If the fields to be listed and sorted by are constrained
to those populated by dsl_dataset_fast_stat(), then
zfs list is much faster, as it does not need to open each
objset and reads its properties.
A previous optimization by Pawel Dawidek
(0cee24064a) took advantage
of this to make listing snapshot names sorted only by name
much faster.
However, it was limited to `-o name -s name`, this work
extends this optimization to work with:
- name
- guid
- createtxg
- numclones
- inconsistent
- redacted
- origin
and could be further extended to any other properties
supported by dsl_dataset_fast_stat() or similar, that do
not require extra locking or reading from disk.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pawel@dawidek.net>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes#11080
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Closes#12728
Sometimes, we'd like to know info about the metaslab groups
on special vdevs too. So let's make -MM do something useful.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12750
Add properties, similar to pool properties, to each vdev.
This makes use of the existing per-vdev ZAP that was added as
part of device evacuation/removal.
A large number of read-only properties are exposed,
many of the members of struct vdev_t, that provide useful
statistics.
Adds support for read-only "removing" vdev property.
Adds the "allocating" property that defaults to "on" and
can be set to "off" to prevent future allocations from that
top-level vdev.
Supports user-defined vdev properties.
Includes support for properties.vdev in SYSFS.
Co-authored-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes#11711
In case if all label checksums will be invalid on any vdev, the pool
will become unimportable. The zhack with newly added cli options could
be used to restore label checksums and make pool importable again.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#2510Closes#12686
In case if all label checksums will be invalid on any vdev, the pool
will become unimportable. From other side zdb with -l option will not
provide any useful information why it happened. Add notifications
about corrupted label checksums.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#2509Closes#12685
The ZED code currently can only turn on the fault LED for
a faulted disk in a JBOD enclosure. This extends support
for faulted NVMe disks as well.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#12648Closes#12695
The only zdb utility require to read metaslab-related data during
read-only pool import because of spacemaps validation. Add global
variable which will allow zdb read spacemaps in case of readonly
import mode.
Reviewed-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#9095Closes#12687
One of our developers noticed a bug in vdev_id where we were incorrectly
sorting PHYs using alphabetical sorting (which usually works) instead
of natural sorting (-v). For example:
[port-0:0]# ls -d phy*
phy-0:10 phy-0:11 phy-0:8 phy-0:9
[port-0:0]# ls -vd phy*
phy-0:8 phy-0:9 phy-0:10 phy-0:11
This fixes the issue.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#12699
The vdev_id.conf "enclosure_symlinks" option persistently creates
and maps /dev/by-enclosure symlinks to dynamic /dev/sg* devices.
This patch fixes two issues:
1. The enclosure_symlinks feature was accidentally broken in:
vdev_id: Support daisy-chained JBODs in multipath mode
2. Even when working, the feature numbered the enclosure
sequentially rather than by HBA port number. That meant that
if a port was down or didn't appear in sysfs, then the
enclosure_sumlinks numbers would be numbered wrong.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Arshad Hussain <arshad.hussain@aeoncomputing.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#12660
When zfs_nicestrtonum() is called and there will be an error,
the message is left in libzfs handle, if provided. We can use
this message, to provide better feedback for user.
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#12650
`UNAVAIL` is maybe not quite as concerning as `DEGRADED`, but still an
event of notice, in my opinion. For example it is triggered when a
drive goes missing.
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Francesco Mazzoli <f@mazzo.li>
Closes#12629Closes#12630
The calculation of estimated time remaining in zdb -cc could overflow,
as reported in #10666. This patch fixes this, by using uint64_t instead
of ints in the calculations.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Teodor Spæren <teodor@sparen.no>
Closes#10666Closes#12610
The arcstat script requests compatibility with python2 and python3, but
PEP 238 modified the / operator and results in erroneous output when
run under python3.
This commit replaces instances of / with //, yielding the expected
result in both versions of Python.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Valmiky Arquissandas <foss@kayvlim.com>
Closes#12603
When you create a pool, zfs writes vd->vdev_enc_sysfs_path with the
enclosure sysfs path to the fault LEDs, like:
vdev_enc_sysfs_path = /sys/class/enclosure/0:0:1:0/SLOT8
However, this enclosure path doesn't get updated on successive imports
even if enclosure path to the disk changes. This patch fixes the issue.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#11950Closes#12095
As of the Linux 5.9 kernel a fallthrough macro has been added which
should be used to anotate all intentional fallthrough paths. Once
all of the kernel code paths have been updated to use fallthrough
the -Wimplicit-fallthrough option will because the default. To
avoid warnings in the OpenZFS code base when this happens apply
the fallthrough macro.
Additional reading: https://lwn.net/Articles/794944/
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#12441
For kernel to send snapshot mount/unmount events to zed.
For kernel to send symlink creates/removes on zvol plumbing.
(/dev/run/dsk/zvol/$pool/$zvol -> /dev/diskX)
If zed misses the ENODEV, all errors after are EINVAL. Treat any error
as kernel module failure.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Closes#12416
Unfortunately macOS reserves inode ID numbers 0-15, and we can
not used them. In macOS port we simply map them really high IDs.
Normally this is hidden inside the _os implementation, but this is
the one place in the common source files.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Closes#12530
It turns out that layouts of union bitfields are a pain, and the
current code results in an inconsistent layout between BE and LE
systems, leading to zstd-active datasets on one erroring out on
the other.
Switch everyone over to the LE layout, and add compatibility code
to read both.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12008Closes#12022
This patch allows you to clear the label on offlined disks in an active
pool with `-f`. Previously, labelclear wouldn't let you do that.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#12511
Previously, zpool-iostat did not display any data regarding rebuild I/Os
in either the latency/size histograms (-w/-l/-r) or the queue data (-q).
This fix essentially utilizes the existing infrastructure for tracking
rebuild queue data and displays this data in the proper places within
zpool-iostat's output.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Bautista <tbautista@newmexicoconsortium.org>
Signed-off-by: Trevor Bautista <tbautista@lanl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Trevor Bautista <tbautista@newmexicoconsortium.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Anton Gubarkov <anton.gubarkov@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Keep check_file_generic() in shared code base, and allow special case
code in check_file() in os section. In future, macOS will have
additional checks in check_file().
Linux and FreeBSD wrappers just calls check_file_generic().
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Closes#12385
`zpool_do_import()` passes `argv[0]`, (optionally) `argv[1]`, and
`pool_specified` to `import_pools()`. If `pool_specified==FALSE`, the
`argv[]` arguments are not used. However, these values may be off the
end of the `argv[]` array, so loading them could dereference unmapped
memory. This error is reported by the asan build:
```
=================================================================
==6003==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow
READ of size 8 at 0x6030000004a8 thread T0
#0 0x562a078b50eb in zpool_do_import zpool_main.c:3796
#1 0x562a078858c5 in main zpool_main.c:10709
#2 0x7f5115231bf6 in __libc_start_main
#3 0x562a07885eb9 in _start
0x6030000004a8 is located 0 bytes to the right of 24-byte region
allocated by thread T0 here:
#0 0x7f5116ac6b40 in __interceptor_malloc
#1 0x562a07885770 in main zpool_main.c:10699
#2 0x7f5115231bf6 in __libc_start_main
```
This commit passes NULL for these arguments if they are off the end
of the `argv[]` array.
Reviewed-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#12339
This includes a simplification of mkbusy and format correctness in zhack
and ztest
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Issue #12201
Use strlcpy instead of problematic strncpy
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Closes#12344
zfs-send(8) claimed in the flags list you could use -pR when sending
a readonly filesystem or volume. You cannot.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12336
Currently, there are several places in zvol_id where the program logic
returns particular errno values, or even particular ioctl return values,
as the program exit status, rather than a straightforward system of
explicit zero on success and explicit nonzero value(s) on failure.
This is problematic for multiple reasons. One particularly interesting
problem that can arise, is that if any of these values happens to have
all 8 least significant bits unset (i.e., it is a positive or negative
multiple of 256), then although the C program sees a nonzero int value
(presumed to be a failure exit status), the actual exit status as seen
by the system is only the bottom 8 bits of that integer: zero.
This can happen in practice, and I have encountered it myself. In a
particularly weird situation, the zvol_open code in the zfs kernel
module was behaving in such a manner that it caused the open() syscall
to fail and for errno to be set to a kernel-private value (ERESTARTSYS,
which happens to be defined as 512). It turns out that 512 is evenly
divisible by 256; or, in other words, its least significant 8 bits are
all-zero. So even though zvol_id believed it was returning a nonzero
(failure) exit status of 512, the system modulo'd that value by 256,
resulting in the actual exit status visible by other programs being 0!
This actually-zero (non-failure) exit status caused problems: udev
believed that the program was operating successfully, when in fact it
was attempting to indicate failure via a nonzero exit status integer.
Combined with another problem, this led to the creation of nonsense
symlinks for zvol dev nodes by udev.
Let's get rid of all this problematic logic, and simply return
EXIT_SUCCESS (0) is everything went fine, and EXIT_FAILURE (1) if
anything went wrong.
Additionally, let's clarify some of the variable names (error is similar
to errno, etc) and clean up the overall program flow a bit.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Justin Gottula <justin@jgottula.com>
Closes#12302
The zvol_id program is invoked by udev, via a PROGRAM key in the
60-zvol.rules.in rule file, to determine the "pretty" /dev/zvol/*
symlink paths paths that should be generated for each opaquely named
/dev/zd* dev node.
The udev rule uses the PROGRAM key, followed by a SYMLINK+= assignment
containing the %c substitution, to collect the program's stdout and then
"paste" it directly into the name of the symlink(s) to be created.
Unfortunately, as currently written, zvol_id outputs both its intended
output (a single string representing the symlink path that should be
created to refer to the name of the dataset whose /dev/zd* path is
given) AND its error messages (if any) to stdout.
When processing PROGRAM keys (and others, such as IMPORT{program}), udev
uses only the data written to stdout for functional purposes. Any data
written to stderr is used solely for the purposes of logging (if udev's
log_level is set to debug).
The unintended consequence of this is as follows: if zvol_id encounters
an error condition; and then udev fails to halt processing of the
current rule (either because zvol_id didn't return a nonzero exit
status, or because the PROGRAM key in the rule wasn't written properly
to result in a "non-match" condition that would stop the current rule on
a nonzero exit); then udev will create a space-delimited list of symlink
names derived directly from the words of the error message string!
I've observed this exact behavior on my own system, in a situation where
the open() syscall on /dev/zd* dev nodes was failing sporadically (for
reasons that aren't especially relevant here). Because the open() call
failed, zvol_id printed "Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736\n" to
stdout and then exited.
The udev rule finished with SYMLINK+="zvol/%c %c". Assuming a volume
name like pool/foo/bar, this would ordinarily expand to
SYMLINK+="zvol/pool/foo/bar pool/foo/bar"
and would cause symlinks to be created like this:
/dev/zvol/pool/foo/bar -> /dev/zd736
/dev/pool/foo/bar -> /dev/zd736
But because of the combination of error messages being printed to
stdout, and the udev syntax freely accepting a space-delimited sequence
of names in this context, the error message string
"Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736\n"
in reality expanded to
SYMLINK+="zvol/Unable to open device file: /dev/zd736"
which caused the following symlinks to actually be created:
/dev/zvol/Unable -> /dev/zd736
/dev/to -> /dev/zd736
/dev/open -> /dev/zd736
/dev/device -> /dev/zd736
/dev/file: -> /dev/zd736
/dev//dev/zd736 -> /dev/zd736
(And, because multiple zvols had open() syscall errors, multiple zvols
attempted to claim several of those symlink names, resulting in numerous
udev errors and timeouts and general chaos.)
This commit rectifies all this silliness by simply printing error
messages to stderr, as Dennis Ritchie originally intended.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Justin Gottula <justin@jgottula.com>
Closes#12302
This enables ZED to auto-online vdevs that are not wholedisk managed by
ZFS.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Commit 6fc3099 broke the quoting when invoking the mail program, revert
that change.
Signed-off-by: Laurențiu Nicola <lnicola@dend.ro>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
ZFS loves using %llu for uint64_t, but that requires a cast to not
be noisy - which is even done in many, though not all, places.
Also a couple places used %u for uint64_t, which were promoted
to %llu.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12233
There are at least two interpretations of basename(3),
in addition to both functions being allowed to /both/ return a static
buffer (unsuitable in multi-threaded environments) /and/ raze the input
(which encourages overallocations, at best)
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12105
Starting in Linux 5.10, trying to write to /dev/{null,zero} errors out.
Prefer to inform people when this happens rather than hoping they guess
what's wrong.
Reviewed-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes: #11991
The first warning of a misspelling is a false positive, so we annotate
the script accordingly. As for the x-prefix warnings update the check
to use the conventional '[ -z <string> ]' syntax.
all-syslog.sh:46:47: warning: Possible misspelling: ZEVENT_ZIO_OBJECT
may not be assigned, but ZEVENT_ZIO_OBJSET is. [SC2153]
make_gitrev.sh:53:6: note: Avoid x-prefix in comparisons as it no
longer serves a purpose [SC2268]
man-dates.sh:10:7: note: Avoid x-prefix in comparisons as it no
longer serves a purpose [SC2268]
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#12208
This:
(a) improves the error log message,
(b) locks per pool instead of globally,
(c) locks the actual output file instead of /var/lock/zfs-list,
which would otherwise linger there forever (well, still will,
but you can remove it and it won't come back), and
(d) preserves attributes of the output file
instead of reverting them to 0:0 644
It is imperative that the previous commit
("zed-functions.sh: zed_lock(): don't truncate lock")
be included in any series that contains this one
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12042
By locking the log file itself, we can omit arduous rebinding and
explicit umask setting, but, perhaps more importantly, avoid permanently
littering /var/lock/ with zed.debug.log.lock we will never delete
It is imperative that the previous commit
("zed-functions.sh: zed_lock(): don't truncate lock")
be included in any series that contains this one
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12042
By appending instead of truncating, we can lock on any file (with write
permissions) instead of only dedicated lock files, since the locking
process itself no longer alters the file in any way
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12042
Update the logic to handle the dedup-case of consecutive
FREEs in the livelist code. The logic still ensures that
all the FREE entries are matched up with a respective
ALLOC by keeping a refcount for each FREE blkptr that we
encounter and ensuring that this refcount gets to zero
by the time we are done processing the livelist.
zdb -y no longer panics when encountering double frees
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Closes#11480Closes#12177
Also mark all printf-like funxions in libzfs_impl.h as printf-like
and add --no-show-locs to storeabi, in hopes diffs will make more sense
in future
This removes these symbols from libzfs:
D nfs_only
T SHA256Init
T SHA2Final
T SHA2Init
T SHA2Update
T SHA384Init
T SHA512Init
D share_all_proto
D smb_only
T zfs_is_shared_proto
W zpool_mount_datasets
W zpool_unmount_datasets
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12048
Exporting names this short can easily cause nasty collisions with user code.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12050
It turns out that sometimes, evidently only when run inside the
ZTS handler, arc_summary3 | head > /dev/null will die with ENOTCONN,
and ruin the test run.
Added handling for that.
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12160
There used to be a warning after upgrading a zpool in FreeBSD, so users
won't forget to update the boot loader that pool is booted from.
This change brings this warning back, but only if the bootfs property
is set on the pool, which should be sufficient for the vast majority of
FreeBSD installations. People running something custom are most likely
aware of what to do after an upgrade in their specific environment.
Functionality is implemented in an OS specific helper function.
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Gmelin <grembo@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Gmelin <grembo@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#12099Closes#12104
make_gitrev.sh actually breaks checkbashisms' parser,
which /insists/ that the end-of-line " is actually a string start
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12101
This checks every file it checked (and a few more),
but explicitly instead of "if it works it works" best-effort
(which wasn't that good anyway)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#10512Closes#12101
Accidentally introduced by commit dd00925e8d.
Force-install the zstreamdump link, this is a supported configuration
and the install should not fail if it needs to overwrite an existing
file.
Also cd to work around some funny platforms as noted in AC_PROG_LN_S doc
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12143
This change introduces long options for ztest. It builds the usage
message as well as the long_options array from a single table. It also
adds #defines for the default values.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Manoj Joseph <manoj.joseph@delphix.com>
Closes#12117
The change correctly handles BrokenPipeError and improves the
associated tests.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12037Closes#12036
Propagate vdev child state to parents on invalid label
Add VDEV_AUX_BAD_LABEL to print_import_config()
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Co-authored-by: Srikanth N S <srikanth.nagasubbaraoseetharaman@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Vipin Kumar Verma <vipin.verma@hpe.com>
Closes#12088
One space is missing from zdb -h output causing strings to be concatenated. (fixing #11940)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes #12098
zstreamdump(8) was in quite a bad state,
and the wrapper didn't work if invoked without /sbin in $PATH
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12015
execl*() before glibc 2.24 could allocate, but only if called with at
least 1024 arguments, which five isn't
errno modification is also fine, so long as we restore it at the end
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#12086
Add zed_notify_pushover to zed-functions.sh, along with the necessary
configuration variables in zed.rc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Signed-off-by: Scott Colby <scott@scolby.com>
Closes#12012
Afterward, git grep ZoL matches:
* README.md: * [ZoL Site](https://zfsonlinux.org)
- Correct
* etc/default/zfs.in:# ZoL userland configuration.
- Changing this would induce a needless upgrade-check,
if the user has modified the configuration;
this can be updated the next time the defaults change
* module/zfs/dmu_send.c: * ZoL < 0.7 does not handle [...]
- Before 0.7 is ZoL, so fair enough
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Issue #11956
This can be very easily triggered by adding a sleep(1) before
the wait4() on a PID-starved system: the reaper thread would wait
for a child before its entry appeared, letting old entries accumulate:
Invoking "all-debug.sh" eid=3021 pid=391
Finished "(null)" eid=0 pid=391 time=0.002432s exit=0
Invoking "all-syslog.sh" eid=3021 pid=336
Finished "(null)" eid=0 pid=336 time=0.002432s exit=0
Invoking "history_event-zfs-list-cacher.sh" eid=3021 pid=347
Invoking "all-debug.sh" eid=3022 pid=349
Finished "history_event-zfs-list-cacher.sh" eid=3021 pid=347
time=0.001669s exit=0
Finished "(null)" eid=0 pid=349 time=0.002404s exit=0
Invoking "all-syslog.sh" eid=3022 pid=370
Finished "(null)" eid=0 pid=370 time=0.002427s exit=0
Invoking "history_event-zfs-list-cacher.sh" eid=3022 pid=391
avl_find(tree, new_node, &where) == NULL
ASSERT at ../../module/avl/avl.c:641:avl_add()
Thread 1 "zed" received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
By employing this wider lock, we atomise [wait, remove] and [fork, add]:
slowing down the reaper thread now just causes some zombies
to accumulate until it can get to them
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11963Closes#11965
While OpenZFS does permit breaking changes to the libzfs API, we should
avoid these changes when reasonably possible, and take steps to mitigate
the impact to consumers when changes are necessary.
Commit e4288a8397 made a libzfs API change that is especially
difficult for consumers because there is no change to the function
signatures, only to their behavior. Therefore, consumers can't notice
that there was a change at compile time. Also, the API change was
incompletely and incorrectly documented.
The commit message mentions `zfs_get_prop()` [sic], but all callers of
`get_numeric_property()` are impacted: `zfs_prop_get()`,
`zfs_prop_get_numeric()`, and `zfs_prop_get_int()`.
`zfs_prop_get_int()` always calls `get_numeric_property(src=NULL)`, so
it assumes that the filesystem is not mounted. This means that e.g.
`zfs_prop_get_int(ZFS_PROP_MOUNTED)` always returns 0.
The documentation says that to preserve the previous behavior, callers
should initialize `*src=ZPROP_SRC_NONE`, and some callers were changed
to do that. However, the existing behavior is actually preserved by
initializing `*src=ZPROP_SRC_ALL`, not `NONE`.
The code comment above `zfs_prop_get()` says, "src: ... NULL will be
treated as ZPROP_SRC_ALL.". However, the code actually treats NULL as
ZPROP_SRC_NONE. i.e. `zfs_prop_get(src=NULL)` assumes that the
filesystem is not mounted.
There are several existing calls which use `src=NULL` which are impacted
by the API change, most noticeably those used by `zfs list`, which now
assumes that filesystems are not mounted. For example,
`zfs list -o name,mounted` previously indicated whether a filesystem was
mounted or not, but now it always (incorrectly) indicates that the
filesystem is not mounted (`MOUNTED: no`). Similarly, properties that
are set at mount time are ignored. E.g. `zfs list -o name,atime` may
display an incorrect value if it was set at mount time.
To address these problems, this commit reverts commit e4288a8397:
"zfs get: don't lookup mount options when using "-s local""
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11999
Also minor clean-up with folding state_to_val() into a case,
unrolling the lesser-available seq into numbers,
ignoring vdev states we don't care about,
and documentation comments
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11934Closes#11935
We only recognize some history records, instead, use
same logic as in print_history_records() in zpool_main.c.
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#11940
Looking up mount options can be very expensive on servers with many
mounted file systems. When doing "zfs get" with any "-s" option that
does not include "temporary", the mount list will never be used. This
commit optimizes for that case.
This is a breaking commit for libzfs! Callers of zfs_get_prop are now
required to initialize src. To preserve existing behavior, they should
initialize it to ZPROP_SRC_NONE.
Sponsored by: Axcient
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#11955
Under function map_slot() variable passed as args
were not getting properly substituted or expanded.
This patch fixes the substitution issue.
Reviewed-by: Niklas Edmundsson <nikke@acc.umu.se>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Arshad Hussain <arshad.hussain@aeoncomputing.com>
Closes#11951Closes#11959
If zdb is not built with DEBUG mode, the ASSERT macros will be
eliminated.
This will leave vim defined, but not used (gcc warning) and
checkpoint spacemap validation loop will do nothing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#11932
As soon as wait4() returns, fork() can immediately return with the same
PID, and race to lock _launched_processes_lock, then try to add the new
(duplicate) PID to _launched_processes, which asserts
By locking before wait4(), we ensure, that, given that same
unfortunate scheduling, _launched_processes_lock cannot be locked by the
spawner before we pop the process in the reaper, and only afterward will
it be added
This moves where the reaper idles when there are children from the
wait4() to the pause(), locking for the duration of that single syscall
in both the no-children and running-children cases; the impact of this
is one to two syscalls (depending on _launched_processes_lock state)
per loop
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11924Closes#11928
This replaces the generic libspl atomic.c atomics implementation
with one based on builtin gcc atomics. This functionality was added
as an experimental feature in gcc 4.4. Today even CentOS 7 ships
with gcc 4.8 as the default compiler we can make this the default.
Furthermore, the builtin atomics are as good or better than our
hand-rolled implementation so it's reasonable to drop that custom code.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11904
Also don't dup /dev/null over stdio if daemonised
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11891
Do not (incorrectly, right instead left) pad health string itself,
it will be taken care of when printing property value below.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Yuri Pankov <yuripv@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11899
All users did a freopen() on it. Even some non-users did!
This is point-less ‒ just open the mtab when needed
If I understand Solaris' getextmntent(3C) correctly, the non-user
freopen()s are very likely an odd, twisted vestigial tail of that ‒
but it's got a completely different calling convention and caching
semantics than any platform we support
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11868
Several improvements to the operation of the 'compatibility' property:
1) Improved handling of unrecognized features:
Change the way unrecognized features in compatibility files are handled.
* invalid features in files under /usr/share/zfs/compatibility.d
only get a warning (as these may refer to future features not yet in
the library),
* invalid features in files under /etc/zfs/compatibility.d
get an error (as these are presumed to refer to the current system).
2) Improved error reporting from zpool_load_compat.
Note: slight ABI change to zpool_load_compat for better error reporting.
3) compatibility=legacy inhibits all 'zpool upgrade' operations.
4) Detect when features are enabled outside current compatibility set
* zpool set compatibility=foo <-- print a warning
* zpool set feature@xxx=enabled <-- error
* zpool status <-- indicate this state
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Colm Buckley <colm@tuatha.org>
Closes#11861
Dunno, maybe it's just me, but the previous style was /really/ confusing
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11860
It's all of 40 bytes with 4-byte pointers and 64 with 8-byte ones
(previously 44 and 88, respectively) ‒
there's no reason it can't live on the stack
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11860
No users, fields marked "reserved for future use", macros defined to 0
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11860
No users, nobody sets it, main() hard-codes LOG_DAEMON, which is the
only correct value for this
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11860
Users passed in EXIT_SUCCESS and EXIT_FAILURE, despite it being a bool
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11860
A tentative implementation and discussion was done in #5285.
According to it a send --skip-missing|-s flag has been added.
In a replication stream, when there are snapshots missing in
the hierarchy, if -s is provided print a warning and ignore
dataset (and its children) instead of throwing an error
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Correa Gómez <ablocorrea@hotmail.com>
Closes#11710
list_zvols() would happily, for zvols with spaces in their names,
assign the second half to volmode, &c., so use a normal read
and set IFS to a tab instead of using 4 separate AWK processes(?)
Similarly, in filter_out_deleted_zvols(), run zfs(8) once and use the
output directly instead of spawning a zfs(8) process per zvol
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11859
We set SA_RESTART early on, which will prevent EINTRs (indeed, to the
point of needing to clear it in the reaper, since it interferes with
pause(2)), which is the only error zed_file_write_n() actually handled
(plus, the pid write is no bigger than 12 bytes anyway)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
These events should currently never be generated.
Also untag _zed_event_add_nvpair() from merge with
zpool_do_events_nvprint() ‒ they serve different purposes (machine,
usually script vs human consumption) and format the output differently
as it stands
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
Same deal as zed_file_close_on_exec()
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
And add a note on /why/ ZEDLETs need to be owned by root
Quoth chown(2), Linux man-pages project:
Only a privileged process (Linux: one with the CAP_CHOWN capability)
may change the owner of a file.
Quoth chown(2), FreeBSD:
[EPERM] The operation would change the ownership,
but the effective user ID is not the super-user.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
There simply isn't a need for one, since the flags the daemon takes
are all short (mostly just toggles) and administrative in nature,
and are therefore better served by the age-old tradition of sourcing an
environment file and preparing the cmdline in the init-specific handler
itself, if needed at all
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
/dev/fd on Darwin
Consider the following strace output:
prlimit64(0, RLIMIT_NOFILE, NULL, {rlim_cur=1024, rlim_max=1024*1024}) = 0
Yes, that is well over a million file descriptors!
This reduces the ZED start-up time from "at least a second" to
"instantaneous", and, under strace, from "don't even try" to "usable"
by simple virtue of doing five syscalls instead of over a million;
in most cases the main loop does nothing
Recent Linuxes (5.8+) have close_range(2) for this, but that's an
overoptimisation (and libcs don't have wrappers for it yet)
This is also run by the ZEDLET pre-exec. Compare:
Finished "all-syslog.sh" eid=13 pid=6717 time=1.027100s exit=0
Finished "history_event-zfs-list-cacher.sh" eid=13 pid=6718 time=1.046923s exit=0
to
Finished "all-syslog.sh" eid=12 pid=4834 time=0.001836s exit=0
Finished "history_event-zfs-list-cacher.sh" eid=12 pid=4835 time=0.001346s exit=0
lol
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11834
zpool list, which is the only user, would mistakenly try to parse the
empty string as the interval in this case:
$ zpool list "a"
cannot open 'a': no such pool
$ zpool list ""
interval cannot be zero
usage: <usage string follows>
which is now symmetric with zpool get:
$ zpool list ""
cannot open '': name must begin with a letter
Avoid breaking the "interval cannot be zero" string.
There simply isn't a need for this, and it's user-facing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11841Closes#11843
Correct an assortment of typos throughout the code base.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gelmini <andrea.gelmini@gelma.net>
Closes#11774
200ms time-out is relatively long, but if we already hit the cap,
then we'll likely be able to spawn multiple new jobs when we wake up
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11807
The FIXME comment was there since the initial implementation in 2014,
there are no users
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11807
Update the fsck.zfs helper to bubble up some already-known-about
errors if they are detected in the pool.
health=degraded => 4/"Filesystem errors left uncorrected"
health=faulted && dataset in /etc/fstab => 8/"Operational error"
pool not found => 8/"Operational error"
everything else => 0
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11806
ZoL 0.6.1 introduced feature flags with the three features that all
implementations at the time were guaranteed to have. 0.6.4 introduced
a few more until 0.6.5 added two after that. OpenZFS 2.1 added the
dRAID feature.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Mike Swanson <mikeonthecomputer@gmail.com>
Closes#11818
When a child process is killed waitpid() must be called on the
pid the reap the zombie process.
Update BUGS section to reflect reality by replacing "zedlets
aren't time limited with "zedlets can be interrupted".
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11769Closes#11798
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Andrea Gelmini <andrea.gelmini@gelma.net>
Closes#11775
If TX_WRITE is create on a file, and the file is later deleted and a new
directory is created on the same object id, it is possible that when
zil_commit happens, zfs_get_data will be called on the new directory.
This may result in panic as it tries to do range lock.
This patch fixes this issue by record the generation number during
zfs_log_write, so zfs_get_data can check if the object is valid.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Chunwei Chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Closes#10593Closes#11682
The RAIDZ and DRAID code is responsible for reporting checksum errors on
their child vdevs. Checksum errors represent events where a disk
returned data or parity that should have been correct, but was not. In
other words, these are instances of silent data corruption. The
checksum errors show up in the vdev stats (and thus `zpool status`'s
CKSUM column), and in the event log (`zpool events`).
Note, this is in contrast with the more common "noisy" errors where a
disk goes offline, in which case ZFS knows that the disk is bad and
doesn't try to read it, or the device returns an error on the requested
read or write operation.
RAIDZ/DRAID generate checksum errors via three code paths:
1. When RAIDZ/DRAID reconstructs a damaged block, checksum errors are
reported on any children whose data was not used during the
reconstruction. This is handled in `raidz_reconstruct()`. This is the
most common type of RAIDZ/DRAID checksum error.
2. When RAIDZ/DRAID is not able to reconstruct a damaged block, that
means that the data has been lost. The zio fails and an error is
returned to the consumer (e.g. the read(2) system call). This would
happen if, for example, three different disks in a RAIDZ2 group are
silently damaged. Since the damage is silent, it isn't possible to know
which three disks are damaged, so a checksum error is reported against
every child that returned data or parity for this read. (For DRAID,
typically only one "group" of children is involved in each io.) This
case is handled in `vdev_raidz_cksum_finish()`. This is the next most
common type of RAIDZ/DRAID checksum error.
3. If RAIDZ/DRAID is not able to reconstruct a damaged block (like in
case 2), but there happens to be additional copies of this block due to
"ditto blocks" (i.e. multiple DVA's in this blkptr_t), and one of those
copies is good, then RAIDZ/DRAID compares each sector of the data or
parity that it retrieved with the good data from the other DVA, and if
they differ then it reports a checksum error on this child. This
differs from case 2 in that the checksum error is reported on only the
subset of children that actually have bad data or parity. This case
happens very rarely, since normally only metadata has ditto blocks. If
the silent damage is extensive, there will be many instances of case 2,
and the pool will likely be unrecoverable.
The code for handling case 3 is considerably more complicated than the
other cases, for two reasons:
1. It needs to run after the main raidz read logic has completed. The
data RAIDZ read needs to be preserved until after the alternate DVA has
been read, which necessitates refcounts and callbacks managed by the
non-raidz-specific zio layer.
2. It's nontrivial to map the sections of data read by RAIDZ to the
correct data. For example, the correct data does not include the parity
information, so the parity must be recalculated based on the correct
data, and then compared to the parity that was read from the RAIDZ
children.
Due to the complexity of case 3, the rareness of hitting it, and the
minimal benefit it provides above case 2, this commit removes the code
for case 3. These types of errors will now be handled the same as case
2, i.e. the checksum error will be reported against all children that
returned data or parity.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11735
Importing a pool using the cachefile is ideal to reduce the time
required to import a pool. However, if the devices associated with
a pool in the cachefile have changed, then the import would fail.
This can easily be corrected by doing a normal import which would
then read the pool configuration from the labels.
The goal of this change is make importing using a cachefile more
resilient and auto-correcting. This is accomplished by having
the cachefile import logic automatically fallback to reading the
labels of the devices similar to a normal import. The main difference
between the fallback logic and a normal import is that the cachefile
import logic will only look at the device directories that were
originally used when the cachefile was populated. Additionally,
the fallback logic will always import by guid to ensure that only
the pools in the cachefile would be imported.
External-issue: DLPX-71980
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Closes#11716
vdev_id uses the /dev/mapper/ symlinks to resolve a UUID to a dm name
(like dm-1). However on some multipath setups, there is no /dev/mapper/
entry for the UUID at the time vdev_id is called by udev. However,
this isn't necessarily needed, as we may be able to resolve the dm
name from the $DEVNAME that udev passes us (like DEVNAME="/dev/dm-1").
This patch tries to resolve the dm name from $DEVNAME first, before
falling back to looking in /dev/mapper/. This fixed an issue where the
by-vdev names weren't reliably showing up on one of our nodes.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#11698
For some reason cppcheck 1.90 is generating an invalidSyntax warning
when the BF64_SET macro is used in the zstream source. The same
warning is not reported by cppcheck 2.3, nor is their any evident
problem with the expanded macro. This appears to be an issue with
this version of cppcheck. This commit annotates the source to suppress
the warning.
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11700
Bring the output of the removal status in line with the other
"fields" that zpool status outputs, and thus allows an parser to
easier detect this as continuation of the 'remove:' output.
Before:
remove: Removal of vdev 0 copied 282G in 0h9m, completed on [...]
776K memory used for removed device mappings
Now:
remove: Removal of vdev 0 copied 282G in 0h9m, completed on [...]
776K memory used for removed device mappings
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Lamprecht <t.lamprecht@proxmox.com>
Closes#11674
After 35ec517 it has become possible to import ZFS pools witn an
active org.illumos:edonr feature on FreeBSD, leading to a panic.
In addition, "zpool status" reported all pools without edonr
as upgradable and "zpool upgrade -v" reported edonr in the list
of upgradable features.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11653
Given a DM device name, the old vdev_id script would extract any text
after a 'p' as the partition number. It then appends "-part" + the
partition number to the name, giving a by-vdev name like "L0-part5".
This works fine if the DM name is like 'dm-2p5', but doesn't work if
the DM name is a multipath name like "mpatha". In those cases it
incorrectly matches the 'p' in "mpatha", giving by-vdev names like
"L0-partatha".
This patch fixes the issue by making the partition regex match stricter.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#11637
gmake install fails when zpool.d compat links already exist.
Force the symlinks to be recreated if already present.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11633
I think this is the behavior that most users expect.
Future work: have a separate flag, e.g., -O, to specify separate
set_global_vars for the zdb child than for the ztest children.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schwarz <me@cschwarz.com>
Closes#11602
Without set_global_var() in the child processes the -o option provides
little use.
Before this change set_global_var() was called as a side-effect of
getopt processing which only happens for the parent ztest process.
This change limits the set of options that can be set and makes them
available to the child through ztest_shared_opts_t.
Future work: support arbitrary option count and length.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schwarz <me@cschwarz.com>
Closes#11602
That happens because of an off-by-one mistake.
share_mount_one_cb() calls report_mount_progress(current=sm_done) after
having incremented sm_done by one. Then report_mount_progress()
increments the parameter again. It appears that that logic became
obsolete after commit a10d50f999, parallel zfs mount.
On FreeBSD I observe that zfs mount -a -v prints, for example,
(null): (201/248)
That happens because set_progress_header() is never called.
With this change the output becomes correct:
Mounting ZFS filesystems: (209/248)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11607
Property to allow sets of features to be specified; for compatibility
with specific versions / releases / external systems. Influences
the behavior of 'zpool upgrade' and 'zpool create'. Initial man
page changes and test cases included.
Brief synopsis:
zpool create -o compatibility=off|legacy|file[,file...] pool vdev...
compatibility = off : disable compatibility mode (enable all features)
compatibility = legacy : request that no features be enabled
compatibility = file[,file...] : read features from specified files.
Only features present in *all* files will be enabled on the
resulting pool. Filenames may be absolute, or relative to
/etc/zfs/compatibility.d or /usr/share/zfs/compatibility.d (/etc
checked first).
Only affects zpool create, zpool upgrade and zpool status.
ABI changes in libzfs:
* New function "zpool_load_compat" to load and parse compat sets.
* Add "zpool_compat_status_t" typedef for compatibility parse status.
* Add ZPOOL_PROP_COMPATIBILITY to the pool properties enum
* Add ZPOOL_STATUS_COMPATIBILITY_ERR to the pool status enum
An initial set of base compatibility sets are included in
cmd/zpool/compatibility.d, and the Makefile for cmd/zpool is
modified to install these in $pkgdatadir/compatibility.d and to
create symbolic links to a reasonable set of aliases.
Reviewed-by: ericloewe
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Colm Buckley <colm@tuatha.org>
Closes#11468
Rather than conditionally compiling out the edonr code for FreeBSD
update zfs_mod_supported_feature() to indicate this feature is
unsupported. This ensures that all spa features are defined on
every platform, even if they are not supported.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11605
Issue #11468
There are two issues that don't allow ZFS to be compiled using uClibc.
`backtrace()`, and `program_invocation_short_name` as a `const`.
This patch adds uClibc to the conditionals in the same way there are
already for Glibc for `backtrace()`; and removes the external param
`program_invocation_short_name` because its only used here for the
whole project.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: José Luis Salvador Rufo <salvador.joseluis@gmail.com>
Closes#11600
Within function sas_handler() userspace commands like
'/usr/sbin/multipath' have been replaced with sourcing
device details from within sysfs which reduced a
significant amount of overhead and processing time.
Multiple JBOD enclosures and their order are sourced
from the bsg driver (/sys/class/enclosure) to isolate
chassis top-level expanders, which are then dynamically
indexed based on host channel of the multipath subordinate
disk member device being processed. Additionally added a
"mixed" mode for slot identification for environments where
a ZFS server system may contain SAS disk slots where there
is no expander (direct connect to HBA) while an attached
external JBOD with an expander have different slot identifier
methods.
How Has This Been Tested?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Testing was performed on a AMD EPYC based dual-server
high-availability multipath environment with multiple
HBAs per ZFS server and four SAS JBODs. The two primary
JBODs were multipath/cross-connected between the two
ZFS-HA servers. The secondary JBODs were daisy-chained
off of the primary JBODs using aligned SAS expander
channels (JBOD-0 expanderA--->JBOD-1 expanderA,
JBOD-0 expanderB--->JBOD-1 expanderB, etc).
Pools were created, exported and re-imported, imported
globally with 'zpool import -a -d /dev/disk/by-vdev'.
Low level udev debug outputs were traced to isolate
and resolve errors.
Result:
~~~~~~~
Initial testing of a previous version of this change
showed how reliance on userspace utilities like
'/usr/sbin/multipath' and '/usr/bin/lsscsi' were
exacerbated by increasing numbers of disks and JBODs.
With four 60-disk SAS JBODs and 240 disks the time to
process a udevadm trigger was 3 minutes 30 seconds
during which nearly all CPU cores were above 80%
utilization. By switching reliance on userspace
utilities to sysfs in this version, the udevadm
trigger processing time was reduced to 12.2 seconds
and negligible CPU load.
This patch also fixes few shellcheck complains.
Reviewed-by: Gabriel A. Devenyi <gdevenyi@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Johnson <jeff.johnson@aeoncomputing.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Johnson <jeff.johnson@aeoncomputing.com>
Signed-off-by: Arshad Hussain <arshad.hussain@aeoncomputing.com>
Closes#11526
The pool guid and vdev guid received by zfs_agent_post_event(),
which calls zfs_retire_recv(), are normally non-zero. However,
later in this same method they may be unconditionally reset to
zero by the code which is intended to handle multipath, spare
and l2arc vdevs. This will result in the EC_dev_remove not
being handled.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>\
Co-authored-by: Vipin Kumar Verma <vipin.verma@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Srikanth N S <srikanth.nagasubbaraoseetharaman@hpe.com>
Closes#11564
In ZED zfs_retire agent added a check to handle Distributed Spare
replacement for Faulted VDEV also.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Vipin Kumar Verma <vipin.verma@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@hpe.com>
Closes#11354Closes#11355
While you can use zdb -R poolname vdev:offset:[<lsize>/]<psize>[:flags]
to extract individual DVAs from a vdev, it would be handy for be able
copy an entire file out of the pool.
Given a file or object number, add support to copy the contents to a
file. Useful for debugging and recovery.
Reviewed-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes#11027
In order for cppcheck to perform a proper analysis it needs to be
aware of how the sources are compiled (source files, include
paths/files, extra defines, etc). All the needed information is
available from the Makefiles and can be leveraged with a generic
cppcheck Makefile target. So let's add one.
Additional minor changes:
* Removing the cppcheck-suppressions.txt file. With cppcheck 2.3
and these changes it appears to no longer be needed. Some inline
suppressions were also removed since they appear not to be
needed. We can add them back if it turns out they're needed
for older versions of cppcheck.
* Added the ax_count_cpus m4 macro to detect at configure time how
many processors are available in order to run multiple cppcheck
jobs. This value is also now used as a replacement for nproc
when executing the kernel interface checks.
* "PHONY =" line moved in to the Rules.am file which is included
at the top of all Makefile.am's. This is just convenient becase
it allows us to use the += syntax to add phony targets.
* One upside of this integration worth mentioning is it now allows
`make cppcheck` to be run in any directory to check that subtree.
* For the moment, cppcheck is not run against the FreeBSD specific
kernel sources. The cppcheck-FreeBSD target will need to be
implemented and testing on FreeBSD to support this.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11508
Explicitly check for NULL to satisfy cppcheck that "val" can never
be NULL when passed to printf(). This looks like a false positive
since is_blank_str() can never take the false conditional branch
when passed a NULL. But there's no harm in adding the extra check.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11508
It was observed that vdev_id exists silently when
the $CONFIG file is missing.
This patch adds error message in case vdev_id is
called without default $CONFIG or '-c'. This makes
end user observe the exit message more easily.
Before Patch:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
$ ./cmd/vdev_id/vdev_id
$
After Patch:
~~~~~~~~~~~~
$ ./cmd/vdev_id/vdev_id
Error: Config file "/etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf" not found
$
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Arshad Hussain <arshad.hussain@aeoncomputing.com>
Closes#11498
When creating a pool only features supported by both user and
kernel space should be enabled. Furthermore, improve the error
messages when attempting to create, or add, a dRAID vdev when
the dRAID feature is not supported by the kernel modules.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11492
Mixing ZIL and normal allocations has several problems:
1. The ZIL allocations are allocated, written to disk, and then a few
seconds later freed. This leaves behind holes (free segments) where the
ZIL blocks used to be, which increases fragmentation, which negatively
impacts performance.
2. When under moderate load, ZIL allocations are of 128KB. If the pool
is fairly fragmented, there may not be many free chunks of that size.
This causes ZFS to load more metaslabs to locate free segments of 128KB
or more. The loading happens synchronously (from zil_commit()), and can
take around a second even if the metaslab's spacemap is cached in the
ARC. All concurrent synchronous operations on this filesystem must wait
while the metaslab is loading. This can cause a significant performance
impact.
3. If the pool is very fragmented, there may be zero free chunks of
128KB or more. In this case, the ZIL falls back to txg_wait_synced(),
which has an enormous performance impact.
These problems can be eliminated by using a dedicated log device
("slog"), even one with the same performance characteristics as the
normal devices.
This change sets aside one metaslab from each top-level vdev that is
preferentially used for ZIL allocations (vdev_log_mg,
spa_embedded_log_class). From an allocation perspective, this is
similar to having a dedicated log device, and it eliminates the
above-mentioned performance problems.
Log (ZIL) blocks can be allocated from the following locations. Each
one is tried in order until the allocation succeeds:
1. dedicated log vdevs, aka "slog" (spa_log_class)
2. embedded slog metaslabs (spa_embedded_log_class)
3. other metaslabs in normal vdevs (spa_normal_class)
The space required for the embedded slog metaslabs is usually between
0.5% and 1.0% of the pool, and comes out of the existing 3.2% of "slop"
space that is not available for user data.
On an all-ssd system with 4TB storage, 87% fragmentation, 60% capacity,
and recordsize=8k, testing shows a ~50% performance increase on random
8k sync writes. On even more fragmented systems (which hit problem #3
above and call txg_wait_synced()), the performance improvement can be
arbitrarily large (>100x).
Reviewed-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11389
zgenhostid(8) is used to modify or create /etc/hostid. This
administrative tool is currently installed to bindir. System utilities
are typically placed in sbin.
Modify the installation directory for zgenhostid. Additionally, track
this change in its use in dracut and the rpm installation.
Authored-by: наб <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Authored-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Closes#11485
The `abd_get_offset_*()` routines create an abd_t that references
another abd_t, and doesn't allocate any pages/buffers of its own. In
some workloads, these routines may be called frequently, to create many
abd_t's representing small pieces of a single large abd_t. In
particular, the upcoming RAIDZ Expansion project makes heavy use of
these routines.
This commit adds the ability for the caller to allocate and provide the
abd_t struct to a variant of `abd_get_offset_*()`. This eliminates the
cost of allocating the abd_t and performing the accounting associated
with it (`abdstat_struct_size`). The RAIDZ/DRAID code uses this for
the `rc_abd`, which references the zio's abd. The upcoming RAIDZ
Expansion project will leverage this infrastructure to increase
performance of reads post-expansion by around 50%.
Additionally, some of the interfaces around creating and destroying
abd_t's are cleaned up. Most significantly, the distinction between
`abd_put()` and `abd_free()` is eliminated; all types of abd_t's are
now disposed of with `abd_free()`.
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Issue #8853Closes#11439
Prior to util-linux 2.36.2, if a file or directory in the
current working directory was named 'dataset' then mount(8)
would prepend the current working directory to the dataset.
Eventually, we should be able to drop this workaround.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sterling Jensen <sterlingjensen@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#11295Closes#11462
Try to use more appropriate ASSERT and VERIFY variants in ztest.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11454
Simplify ztest by using fnvlist functions to verify success.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matt Ahrens <matt@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11441
Each zfs ioctl that changes on-disk state (e.g. set property, create
snapshot, destroy filesystem) is recorded in the zpool history, and is
printed by `zpool history -i`.
For performance diagnostic purposes, it would be useful to know how long
each of these ioctls took to run. This commit adds that functionality,
with a new `ZPOOL_HIST_ELAPSED_NS` member of the history nvlist.
Additionally, the time recorded in this history log is currently the
time that the history record is written to disk. But in many cases (CLI
args logging and ioctl logging), this happens asynchronously,
potentially many seconds after the operation completed. This commit
changes the timestamp to reflect when the history event was created,
rather than when it was written to disk.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mmaybee@cray.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11440
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11396
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11396
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11396
In `zpool_find_config()`, the `pools` nvlist is leaked. Part of it (a
sub-nvlist) is returned in `*configp`, but the callers also leak that.
Additionally, in `zdb.c:main()`, the `searchdirs` is leaked.
The leaks were detected by ASAN (`configure --enable-asan`).
This commit resolves the leaks.
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11396
Replace "is" with "==" and "is not" with "!=".
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11394
Check for the history_event type instead.
The zfs-list-cacher.sh script currently respects the event types
excluded from syslog(!) in ZED_SYSLOG_SUBCLASS_EXCLUDE.
This makes little sense in this single-purpose script and
silently breaks when history_events are excluded from syslog,
which is the default since 13d65987a9.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: InsanePrawn <insane.prawny@gmail.com>
Closes#11164Closes#11347
Use the correct return type for getopt otherwise clang complains
about tautological-constant-out-of-range-compare.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sterling Jensen <sterlingjensen@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#11359
Metaslab rotor and aliquot are used to distribute workload between
vdevs while keeping some locality for logically adjacent blocks. Once
multiple allocators were introduced to separate allocation of different
objects it does not make much sense for different allocators to write
into different metaslabs of the same metaslab group (vdev) same time,
competing for its resources. This change makes each allocator choose
metaslab group independently, colliding with others only sporadically.
Test including simultaneous write into 4 files with recordsize of 4KB
on a striped pool of 30 disks on a system with 40 logical cores show
reduction of vdev queue lock contention from 54 to 27% due to better
load distribution. Unfortunately it won't help much ZVOLs yet since
only one dataset/ZVOL is synced at a time, and so for the most part
only one allocator is used, but it may improve later.
While there, to reduce the number of pointer dereferences change
per-allocator storage for metaslab classes and groups from several
separate malloc()'s to variable length arrays at the ends of the
original class and group structures.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11288
Some tunables shown by arc_summary3 have string values that may exceed
the normal line length, leaving a negative offset between the name and
value fields. The negative space is of course not valid and Python
rightly barfs up an exception traceback.
Handle an overflowing value field width by ignoring the line length
and separating the name from the value by a single space instead.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11270
py-sysctl now includes the CTLTYPE_NODE type nodes in the list returned
by sysctl.filter() on FreeBSD head. It also provides descriptions now.
Eliminate the subprocess call to get descriptions, and filter out the
nodes so we only deal with values.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11318
Tracking down an error message with the errno value can be difficult,
using strerror makes the error message clearer.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Érico Rolim <erico.erc@gmail.com>
Closes#11303
Canonicalization, the source of the trouble, was disabled in 9000a9f.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sterling Jensen <sterlingjensen@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#11295
`zpool create -n` fails to list cache and spare vdevs.
`zpool add -n` fails to list spare devices.
`zpool split -n` fails to list `special` and `dedup` labels.
`zpool add -n` and `zpool split -n` shouldn't list hole devices.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Closes#11122Closes#11167
Add -u option to 'zfs create' that prevents file system from being
automatically mounted. This is similar to the 'zfs receive -u'.
Authored by: pjd <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD-commit: freebsd/freebsd@35c58230e2
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Ported-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11254
This is needed for zfsd to autoreplace vdevs.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11260
When ZFS_COLOR is set, zpool status shows row headings in bold,
except for the "remove:" heading. This is a quick fix that makes
it print in bold too.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Sun <me@andrewsun.com>
Closes#11255
Move the zpool_influxdb command to /usr/libexec/zfs,
and include the /usr/libexec/zfs path in the system search
directory when running the test suite.
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Closes#11156Closes#11160Closes#11224
zpool_expand_proplist() now ignores pl_fixed if its new literal
argument is true. The rest is a consequence of needing to pass
that down.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiao?=~Dska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#11202
A common usage pattern for zgenhostid, including in the ZFS dracut
module, is running it as:
zgenhostid $(hostid)
However, zgenhostid only accepted hostid arguments greater than 0, which
meant that, when the output of hostid(1) was "00000000", zgenhostid
would error out, even though 0 is a possible return value for the
gethostid(3) function used by hostid(1):
- On current musl libc, gethostid(3) is a stub that always returns 0.
- On glibc, gethostid(3) will return 0 if /etc/hostid exists but is
smaller than 4 bytes.
In these cases, it makes more sense for zgenhostid to treat a value of 0
as other parts of the zfs codebase do, meaning that a hostid value
couldn't be determined; therefore, it should attempt to generate a
random value to write into /etc/hostid.
The manpage and usage output have been updated to reflect this.
Whitespace has also been fixed in the usage output.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Georgy Yakovlev <gyakovlev@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Andrew J. Hesford <ajh@sideband.org>
Signed-off-by: Érico Rolim <erico.erc@gmail.com>
Closes#11174Closes#11189
The output of ZFS channel programs is logged on-disk in the zpool
history, and printed by `zpool history -i`. Channel programs can use
10MB of memory by default, and up to 100MB by using the `zfs program -m`
flag. Therefore their output can be up to some fraction of 100MB.
In addition to being somewhat wasteful of the limited space reserved for
the pool history (which for large pools is 1GB), in extreme cases this
can result in a failure of `ASSERT(length <= DMU_MAX_ACCESS);` in
`dmu_buf_hold_array_by_dnode()`.
This commit limits the output size that will be logged to 1MB. Larger
outputs will not be logged, instead a entry will be logged indicating
the size of the omitted output.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#11194
This patch adds a new top-level vdev type called dRAID, which stands
for Distributed parity RAID. This pool configuration allows all dRAID
vdevs to participate when rebuilding to a distributed hot spare device.
This can substantially reduce the total time required to restore full
parity to pool with a failed device.
A dRAID pool can be created using the new top-level `draid` type.
Like `raidz`, the desired redundancy is specified after the type:
`draid[1,2,3]`. No additional information is required to create the
pool and reasonable default values will be chosen based on the number
of child vdevs in the dRAID vdev.
zpool create <pool> draid[1,2,3] <vdevs...>
Unlike raidz, additional optional dRAID configuration values can be
provided as part of the draid type as colon separated values. This
allows administrators to fully specify a layout for either performance
or capacity reasons. The supported options include:
zpool create <pool> \
draid[<parity>][:<data>d][:<children>c][:<spares>s] \
<vdevs...>
- draid[parity] - Parity level (default 1)
- draid[:<data>d] - Data devices per group (default 8)
- draid[:<children>c] - Expected number of child vdevs
- draid[:<spares>s] - Distributed hot spares (default 0)
Abbreviated example `zpool status` output for a 68 disk dRAID pool
with two distributed spares using special allocation classes.
```
pool: tank
state: ONLINE
config:
NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM
slag7 ONLINE 0 0 0
draid2:8d:68c:2s-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
L0 ONLINE 0 0 0
L1 ONLINE 0 0 0
...
U25 ONLINE 0 0 0
U26 ONLINE 0 0 0
spare-53 ONLINE 0 0 0
U27 ONLINE 0 0 0
draid2-0-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
U28 ONLINE 0 0 0
U29 ONLINE 0 0 0
...
U42 ONLINE 0 0 0
U43 ONLINE 0 0 0
special
mirror-1 ONLINE 0 0 0
L5 ONLINE 0 0 0
U5 ONLINE 0 0 0
mirror-2 ONLINE 0 0 0
L6 ONLINE 0 0 0
U6 ONLINE 0 0 0
spares
draid2-0-0 INUSE currently in use
draid2-0-1 AVAIL
```
When adding test coverage for the new dRAID vdev type the following
options were added to the ztest command. These options are leverages
by zloop.sh to test a wide range of dRAID configurations.
-K draid|raidz|random - kind of RAID to test
-D <value> - dRAID data drives per group
-S <value> - dRAID distributed hot spares
-R <value> - RAID parity (raidz or dRAID)
The zpool_create, zpool_import, redundancy, replacement and fault
test groups have all been updated provide test coverage for the
dRAID feature.
Co-authored-by: Isaac Huang <he.huang@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Maybee <mmaybee@cray.com>
Co-authored-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Co-authored-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Co-authored-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mmaybee@cray.com>
Reviewed-by: Matt Ahrens <matt@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#10102
Convert dynamic allocation to static buffer, simplify parse_dataset
function return path. Add tests specific to the mount helper.
Reviewed-by: Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sterling Jensen <sterlingjensen@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#11098
The original xuio zero copy functionality has always been unused
on Linux and FreeBSD. Remove this disabled code to avoid any
confusion and improve readability.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Matt Macy <mmacy@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11124
Refer to the correct section or alternative for FreeBSD and Linux.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11132
Added -a option to automatically print all valid statistics.
Added -p option to suppress scaling of printed data.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Authored by: Nick Principe <32284693+powernap@users.noreply.github.com>
Ported-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#11090
ZED will log zevents summaries to the syslog, however the log entries
tend to drop event details that can be useful for diagnosis. This is
especially true for ereport events, like io, checksum, and delay.
Update the all-syslog.sh script to log additional event information.
Add an optional config option, ZED_SYSLOG_DISPLAY_GUIDS, to zed.rc
for choosing GUIDs over names for pool and vdev.
Change the default ZED_SYSLOG_SUBCLASS_EXCLUDE to exclude history_event
events. These events tend to be frequent, convey no meaningful info,
and are already logged in the zpool history.
Reviewed-by: John Kennedy <john.kennedy@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Closes#10967
This was requested but forgotten in #10786.
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11071
Code cleanup, a follow up commit to 4d55ea81.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@freqlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schwarz <me@cschwarz.com>
Closes#11020
A zpool_influxdb command is introduced to ease the collection
of zpool statistics into the InfluxDB time-series database.
Examples are given on how to integrate with the telegraf
statistics aggregator, a companion to influxdb.
Finally, a grafana dashboard template is included to show
how pool latency distributions can be visualized in a
ZFS + telegraf + influxdb + grafana environment.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Closes#10786
This change updates the documentation to refer to the project
as OpenZFS instead ZFS on Linux. Web links have been updated
to refer to https://github.com/openzfs/zfs. The extraneous
zfsonlinux.org web links in the ZED and SPL sources have been
dropped.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#11007
With procfs_list kstats implemented for FreeBSD, dbufs are now exposed
as kstat.zfs.misc.dbufs.
On FreeBSD, dbufstats can use the sysctl instead of procfs when no
input file has been given.
Enable the dbufstats tests on FreeBSD.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#11008
The zdb is interpreting byte array as textual string in dump_zap,
but there are also binary arrays and we should not output binary
data on terminal.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
External-issue: https://www.illumos.org/issues/12012
External-issue: https://www.illumos.org/issues/11713Closes#11006
Change zfs userspace subcommand to use zfs_path_to_zhandle() so that
the provided dataset can be a path (/usr) or a dataset (rpool/usr).
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes#8915
== Motivation and Context
The new vdev ashift optimization prevents the removal of devices when
a zfs configuration is comprised of disks which have different logical
and physical block sizes. This is caused because we set 'spa_min_ashift'
in vdev_open and then later call 'vdev_ashift_optimize'. This would
result in an inconsistency between spa's ashift calculations and that
of the top-level vdev.
In addition, the optimization logical ignores the overridden ashift
value that would be provided by '-o ashift=<val>'.
== Description
This change reworks the vdev ashift optimization so that it's only
set the first time the device is configured. It still allows the
physical and logical ahsift values to be set every time the device
is opened but those values are only consulted on first open.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Cedric Berger <cedric@precidata.com>
Signed-off-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
External-Issue: DLPX-71831
Closes#10932
When a device removal is in progress, there are 2 locations for the data
that's already been moved: the original location, on the device that's
being removed; and the new location, which is pointed to by the indirect
mapping. When doing leak detection, zdb needs to know about both
locations. To determine what's already been copied, we load the
spacemaps of the removing vdev, omit the blocks that are yet to be
copied, and then use the vdev's remap op to find the new location.
The problem is with an optimization to the spacemap-loading code in zdb.
When processing the log spacemaps, we ignore entries that are not
relevant because they are past the point that's been copied. However,
entries which span the point that's been copied (i.e. they are partly
relevant and partly irrelevant) are processed normally. This can lead
to an illegal spacemap operation, for example if offsets up to 100KB
have been copied, and the spacemap log has the following entries:
ALLOC 50KB-150KB (partly relevant)
FREE 50KB-100KB (entirely relevant)
FREE 100KB-150KB (entirely irrlevant - ignored)
ALLOC 50KB-150KB (partly relevant)
Because the entirely irrelevant entry was ignored, its space remains in
the spacemap. When the last entry is processed, we attempt to add it to
the spacemap, but it partially overlaps with the 100-150KB entry that
was left over.
This problem was discovered by ztest/zloop.
One solution would be to also ignore the irrelevant parts of
partially-irrelevant entries (i.e. when processing the ALLOC 50-150, to
only add 50-100 to the spacemap). However, this commit implements a
simpler solution, which is to remove this optimization entirely. I.e.
to process the entire spacemap log, without regard for the point that's
been copied. After reconstructing the entire allocatable range tree,
there's already code to remove the parts that have not yet been copied.
Reviewed-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
External-issue: DLPX-71820
Closes#10920
It was discovered that dracut scripts and zgenhostid
always generate little-endian /etc/hostid.
This commit provides simple endianess-aware binary
and updates the scripts to use it.
New features include:
-f flag to force overwrite.
-o flag to write to different file (for dracut)
accepting both 0x01234567 and 01234567 values as input
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Olaf Faaland <faaland1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Georgy Yakovlev <gyakovlev@gentoo.org>
Closes#10887Closes#10925
Currently the ARC state (MFU/MRU) of cached L2ARC buffer and their
content type is unknown. Knowing this information may prove beneficial
in adjusting the L2ARC caching policy.
This commit adds L2ARC arcstats that display the aligned size
(in bytes) of L2ARC buffers according to their content type
(data/metadata) and according to their ARC state (MRU/MFU or
prefetch). It also expands the existing evict_l2_eligible arcstat to
differentiate between MFU and MRU buffers.
L2ARC caches buffers from the MRU and MFU lists of ARC. Upon caching a
buffer, its ARC state (MRU/MFU) is stored in the L2 header
(b_arcs_state). The l2_m{f,r}u_asize arcstats reflect the aligned size
(in bytes) of L2ARC buffers according to their ARC state (based on
b_arcs_state). We also account for the case where an L2ARC and ARC
cached MRU or MRU_ghost buffer transitions to MFU. The l2_prefetch_asize
reflects the alinged size (in bytes) of L2ARC buffers that were cached
while they had the prefetch flag set in ARC. This is dynamically updated
as the prefetch flag of L2ARC buffers changes.
When buffers are evicted from ARC, if they are determined to be L2ARC
eligible then their logical size is recorded in
evict_l2_eligible_m{r,f}u arcstats according to their ARC state upon
eviction.
Persistent L2ARC:
When committing an L2ARC buffer to a log block (L2ARC metadata) its
b_arcs_state and prefetch flag is also stored. If the buffer changes
its arcstate or prefetch flag this is reflected in the above arcstats.
However, the L2ARC metadata cannot currently be updated to reflect this
change.
Example: L2ARC caches an MRU buffer. L2ARC metadata and arcstats count
this as an MRU buffer. The buffer transitions to MFU. The arcstats are
updated to reflect this. Upon pool re-import or on/offlining the L2ARC
device the arcstats are cleared and the buffer will now be counted as an
MRU buffer, as the L2ARC metadata were not updated.
Bug fix:
- If l2arc_noprefetch is set, arc_read_done clears the L2CACHE flag of
an ARC buffer. However, prefetches may be issued in a way that
arc_read_done() is bypassed. Instead, move the related code in
l2arc_write_eligible() to account for those cases too.
Also add a test and update manpages for l2arc_mfuonly module parameter,
and update the manpages and code comments for l2arc_noprefetch.
Move persist_l2arc tests to l2arc.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#10743
This solves issues occurring with a different decimal operator and
keeps the command line interface consistent for all locales .
E.g. `zfs set quota=0.5T`
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Felix Neumärker <xdch47@posteo.de>
Closes#10878
Allow to rename file systems without remounting if it is possible.
It is possible for file systems with 'mountpoint' property set to
'legacy' or 'none' - we don't have to change mount directory for them.
Currently such file systems are unmounted on rename and not even
mounted back.
This introduces layering violation, as we need to update
'f_mntfromname' field in statfs structure related to mountpoint (for
the dataset we are renaming and all its children).
In my opinion it is worth it, as it allow to update FreeBSD in even
cleaner way - in ZFS-only configuration root file system is ZFS file
system with 'mountpoint' property set to 'legacy'. If root dataset is
named system/rootfs, we can snapshot it (system/rootfs@upgrade), clone
it (system/oldrootfs), update FreeBSD and if it doesn't boot we can
boot back from system/oldrootfs and rename it back to system/rootfs
while it is mounted as /. Before it was not possible, because
unmounting / was not possible.
Authored by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Ported by: Matt Macy <mmacy@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#10839
Corrected the typo in zfs/cmd/zfs/zfs_main.c
line number 404 pbkfd2iters to pbkdf2iters
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Spencer Kinny <spencerkinny1995@gmail.com>
Closes#10850
Many modern devices use physical allocation units that are much
larger than the minimum logical allocation size accessible by
external commands. Two prevalent examples of this are 512e disk
drives (512b logical sector, 4K physical sector) and flash devices
(512b logical sector, 4K or larger allocation block size, and 128k
or larger erase block size). Operations that modify less than the
physical sector size result in a costly read-modify-write or garbage
collection sequence on these devices.
Simply exporting the true physical sector of the device to ZFS would
yield optimal performance, but has two serious drawbacks:
1. Existing pools created with devices that have different logical
and physical block sizes, but were configured to use the logical
block size (e.g. because the OS version used for pool construction
reported the logical block size instead of the physical block
size) will suddenly find that the vdev allocation size has
increased. This can be easily tolerated for active members of
the array, but ZFS would prevent replacement of a vdev with
another identical device because it now appears that the smaller
allocation size required by the pool is not supported by the new
device.
2. The device's physical block size may be too large to be supported
by ZFS. The optimal allocation size for the vdev may be quite
large. For example, a RAID controller may export a vdev that
requires read-modify-write cycles unless accessed using 64k
aligned/sized requests. ZFS currently has an 8k minimum block
size limit.
Reporting both the logical and physical allocation sizes for vdevs
solves these problems. A device may be used so long as the logical
block size is compatible with the configuration. By comparing the
logical and physical block sizes, new configurations can be optimized
and administrators can be notified of any existing pools that are
sub-optimal.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Matthew Macy <mmacy@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Matt Macy <mmacy@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#10619
Commit d2bce6d03 added the 'make checkbashisms' target but did not
resolve all of the bashisms in the scripts. This commit doesn't
resolve them all either but it does fix up a few, and it excludes
the others so 'make checkstyle' no longer prints warnings. It's
a small step in the right direction.
* Dracut is Linux specific and itself depends on bash. Therefore
all dracut support scripts can be bash specific, update their
shebang accordingly.
* zed-functions.sh, zfs-import, zfs-mount, zfs-zed, smart
paxcheck.sh, make_gitrev.sh - these scripts were excuded from
the check until they can be updated and properly tested.
* zfsunlock - only whole values for sleep are allowed.
* vdev_id - removed unneeded locals; use && instead of -a.
* dkms.mkconf, dkms.postbuil - use || instead of -o.
Reviewed-by: InsanePrawn <insane.prawny@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Gabriel A. Devenyi <gdevenyi@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#10755
This is a follow on to PR #10688 where `zfs share -a` allows the
sharing of canmount=noauto datasets if they are mounted. However,
when a dataset with canmount=noauto is not mounted, the command
should also purge any existing entries from the exports file.
Otherwise, after a reboot, the nfs server attempts to export the
underlying mountpath, not the dataset. This can lead to a hard hang
for existing client mounts.
Instead of just skipping the adding of an export if not mounted
and canmount=noauto, have it also remove an existing export of the
dataset so that, after a reboot, we don't export an unmounted dataset.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Closes#10747
This PR adds two new compression types, based on ZStandard:
- zstd: A basic ZStandard compression algorithm Available compression.
Levels for zstd are zstd-1 through zstd-19, where the compression
increases with every level, but speed decreases.
- zstd-fast: A faster version of the ZStandard compression algorithm
zstd-fast is basically a "negative" level of zstd. The compression
decreases with every level, but speed increases.
Available compression levels for zstd-fast:
- zstd-fast-1 through zstd-fast-10
- zstd-fast-20 through zstd-fast-100 (in increments of 10)
- zstd-fast-500 and zstd-fast-1000
For more information check the man page.
Implementation details:
Rather than treat each level of zstd as a different algorithm (as was
done historically with gzip), the block pointer `enum zio_compress`
value is simply zstd for all levels, including zstd-fast, since they all
use the same decompression function.
The compress= property (a 64bit unsigned integer) uses the lower 7 bits
to store the compression algorithm (matching the number of bits used in
a block pointer, as the 8th bit was borrowed for embedded block
pointers). The upper bits are used to store the compression level.
It is necessary to be able to determine what compression level was used
when later reading a block back, so the concept used in LZ4, where the
first 32bits of the on-disk value are the size of the compressed data
(since the allocation is rounded up to the nearest ashift), was
extended, and we store the version of ZSTD and the level as well as the
compressed size. This value is returned when decompressing a block, so
that if the block needs to be recompressed (L2ARC, nop-write, etc), that
the same parameters will be used to result in the matching checksum.
All of the internal ZFS code ( `arc_buf_hdr_t`, `objset_t`,
`zio_prop_t`, etc.) uses the separated _compress and _complevel
variables. Only the properties ZAP contains the combined/bit-shifted
value. The combined value is split when the compression_changed_cb()
callback is called, and sets both objset members (os_compress and
os_complevel).
The userspace tools all use the combined/bit-shifted value.
Additional notes:
zdb can now also decode the ZSTD compression header (flag -Z) and
inspect the size, version and compression level saved in that header.
For each record, if it is ZSTD compressed, the parameters of the decoded
compression header get printed.
ZSTD is included with all current tests and new tests are added
as-needed.
Per-dataset feature flags now get activated when the property is set.
If a compression algorithm requires a feature flag, zfs activates the
feature when the property is set, rather than waiting for the first
block to be born. This is currently only used by zstd but can be
extended as needed.
Portions-Sponsored-By: The FreeBSD Foundation
Co-authored-by: Allan Jude <allanjude@freebsd.org>
Co-authored-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Gottschall <s.gottschall@dd-wrt.com>
Co-authored-by: Kjeld Schouten-Lebbing <kjeld@schouten-lebbing.nl>
Co-authored-by: Michael Niewöhner <foss@mniewoehner.de>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allanjude@freebsd.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Gottschall <s.gottschall@dd-wrt.com>
Signed-off-by: Kjeld Schouten-Lebbing <kjeld@schouten-lebbing.nl>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niewöhner <foss@mniewoehner.de>
Closes#6247Closes#9024Closes#10277Closes#10278
Due to commit d48091d a removed device is now explicitly offlined by
the ZED if no spare is available, rather than the letting ZFS detect
it as UNAVAIL. This broke auto-replacing of whole-disk devices, as
described in issue #10577. In short, when a new device is reinserted
in the same slot, the ZED will try to ONLINE it without letting ZFS
recreate the necessary partition table.
This change simply avoids setting the device OFFLINE when removed if
no spare is available (or if spare_on_remove is false). This change
has been left minimal to allow it to be backported to 0.8.x release.
The auto_offline_001_pos ZTS test has been updated accordingly.
Some follow up work is planned to update the ZED so it transitions
the vdev to a REMOVED state. This is a state which has always
existed but there is no current interface the ZED can use to
accomplish this. Therefore it's being left to a follow up PR.
Reviewed-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Co-authored-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#10577Closes#10730
The ARC caches data in scatter ABD's, which are collections of pages,
which are typically 4K. Therefore, the space used to cache each block
is rounded up to a multiple of 4K. The ABD subsystem tracks this wasted
memory in the `scatter_chunk_waste` kstat. However, the ARC's `size` is
not aware of the memory used by this round-up, it only accounts for the
size that it requested from the ABD subsystem.
Therefore, the ARC is effectively using more memory than it is aware of,
due to the `scatter_chunk_waste`. This impacts observability, e.g.
`arcstat` will show that the ARC is using less memory than it
effectively is. It also impacts how the ARC responds to memory
pressure. As the amount of `scatter_chunk_waste` changes, it appears to
the ARC as memory pressure, so it needs to resize `arc_c`.
If the sector size (`1<<ashift`) is the same as the page size (or
larger), there won't be any waste. If the (compressed) block size is
relatively large compared to the page size, the amount of
`scatter_chunk_waste` will be small, so the problematic effects are
minimal.
However, if using 512B sectors (`ashift=9`), and the (compressed) block
size is small (e.g. `compression=on` with the default `volblocksize=8k`
or a decreased `recordsize`), the amount of `scatter_chunk_waste` can be
very large. On a production system, with `arc_size` at a constant 50%
of memory, `scatter_chunk_waste` has been been observed to be 10-30% of
memory.
This commit adds `scatter_chunk_waste` to `arc_size`, and adds a new
`waste` field to `arcstat`. As a result, the ARC's memory usage is more
observable, and `arc_c` does not need to be adjusted as frequently.
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#10701