| // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| /* |
| * Copyright (c) 2000-2005 Silicon Graphics, Inc. |
| * All Rights Reserved. |
| */ |
| #include "xfs.h" |
| #include "xfs_fs.h" |
| #include "xfs_shared.h" |
| #include "xfs_format.h" |
| #include "xfs_log_format.h" |
| #include "xfs_trans_resv.h" |
| #include "xfs_mount.h" |
| #include "xfs_errortag.h" |
| #include "xfs_error.h" |
| #include "xfs_trans.h" |
| #include "xfs_trans_priv.h" |
| #include "xfs_log.h" |
| #include "xfs_log_priv.h" |
| #include "xfs_trace.h" |
| #include "xfs_sysfs.h" |
| #include "xfs_sb.h" |
| #include "xfs_health.h" |
| |
| struct kmem_cache *xfs_log_ticket_cache; |
| |
| /* Local miscellaneous function prototypes */ |
| STATIC struct xlog * |
| xlog_alloc_log( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xfs_buftarg *log_target, |
| xfs_daddr_t blk_offset, |
| int num_bblks); |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_dealloc_log( |
| struct xlog *log); |
| |
| /* local state machine functions */ |
| STATIC void xlog_state_done_syncing( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog); |
| STATIC void xlog_state_do_callback( |
| struct xlog *log); |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_state_get_iclog_space( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| int len, |
| struct xlog_in_core **iclog, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| int *logoffsetp); |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_sync( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket); |
| #if defined(DEBUG) |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_verify_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int count); |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_verify_tail_lsn( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog); |
| #else |
| #define xlog_verify_iclog(a,b,c) |
| #define xlog_verify_tail_lsn(a,b) |
| #endif |
| |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_iclogs_empty( |
| struct xlog *log); |
| |
| static int |
| xfs_log_cover(struct xfs_mount *); |
| |
| /* |
| * We need to make sure the buffer pointer returned is naturally aligned for the |
| * biggest basic data type we put into it. We have already accounted for this |
| * padding when sizing the buffer. |
| * |
| * However, this padding does not get written into the log, and hence we have to |
| * track the space used by the log vectors separately to prevent log space hangs |
| * due to inaccurate accounting (i.e. a leak) of the used log space through the |
| * CIL context ticket. |
| * |
| * We also add space for the xlog_op_header that describes this region in the |
| * log. This prepends the data region we return to the caller to copy their data |
| * into, so do all the static initialisation of the ophdr now. Because the ophdr |
| * is not 8 byte aligned, we have to be careful to ensure that we align the |
| * start of the buffer such that the region we return to the call is 8 byte |
| * aligned and packed against the tail of the ophdr. |
| */ |
| void * |
| xlog_prepare_iovec( |
| struct xfs_log_vec *lv, |
| struct xfs_log_iovec **vecp, |
| uint type) |
| { |
| struct xfs_log_iovec *vec = *vecp; |
| struct xlog_op_header *oph; |
| uint32_t len; |
| void *buf; |
| |
| if (vec) { |
| ASSERT(vec - lv->lv_iovecp < lv->lv_niovecs); |
| vec++; |
| } else { |
| vec = &lv->lv_iovecp[0]; |
| } |
| |
| len = lv->lv_buf_len + sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| if (!IS_ALIGNED(len, sizeof(uint64_t))) { |
| lv->lv_buf_len = round_up(len, sizeof(uint64_t)) - |
| sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| } |
| |
| vec->i_type = type; |
| vec->i_addr = lv->lv_buf + lv->lv_buf_len; |
| |
| oph = vec->i_addr; |
| oph->oh_clientid = XFS_TRANSACTION; |
| oph->oh_res2 = 0; |
| oph->oh_flags = 0; |
| |
| buf = vec->i_addr + sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| ASSERT(IS_ALIGNED((unsigned long)buf, sizeof(uint64_t))); |
| |
| *vecp = vec; |
| return buf; |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| xlog_grant_sub_space( |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| int64_t bytes) |
| { |
| atomic64_sub(bytes, &head->grant); |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| xlog_grant_add_space( |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| int64_t bytes) |
| { |
| atomic64_add(bytes, &head->grant); |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| xlog_grant_head_init( |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head) |
| { |
| atomic64_set(&head->grant, 0); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&head->waiters); |
| spin_lock_init(&head->lock); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| xlog_grant_return_space( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| xfs_lsn_t old_head, |
| xfs_lsn_t new_head) |
| { |
| int64_t diff = xlog_lsn_sub(log, new_head, old_head); |
| |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_reserve_head, diff); |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_write_head, diff); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Return the space in the log between the tail and the head. In the case where |
| * we have overrun available reservation space, return 0. The memory barrier |
| * pairs with the smp_wmb() in xlog_cil_ail_insert() to ensure that grant head |
| * vs tail space updates are seen in the correct order and hence avoid |
| * transients as space is transferred from the grant heads to the AIL on commit |
| * completion. |
| */ |
| static uint64_t |
| xlog_grant_space_left( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head) |
| { |
| int64_t free_bytes; |
| |
| smp_rmb(); /* paired with smp_wmb in xlog_cil_ail_insert() */ |
| free_bytes = log->l_logsize - READ_ONCE(log->l_tail_space) - |
| atomic64_read(&head->grant); |
| if (free_bytes > 0) |
| return free_bytes; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_grant_head_wake_all( |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head) |
| { |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic; |
| |
| spin_lock(&head->lock); |
| list_for_each_entry(tic, &head->waiters, t_queue) |
| wake_up_process(tic->t_task); |
| spin_unlock(&head->lock); |
| } |
| |
| static inline int |
| xlog_ticket_reservation( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic) |
| { |
| if (head == &log->l_write_head) { |
| ASSERT(tic->t_flags & XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV); |
| return tic->t_unit_res; |
| } |
| |
| if (tic->t_flags & XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV) |
| return tic->t_unit_res * tic->t_cnt; |
| |
| return tic->t_unit_res; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC bool |
| xlog_grant_head_wake( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| int *free_bytes) |
| { |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic; |
| int need_bytes; |
| |
| list_for_each_entry(tic, &head->waiters, t_queue) { |
| need_bytes = xlog_ticket_reservation(log, head, tic); |
| if (*free_bytes < need_bytes) |
| return false; |
| |
| *free_bytes -= need_bytes; |
| trace_xfs_log_grant_wake_up(log, tic); |
| wake_up_process(tic->t_task); |
| } |
| |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_grant_head_wait( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic, |
| int need_bytes) __releases(&head->lock) |
| __acquires(&head->lock) |
| { |
| list_add_tail(&tic->t_queue, &head->waiters); |
| |
| do { |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| goto shutdown; |
| |
| __set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); |
| spin_unlock(&head->lock); |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(log->l_mp, xs_sleep_logspace); |
| |
| /* Push on the AIL to free up all the log space. */ |
| xfs_ail_push_all(log->l_ailp); |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_grant_sleep(log, tic); |
| schedule(); |
| trace_xfs_log_grant_wake(log, tic); |
| |
| spin_lock(&head->lock); |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| goto shutdown; |
| } while (xlog_grant_space_left(log, head) < need_bytes); |
| |
| list_del_init(&tic->t_queue); |
| return 0; |
| shutdown: |
| list_del_init(&tic->t_queue); |
| return -EIO; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Atomically get the log space required for a log ticket. |
| * |
| * Once a ticket gets put onto head->waiters, it will only return after the |
| * needed reservation is satisfied. |
| * |
| * This function is structured so that it has a lock free fast path. This is |
| * necessary because every new transaction reservation will come through this |
| * path. Hence any lock will be globally hot if we take it unconditionally on |
| * every pass. |
| * |
| * As tickets are only ever moved on and off head->waiters under head->lock, we |
| * only need to take that lock if we are going to add the ticket to the queue |
| * and sleep. We can avoid taking the lock if the ticket was never added to |
| * head->waiters because the t_queue list head will be empty and we hold the |
| * only reference to it so it can safely be checked unlocked. |
| */ |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_grant_head_check( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_grant_head *head, |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic, |
| int *need_bytes) |
| { |
| int free_bytes; |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| ASSERT(!xlog_in_recovery(log)); |
| |
| /* |
| * If there are other waiters on the queue then give them a chance at |
| * logspace before us. Wake up the first waiters, if we do not wake |
| * up all the waiters then go to sleep waiting for more free space, |
| * otherwise try to get some space for this transaction. |
| */ |
| *need_bytes = xlog_ticket_reservation(log, head, tic); |
| free_bytes = xlog_grant_space_left(log, head); |
| if (!list_empty_careful(&head->waiters)) { |
| spin_lock(&head->lock); |
| if (!xlog_grant_head_wake(log, head, &free_bytes) || |
| free_bytes < *need_bytes) { |
| error = xlog_grant_head_wait(log, head, tic, |
| *need_bytes); |
| } |
| spin_unlock(&head->lock); |
| } else if (free_bytes < *need_bytes) { |
| spin_lock(&head->lock); |
| error = xlog_grant_head_wait(log, head, tic, *need_bytes); |
| spin_unlock(&head->lock); |
| } |
| |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| bool |
| xfs_log_writable( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| /* |
| * Do not write to the log on norecovery mounts, if the data or log |
| * devices are read-only, or if the filesystem is shutdown. Read-only |
| * mounts allow internal writes for log recovery and unmount purposes, |
| * so don't restrict that case. |
| */ |
| if (xfs_has_norecovery(mp)) |
| return false; |
| if (xfs_readonly_buftarg(mp->m_ddev_targp)) |
| return false; |
| if (xfs_readonly_buftarg(mp->m_log->l_targ)) |
| return false; |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(mp->m_log)) |
| return false; |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Replenish the byte reservation required by moving the grant write head. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_regrant( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| int need_bytes; |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| return -EIO; |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_try_logspace); |
| |
| /* |
| * This is a new transaction on the ticket, so we need to change the |
| * transaction ID so that the next transaction has a different TID in |
| * the log. Just add one to the existing tid so that we can see chains |
| * of rolling transactions in the log easily. |
| */ |
| tic->t_tid++; |
| tic->t_curr_res = tic->t_unit_res; |
| if (tic->t_cnt > 0) |
| return 0; |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_regrant(log, tic); |
| |
| error = xlog_grant_head_check(log, &log->l_write_head, tic, |
| &need_bytes); |
| if (error) |
| goto out_error; |
| |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_write_head, need_bytes); |
| trace_xfs_log_regrant_exit(log, tic); |
| return 0; |
| |
| out_error: |
| /* |
| * If we are failing, make sure the ticket doesn't have any current |
| * reservations. We don't want to add this back when the ticket/ |
| * transaction gets cancelled. |
| */ |
| tic->t_curr_res = 0; |
| tic->t_cnt = 0; /* ungrant will give back unit_res * t_cnt. */ |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Reserve log space and return a ticket corresponding to the reservation. |
| * |
| * Each reservation is going to reserve extra space for a log record header. |
| * When writes happen to the on-disk log, we don't subtract the length of the |
| * log record header from any reservation. By wasting space in each |
| * reservation, we prevent over allocation problems. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_reserve( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| int unit_bytes, |
| int cnt, |
| struct xlog_ticket **ticp, |
| bool permanent) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic; |
| int need_bytes; |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| return -EIO; |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_try_logspace); |
| |
| ASSERT(*ticp == NULL); |
| tic = xlog_ticket_alloc(log, unit_bytes, cnt, permanent); |
| *ticp = tic; |
| trace_xfs_log_reserve(log, tic); |
| error = xlog_grant_head_check(log, &log->l_reserve_head, tic, |
| &need_bytes); |
| if (error) |
| goto out_error; |
| |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_reserve_head, need_bytes); |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_write_head, need_bytes); |
| trace_xfs_log_reserve_exit(log, tic); |
| return 0; |
| |
| out_error: |
| /* |
| * If we are failing, make sure the ticket doesn't have any current |
| * reservations. We don't want to add this back when the ticket/ |
| * transaction gets cancelled. |
| */ |
| tic->t_curr_res = 0; |
| tic->t_cnt = 0; /* ungrant will give back unit_res * t_cnt. */ |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Run all the pending iclog callbacks and wake log force waiters and iclog |
| * space waiters so they can process the newly set shutdown state. We really |
| * don't care what order we process callbacks here because the log is shut down |
| * and so state cannot change on disk anymore. However, we cannot wake waiters |
| * until the callbacks have been processed because we may be in unmount and |
| * we must ensure that all AIL operations the callbacks perform have completed |
| * before we tear down the AIL. |
| * |
| * We avoid processing actively referenced iclogs so that we don't run callbacks |
| * while the iclog owner might still be preparing the iclog for IO submssion. |
| * These will be caught by xlog_state_iclog_release() and call this function |
| * again to process any callbacks that may have been added to that iclog. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_state_shutdown_callbacks( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog; |
| LIST_HEAD(cb_list); |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| do { |
| if (atomic_read(&iclog->ic_refcnt)) { |
| /* Reference holder will re-run iclog callbacks. */ |
| continue; |
| } |
| list_splice_init(&iclog->ic_callbacks, &cb_list); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| xlog_cil_process_committed(&cb_list); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| wake_up_all(&iclog->ic_write_wait); |
| wake_up_all(&iclog->ic_force_wait); |
| } while ((iclog = iclog->ic_next) != log->l_iclog); |
| |
| wake_up_all(&log->l_flush_wait); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Flush iclog to disk if this is the last reference to the given iclog and the |
| * it is in the WANT_SYNC state. |
| * |
| * If XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA is already set on the iclog, we need to ensure that the |
| * log tail is updated correctly. NEED_FUA indicates that the iclog will be |
| * written to stable storage, and implies that a commit record is contained |
| * within the iclog. We need to ensure that the log tail does not move beyond |
| * the tail that the first commit record in the iclog ordered against, otherwise |
| * correct recovery of that checkpoint becomes dependent on future operations |
| * performed on this iclog. |
| * |
| * Hence if NEED_FUA is set and the current iclog tail lsn is empty, write the |
| * current tail into iclog. Once the iclog tail is set, future operations must |
| * not modify it, otherwise they potentially violate ordering constraints for |
| * the checkpoint commit that wrote the initial tail lsn value. The tail lsn in |
| * the iclog will get zeroed on activation of the iclog after sync, so we |
| * always capture the tail lsn on the iclog on the first NEED_FUA release |
| * regardless of the number of active reference counts on this iclog. |
| */ |
| int |
| xlog_state_release_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| bool last_ref; |
| |
| lockdep_assert_held(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| trace_xlog_iclog_release(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| /* |
| * Grabbing the current log tail needs to be atomic w.r.t. the writing |
| * of the tail LSN into the iclog so we guarantee that the log tail does |
| * not move between the first time we know that the iclog needs to be |
| * made stable and when we eventually submit it. |
| */ |
| if ((iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC || |
| (iclog->ic_flags & XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA)) && |
| !iclog->ic_header.h_tail_lsn) { |
| iclog->ic_header.h_tail_lsn = |
| cpu_to_be64(atomic64_read(&log->l_tail_lsn)); |
| } |
| |
| last_ref = atomic_dec_and_test(&iclog->ic_refcnt); |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) { |
| /* |
| * If there are no more references to this iclog, process the |
| * pending iclog callbacks that were waiting on the release of |
| * this iclog. |
| */ |
| if (last_ref) |
| xlog_state_shutdown_callbacks(log); |
| return -EIO; |
| } |
| |
| if (!last_ref) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC) { |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_SYNCING; |
| xlog_verify_tail_lsn(log, iclog); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_syncing(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xlog_sync(log, iclog, ticket); |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Mount a log filesystem |
| * |
| * mp - ubiquitous xfs mount point structure |
| * log_target - buftarg of on-disk log device |
| * blk_offset - Start block # where block size is 512 bytes (BBSIZE) |
| * num_bblocks - Number of BBSIZE blocks in on-disk log |
| * |
| * Return error or zero. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_mount( |
| xfs_mount_t *mp, |
| struct xfs_buftarg *log_target, |
| xfs_daddr_t blk_offset, |
| int num_bblks) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log; |
| int error = 0; |
| int min_logfsbs; |
| |
| if (!xfs_has_norecovery(mp)) { |
| xfs_notice(mp, "Mounting V%d Filesystem %pU", |
| XFS_SB_VERSION_NUM(&mp->m_sb), |
| &mp->m_sb.sb_uuid); |
| } else { |
| xfs_notice(mp, |
| "Mounting V%d filesystem %pU in no-recovery mode. Filesystem will be inconsistent.", |
| XFS_SB_VERSION_NUM(&mp->m_sb), |
| &mp->m_sb.sb_uuid); |
| ASSERT(xfs_is_readonly(mp)); |
| } |
| |
| log = xlog_alloc_log(mp, log_target, blk_offset, num_bblks); |
| if (IS_ERR(log)) { |
| error = PTR_ERR(log); |
| goto out; |
| } |
| mp->m_log = log; |
| |
| /* |
| * Now that we have set up the log and it's internal geometry |
| * parameters, we can validate the given log space and drop a critical |
| * message via syslog if the log size is too small. A log that is too |
| * small can lead to unexpected situations in transaction log space |
| * reservation stage. The superblock verifier has already validated all |
| * the other log geometry constraints, so we don't have to check those |
| * here. |
| * |
| * Note: For v4 filesystems, we can't just reject the mount if the |
| * validation fails. This would mean that people would have to |
| * downgrade their kernel just to remedy the situation as there is no |
| * way to grow the log (short of black magic surgery with xfs_db). |
| * |
| * We can, however, reject mounts for V5 format filesystems, as the |
| * mkfs binary being used to make the filesystem should never create a |
| * filesystem with a log that is too small. |
| */ |
| min_logfsbs = xfs_log_calc_minimum_size(mp); |
| if (mp->m_sb.sb_logblocks < min_logfsbs) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, |
| "Log size %d blocks too small, minimum size is %d blocks", |
| mp->m_sb.sb_logblocks, min_logfsbs); |
| |
| /* |
| * Log check errors are always fatal on v5; or whenever bad |
| * metadata leads to a crash. |
| */ |
| if (xfs_has_crc(mp)) { |
| xfs_crit(mp, "AAIEEE! Log failed size checks. Abort!"); |
| ASSERT(0); |
| error = -EINVAL; |
| goto out_free_log; |
| } |
| xfs_crit(mp, "Log size out of supported range."); |
| xfs_crit(mp, |
| "Continuing onwards, but if log hangs are experienced then please report this message in the bug report."); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Initialize the AIL now we have a log. |
| */ |
| error = xfs_trans_ail_init(mp); |
| if (error) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "AIL initialisation failed: error %d", error); |
| goto out_free_log; |
| } |
| log->l_ailp = mp->m_ail; |
| |
| /* |
| * skip log recovery on a norecovery mount. pretend it all |
| * just worked. |
| */ |
| if (!xfs_has_norecovery(mp)) { |
| error = xlog_recover(log); |
| if (error) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "log mount/recovery failed: error %d", |
| error); |
| xlog_recover_cancel(log); |
| goto out_destroy_ail; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| error = xfs_sysfs_init(&log->l_kobj, &xfs_log_ktype, &mp->m_kobj, |
| "log"); |
| if (error) |
| goto out_destroy_ail; |
| |
| /* Normal transactions can now occur */ |
| clear_bit(XLOG_ACTIVE_RECOVERY, &log->l_opstate); |
| |
| /* |
| * Now the log has been fully initialised and we know were our |
| * space grant counters are, we can initialise the permanent ticket |
| * needed for delayed logging to work. |
| */ |
| xlog_cil_init_post_recovery(log); |
| |
| return 0; |
| |
| out_destroy_ail: |
| xfs_trans_ail_destroy(mp); |
| out_free_log: |
| xlog_dealloc_log(log); |
| out: |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Finish the recovery of the file system. This is separate from the |
| * xfs_log_mount() call, because it depends on the code in xfs_mountfs() to read |
| * in the root and real-time bitmap inodes between calling xfs_log_mount() and |
| * here. |
| * |
| * If we finish recovery successfully, start the background log work. If we are |
| * not doing recovery, then we have a RO filesystem and we don't need to start |
| * it. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_mount_finish( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| if (xfs_has_norecovery(mp)) { |
| ASSERT(xfs_is_readonly(mp)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * During the second phase of log recovery, we need iget and |
| * iput to behave like they do for an active filesystem. |
| * xfs_fs_drop_inode needs to be able to prevent the deletion |
| * of inodes before we're done replaying log items on those |
| * inodes. Turn it off immediately after recovery finishes |
| * so that we don't leak the quota inodes if subsequent mount |
| * activities fail. |
| * |
| * We let all inodes involved in redo item processing end up on |
| * the LRU instead of being evicted immediately so that if we do |
| * something to an unlinked inode, the irele won't cause |
| * premature truncation and freeing of the inode, which results |
| * in log recovery failure. We have to evict the unreferenced |
| * lru inodes after clearing SB_ACTIVE because we don't |
| * otherwise clean up the lru if there's a subsequent failure in |
| * xfs_mountfs, which leads to us leaking the inodes if nothing |
| * else (e.g. quotacheck) references the inodes before the |
| * mount failure occurs. |
| */ |
| mp->m_super->s_flags |= SB_ACTIVE; |
| xfs_log_work_queue(mp); |
| if (xlog_recovery_needed(log)) |
| error = xlog_recover_finish(log); |
| mp->m_super->s_flags &= ~SB_ACTIVE; |
| evict_inodes(mp->m_super); |
| |
| /* |
| * Drain the buffer LRU after log recovery. This is required for v4 |
| * filesystems to avoid leaving around buffers with NULL verifier ops, |
| * but we do it unconditionally to make sure we're always in a clean |
| * cache state after mount. |
| * |
| * Don't push in the error case because the AIL may have pending intents |
| * that aren't removed until recovery is cancelled. |
| */ |
| if (xlog_recovery_needed(log)) { |
| if (!error) { |
| xfs_log_force(mp, XFS_LOG_SYNC); |
| xfs_ail_push_all_sync(mp->m_ail); |
| } |
| xfs_notice(mp, "Ending recovery (logdev: %s)", |
| mp->m_logname ? mp->m_logname : "internal"); |
| } else { |
| xfs_info(mp, "Ending clean mount"); |
| } |
| xfs_buftarg_drain(mp->m_ddev_targp); |
| |
| clear_bit(XLOG_RECOVERY_NEEDED, &log->l_opstate); |
| |
| /* Make sure the log is dead if we're returning failure. */ |
| ASSERT(!error || xlog_is_shutdown(log)); |
| |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * The mount has failed. Cancel the recovery if it hasn't completed and destroy |
| * the log. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_mount_cancel( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| xlog_recover_cancel(mp->m_log); |
| xfs_log_unmount(mp); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Flush out the iclog to disk ensuring that device caches are flushed and |
| * the iclog hits stable storage before any completion waiters are woken. |
| */ |
| static inline int |
| xlog_force_iclog( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| { |
| atomic_inc(&iclog->ic_refcnt); |
| iclog->ic_flags |= XLOG_ICL_NEED_FLUSH | XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA; |
| if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE) |
| xlog_state_switch_iclogs(iclog->ic_log, iclog, 0); |
| return xlog_state_release_iclog(iclog->ic_log, iclog, NULL); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Cycle all the iclogbuf locks to make sure all log IO completion |
| * is done before we tear down these buffers. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_wait_iclog_completion(struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| int i; |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < log->l_iclog_bufs; i++) { |
| down(&iclog->ic_sema); |
| up(&iclog->ic_sema); |
| iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Wait for the iclog and all prior iclogs to be written disk as required by the |
| * log force state machine. Waiting on ic_force_wait ensures iclog completions |
| * have been ordered and callbacks run before we are woken here, hence |
| * guaranteeing that all the iclogs up to this one are on stable storage. |
| */ |
| int |
| xlog_wait_on_iclog( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| __releases(iclog->ic_log->l_icloglock) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = iclog->ic_log; |
| |
| trace_xlog_iclog_wait_on(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| if (!xlog_is_shutdown(log) && |
| iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE && |
| iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_DIRTY) { |
| XFS_STATS_INC(log->l_mp, xs_log_force_sleep); |
| xlog_wait(&iclog->ic_force_wait, &log->l_icloglock); |
| } else { |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| } |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| return -EIO; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Write out an unmount record using the ticket provided. We have to account for |
| * the data space used in the unmount ticket as this write is not done from a |
| * transaction context that has already done the accounting for us. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xlog_write_unmount_record( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| struct { |
| struct xlog_op_header ophdr; |
| struct xfs_unmount_log_format ulf; |
| } unmount_rec = { |
| .ophdr = { |
| .oh_clientid = XFS_LOG, |
| .oh_tid = cpu_to_be32(ticket->t_tid), |
| .oh_flags = XLOG_UNMOUNT_TRANS, |
| }, |
| .ulf = { |
| .magic = XLOG_UNMOUNT_TYPE, |
| }, |
| }; |
| struct xfs_log_iovec reg = { |
| .i_addr = &unmount_rec, |
| .i_len = sizeof(unmount_rec), |
| .i_type = XLOG_REG_TYPE_UNMOUNT, |
| }; |
| struct xfs_log_vec vec = { |
| .lv_niovecs = 1, |
| .lv_iovecp = ®, |
| }; |
| LIST_HEAD(lv_chain); |
| list_add(&vec.lv_list, &lv_chain); |
| |
| BUILD_BUG_ON((sizeof(struct xlog_op_header) + |
| sizeof(struct xfs_unmount_log_format)) != |
| sizeof(unmount_rec)); |
| |
| /* account for space used by record data */ |
| ticket->t_curr_res -= sizeof(unmount_rec); |
| |
| return xlog_write(log, NULL, &lv_chain, ticket, reg.i_len); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Mark the filesystem clean by writing an unmount record to the head of the |
| * log. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_unmount_write( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| struct xfs_mount *mp = log->l_mp; |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog; |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic = NULL; |
| int error; |
| |
| error = xfs_log_reserve(mp, 600, 1, &tic, 0); |
| if (error) |
| goto out_err; |
| |
| error = xlog_write_unmount_record(log, tic); |
| /* |
| * At this point, we're umounting anyway, so there's no point in |
| * transitioning log state to shutdown. Just continue... |
| */ |
| out_err: |
| if (error) |
| xfs_alert(mp, "%s: unmount record failed", __func__); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| error = xlog_force_iclog(iclog); |
| xlog_wait_on_iclog(iclog); |
| |
| if (tic) { |
| trace_xfs_log_umount_write(log, tic); |
| xfs_log_ticket_ungrant(log, tic); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| xfs_log_unmount_verify_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| |
| do { |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE); |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_offset == 0); |
| } while ((iclog = iclog->ic_next) != log->l_iclog); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Unmount record used to have a string "Unmount filesystem--" in the |
| * data section where the "Un" was really a magic number (XLOG_UNMOUNT_TYPE). |
| * We just write the magic number now since that particular field isn't |
| * currently architecture converted and "Unmount" is a bit foo. |
| * As far as I know, there weren't any dependencies on the old behaviour. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xfs_log_unmount_write( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| |
| if (!xfs_log_writable(mp)) |
| return; |
| |
| xfs_log_force(mp, XFS_LOG_SYNC); |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| return; |
| |
| /* |
| * If we think the summary counters are bad, avoid writing the unmount |
| * record to force log recovery at next mount, after which the summary |
| * counters will be recalculated. Refer to xlog_check_unmount_rec for |
| * more details. |
| */ |
| if (XFS_TEST_ERROR(xfs_fs_has_sickness(mp, XFS_SICK_FS_COUNTERS), mp, |
| XFS_ERRTAG_FORCE_SUMMARY_RECALC)) { |
| xfs_alert(mp, "%s: will fix summary counters at next mount", |
| __func__); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| xfs_log_unmount_verify_iclog(log); |
| xlog_unmount_write(log); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Empty the log for unmount/freeze. |
| * |
| * To do this, we first need to shut down the background log work so it is not |
| * trying to cover the log as we clean up. We then need to unpin all objects in |
| * the log so we can then flush them out. Once they have completed their IO and |
| * run the callbacks removing themselves from the AIL, we can cover the log. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_quiesce( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| /* |
| * Clear log incompat features since we're quiescing the log. Report |
| * failures, though it's not fatal to have a higher log feature |
| * protection level than the log contents actually require. |
| */ |
| if (xfs_clear_incompat_log_features(mp)) { |
| int error; |
| |
| error = xfs_sync_sb(mp, false); |
| if (error) |
| xfs_warn(mp, |
| "Failed to clear log incompat features on quiesce"); |
| } |
| |
| cancel_delayed_work_sync(&mp->m_log->l_work); |
| xfs_log_force(mp, XFS_LOG_SYNC); |
| |
| /* |
| * The superblock buffer is uncached and while xfs_ail_push_all_sync() |
| * will push it, xfs_buftarg_wait() will not wait for it. Further, |
| * xfs_buf_iowait() cannot be used because it was pushed with the |
| * XBF_ASYNC flag set, so we need to use a lock/unlock pair to wait for |
| * the IO to complete. |
| */ |
| xfs_ail_push_all_sync(mp->m_ail); |
| xfs_buftarg_wait(mp->m_ddev_targp); |
| xfs_buf_lock(mp->m_sb_bp); |
| xfs_buf_unlock(mp->m_sb_bp); |
| |
| return xfs_log_cover(mp); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| xfs_log_clean( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| xfs_log_quiesce(mp); |
| xfs_log_unmount_write(mp); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Shut down and release the AIL and Log. |
| * |
| * During unmount, we need to ensure we flush all the dirty metadata objects |
| * from the AIL so that the log is empty before we write the unmount record to |
| * the log. Once this is done, we can tear down the AIL and the log. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_unmount( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| xfs_log_clean(mp); |
| |
| /* |
| * If shutdown has come from iclog IO context, the log |
| * cleaning will have been skipped and so we need to wait |
| * for the iclog to complete shutdown processing before we |
| * tear anything down. |
| */ |
| xlog_wait_iclog_completion(mp->m_log); |
| |
| xfs_buftarg_drain(mp->m_ddev_targp); |
| |
| xfs_trans_ail_destroy(mp); |
| |
| xfs_sysfs_del(&mp->m_log->l_kobj); |
| |
| xlog_dealloc_log(mp->m_log); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| xfs_log_item_init( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xfs_log_item *item, |
| int type, |
| const struct xfs_item_ops *ops) |
| { |
| item->li_log = mp->m_log; |
| item->li_ailp = mp->m_ail; |
| item->li_type = type; |
| item->li_ops = ops; |
| item->li_lv = NULL; |
| |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&item->li_ail); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&item->li_cil); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&item->li_bio_list); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&item->li_trans); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Wake up processes waiting for log space after we have moved the log tail. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_space_wake( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| int free_bytes; |
| |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| return; |
| |
| if (!list_empty_careful(&log->l_write_head.waiters)) { |
| ASSERT(!xlog_in_recovery(log)); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_write_head.lock); |
| free_bytes = xlog_grant_space_left(log, &log->l_write_head); |
| xlog_grant_head_wake(log, &log->l_write_head, &free_bytes); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_write_head.lock); |
| } |
| |
| if (!list_empty_careful(&log->l_reserve_head.waiters)) { |
| ASSERT(!xlog_in_recovery(log)); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_reserve_head.lock); |
| free_bytes = xlog_grant_space_left(log, &log->l_reserve_head); |
| xlog_grant_head_wake(log, &log->l_reserve_head, &free_bytes); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_reserve_head.lock); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Determine if we have a transaction that has gone to disk that needs to be |
| * covered. To begin the transition to the idle state firstly the log needs to |
| * be idle. That means the CIL, the AIL and the iclogs needs to be empty before |
| * we start attempting to cover the log. |
| * |
| * Only if we are then in a state where covering is needed, the caller is |
| * informed that dummy transactions are required to move the log into the idle |
| * state. |
| * |
| * If there are any items in the AIl or CIL, then we do not want to attempt to |
| * cover the log as we may be in a situation where there isn't log space |
| * available to run a dummy transaction and this can lead to deadlocks when the |
| * tail of the log is pinned by an item that is modified in the CIL. Hence |
| * there's no point in running a dummy transaction at this point because we |
| * can't start trying to idle the log until both the CIL and AIL are empty. |
| */ |
| static bool |
| xfs_log_need_covered( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| bool needed = false; |
| |
| if (!xlog_cil_empty(log)) |
| return false; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| switch (log->l_covered_state) { |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE: |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE2: |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE: |
| break; |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED: |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED2: |
| if (xfs_ail_min_lsn(log->l_ailp)) |
| break; |
| if (!xlog_iclogs_empty(log)) |
| break; |
| |
| needed = true; |
| if (log->l_covered_state == XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED) |
| log->l_covered_state = XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE; |
| else |
| log->l_covered_state = XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE2; |
| break; |
| default: |
| needed = true; |
| break; |
| } |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return needed; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Explicitly cover the log. This is similar to background log covering but |
| * intended for usage in quiesce codepaths. The caller is responsible to ensure |
| * the log is idle and suitable for covering. The CIL, iclog buffers and AIL |
| * must all be empty. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xfs_log_cover( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| int error = 0; |
| bool need_covered; |
| |
| ASSERT((xlog_cil_empty(mp->m_log) && xlog_iclogs_empty(mp->m_log) && |
| !xfs_ail_min_lsn(mp->m_log->l_ailp)) || |
| xlog_is_shutdown(mp->m_log)); |
| |
| if (!xfs_log_writable(mp)) |
| return 0; |
| |
| /* |
| * xfs_log_need_covered() is not idempotent because it progresses the |
| * state machine if the log requires covering. Therefore, we must call |
| * this function once and use the result until we've issued an sb sync. |
| * Do so first to make that abundantly clear. |
| * |
| * Fall into the covering sequence if the log needs covering or the |
| * mount has lazy superblock accounting to sync to disk. The sb sync |
| * used for covering accumulates the in-core counters, so covering |
| * handles this for us. |
| */ |
| need_covered = xfs_log_need_covered(mp); |
| if (!need_covered && !xfs_has_lazysbcount(mp)) |
| return 0; |
| |
| /* |
| * To cover the log, commit the superblock twice (at most) in |
| * independent checkpoints. The first serves as a reference for the |
| * tail pointer. The sync transaction and AIL push empties the AIL and |
| * updates the in-core tail to the LSN of the first checkpoint. The |
| * second commit updates the on-disk tail with the in-core LSN, |
| * covering the log. Push the AIL one more time to leave it empty, as |
| * we found it. |
| */ |
| do { |
| error = xfs_sync_sb(mp, true); |
| if (error) |
| break; |
| xfs_ail_push_all_sync(mp->m_ail); |
| } while (xfs_log_need_covered(mp)); |
| |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| xlog_ioend_work( |
| struct work_struct *work) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = |
| container_of(work, struct xlog_in_core, ic_end_io_work); |
| struct xlog *log = iclog->ic_log; |
| int error; |
| |
| error = blk_status_to_errno(iclog->ic_bio.bi_status); |
| #ifdef DEBUG |
| /* treat writes with injected CRC errors as failed */ |
| if (iclog->ic_fail_crc) |
| error = -EIO; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * Race to shutdown the filesystem if we see an error. |
| */ |
| if (XFS_TEST_ERROR(error, log->l_mp, XFS_ERRTAG_IODONE_IOERR)) { |
| xfs_alert(log->l_mp, "log I/O error %d", error); |
| xlog_force_shutdown(log, SHUTDOWN_LOG_IO_ERROR); |
| } |
| |
| xlog_state_done_syncing(iclog); |
| bio_uninit(&iclog->ic_bio); |
| |
| /* |
| * Drop the lock to signal that we are done. Nothing references the |
| * iclog after this, so an unmount waiting on this lock can now tear it |
| * down safely. As such, it is unsafe to reference the iclog after the |
| * unlock as we could race with it being freed. |
| */ |
| up(&iclog->ic_sema); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Return size of each in-core log record buffer. |
| * |
| * All machines get 8 x 32kB buffers by default, unless tuned otherwise. |
| * |
| * If the filesystem blocksize is too large, we may need to choose a |
| * larger size since the directory code currently logs entire blocks. |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_get_iclog_buffer_size( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| if (mp->m_logbufs <= 0) |
| mp->m_logbufs = XLOG_MAX_ICLOGS; |
| if (mp->m_logbsize <= 0) |
| mp->m_logbsize = XLOG_BIG_RECORD_BSIZE; |
| |
| log->l_iclog_bufs = mp->m_logbufs; |
| log->l_iclog_size = mp->m_logbsize; |
| |
| /* |
| * # headers = size / 32k - one header holds cycles from 32k of data. |
| */ |
| log->l_iclog_heads = |
| DIV_ROUND_UP(mp->m_logbsize, XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE); |
| log->l_iclog_hsize = log->l_iclog_heads << BBSHIFT; |
| } |
| |
| void |
| xfs_log_work_queue( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp) |
| { |
| queue_delayed_work(mp->m_sync_workqueue, &mp->m_log->l_work, |
| msecs_to_jiffies(xfs_syncd_centisecs * 10)); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Clear the log incompat flags if we have the opportunity. |
| * |
| * This only happens if we're about to log the second dummy transaction as part |
| * of covering the log. |
| */ |
| static inline void |
| xlog_clear_incompat( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| struct xfs_mount *mp = log->l_mp; |
| |
| if (!xfs_sb_has_incompat_log_feature(&mp->m_sb, |
| XFS_SB_FEAT_INCOMPAT_LOG_ALL)) |
| return; |
| |
| if (log->l_covered_state != XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE2) |
| return; |
| |
| xfs_clear_incompat_log_features(mp); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Every sync period we need to unpin all items in the AIL and push them to |
| * disk. If there is nothing dirty, then we might need to cover the log to |
| * indicate that the filesystem is idle. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xfs_log_worker( |
| struct work_struct *work) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = container_of(to_delayed_work(work), |
| struct xlog, l_work); |
| struct xfs_mount *mp = log->l_mp; |
| |
| /* dgc: errors ignored - not fatal and nowhere to report them */ |
| if (xfs_fs_writable(mp, SB_FREEZE_WRITE) && xfs_log_need_covered(mp)) { |
| /* |
| * Dump a transaction into the log that contains no real change. |
| * This is needed to stamp the current tail LSN into the log |
| * during the covering operation. |
| * |
| * We cannot use an inode here for this - that will push dirty |
| * state back up into the VFS and then periodic inode flushing |
| * will prevent log covering from making progress. Hence we |
| * synchronously log the superblock instead to ensure the |
| * superblock is immediately unpinned and can be written back. |
| */ |
| xlog_clear_incompat(log); |
| xfs_sync_sb(mp, true); |
| } else |
| xfs_log_force(mp, 0); |
| |
| /* start pushing all the metadata that is currently dirty */ |
| xfs_ail_push_all(mp->m_ail); |
| |
| /* queue us up again */ |
| xfs_log_work_queue(mp); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * This routine initializes some of the log structure for a given mount point. |
| * Its primary purpose is to fill in enough, so recovery can occur. However, |
| * some other stuff may be filled in too. |
| */ |
| STATIC struct xlog * |
| xlog_alloc_log( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xfs_buftarg *log_target, |
| xfs_daddr_t blk_offset, |
| int num_bblks) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log; |
| xlog_rec_header_t *head; |
| xlog_in_core_t **iclogp; |
| xlog_in_core_t *iclog, *prev_iclog=NULL; |
| int i; |
| int error = -ENOMEM; |
| uint log2_size = 0; |
| |
| log = kzalloc(sizeof(struct xlog), GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL); |
| if (!log) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "Log allocation failed: No memory!"); |
| goto out; |
| } |
| |
| log->l_mp = mp; |
| log->l_targ = log_target; |
| log->l_logsize = BBTOB(num_bblks); |
| log->l_logBBstart = blk_offset; |
| log->l_logBBsize = num_bblks; |
| log->l_covered_state = XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE; |
| set_bit(XLOG_ACTIVE_RECOVERY, &log->l_opstate); |
| INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&log->l_work, xfs_log_worker); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&log->r_dfops); |
| |
| log->l_prev_block = -1; |
| /* log->l_tail_lsn = 0x100000000LL; cycle = 1; current block = 0 */ |
| xlog_assign_atomic_lsn(&log->l_tail_lsn, 1, 0); |
| log->l_curr_cycle = 1; /* 0 is bad since this is initial value */ |
| |
| if (xfs_has_logv2(mp) && mp->m_sb.sb_logsunit > 1) |
| log->l_iclog_roundoff = mp->m_sb.sb_logsunit; |
| else |
| log->l_iclog_roundoff = BBSIZE; |
| |
| xlog_grant_head_init(&log->l_reserve_head); |
| xlog_grant_head_init(&log->l_write_head); |
| |
| error = -EFSCORRUPTED; |
| if (xfs_has_sector(mp)) { |
| log2_size = mp->m_sb.sb_logsectlog; |
| if (log2_size < BBSHIFT) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "Log sector size too small (0x%x < 0x%x)", |
| log2_size, BBSHIFT); |
| goto out_free_log; |
| } |
| |
| log2_size -= BBSHIFT; |
| if (log2_size > mp->m_sectbb_log) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "Log sector size too large (0x%x > 0x%x)", |
| log2_size, mp->m_sectbb_log); |
| goto out_free_log; |
| } |
| |
| /* for larger sector sizes, must have v2 or external log */ |
| if (log2_size && log->l_logBBstart > 0 && |
| !xfs_has_logv2(mp)) { |
| xfs_warn(mp, |
| "log sector size (0x%x) invalid for configuration.", |
| log2_size); |
| goto out_free_log; |
| } |
| } |
| log->l_sectBBsize = 1 << log2_size; |
| |
| xlog_get_iclog_buffer_size(mp, log); |
| |
| spin_lock_init(&log->l_icloglock); |
| init_waitqueue_head(&log->l_flush_wait); |
| |
| iclogp = &log->l_iclog; |
| /* |
| * The amount of memory to allocate for the iclog structure is |
| * rather funky due to the way the structure is defined. It is |
| * done this way so that we can use different sizes for machines |
| * with different amounts of memory. See the definition of |
| * xlog_in_core_t in xfs_log_priv.h for details. |
| */ |
| ASSERT(log->l_iclog_size >= 4096); |
| for (i = 0; i < log->l_iclog_bufs; i++) { |
| size_t bvec_size = howmany(log->l_iclog_size, PAGE_SIZE) * |
| sizeof(struct bio_vec); |
| |
| iclog = kzalloc(sizeof(*iclog) + bvec_size, |
| GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL); |
| if (!iclog) |
| goto out_free_iclog; |
| |
| *iclogp = iclog; |
| iclog->ic_prev = prev_iclog; |
| prev_iclog = iclog; |
| |
| iclog->ic_data = kvzalloc(log->l_iclog_size, |
| GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_RETRY_MAYFAIL); |
| if (!iclog->ic_data) |
| goto out_free_iclog; |
| head = &iclog->ic_header; |
| memset(head, 0, sizeof(xlog_rec_header_t)); |
| head->h_magicno = cpu_to_be32(XLOG_HEADER_MAGIC_NUM); |
| head->h_version = cpu_to_be32( |
| xfs_has_logv2(log->l_mp) ? 2 : 1); |
| head->h_size = cpu_to_be32(log->l_iclog_size); |
| /* new fields */ |
| head->h_fmt = cpu_to_be32(XLOG_FMT); |
| memcpy(&head->h_fs_uuid, &mp->m_sb.sb_uuid, sizeof(uuid_t)); |
| |
| iclog->ic_size = log->l_iclog_size - log->l_iclog_hsize; |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE; |
| iclog->ic_log = log; |
| atomic_set(&iclog->ic_refcnt, 0); |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&iclog->ic_callbacks); |
| iclog->ic_datap = (void *)iclog->ic_data + log->l_iclog_hsize; |
| |
| init_waitqueue_head(&iclog->ic_force_wait); |
| init_waitqueue_head(&iclog->ic_write_wait); |
| INIT_WORK(&iclog->ic_end_io_work, xlog_ioend_work); |
| sema_init(&iclog->ic_sema, 1); |
| |
| iclogp = &iclog->ic_next; |
| } |
| *iclogp = log->l_iclog; /* complete ring */ |
| log->l_iclog->ic_prev = prev_iclog; /* re-write 1st prev ptr */ |
| |
| log->l_ioend_workqueue = alloc_workqueue("xfs-log/%s", |
| XFS_WQFLAGS(WQ_FREEZABLE | WQ_MEM_RECLAIM | |
| WQ_HIGHPRI), |
| 0, mp->m_super->s_id); |
| if (!log->l_ioend_workqueue) |
| goto out_free_iclog; |
| |
| error = xlog_cil_init(log); |
| if (error) |
| goto out_destroy_workqueue; |
| return log; |
| |
| out_destroy_workqueue: |
| destroy_workqueue(log->l_ioend_workqueue); |
| out_free_iclog: |
| for (iclog = log->l_iclog; iclog; iclog = prev_iclog) { |
| prev_iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| kvfree(iclog->ic_data); |
| kfree(iclog); |
| if (prev_iclog == log->l_iclog) |
| break; |
| } |
| out_free_log: |
| kfree(log); |
| out: |
| return ERR_PTR(error); |
| } /* xlog_alloc_log */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Stamp cycle number in every block |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_pack_data( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int roundoff) |
| { |
| int i, j, k; |
| int size = iclog->ic_offset + roundoff; |
| __be32 cycle_lsn; |
| char *dp; |
| |
| cycle_lsn = CYCLE_LSN_DISK(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn); |
| |
| dp = iclog->ic_datap; |
| for (i = 0; i < BTOBB(size); i++) { |
| if (i >= (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE)) |
| break; |
| iclog->ic_header.h_cycle_data[i] = *(__be32 *)dp; |
| *(__be32 *)dp = cycle_lsn; |
| dp += BBSIZE; |
| } |
| |
| if (xfs_has_logv2(log->l_mp)) { |
| xlog_in_core_2_t *xhdr = iclog->ic_data; |
| |
| for ( ; i < BTOBB(size); i++) { |
| j = i / (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| k = i % (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| xhdr[j].hic_xheader.xh_cycle_data[k] = *(__be32 *)dp; |
| *(__be32 *)dp = cycle_lsn; |
| dp += BBSIZE; |
| } |
| |
| for (i = 1; i < log->l_iclog_heads; i++) |
| xhdr[i].hic_xheader.xh_cycle = cycle_lsn; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Calculate the checksum for a log buffer. |
| * |
| * This is a little more complicated than it should be because the various |
| * headers and the actual data are non-contiguous. |
| */ |
| __le32 |
| xlog_cksum( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_rec_header *rhead, |
| char *dp, |
| int size) |
| { |
| uint32_t crc; |
| |
| /* first generate the crc for the record header ... */ |
| crc = xfs_start_cksum_update((char *)rhead, |
| sizeof(struct xlog_rec_header), |
| offsetof(struct xlog_rec_header, h_crc)); |
| |
| /* ... then for additional cycle data for v2 logs ... */ |
| if (xfs_has_logv2(log->l_mp)) { |
| union xlog_in_core2 *xhdr = (union xlog_in_core2 *)rhead; |
| int i; |
| int xheads; |
| |
| xheads = DIV_ROUND_UP(size, XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE); |
| |
| for (i = 1; i < xheads; i++) { |
| crc = crc32c(crc, &xhdr[i].hic_xheader, |
| sizeof(struct xlog_rec_ext_header)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* ... and finally for the payload */ |
| crc = crc32c(crc, dp, size); |
| |
| return xfs_end_cksum(crc); |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| xlog_bio_end_io( |
| struct bio *bio) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = bio->bi_private; |
| |
| queue_work(iclog->ic_log->l_ioend_workqueue, |
| &iclog->ic_end_io_work); |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| xlog_map_iclog_data( |
| struct bio *bio, |
| void *data, |
| size_t count) |
| { |
| do { |
| struct page *page = kmem_to_page(data); |
| unsigned int off = offset_in_page(data); |
| size_t len = min_t(size_t, count, PAGE_SIZE - off); |
| |
| if (bio_add_page(bio, page, len, off) != len) |
| return -EIO; |
| |
| data += len; |
| count -= len; |
| } while (count); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_write_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| uint64_t bno, |
| unsigned int count) |
| { |
| ASSERT(bno < log->l_logBBsize); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_write(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| /* |
| * We lock the iclogbufs here so that we can serialise against I/O |
| * completion during unmount. We might be processing a shutdown |
| * triggered during unmount, and that can occur asynchronously to the |
| * unmount thread, and hence we need to ensure that completes before |
| * tearing down the iclogbufs. Hence we need to hold the buffer lock |
| * across the log IO to archieve that. |
| */ |
| down(&iclog->ic_sema); |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) { |
| /* |
| * It would seem logical to return EIO here, but we rely on |
| * the log state machine to propagate I/O errors instead of |
| * doing it here. We kick of the state machine and unlock |
| * the buffer manually, the code needs to be kept in sync |
| * with the I/O completion path. |
| */ |
| goto sync; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We use REQ_SYNC | REQ_IDLE here to tell the block layer the are more |
| * IOs coming immediately after this one. This prevents the block layer |
| * writeback throttle from throttling log writes behind background |
| * metadata writeback and causing priority inversions. |
| */ |
| bio_init(&iclog->ic_bio, log->l_targ->bt_bdev, iclog->ic_bvec, |
| howmany(count, PAGE_SIZE), |
| REQ_OP_WRITE | REQ_META | REQ_SYNC | REQ_IDLE); |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_iter.bi_sector = log->l_logBBstart + bno; |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_end_io = xlog_bio_end_io; |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_private = iclog; |
| |
| if (iclog->ic_flags & XLOG_ICL_NEED_FLUSH) { |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_opf |= REQ_PREFLUSH; |
| /* |
| * For external log devices, we also need to flush the data |
| * device cache first to ensure all metadata writeback covered |
| * by the LSN in this iclog is on stable storage. This is slow, |
| * but it *must* complete before we issue the external log IO. |
| * |
| * If the flush fails, we cannot conclude that past metadata |
| * writeback from the log succeeded. Repeating the flush is |
| * not possible, hence we must shut down with log IO error to |
| * avoid shutdown re-entering this path and erroring out again. |
| */ |
| if (log->l_targ != log->l_mp->m_ddev_targp && |
| blkdev_issue_flush(log->l_mp->m_ddev_targp->bt_bdev)) |
| goto shutdown; |
| } |
| if (iclog->ic_flags & XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA) |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_opf |= REQ_FUA; |
| |
| iclog->ic_flags &= ~(XLOG_ICL_NEED_FLUSH | XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA); |
| |
| if (xlog_map_iclog_data(&iclog->ic_bio, iclog->ic_data, count)) |
| goto shutdown; |
| |
| if (is_vmalloc_addr(iclog->ic_data)) |
| flush_kernel_vmap_range(iclog->ic_data, count); |
| |
| /* |
| * If this log buffer would straddle the end of the log we will have |
| * to split it up into two bios, so that we can continue at the start. |
| */ |
| if (bno + BTOBB(count) > log->l_logBBsize) { |
| struct bio *split; |
| |
| split = bio_split(&iclog->ic_bio, log->l_logBBsize - bno, |
| GFP_NOIO, &fs_bio_set); |
| bio_chain(split, &iclog->ic_bio); |
| submit_bio(split); |
| |
| /* restart at logical offset zero for the remainder */ |
| iclog->ic_bio.bi_iter.bi_sector = log->l_logBBstart; |
| } |
| |
| submit_bio(&iclog->ic_bio); |
| return; |
| shutdown: |
| xlog_force_shutdown(log, SHUTDOWN_LOG_IO_ERROR); |
| sync: |
| xlog_state_done_syncing(iclog); |
| up(&iclog->ic_sema); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We need to bump cycle number for the part of the iclog that is |
| * written to the start of the log. Watch out for the header magic |
| * number case, though. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_split_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| void *data, |
| uint64_t bno, |
| unsigned int count) |
| { |
| unsigned int split_offset = BBTOB(log->l_logBBsize - bno); |
| unsigned int i; |
| |
| for (i = split_offset; i < count; i += BBSIZE) { |
| uint32_t cycle = get_unaligned_be32(data + i); |
| |
| if (++cycle == XLOG_HEADER_MAGIC_NUM) |
| cycle++; |
| put_unaligned_be32(cycle, data + i); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| xlog_calc_iclog_size( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| uint32_t *roundoff) |
| { |
| uint32_t count_init, count; |
| |
| /* Add for LR header */ |
| count_init = log->l_iclog_hsize + iclog->ic_offset; |
| count = roundup(count_init, log->l_iclog_roundoff); |
| |
| *roundoff = count - count_init; |
| |
| ASSERT(count >= count_init); |
| ASSERT(*roundoff < log->l_iclog_roundoff); |
| return count; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Flush out the in-core log (iclog) to the on-disk log in an asynchronous |
| * fashion. Previously, we should have moved the current iclog |
| * ptr in the log to point to the next available iclog. This allows further |
| * write to continue while this code syncs out an iclog ready to go. |
| * Before an in-core log can be written out, the data section must be scanned |
| * to save away the 1st word of each BBSIZE block into the header. We replace |
| * it with the current cycle count. Each BBSIZE block is tagged with the |
| * cycle count because there in an implicit assumption that drives will |
| * guarantee that entire 512 byte blocks get written at once. In other words, |
| * we can't have part of a 512 byte block written and part not written. By |
| * tagging each block, we will know which blocks are valid when recovering |
| * after an unclean shutdown. |
| * |
| * This routine is single threaded on the iclog. No other thread can be in |
| * this routine with the same iclog. Changing contents of iclog can there- |
| * fore be done without grabbing the state machine lock. Updating the global |
| * log will require grabbing the lock though. |
| * |
| * The entire log manager uses a logical block numbering scheme. Only |
| * xlog_write_iclog knows about the fact that the log may not start with |
| * block zero on a given device. |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_sync( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| unsigned int count; /* byte count of bwrite */ |
| unsigned int roundoff; /* roundoff to BB or stripe */ |
| uint64_t bno; |
| unsigned int size; |
| |
| ASSERT(atomic_read(&iclog->ic_refcnt) == 0); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_sync(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| count = xlog_calc_iclog_size(log, iclog, &roundoff); |
| |
| /* |
| * If we have a ticket, account for the roundoff via the ticket |
| * reservation to avoid touching the hot grant heads needlessly. |
| * Otherwise, we have to move grant heads directly. |
| */ |
| if (ticket) { |
| ticket->t_curr_res -= roundoff; |
| } else { |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_reserve_head, roundoff); |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_write_head, roundoff); |
| } |
| |
| /* put cycle number in every block */ |
| xlog_pack_data(log, iclog, roundoff); |
| |
| /* real byte length */ |
| size = iclog->ic_offset; |
| if (xfs_has_logv2(log->l_mp)) |
| size += roundoff; |
| iclog->ic_header.h_len = cpu_to_be32(size); |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(log->l_mp, xs_log_writes); |
| XFS_STATS_ADD(log->l_mp, xs_log_blocks, BTOBB(count)); |
| |
| bno = BLOCK_LSN(be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn)); |
| |
| /* Do we need to split this write into 2 parts? */ |
| if (bno + BTOBB(count) > log->l_logBBsize) |
| xlog_split_iclog(log, &iclog->ic_header, bno, count); |
| |
| /* calculcate the checksum */ |
| iclog->ic_header.h_crc = xlog_cksum(log, &iclog->ic_header, |
| iclog->ic_datap, size); |
| /* |
| * Intentionally corrupt the log record CRC based on the error injection |
| * frequency, if defined. This facilitates testing log recovery in the |
| * event of torn writes. Hence, set the IOABORT state to abort the log |
| * write on I/O completion and shutdown the fs. The subsequent mount |
| * detects the bad CRC and attempts to recover. |
| */ |
| #ifdef DEBUG |
| if (XFS_TEST_ERROR(false, log->l_mp, XFS_ERRTAG_LOG_BAD_CRC)) { |
| iclog->ic_header.h_crc &= cpu_to_le32(0xAAAAAAAA); |
| iclog->ic_fail_crc = true; |
| xfs_warn(log->l_mp, |
| "Intentionally corrupted log record at LSN 0x%llx. Shutdown imminent.", |
| be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn)); |
| } |
| #endif |
| xlog_verify_iclog(log, iclog, count); |
| xlog_write_iclog(log, iclog, bno, count); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Deallocate a log structure |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_dealloc_log( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| xlog_in_core_t *iclog, *next_iclog; |
| int i; |
| |
| /* |
| * Destroy the CIL after waiting for iclog IO completion because an |
| * iclog EIO error will try to shut down the log, which accesses the |
| * CIL to wake up the waiters. |
| */ |
| xlog_cil_destroy(log); |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| for (i = 0; i < log->l_iclog_bufs; i++) { |
| next_iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| kvfree(iclog->ic_data); |
| kfree(iclog); |
| iclog = next_iclog; |
| } |
| |
| log->l_mp->m_log = NULL; |
| destroy_workqueue(log->l_ioend_workqueue); |
| kfree(log); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Update counters atomically now that memcpy is done. |
| */ |
| static inline void |
| xlog_state_finish_copy( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int record_cnt, |
| int copy_bytes) |
| { |
| lockdep_assert_held(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| be32_add_cpu(&iclog->ic_header.h_num_logops, record_cnt); |
| iclog->ic_offset += copy_bytes; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * print out info relating to regions written which consume |
| * the reservation |
| */ |
| void |
| xlog_print_tic_res( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| xfs_warn(mp, "ticket reservation summary:"); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " unit res = %d bytes", ticket->t_unit_res); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " current res = %d bytes", ticket->t_curr_res); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " original count = %d", ticket->t_ocnt); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " remaining count = %d", ticket->t_cnt); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Print a summary of the transaction. |
| */ |
| void |
| xlog_print_trans( |
| struct xfs_trans *tp) |
| { |
| struct xfs_mount *mp = tp->t_mountp; |
| struct xfs_log_item *lip; |
| |
| /* dump core transaction and ticket info */ |
| xfs_warn(mp, "transaction summary:"); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " log res = %d", tp->t_log_res); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " log count = %d", tp->t_log_count); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " flags = 0x%x", tp->t_flags); |
| |
| xlog_print_tic_res(mp, tp->t_ticket); |
| |
| /* dump each log item */ |
| list_for_each_entry(lip, &tp->t_items, li_trans) { |
| struct xfs_log_vec *lv = lip->li_lv; |
| struct xfs_log_iovec *vec; |
| int i; |
| |
| xfs_warn(mp, "log item: "); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " type = 0x%x", lip->li_type); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " flags = 0x%lx", lip->li_flags); |
| if (!lv) |
| continue; |
| xfs_warn(mp, " niovecs = %d", lv->lv_niovecs); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " size = %d", lv->lv_size); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " bytes = %d", lv->lv_bytes); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " buf len = %d", lv->lv_buf_len); |
| |
| /* dump each iovec for the log item */ |
| vec = lv->lv_iovecp; |
| for (i = 0; i < lv->lv_niovecs; i++) { |
| int dumplen = min(vec->i_len, 32); |
| |
| xfs_warn(mp, " iovec[%d]", i); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " type = 0x%x", vec->i_type); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " len = %d", vec->i_len); |
| xfs_warn(mp, " first %d bytes of iovec[%d]:", dumplen, i); |
| xfs_hex_dump(vec->i_addr, dumplen); |
| |
| vec++; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| xlog_write_iovec( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| uint32_t *log_offset, |
| void *data, |
| uint32_t write_len, |
| int *bytes_left, |
| uint32_t *record_cnt, |
| uint32_t *data_cnt) |
| { |
| ASSERT(*log_offset < iclog->ic_log->l_iclog_size); |
| ASSERT(*log_offset % sizeof(int32_t) == 0); |
| ASSERT(write_len % sizeof(int32_t) == 0); |
| |
| memcpy(iclog->ic_datap + *log_offset, data, write_len); |
| *log_offset += write_len; |
| *bytes_left -= write_len; |
| (*record_cnt)++; |
| *data_cnt += write_len; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Write log vectors into a single iclog which is guaranteed by the caller |
| * to have enough space to write the entire log vector into. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_write_full( |
| struct xfs_log_vec *lv, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| uint32_t *log_offset, |
| uint32_t *len, |
| uint32_t *record_cnt, |
| uint32_t *data_cnt) |
| { |
| int index; |
| |
| ASSERT(*log_offset + *len <= iclog->ic_size || |
| iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC); |
| |
| /* |
| * Ordered log vectors have no regions to write so this |
| * loop will naturally skip them. |
| */ |
| for (index = 0; index < lv->lv_niovecs; index++) { |
| struct xfs_log_iovec *reg = &lv->lv_iovecp[index]; |
| struct xlog_op_header *ophdr = reg->i_addr; |
| |
| ophdr->oh_tid = cpu_to_be32(ticket->t_tid); |
| xlog_write_iovec(iclog, log_offset, reg->i_addr, |
| reg->i_len, len, record_cnt, data_cnt); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| xlog_write_get_more_iclog_space( |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| struct xlog_in_core **iclogp, |
| uint32_t *log_offset, |
| uint32_t len, |
| uint32_t *record_cnt, |
| uint32_t *data_cnt) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = *iclogp; |
| struct xlog *log = iclog->ic_log; |
| int error; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC); |
| xlog_state_finish_copy(log, iclog, *record_cnt, *data_cnt); |
| error = xlog_state_release_iclog(log, iclog, ticket); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| |
| error = xlog_state_get_iclog_space(log, len, &iclog, ticket, |
| log_offset); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| *record_cnt = 0; |
| *data_cnt = 0; |
| *iclogp = iclog; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Write log vectors into a single iclog which is smaller than the current chain |
| * length. We write until we cannot fit a full record into the remaining space |
| * and then stop. We return the log vector that is to be written that cannot |
| * wholly fit in the iclog. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xlog_write_partial( |
| struct xfs_log_vec *lv, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| struct xlog_in_core **iclogp, |
| uint32_t *log_offset, |
| uint32_t *len, |
| uint32_t *record_cnt, |
| uint32_t *data_cnt) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = *iclogp; |
| struct xlog_op_header *ophdr; |
| int index = 0; |
| uint32_t rlen; |
| int error; |
| |
| /* walk the logvec, copying until we run out of space in the iclog */ |
| for (index = 0; index < lv->lv_niovecs; index++) { |
| struct xfs_log_iovec *reg = &lv->lv_iovecp[index]; |
| uint32_t reg_offset = 0; |
| |
| /* |
| * The first region of a continuation must have a non-zero |
| * length otherwise log recovery will just skip over it and |
| * start recovering from the next opheader it finds. Because we |
| * mark the next opheader as a continuation, recovery will then |
| * incorrectly add the continuation to the previous region and |
| * that breaks stuff. |
| * |
| * Hence if there isn't space for region data after the |
| * opheader, then we need to start afresh with a new iclog. |
| */ |
| if (iclog->ic_size - *log_offset <= |
| sizeof(struct xlog_op_header)) { |
| error = xlog_write_get_more_iclog_space(ticket, |
| &iclog, log_offset, *len, record_cnt, |
| data_cnt); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| ophdr = reg->i_addr; |
| rlen = min_t(uint32_t, reg->i_len, iclog->ic_size - *log_offset); |
| |
| ophdr->oh_tid = cpu_to_be32(ticket->t_tid); |
| ophdr->oh_len = cpu_to_be32(rlen - sizeof(struct xlog_op_header)); |
| if (rlen != reg->i_len) |
| ophdr->oh_flags |= XLOG_CONTINUE_TRANS; |
| |
| xlog_write_iovec(iclog, log_offset, reg->i_addr, |
| rlen, len, record_cnt, data_cnt); |
| |
| /* If we wrote the whole region, move to the next. */ |
| if (rlen == reg->i_len) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* |
| * We now have a partially written iovec, but it can span |
| * multiple iclogs so we loop here. First we release the iclog |
| * we currently have, then we get a new iclog and add a new |
| * opheader. Then we continue copying from where we were until |
| * we either complete the iovec or fill the iclog. If we |
| * complete the iovec, then we increment the index and go right |
| * back to the top of the outer loop. if we fill the iclog, we |
| * run the inner loop again. |
| * |
| * This is complicated by the tail of a region using all the |
| * space in an iclog and hence requiring us to release the iclog |
| * and get a new one before returning to the outer loop. We must |
| * always guarantee that we exit this inner loop with at least |
| * space for log transaction opheaders left in the current |
| * iclog, hence we cannot just terminate the loop at the end |
| * of the of the continuation. So we loop while there is no |
| * space left in the current iclog, and check for the end of the |
| * continuation after getting a new iclog. |
| */ |
| do { |
| /* |
| * Ensure we include the continuation opheader in the |
| * space we need in the new iclog by adding that size |
| * to the length we require. This continuation opheader |
| * needs to be accounted to the ticket as the space it |
| * consumes hasn't been accounted to the lv we are |
| * writing. |
| */ |
| error = xlog_write_get_more_iclog_space(ticket, |
| &iclog, log_offset, |
| *len + sizeof(struct xlog_op_header), |
| record_cnt, data_cnt); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| |
| ophdr = iclog->ic_datap + *log_offset; |
| ophdr->oh_tid = cpu_to_be32(ticket->t_tid); |
| ophdr->oh_clientid = XFS_TRANSACTION; |
| ophdr->oh_res2 = 0; |
| ophdr->oh_flags = XLOG_WAS_CONT_TRANS; |
| |
| ticket->t_curr_res -= sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| *log_offset += sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| *data_cnt += sizeof(struct xlog_op_header); |
| |
| /* |
| * If rlen fits in the iclog, then end the region |
| * continuation. Otherwise we're going around again. |
| */ |
| reg_offset += rlen; |
| rlen = reg->i_len - reg_offset; |
| if (rlen <= iclog->ic_size - *log_offset) |
| ophdr->oh_flags |= XLOG_END_TRANS; |
| else |
| ophdr->oh_flags |= XLOG_CONTINUE_TRANS; |
| |
| rlen = min_t(uint32_t, rlen, iclog->ic_size - *log_offset); |
| ophdr->oh_len = cpu_to_be32(rlen); |
| |
| xlog_write_iovec(iclog, log_offset, |
| reg->i_addr + reg_offset, |
| rlen, len, record_cnt, data_cnt); |
| |
| } while (ophdr->oh_flags & XLOG_CONTINUE_TRANS); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * No more iovecs remain in this logvec so return the next log vec to |
| * the caller so it can go back to fast path copying. |
| */ |
| *iclogp = iclog; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Write some region out to in-core log |
| * |
| * This will be called when writing externally provided regions or when |
| * writing out a commit record for a given transaction. |
| * |
| * General algorithm: |
| * 1. Find total length of this write. This may include adding to the |
| * lengths passed in. |
| * 2. Check whether we violate the tickets reservation. |
| * 3. While writing to this iclog |
| * A. Reserve as much space in this iclog as can get |
| * B. If this is first write, save away start lsn |
| * C. While writing this region: |
| * 1. If first write of transaction, write start record |
| * 2. Write log operation header (header per region) |
| * 3. Find out if we can fit entire region into this iclog |
| * 4. Potentially, verify destination memcpy ptr |
| * 5. Memcpy (partial) region |
| * 6. If partial copy, release iclog; otherwise, continue |
| * copying more regions into current iclog |
| * 4. Mark want sync bit (in simulation mode) |
| * 5. Release iclog for potential flush to on-disk log. |
| * |
| * ERRORS: |
| * 1. Panic if reservation is overrun. This should never happen since |
| * reservation amounts are generated internal to the filesystem. |
| * NOTES: |
| * 1. Tickets are single threaded data structures. |
| * 2. The XLOG_END_TRANS & XLOG_CONTINUE_TRANS flags are passed down to the |
| * syncing routine. When a single log_write region needs to span |
| * multiple in-core logs, the XLOG_CONTINUE_TRANS bit should be set |
| * on all log operation writes which don't contain the end of the |
| * region. The XLOG_END_TRANS bit is used for the in-core log |
| * operation which contains the end of the continued log_write region. |
| * 3. When xlog_state_get_iclog_space() grabs the rest of the current iclog, |
| * we don't really know exactly how much space will be used. As a result, |
| * we don't update ic_offset until the end when we know exactly how many |
| * bytes have been written out. |
| */ |
| int |
| xlog_write( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xfs_cil_ctx *ctx, |
| struct list_head *lv_chain, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| uint32_t len) |
| |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = NULL; |
| struct xfs_log_vec *lv; |
| uint32_t record_cnt = 0; |
| uint32_t data_cnt = 0; |
| int error = 0; |
| int log_offset; |
| |
| if (ticket->t_curr_res < 0) { |
| xfs_alert_tag(log->l_mp, XFS_PTAG_LOGRES, |
| "ctx ticket reservation ran out. Need to up reservation"); |
| xlog_print_tic_res(log->l_mp, ticket); |
| xlog_force_shutdown(log, SHUTDOWN_LOG_IO_ERROR); |
| } |
| |
| error = xlog_state_get_iclog_space(log, len, &iclog, ticket, |
| &log_offset); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| |
| ASSERT(log_offset <= iclog->ic_size - 1); |
| |
| /* |
| * If we have a context pointer, pass it the first iclog we are |
| * writing to so it can record state needed for iclog write |
| * ordering. |
| */ |
| if (ctx) |
| xlog_cil_set_ctx_write_state(ctx, iclog); |
| |
| list_for_each_entry(lv, lv_chain, lv_list) { |
| /* |
| * If the entire log vec does not fit in the iclog, punt it to |
| * the partial copy loop which can handle this case. |
| */ |
| if (lv->lv_niovecs && |
| lv->lv_bytes > iclog->ic_size - log_offset) { |
| error = xlog_write_partial(lv, ticket, &iclog, |
| &log_offset, &len, &record_cnt, |
| &data_cnt); |
| if (error) { |
| /* |
| * We have no iclog to release, so just return |
| * the error immediately. |
| */ |
| return error; |
| } |
| } else { |
| xlog_write_full(lv, ticket, iclog, &log_offset, |
| &len, &record_cnt, &data_cnt); |
| } |
| } |
| ASSERT(len == 0); |
| |
| /* |
| * We've already been guaranteed that the last writes will fit inside |
| * the current iclog, and hence it will already have the space used by |
| * those writes accounted to it. Hence we do not need to update the |
| * iclog with the number of bytes written here. |
| */ |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xlog_state_finish_copy(log, iclog, record_cnt, 0); |
| error = xlog_state_release_iclog(log, iclog, ticket); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| return error; |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| xlog_state_activate_iclog( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int *iclogs_changed) |
| { |
| ASSERT(list_empty_careful(&iclog->ic_callbacks)); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_activate(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| /* |
| * If the number of ops in this iclog indicate it just contains the |
| * dummy transaction, we can change state into IDLE (the second time |
| * around). Otherwise we should change the state into NEED a dummy. |
| * We don't need to cover the dummy. |
| */ |
| if (*iclogs_changed == 0 && |
| iclog->ic_header.h_num_logops == cpu_to_be32(XLOG_COVER_OPS)) { |
| *iclogs_changed = 1; |
| } else { |
| /* |
| * We have two dirty iclogs so start over. This could also be |
| * num of ops indicating this is not the dummy going out. |
| */ |
| *iclogs_changed = 2; |
| } |
| |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE; |
| iclog->ic_offset = 0; |
| iclog->ic_header.h_num_logops = 0; |
| memset(iclog->ic_header.h_cycle_data, 0, |
| sizeof(iclog->ic_header.h_cycle_data)); |
| iclog->ic_header.h_lsn = 0; |
| iclog->ic_header.h_tail_lsn = 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Loop through all iclogs and mark all iclogs currently marked DIRTY as |
| * ACTIVE after iclog I/O has completed. |
| */ |
| static void |
| xlog_state_activate_iclogs( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| int *iclogs_changed) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| |
| do { |
| if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_DIRTY) |
| xlog_state_activate_iclog(iclog, iclogs_changed); |
| /* |
| * The ordering of marking iclogs ACTIVE must be maintained, so |
| * an iclog doesn't become ACTIVE beyond one that is SYNCING. |
| */ |
| else if (iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE) |
| break; |
| } while ((iclog = iclog->ic_next) != log->l_iclog); |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| xlog_covered_state( |
| int prev_state, |
| int iclogs_changed) |
| { |
| /* |
| * We go to NEED for any non-covering writes. We go to NEED2 if we just |
| * wrote the first covering record (DONE). We go to IDLE if we just |
| * wrote the second covering record (DONE2) and remain in IDLE until a |
| * non-covering write occurs. |
| */ |
| switch (prev_state) { |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE: |
| if (iclogs_changed == 1) |
| return XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE; |
| fallthrough; |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED: |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED2: |
| break; |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE: |
| if (iclogs_changed == 1) |
| return XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED2; |
| break; |
| case XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE2: |
| if (iclogs_changed == 1) |
| return XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE; |
| break; |
| default: |
| ASSERT(0); |
| } |
| |
| return XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_state_clean_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *dirty_iclog) |
| { |
| int iclogs_changed = 0; |
| |
| trace_xlog_iclog_clean(dirty_iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| dirty_iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_DIRTY; |
| |
| xlog_state_activate_iclogs(log, &iclogs_changed); |
| wake_up_all(&dirty_iclog->ic_force_wait); |
| |
| if (iclogs_changed) { |
| log->l_covered_state = xlog_covered_state(log->l_covered_state, |
| iclogs_changed); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| STATIC xfs_lsn_t |
| xlog_get_lowest_lsn( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| xfs_lsn_t lowest_lsn = 0, lsn; |
| |
| do { |
| if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE || |
| iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_DIRTY) |
| continue; |
| |
| lsn = be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn); |
| if ((lsn && !lowest_lsn) || XFS_LSN_CMP(lsn, lowest_lsn) < 0) |
| lowest_lsn = lsn; |
| } while ((iclog = iclog->ic_next) != log->l_iclog); |
| |
| return lowest_lsn; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Return true if we need to stop processing, false to continue to the next |
| * iclog. The caller will need to run callbacks if the iclog is returned in the |
| * XLOG_STATE_CALLBACK state. |
| */ |
| static bool |
| xlog_state_iodone_process_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| { |
| xfs_lsn_t lowest_lsn; |
| xfs_lsn_t header_lsn; |
| |
| switch (iclog->ic_state) { |
| case XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE: |
| case XLOG_STATE_DIRTY: |
| /* |
| * Skip all iclogs in the ACTIVE & DIRTY states: |
| */ |
| return false; |
| case XLOG_STATE_DONE_SYNC: |
| /* |
| * Now that we have an iclog that is in the DONE_SYNC state, do |
| * one more check here to see if we have chased our tail around. |
| * If this is not the lowest lsn iclog, then we will leave it |
| * for another completion to process. |
| */ |
| header_lsn = be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn); |
| lowest_lsn = xlog_get_lowest_lsn(log); |
| if (lowest_lsn && XFS_LSN_CMP(lowest_lsn, header_lsn) < 0) |
| return false; |
| /* |
| * If there are no callbacks on this iclog, we can mark it clean |
| * immediately and return. Otherwise we need to run the |
| * callbacks. |
| */ |
| if (list_empty(&iclog->ic_callbacks)) { |
| xlog_state_clean_iclog(log, iclog); |
| return false; |
| } |
| trace_xlog_iclog_callback(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_CALLBACK; |
| return false; |
| default: |
| /* |
| * Can only perform callbacks in order. Since this iclog is not |
| * in the DONE_SYNC state, we skip the rest and just try to |
| * clean up. |
| */ |
| return true; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Loop over all the iclogs, running attached callbacks on them. Return true if |
| * we ran any callbacks, indicating that we dropped the icloglock. We don't need |
| * to handle transient shutdown state here at all because |
| * xlog_state_shutdown_callbacks() will be run to do the necessary shutdown |
| * cleanup of the callbacks. |
| */ |
| static bool |
| xlog_state_do_iclog_callbacks( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| __releases(&log->l_icloglock) |
| __acquires(&log->l_icloglock) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *first_iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog = first_iclog; |
| bool ran_callback = false; |
| |
| do { |
| LIST_HEAD(cb_list); |
| |
| if (xlog_state_iodone_process_iclog(log, iclog)) |
| break; |
| if (iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_CALLBACK) { |
| iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| continue; |
| } |
| list_splice_init(&iclog->ic_callbacks, &cb_list); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| trace_xlog_iclog_callbacks_start(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| xlog_cil_process_committed(&cb_list); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_callbacks_done(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| ran_callback = true; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xlog_state_clean_iclog(log, iclog); |
| iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| } while (iclog != first_iclog); |
| |
| return ran_callback; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Loop running iclog completion callbacks until there are no more iclogs in a |
| * state that can run callbacks. |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_state_do_callback( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| int flushcnt = 0; |
| int repeats = 0; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| while (xlog_state_do_iclog_callbacks(log)) { |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| break; |
| |
| if (++repeats > 5000) { |
| flushcnt += repeats; |
| repeats = 0; |
| xfs_warn(log->l_mp, |
| "%s: possible infinite loop (%d iterations)", |
| __func__, flushcnt); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (log->l_iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE) |
| wake_up_all(&log->l_flush_wait); |
| |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Finish transitioning this iclog to the dirty state. |
| * |
| * Callbacks could take time, so they are done outside the scope of the |
| * global state machine log lock. |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_state_done_syncing( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = iclog->ic_log; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| ASSERT(atomic_read(&iclog->ic_refcnt) == 0); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_sync_done(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| /* |
| * If we got an error, either on the first buffer, or in the case of |
| * split log writes, on the second, we shut down the file system and |
| * no iclogs should ever be attempted to be written to disk again. |
| */ |
| if (!xlog_is_shutdown(log)) { |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_SYNCING); |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_DONE_SYNC; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Someone could be sleeping prior to writing out the next |
| * iclog buffer, we wake them all, one will get to do the |
| * I/O, the others get to wait for the result. |
| */ |
| wake_up_all(&iclog->ic_write_wait); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xlog_state_do_callback(log); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * If the head of the in-core log ring is not (ACTIVE or DIRTY), then we must |
| * sleep. We wait on the flush queue on the head iclog as that should be |
| * the first iclog to complete flushing. Hence if all iclogs are syncing, |
| * we will wait here and all new writes will sleep until a sync completes. |
| * |
| * The in-core logs are used in a circular fashion. They are not used |
| * out-of-order even when an iclog past the head is free. |
| * |
| * return: |
| * * log_offset where xlog_write() can start writing into the in-core |
| * log's data space. |
| * * in-core log pointer to which xlog_write() should write. |
| * * boolean indicating this is a continued write to an in-core log. |
| * If this is the last write, then the in-core log's offset field |
| * needs to be incremented, depending on the amount of data which |
| * is copied. |
| */ |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_state_get_iclog_space( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| int len, |
| struct xlog_in_core **iclogp, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket, |
| int *logoffsetp) |
| { |
| int log_offset; |
| xlog_rec_header_t *head; |
| xlog_in_core_t *iclog; |
| |
| restart: |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) { |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return -EIO; |
| } |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| if (iclog->ic_state != XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE) { |
| XFS_STATS_INC(log->l_mp, xs_log_noiclogs); |
| |
| /* Wait for log writes to have flushed */ |
| xlog_wait(&log->l_flush_wait, &log->l_icloglock); |
| goto restart; |
| } |
| |
| head = &iclog->ic_header; |
| |
| atomic_inc(&iclog->ic_refcnt); /* prevents sync */ |
| log_offset = iclog->ic_offset; |
| |
| trace_xlog_iclog_get_space(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| /* On the 1st write to an iclog, figure out lsn. This works |
| * if iclogs marked XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC always write out what they are |
| * committing to. If the offset is set, that's how many blocks |
| * must be written. |
| */ |
| if (log_offset == 0) { |
| ticket->t_curr_res -= log->l_iclog_hsize; |
| head->h_cycle = cpu_to_be32(log->l_curr_cycle); |
| head->h_lsn = cpu_to_be64( |
| xlog_assign_lsn(log->l_curr_cycle, log->l_curr_block)); |
| ASSERT(log->l_curr_block >= 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* If there is enough room to write everything, then do it. Otherwise, |
| * claim the rest of the region and make sure the XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC |
| * bit is on, so this will get flushed out. Don't update ic_offset |
| * until you know exactly how many bytes get copied. Therefore, wait |
| * until later to update ic_offset. |
| * |
| * xlog_write() algorithm assumes that at least 2 xlog_op_header_t's |
| * can fit into remaining data section. |
| */ |
| if (iclog->ic_size - iclog->ic_offset < 2*sizeof(xlog_op_header_t)) { |
| int error = 0; |
| |
| xlog_state_switch_iclogs(log, iclog, iclog->ic_size); |
| |
| /* |
| * If we are the only one writing to this iclog, sync it to |
| * disk. We need to do an atomic compare and decrement here to |
| * avoid racing with concurrent atomic_dec_and_lock() calls in |
| * xlog_state_release_iclog() when there is more than one |
| * reference to the iclog. |
| */ |
| if (!atomic_add_unless(&iclog->ic_refcnt, -1, 1)) |
| error = xlog_state_release_iclog(log, iclog, ticket); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| goto restart; |
| } |
| |
| /* Do we have enough room to write the full amount in the remainder |
| * of this iclog? Or must we continue a write on the next iclog and |
| * mark this iclog as completely taken? In the case where we switch |
| * iclogs (to mark it taken), this particular iclog will release/sync |
| * to disk in xlog_write(). |
| */ |
| if (len <= iclog->ic_size - iclog->ic_offset) |
| iclog->ic_offset += len; |
| else |
| xlog_state_switch_iclogs(log, iclog, iclog->ic_size); |
| *iclogp = iclog; |
| |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_offset <= iclog->ic_size); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| *logoffsetp = log_offset; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * The first cnt-1 times a ticket goes through here we don't need to move the |
| * grant write head because the permanent reservation has reserved cnt times the |
| * unit amount. Release part of current permanent unit reservation and reset |
| * current reservation to be one units worth. Also move grant reservation head |
| * forward. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_ticket_regrant( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_regrant(log, ticket); |
| |
| if (ticket->t_cnt > 0) |
| ticket->t_cnt--; |
| |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_reserve_head, ticket->t_curr_res); |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_write_head, ticket->t_curr_res); |
| ticket->t_curr_res = ticket->t_unit_res; |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_regrant_sub(log, ticket); |
| |
| /* just return if we still have some of the pre-reserved space */ |
| if (!ticket->t_cnt) { |
| xlog_grant_add_space(&log->l_reserve_head, ticket->t_unit_res); |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_regrant_exit(log, ticket); |
| |
| ticket->t_curr_res = ticket->t_unit_res; |
| } |
| |
| xfs_log_ticket_put(ticket); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Give back the space left from a reservation. |
| * |
| * All the information we need to make a correct determination of space left |
| * is present. For non-permanent reservations, things are quite easy. The |
| * count should have been decremented to zero. We only need to deal with the |
| * space remaining in the current reservation part of the ticket. If the |
| * ticket contains a permanent reservation, there may be left over space which |
| * needs to be released. A count of N means that N-1 refills of the current |
| * reservation can be done before we need to ask for more space. The first |
| * one goes to fill up the first current reservation. Once we run out of |
| * space, the count will stay at zero and the only space remaining will be |
| * in the current reservation field. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_ticket_ungrant( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_ticket *ticket) |
| { |
| int bytes; |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_ungrant(log, ticket); |
| |
| if (ticket->t_cnt > 0) |
| ticket->t_cnt--; |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_ungrant_sub(log, ticket); |
| |
| /* |
| * If this is a permanent reservation ticket, we may be able to free |
| * up more space based on the remaining count. |
| */ |
| bytes = ticket->t_curr_res; |
| if (ticket->t_cnt > 0) { |
| ASSERT(ticket->t_flags & XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV); |
| bytes += ticket->t_unit_res*ticket->t_cnt; |
| } |
| |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_reserve_head, bytes); |
| xlog_grant_sub_space(&log->l_write_head, bytes); |
| |
| trace_xfs_log_ticket_ungrant_exit(log, ticket); |
| |
| xfs_log_space_wake(log->l_mp); |
| xfs_log_ticket_put(ticket); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * This routine will mark the current iclog in the ring as WANT_SYNC and move |
| * the current iclog pointer to the next iclog in the ring. |
| */ |
| void |
| xlog_state_switch_iclogs( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int eventual_size) |
| { |
| ASSERT(iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE); |
| assert_spin_locked(&log->l_icloglock); |
| trace_xlog_iclog_switch(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| if (!eventual_size) |
| eventual_size = iclog->ic_offset; |
| iclog->ic_state = XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC; |
| iclog->ic_header.h_prev_block = cpu_to_be32(log->l_prev_block); |
| log->l_prev_block = log->l_curr_block; |
| log->l_prev_cycle = log->l_curr_cycle; |
| |
| /* roll log?: ic_offset changed later */ |
| log->l_curr_block += BTOBB(eventual_size)+BTOBB(log->l_iclog_hsize); |
| |
| /* Round up to next log-sunit */ |
| if (log->l_iclog_roundoff > BBSIZE) { |
| uint32_t sunit_bb = BTOBB(log->l_iclog_roundoff); |
| log->l_curr_block = roundup(log->l_curr_block, sunit_bb); |
| } |
| |
| if (log->l_curr_block >= log->l_logBBsize) { |
| /* |
| * Rewind the current block before the cycle is bumped to make |
| * sure that the combined LSN never transiently moves forward |
| * when the log wraps to the next cycle. This is to support the |
| * unlocked sample of these fields from xlog_valid_lsn(). Most |
| * other cases should acquire l_icloglock. |
| */ |
| log->l_curr_block -= log->l_logBBsize; |
| ASSERT(log->l_curr_block >= 0); |
| smp_wmb(); |
| log->l_curr_cycle++; |
| if (log->l_curr_cycle == XLOG_HEADER_MAGIC_NUM) |
| log->l_curr_cycle++; |
| } |
| ASSERT(iclog == log->l_iclog); |
| log->l_iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Force the iclog to disk and check if the iclog has been completed before |
| * xlog_force_iclog() returns. This can happen on synchronous (e.g. |
| * pmem) or fast async storage because we drop the icloglock to issue the IO. |
| * If completion has already occurred, tell the caller so that it can avoid an |
| * unnecessary wait on the iclog. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xlog_force_and_check_iclog( |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| bool *completed) |
| { |
| xfs_lsn_t lsn = be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn); |
| int error; |
| |
| *completed = false; |
| error = xlog_force_iclog(iclog); |
| if (error) |
| return error; |
| |
| /* |
| * If the iclog has already been completed and reused the header LSN |
| * will have been rewritten by completion |
| */ |
| if (be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn) != lsn) |
| *completed = true; |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Write out all data in the in-core log as of this exact moment in time. |
| * |
| * Data may be written to the in-core log during this call. However, |
| * we don't guarantee this data will be written out. A change from past |
| * implementation means this routine will *not* write out zero length LRs. |
| * |
| * Basically, we try and perform an intelligent scan of the in-core logs. |
| * If we determine there is no flushable data, we just return. There is no |
| * flushable data if: |
| * |
| * 1. the current iclog is active and has no data; the previous iclog |
| * is in the active or dirty state. |
| * 2. the current iclog is drity, and the previous iclog is in the |
| * active or dirty state. |
| * |
| * We may sleep if: |
| * |
| * 1. the current iclog is not in the active nor dirty state. |
| * 2. the current iclog dirty, and the previous iclog is not in the |
| * active nor dirty state. |
| * 3. the current iclog is active, and there is another thread writing |
| * to this particular iclog. |
| * 4. a) the current iclog is active and has no other writers |
| * b) when we return from flushing out this iclog, it is still |
| * not in the active nor dirty state. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_force( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| uint flags) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog; |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_log_force); |
| trace_xfs_log_force(mp, 0, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| xlog_cil_force(log); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| goto out_error; |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| trace_xlog_iclog_force(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_DIRTY || |
| (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE && |
| atomic_read(&iclog->ic_refcnt) == 0 && iclog->ic_offset == 0)) { |
| /* |
| * If the head is dirty or (active and empty), then we need to |
| * look at the previous iclog. |
| * |
| * If the previous iclog is active or dirty we are done. There |
| * is nothing to sync out. Otherwise, we attach ourselves to the |
| * previous iclog and go to sleep. |
| */ |
| iclog = iclog->ic_prev; |
| } else if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE) { |
| if (atomic_read(&iclog->ic_refcnt) == 0) { |
| /* We have exclusive access to this iclog. */ |
| bool completed; |
| |
| if (xlog_force_and_check_iclog(iclog, &completed)) |
| goto out_error; |
| |
| if (completed) |
| goto out_unlock; |
| } else { |
| /* |
| * Someone else is still writing to this iclog, so we |
| * need to ensure that when they release the iclog it |
| * gets synced immediately as we may be waiting on it. |
| */ |
| xlog_state_switch_iclogs(log, iclog, 0); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * The iclog we are about to wait on may contain the checkpoint pushed |
| * by the above xlog_cil_force() call, but it may not have been pushed |
| * to disk yet. Like the ACTIVE case above, we need to make sure caches |
| * are flushed when this iclog is written. |
| */ |
| if (iclog->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC) |
| iclog->ic_flags |= XLOG_ICL_NEED_FLUSH | XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA; |
| |
| if (flags & XFS_LOG_SYNC) |
| return xlog_wait_on_iclog(iclog); |
| out_unlock: |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return 0; |
| out_error: |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return -EIO; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Force the log to a specific LSN. |
| * |
| * If an iclog with that lsn can be found: |
| * If it is in the DIRTY state, just return. |
| * If it is in the ACTIVE state, move the in-core log into the WANT_SYNC |
| * state and go to sleep or return. |
| * If it is in any other state, go to sleep or return. |
| * |
| * Synchronous forces are implemented with a wait queue. All callers trying |
| * to force a given lsn to disk must wait on the queue attached to the |
| * specific in-core log. When given in-core log finally completes its write |
| * to disk, that thread will wake up all threads waiting on the queue. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xlog_force_lsn( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| xfs_lsn_t lsn, |
| uint flags, |
| int *log_flushed, |
| bool already_slept) |
| { |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog; |
| bool completed; |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (xlog_is_shutdown(log)) |
| goto out_error; |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| while (be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_lsn) != lsn) { |
| trace_xlog_iclog_force_lsn(iclog, _RET_IP_); |
| iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| if (iclog == log->l_iclog) |
| goto out_unlock; |
| } |
| |
| switch (iclog->ic_state) { |
| case XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE: |
| /* |
| * We sleep here if we haven't already slept (e.g. this is the |
| * first time we've looked at the correct iclog buf) and the |
| * buffer before us is going to be sync'ed. The reason for this |
| * is that if we are doing sync transactions here, by waiting |
| * for the previous I/O to complete, we can allow a few more |
| * transactions into this iclog before we close it down. |
| * |
| * Otherwise, we mark the buffer WANT_SYNC, and bump up the |
| * refcnt so we can release the log (which drops the ref count). |
| * The state switch keeps new transaction commits from using |
| * this buffer. When the current commits finish writing into |
| * the buffer, the refcount will drop to zero and the buffer |
| * will go out then. |
| */ |
| if (!already_slept && |
| (iclog->ic_prev->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC || |
| iclog->ic_prev->ic_state == XLOG_STATE_SYNCING)) { |
| xlog_wait(&iclog->ic_prev->ic_write_wait, |
| &log->l_icloglock); |
| return -EAGAIN; |
| } |
| if (xlog_force_and_check_iclog(iclog, &completed)) |
| goto out_error; |
| if (log_flushed) |
| *log_flushed = 1; |
| if (completed) |
| goto out_unlock; |
| break; |
| case XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC: |
| /* |
| * This iclog may contain the checkpoint pushed by the |
| * xlog_cil_force_seq() call, but there are other writers still |
| * accessing it so it hasn't been pushed to disk yet. Like the |
| * ACTIVE case above, we need to make sure caches are flushed |
| * when this iclog is written. |
| */ |
| iclog->ic_flags |= XLOG_ICL_NEED_FLUSH | XLOG_ICL_NEED_FUA; |
| break; |
| default: |
| /* |
| * The entire checkpoint was written by the CIL force and is on |
| * its way to disk already. It will be stable when it |
| * completes, so we don't need to manipulate caches here at all. |
| * We just need to wait for completion if necessary. |
| */ |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| if (flags & XFS_LOG_SYNC) |
| return xlog_wait_on_iclog(iclog); |
| out_unlock: |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return 0; |
| out_error: |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return -EIO; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Force the log to a specific checkpoint sequence. |
| * |
| * First force the CIL so that all the required changes have been flushed to the |
| * iclogs. If the CIL force completed it will return a commit LSN that indicates |
| * the iclog that needs to be flushed to stable storage. If the caller needs |
| * a synchronous log force, we will wait on the iclog with the LSN returned by |
| * xlog_cil_force_seq() to be completed. |
| */ |
| int |
| xfs_log_force_seq( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| xfs_csn_t seq, |
| uint flags, |
| int *log_flushed) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| xfs_lsn_t lsn; |
| int ret; |
| ASSERT(seq != 0); |
| |
| XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_log_force); |
| trace_xfs_log_force(mp, seq, _RET_IP_); |
| |
| lsn = xlog_cil_force_seq(log, seq); |
| if (lsn == NULLCOMMITLSN) |
| return 0; |
| |
| ret = xlog_force_lsn(log, lsn, flags, log_flushed, false); |
| if (ret == -EAGAIN) { |
| XFS_STATS_INC(mp, xs_log_force_sleep); |
| ret = xlog_force_lsn(log, lsn, flags, log_flushed, true); |
| } |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Free a used ticket when its refcount falls to zero. |
| */ |
| void |
| xfs_log_ticket_put( |
| xlog_ticket_t *ticket) |
| { |
| ASSERT(atomic_read(&ticket->t_ref) > 0); |
| if (atomic_dec_and_test(&ticket->t_ref)) |
| kmem_cache_free(xfs_log_ticket_cache, ticket); |
| } |
| |
| xlog_ticket_t * |
| xfs_log_ticket_get( |
| xlog_ticket_t *ticket) |
| { |
| ASSERT(atomic_read(&ticket->t_ref) > 0); |
| atomic_inc(&ticket->t_ref); |
| return ticket; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Figure out the total log space unit (in bytes) that would be |
| * required for a log ticket. |
| */ |
| static int |
| xlog_calc_unit_res( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| int unit_bytes, |
| int *niclogs) |
| { |
| int iclog_space; |
| uint num_headers; |
| |
| /* |
| * Permanent reservations have up to 'cnt'-1 active log operations |
| * in the log. A unit in this case is the amount of space for one |
| * of these log operations. Normal reservations have a cnt of 1 |
| * and their unit amount is the total amount of space required. |
| * |
| * The following lines of code account for non-transaction data |
| * which occupy space in the on-disk log. |
| * |
| * Normal form of a transaction is: |
| * <oph><trans-hdr><start-oph><reg1-oph><reg1><reg2-oph>...<commit-oph> |
| * and then there are LR hdrs, split-recs and roundoff at end of syncs. |
| * |
| * We need to account for all the leadup data and trailer data |
| * around the transaction data. |
| * And then we need to account for the worst case in terms of using |
| * more space. |
| * The worst case will happen if: |
| * - the placement of the transaction happens to be such that the |
| * roundoff is at its maximum |
| * - the transaction data is synced before the commit record is synced |
| * i.e. <transaction-data><roundoff> | <commit-rec><roundoff> |
| * Therefore the commit record is in its own Log Record. |
| * This can happen as the commit record is called with its |
| * own region to xlog_write(). |
| * This then means that in the worst case, roundoff can happen for |
| * the commit-rec as well. |
| * The commit-rec is smaller than padding in this scenario and so it is |
| * not added separately. |
| */ |
| |
| /* for trans header */ |
| unit_bytes += sizeof(xlog_op_header_t); |
| unit_bytes += sizeof(xfs_trans_header_t); |
| |
| /* for start-rec */ |
| unit_bytes += sizeof(xlog_op_header_t); |
| |
| /* |
| * for LR headers - the space for data in an iclog is the size minus |
| * the space used for the headers. If we use the iclog size, then we |
| * undercalculate the number of headers required. |
| * |
| * Furthermore - the addition of op headers for split-recs might |
| * increase the space required enough to require more log and op |
| * headers, so take that into account too. |
| * |
| * IMPORTANT: This reservation makes the assumption that if this |
| * transaction is the first in an iclog and hence has the LR headers |
| * accounted to it, then the remaining space in the iclog is |
| * exclusively for this transaction. i.e. if the transaction is larger |
| * than the iclog, it will be the only thing in that iclog. |
| * Fundamentally, this means we must pass the entire log vector to |
| * xlog_write to guarantee this. |
| */ |
| iclog_space = log->l_iclog_size - log->l_iclog_hsize; |
| num_headers = howmany(unit_bytes, iclog_space); |
| |
| /* for split-recs - ophdrs added when data split over LRs */ |
| unit_bytes += sizeof(xlog_op_header_t) * num_headers; |
| |
| /* add extra header reservations if we overrun */ |
| while (!num_headers || |
| howmany(unit_bytes, iclog_space) > num_headers) { |
| unit_bytes += sizeof(xlog_op_header_t); |
| num_headers++; |
| } |
| unit_bytes += log->l_iclog_hsize * num_headers; |
| |
| /* for commit-rec LR header - note: padding will subsume the ophdr */ |
| unit_bytes += log->l_iclog_hsize; |
| |
| /* roundoff padding for transaction data and one for commit record */ |
| unit_bytes += 2 * log->l_iclog_roundoff; |
| |
| if (niclogs) |
| *niclogs = num_headers; |
| return unit_bytes; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| xfs_log_calc_unit_res( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| int unit_bytes) |
| { |
| return xlog_calc_unit_res(mp->m_log, unit_bytes, NULL); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Allocate and initialise a new log ticket. |
| */ |
| struct xlog_ticket * |
| xlog_ticket_alloc( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| int unit_bytes, |
| int cnt, |
| bool permanent) |
| { |
| struct xlog_ticket *tic; |
| int unit_res; |
| |
| tic = kmem_cache_zalloc(xfs_log_ticket_cache, |
| GFP_KERNEL | __GFP_NOFAIL); |
| |
| unit_res = xlog_calc_unit_res(log, unit_bytes, &tic->t_iclog_hdrs); |
| |
| atomic_set(&tic->t_ref, 1); |
| tic->t_task = current; |
| INIT_LIST_HEAD(&tic->t_queue); |
| tic->t_unit_res = unit_res; |
| tic->t_curr_res = unit_res; |
| tic->t_cnt = cnt; |
| tic->t_ocnt = cnt; |
| tic->t_tid = get_random_u32(); |
| if (permanent) |
| tic->t_flags |= XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV; |
| |
| return tic; |
| } |
| |
| #if defined(DEBUG) |
| static void |
| xlog_verify_dump_tail( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| { |
| xfs_alert(log->l_mp, |
| "ran out of log space tail 0x%llx/0x%llx, head lsn 0x%llx, head 0x%x/0x%x, prev head 0x%x/0x%x", |
| iclog ? be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_tail_lsn) : -1, |
| atomic64_read(&log->l_tail_lsn), |
| log->l_ailp->ail_head_lsn, |
| log->l_curr_cycle, log->l_curr_block, |
| log->l_prev_cycle, log->l_prev_block); |
| xfs_alert(log->l_mp, |
| "write grant 0x%llx, reserve grant 0x%llx, tail_space 0x%llx, size 0x%x, iclog flags 0x%x", |
| atomic64_read(&log->l_write_head.grant), |
| atomic64_read(&log->l_reserve_head.grant), |
| log->l_tail_space, log->l_logsize, |
| iclog ? iclog->ic_flags : -1); |
| } |
| |
| /* Check if the new iclog will fit in the log. */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_verify_tail_lsn( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog) |
| { |
| xfs_lsn_t tail_lsn = be64_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_tail_lsn); |
| int blocks; |
| |
| if (CYCLE_LSN(tail_lsn) == log->l_prev_cycle) { |
| blocks = log->l_logBBsize - |
| (log->l_prev_block - BLOCK_LSN(tail_lsn)); |
| if (blocks < BTOBB(iclog->ic_offset) + |
| BTOBB(log->l_iclog_hsize)) { |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, |
| "%s: ran out of log space", __func__); |
| xlog_verify_dump_tail(log, iclog); |
| } |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| if (CYCLE_LSN(tail_lsn) + 1 != log->l_prev_cycle) { |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: head has wrapped tail.", __func__); |
| xlog_verify_dump_tail(log, iclog); |
| return; |
| } |
| if (BLOCK_LSN(tail_lsn) == log->l_prev_block) { |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: tail wrapped", __func__); |
| xlog_verify_dump_tail(log, iclog); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| blocks = BLOCK_LSN(tail_lsn) - log->l_prev_block; |
| if (blocks < BTOBB(iclog->ic_offset) + 1) { |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: ran out of iclog space", __func__); |
| xlog_verify_dump_tail(log, iclog); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Perform a number of checks on the iclog before writing to disk. |
| * |
| * 1. Make sure the iclogs are still circular |
| * 2. Make sure we have a good magic number |
| * 3. Make sure we don't have magic numbers in the data |
| * 4. Check fields of each log operation header for: |
| * A. Valid client identifier |
| * B. tid ptr value falls in valid ptr space (user space code) |
| * C. Length in log record header is correct according to the |
| * individual operation headers within record. |
| * 5. When a bwrite will occur within 5 blocks of the front of the physical |
| * log, check the preceding blocks of the physical log to make sure all |
| * the cycle numbers agree with the current cycle number. |
| */ |
| STATIC void |
| xlog_verify_iclog( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| struct xlog_in_core *iclog, |
| int count) |
| { |
| xlog_op_header_t *ophead; |
| xlog_in_core_t *icptr; |
| xlog_in_core_2_t *xhdr; |
| void *base_ptr, *ptr, *p; |
| ptrdiff_t field_offset; |
| uint8_t clientid; |
| int len, i, j, k, op_len; |
| int idx; |
| |
| /* check validity of iclog pointers */ |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| icptr = log->l_iclog; |
| for (i = 0; i < log->l_iclog_bufs; i++, icptr = icptr->ic_next) |
| ASSERT(icptr); |
| |
| if (icptr != log->l_iclog) |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: corrupt iclog ring", __func__); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| /* check log magic numbers */ |
| if (iclog->ic_header.h_magicno != cpu_to_be32(XLOG_HEADER_MAGIC_NUM)) |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: invalid magic num", __func__); |
| |
| base_ptr = ptr = &iclog->ic_header; |
| p = &iclog->ic_header; |
| for (ptr += BBSIZE; ptr < base_ptr + count; ptr += BBSIZE) { |
| if (*(__be32 *)ptr == cpu_to_be32(XLOG_HEADER_MAGIC_NUM)) |
| xfs_emerg(log->l_mp, "%s: unexpected magic num", |
| __func__); |
| } |
| |
| /* check fields */ |
| len = be32_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_num_logops); |
| base_ptr = ptr = iclog->ic_datap; |
| ophead = ptr; |
| xhdr = iclog->ic_data; |
| for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { |
| ophead = ptr; |
| |
| /* clientid is only 1 byte */ |
| p = &ophead->oh_clientid; |
| field_offset = p - base_ptr; |
| if (field_offset & 0x1ff) { |
| clientid = ophead->oh_clientid; |
| } else { |
| idx = BTOBBT((void *)&ophead->oh_clientid - iclog->ic_datap); |
| if (idx >= (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE)) { |
| j = idx / (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| k = idx % (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| clientid = xlog_get_client_id( |
| xhdr[j].hic_xheader.xh_cycle_data[k]); |
| } else { |
| clientid = xlog_get_client_id( |
| iclog->ic_header.h_cycle_data[idx]); |
| } |
| } |
| if (clientid != XFS_TRANSACTION && clientid != XFS_LOG) { |
| xfs_warn(log->l_mp, |
| "%s: op %d invalid clientid %d op "PTR_FMT" offset 0x%lx", |
| __func__, i, clientid, ophead, |
| (unsigned long)field_offset); |
| } |
| |
| /* check length */ |
| p = &ophead->oh_len; |
| field_offset = p - base_ptr; |
| if (field_offset & 0x1ff) { |
| op_len = be32_to_cpu(ophead->oh_len); |
| } else { |
| idx = BTOBBT((void *)&ophead->oh_len - iclog->ic_datap); |
| if (idx >= (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE)) { |
| j = idx / (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| k = idx % (XLOG_HEADER_CYCLE_SIZE / BBSIZE); |
| op_len = be32_to_cpu(xhdr[j].hic_xheader.xh_cycle_data[k]); |
| } else { |
| op_len = be32_to_cpu(iclog->ic_header.h_cycle_data[idx]); |
| } |
| } |
| ptr += sizeof(xlog_op_header_t) + op_len; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| /* |
| * Perform a forced shutdown on the log. |
| * |
| * This can be called from low level log code to trigger a shutdown, or from the |
| * high level mount shutdown code when the mount shuts down. |
| * |
| * Our main objectives here are to make sure that: |
| * a. if the shutdown was not due to a log IO error, flush the logs to |
| * disk. Anything modified after this is ignored. |
| * b. the log gets atomically marked 'XLOG_IO_ERROR' for all interested |
| * parties to find out. Nothing new gets queued after this is done. |
| * c. Tasks sleeping on log reservations, pinned objects and |
| * other resources get woken up. |
| * d. The mount is also marked as shut down so that log triggered shutdowns |
| * still behave the same as if they called xfs_forced_shutdown(). |
| * |
| * Return true if the shutdown cause was a log IO error and we actually shut the |
| * log down. |
| */ |
| bool |
| xlog_force_shutdown( |
| struct xlog *log, |
| uint32_t shutdown_flags) |
| { |
| bool log_error = (shutdown_flags & SHUTDOWN_LOG_IO_ERROR); |
| |
| if (!log) |
| return false; |
| |
| /* |
| * Flush all the completed transactions to disk before marking the log |
| * being shut down. We need to do this first as shutting down the log |
| * before the force will prevent the log force from flushing the iclogs |
| * to disk. |
| * |
| * When we are in recovery, there are no transactions to flush, and |
| * we don't want to touch the log because we don't want to perturb the |
| * current head/tail for future recovery attempts. Hence we need to |
| * avoid a log force in this case. |
| * |
| * If we are shutting down due to a log IO error, then we must avoid |
| * trying to write the log as that may just result in more IO errors and |
| * an endless shutdown/force loop. |
| */ |
| if (!log_error && !xlog_in_recovery(log)) |
| xfs_log_force(log->l_mp, XFS_LOG_SYNC); |
| |
| /* |
| * Atomically set the shutdown state. If the shutdown state is already |
| * set, there someone else is performing the shutdown and so we are done |
| * here. This should never happen because we should only ever get called |
| * once by the first shutdown caller. |
| * |
| * Much of the log state machine transitions assume that shutdown state |
| * cannot change once they hold the log->l_icloglock. Hence we need to |
| * hold that lock here, even though we use the atomic test_and_set_bit() |
| * operation to set the shutdown state. |
| */ |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| if (test_and_set_bit(XLOG_IO_ERROR, &log->l_opstate)) { |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| return false; |
| } |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| /* |
| * If this log shutdown also sets the mount shutdown state, issue a |
| * shutdown warning message. |
| */ |
| if (!xfs_set_shutdown(log->l_mp)) { |
| xfs_alert_tag(log->l_mp, XFS_PTAG_SHUTDOWN_LOGERROR, |
| "Filesystem has been shut down due to log error (0x%x).", |
| shutdown_flags); |
| xfs_alert(log->l_mp, |
| "Please unmount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)."); |
| if (xfs_error_level >= XFS_ERRLEVEL_HIGH) |
| xfs_stack_trace(); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * We don't want anybody waiting for log reservations after this. That |
| * means we have to wake up everybody queued up on reserveq as well as |
| * writeq. In addition, we make sure in xlog_{re}grant_log_space that |
| * we don't enqueue anything once the SHUTDOWN flag is set, and this |
| * action is protected by the grant locks. |
| */ |
| xlog_grant_head_wake_all(&log->l_reserve_head); |
| xlog_grant_head_wake_all(&log->l_write_head); |
| |
| /* |
| * Wake up everybody waiting on xfs_log_force. Wake the CIL push first |
| * as if the log writes were completed. The abort handling in the log |
| * item committed callback functions will do this again under lock to |
| * avoid races. |
| */ |
| spin_lock(&log->l_cilp->xc_push_lock); |
| wake_up_all(&log->l_cilp->xc_start_wait); |
| wake_up_all(&log->l_cilp->xc_commit_wait); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_cilp->xc_push_lock); |
| |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xlog_state_shutdown_callbacks(log); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| |
| wake_up_var(&log->l_opstate); |
| return log_error; |
| } |
| |
| STATIC int |
| xlog_iclogs_empty( |
| struct xlog *log) |
| { |
| xlog_in_core_t *iclog; |
| |
| iclog = log->l_iclog; |
| do { |
| /* endianness does not matter here, zero is zero in |
| * any language. |
| */ |
| if (iclog->ic_header.h_num_logops) |
| return 0; |
| iclog = iclog->ic_next; |
| } while (iclog != log->l_iclog); |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * Verify that an LSN stamped into a piece of metadata is valid. This is |
| * intended for use in read verifiers on v5 superblocks. |
| */ |
| bool |
| xfs_log_check_lsn( |
| struct xfs_mount *mp, |
| xfs_lsn_t lsn) |
| { |
| struct xlog *log = mp->m_log; |
| bool valid; |
| |
| /* |
| * norecovery mode skips mount-time log processing and unconditionally |
| * resets the in-core LSN. We can't validate in this mode, but |
| * modifications are not allowed anyways so just return true. |
| */ |
| if (xfs_has_norecovery(mp)) |
| return true; |
| |
| /* |
| * Some metadata LSNs are initialized to NULL (e.g., the agfl). This is |
| * handled by recovery and thus safe to ignore here. |
| */ |
| if (lsn == NULLCOMMITLSN) |
| return true; |
| |
| valid = xlog_valid_lsn(mp->m_log, lsn); |
| |
| /* warn the user about what's gone wrong before verifier failure */ |
| if (!valid) { |
| spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| xfs_warn(mp, |
| "Corruption warning: Metadata has LSN (%d:%d) ahead of current LSN (%d:%d). " |
| "Please unmount and run xfs_repair (>= v4.3) to resolve.", |
| CYCLE_LSN(lsn), BLOCK_LSN(lsn), |
| log->l_curr_cycle, log->l_curr_block); |
| spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock); |
| } |
| |
| return valid; |
| } |