dir comes back locked
* if lockparent (we set it) and no error
* (this leg) and ISLASTCN
*/
if (flags & ISLASTCN) {
VTONULL(dvp)->null_flags |= NULL_LLOCK; /* no op, right? */
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
if (!VOP_ISLOCKED(VTONULL(dvp)->null_lowervp)) {
vprint("lowerdvp not locked after lookup\n", dvp);
panic("null_lookup not locked");
}
#endif
} else {
VTONULL(dvp)->null_flags &= ~NULL_LLOCK;
#ifdef NULLFS_DIAGNOSTIC
if (VOP_ISLOCKED(VTONULL(dvp)->null_lowervp)) {
vprint("lowerdvp locked after lookup?\n", dvp);
panic("null_lookup locked");
}
#endif
}
/*
* we should return our directory unlocked if
* our caller didn't want the parent locked,
* !(flags & LOCKPARENT), or we're not at the
* end yet, !(flags & ISLASTCN)
*/
if (!(flags & LOCKPARENT) || !(flags & ISLASTCN))
VOP_UNLOCK(dvp);
}
}
return error;
}
/*
* Global vfs data structures
*/
int (**null_vnodeop_p) __P((void *));
struct vnodeopv_entry_desc null_vnodeop_entries[] = {
{ &vop_default_desc, null_bypass },
{ &vop_getattr_desc, null_getattr },
{ &vop_inactive_desc, null_inactive },
{ &vop_reclaim_desc, null_reclaim },
{ &vop_print_desc, null_print },
{ &vop_lock_desc, null_lock },
{ &vop_unlock_desc, null_unlock },
{ &vop_islocked_desc, null_islocked },
{ &vop_lookup_desc, null_lookup }, /* special locking frob */
{ &vop_strategy_desc, null_strategy },
{ &vop_bwrite_desc, null_bwrite },
{ (struct vnodeop_desc*)NULL, (int(*) __P((void *)))NULL }
};
struct vnodeopv_desc nullfs_vnodeop_opv_desc =
{ &null_vnodeop_p, null_vnodeop_entries };