Commit Graph

193 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Behlendorf
5f35b19007 Fully update inode when created
When a new znode/inode pair is created both the znode and the inode
should be immediately updated to the correct values.  This was done
for the znode and for most of the values in the inode, but not all
of them.  This normally wasn't a problem because most subsequent
operations would cause the inode to be immediately updated.  This
change ensures the inode is now fully updated before it is inserted
in to the inode hash.

Closes #116
Closes #146
Closes #164
2011-05-02 14:04:19 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
df554c148e Fix 'zfs set volsize=N pool/dataset'
This change fixes a kernel panic which would occur when resizing
a dataset which was not open.  The objset_t stored in the
zvol_state_t will be set to NULL when the block device is closed.
To avoid this issue we pass the correct objset_t as the third arg.

The code has also been updated to correctly notify the kernel
when the block device capacity changes.  For 2.6.28 and newer
kernels the capacity change will be immediately detected.  For
earlier kernels the capacity change will be detected when the
device is next opened.  This is a known limitation of older
kernels.

Online ext3 resize test case passes on 2.6.28+ kernels:
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/zvol bs=1M count=1 seek=1023
$ zpool create tank /tmp/zvol
$ zfs create -V 500M tank/zd0
$ mkfs.ext3 /dev/zd0
$ mkdir /mnt/zd0
$ mount /dev/zd0 /mnt/zd0
$ df -h /mnt/zd0
$ zfs set volsize=800M tank/zd0
$ resize2fs /dev/zd0
$ df -h /mnt/zd0

Original-patch-by: Fajar A. Nugraha <github@fajar.net>
Closes #68
Closes #84
2011-05-02 08:54:40 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner
055656d4f4 Implemented NFS export_operations.
Implemented the required NFS operations for exporting ZFS datasets
using the in-kernel NFS daemon.
2011-04-29 12:36:13 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
5476e6952c Suppress 'vdev_metaslab_init' memory warning
The vdev_metaslab_init() function has been observed to allocate
larger than 8k chunks.  However, they are not much larger than 8k
and it does this infrequently so it is allowed and the warning is
supressed.
2011-04-27 09:35:18 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
40a39e1103 Conserve stack in dsl_scan_visit()
The dsl_scan_visit() function is a little heavy weight taking 464
bytes on the stack.  This can be easily reduced for little cost by
moving zap_cursor_t and zap_attribute_t off the stack and on to the
heap.  After this change dsl_scan_visit() has been reduced in size
by 320 bytes.

This change was made to reduce stack usage in the dsl_scan_sync()
callpath which is recursive and has been observed to overflow the
stack.

Issue #174
2011-04-26 15:48:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
b81c4ac9af Conserve stack in dsl_scan_visitbp()
This function is called recursively so everything possible must be
done to limit its stack consumption.  The dprintf_bp() debugging
function adds 30 bytes of local variables to the function we cannot
afford.  By commenting out this debugging we save 30 bytes per
recursion and depths of 13 are not uncommon.  This yeilds a total
stack saving of 390 bytes on our 8k stack.

Issue #174
2011-04-26 15:48:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
7a060636b0 Conserve stack in dsl_scan_visitbp()
The recursive call chain dsl_scan_visitbp() -> dsl_scan_recurse() ->
dsl_scan_visitdnode() -> dsl_scan_visitbp has been observed to consume
considerable stack resulting in a stack overflow (>8k).  The cleanest
way I see to fix this with minimal impact to the existing flow of
code, and with the fewest performance concerns, is to always inline
dsl_scan_recurse() and dsl_scan_visitdnode().  While this will increase
the function size of dsl_scan_visitbp(), by 4660 bytes, it also reduces
the stack requirements by removing the function call overhead.

Issue #174
2011-04-26 13:37:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
701b1f8168 Fix zvol deadlock
It's possible for a zvol_write thread to enter direct memory reclaim
while holding open a transaction group.  This results in the system
attempting to write out data to the disk to free memory.  Unfortunately,
this can't succeed because the the thread doing reclaim is holding open
the txg which must be closed to be synced to disk.  To prevent this
the offending allocation is marked KM_PUSHPAGE which will prevent it
from attempting writeback.

Closes #191
2011-04-26 12:56:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
e2448b0e62 Fix spurious -EFAULT when setting I/O scheduler
Occasionally we would see an -EFAULT returned when setting the
I/O scheduler on a vdev.  This was caused an improperly formatted
user mode helper command.

This commit restructures the command to something simpler, allocates
space for it dynamically to save stack, and removes the retry logic
which is no longer needed.

Closes #169
2011-04-22 14:55:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
6a8f9b6bf0 Enforce ARC meta-data limits
This change ensures the ARC meta-data limits are enforced.  Without
this enforcement meta-data can grow to consume all of the ARC cache
pushing out data and hurting performance.  The cache is aggressively
reclaimed but this is a soft and not a hard limit.  The cache may
exceed the set limit briefly before being brought under control.

By default 25% of the ARC capacity can be used for meta-data.  This
limit can be tuned by setting the 'zfs_arc_meta_limit' module option.
Once this limit is exceeded meta-data reclaim will occur in 3 percent
chunks, or may be tuned using 'arc_reduce_dnlc_percent'.

Closes #193
2011-04-21 13:49:31 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner
36df284366 Fixed a use-after-free bug in zfs_zget().
Fixed a bug where zfs_zget could access a stale znode pointer when
the inode had already been removed from the inode cache via iput ->
iput_final -> ... -> zfs_zinactive but the corresponding SA handle
was still alive.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #180
2011-04-21 13:48:01 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
d247f2a3cc Suppress 'zfs receive' memory warning
As part of zfs_ioc_recv() a zfs_cmd_t is allocated in the kernel
which is 17808 bytes in size.  This sort of thing in general should
be avoided.  However, since this should be an infrequent event for
now we allow it and simply suppress the warning with the KM_NODEBUG
flag.  This can be revisited latter if/when it becomes an issue.

Closes #178
2011-04-20 10:22:31 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner
bec30953cd Truncate the xattr znode when updating existing attributes.
If the attribute's new value was shorter than the old one the old
code would leave parts of the old value in the xattr znode.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #203
2011-04-19 14:14:40 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner
274b7e79f3 Added missing initialization for va.va_dentry in zfs_get_xattrdir.
Without this we may mistakenly believe we have a dentry and try to
d_instantiate() it.  This will result in the following BUG.  It's
important to note that while the xattr directory has an inode
assoicated with it we never create a dentry for it.

  kernel BUG at fs/dcache.c:1418!

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #202
2011-04-19 13:57:41 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
0fe3d820f5 Fix gcc compiler warning, dsl_pool_create()
When compiling ZFS in user space gcc-4.6.0 correctly identifies
the variable 'os' as being set but never used.  This generates a
warning and a build failure when using --enable-debug.  However,
the code is correct we only want to use 'os' for the kernel space
builds.  To suppress the warning the call was wrapped with a
VERIFY() which has the nice side effect of ensuring the 'os'
actually never is NULL.  This was observed under Fedora 15.

  module/zfs/dsl_pool.c: In function ‘dsl_pool_create’:
  module/zfs/dsl_pool.c:229:12: error: variable ‘os’ set but not used
  [-Werror=unused-but-set-variable]
2011-04-19 09:04:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
e30c0ada6d Linux 2.6.39 compat, invalidate_inodes()
Update code to use the spl_invalidate_inodes() wrapper.  This hides
some of the complexity of determining if invalidate_inodes() was
exported, and if so what is its prototype.  The second argument
of spl_invalidate_inodes() determined the behavior of how dirty
inodes are handled.  By passing a zero we are indicated that we
want those inodes to be treated as busy and skipped.
2011-04-19 08:57:23 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
0d3ac5e735 Linux 2.6.29 compat, credentials
The .sync_fs fix as applied did not use the updated SPL credential
API.  This broke builds on Debian Lenny, this change applies the
needed fix to use the portable API.  The original credential changes
are part of commit 81e97e2187.
2011-04-07 14:27:09 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
eec8164771 Fix ASSERTION(!dsl_pool_sync_context(tx->tx_pool))
Disable the normal reclaim path for the txg_sync thread.  This
ensures the thread will never enter dmu_tx_assign() which can
otherwise occur due to direct reclaim.  If this is allowed to
happen the system can deadlock.  Direct reclaim call path:

  ->shrink_icache_memory->prune_icache->dispose_list->
  clear_inode->zpl_clear_inode->zfs_inactive->dmu_tx_assign
2011-04-07 09:52:16 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
7cb67b45f3 Add direct+indirect ARC reclaim
Under OpenSolaris all memory reclaim is done asyncronously.  Under
Linux memory reclaim is done asynchronously _and_ synchronously.
When a process allocates memory with GFP_KERNEL it explicitly allows
the kernel to do reclaim on its behalf to satify the allocation.
If that GFP_KERNEL allocation fails the kernel may take more drastic
measures to reclaim the memory such as killing user space processes.

This was observed to happen with ZFS because the ARC could consume
a large fraction of the system memory but no synchronous reclaim
could be performed on it.  The result was GFP_KERNEL allocations
could fail resulting in OOM events, and only moments latter the
arc_reclaim thread would free unused memory from the ARC.

This change leaves the arc_thread in place to manage the fundamental
ARC behavior.  But it adds a synchronous (direct) reclaim path for
the ARC which can be called when memory is badly needed.  It also
adds an asynchronous (indirect) reclaim path which is called
much more frequently to prune the ARC slab caches.
2011-04-07 09:52:10 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
1834f2d8b7 Add missing arcstats
The following useful values were missing the arcstats.  This change
adds them in to provide greater visibility in to the arcs behavior.

arc_no_grow                     4    0
arc_tempreserve                 4    0
arc_loaned_bytes                4    0
arc_meta_used                   4    624774592
arc_meta_limit                  4    400785408
arc_meta_max                    4    625594176
2011-04-07 09:52:05 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
c85b224faf Call d_instantiate before unlocking inode
Under Linux a dentry referencing an inode must be instantiated before
the inode is unlocked.  To accomplish this without overly modifing
the core ZFS code the dentry it passed via the vattr_t.  There are
cases such as replay when a dentry is not available.  In which case
it is obviously not initialized at inode creation time, if a dentry
is needed it will be spliced as when required via d_lookup().
2011-04-07 09:51:57 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
d433c20651 Fix make distclean for `./configure --with-config=user
Making distclean in module
    make[1]: Entering directory `/zfs/module'
    make -C  SUBDIRS=`pwd`  clean
    make: Entering an unknown directory
    make: *** SUBDIRS=/zfs/module: No such file or directory.  Stop.

When using --with-config=user the 'distclean' target would fail
because it assumes the kernel configuration infrastrure is set up.
This is not the case, nor does it need to be, because the
'--with-config=user' option will prune the entire ./module subtree
from SUBDIRS.  This prevents most build rules from operating in the
./module directory.

However, the 'dist*' rules will still traverse this directory
because it is listed in DIST_SUBDIRS.  This is correct because we
need to ensure the dist rules package the directory contents
regardless of the configuration for the 'dist' rule.  The correct
way to handle this is to only invoke the kernel build system as
part of the 'clean' rule when CONFIG_KERNEL_TRUE is set.

Initial fix provided by Darik Horn <dajhorn@vanadac.com>.
This commit is a slightly refined form of the original.
2011-04-05 13:33:28 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
bfd214af01 Fix inflated load average
Kernel threads which sleep uninterruptibly on Linux are marked in the (D)
state.  These threads are usually in the process of performing IO and are
thus counted against the load average.  The txg_quiesce and txg_sync threads
were always sleeping uninterruptibly and thus inflating the load average.

This change makes them sleep interruptibly.  Some care is required however
because these threads may now be woken early by signals.  In this case the
callers are all careful to check that the required conditions are met after
waking up.  If we're woken early due to a signal they will simply go back
to sleep.  In this case these changes are safe.

Closes #175
2011-03-31 17:07:12 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
7a1cdc0775 Linux 2.6.29 compat, .freeze_fs/.unfreeze_fs
The .freeze_fs/.unfreeze_fs hooks were not added until Linux 2.6.29
Since these hooks are currently unused they are being removed to
allow support of older kernels.
2011-03-22 12:17:24 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
81e97e2187 Linux 2.6.29 compat, credentials
As of Linux 2.6.29 a clean credential API was added to the Linux kernel.
Previously the credential was embedded in the task_struct.  Because the
SPL already has considerable support for handling this API change the
ZPL code has been updated to use the Solaris credential API.
2011-03-22 12:15:54 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
d6bd8eaae4 Fix evict() deadlock
Now that KM_SLEEP is not defined as GFP_NOFS there is the possibility
of synchronous reclaim deadlocks.  These deadlocks never existed in the
original OpenSolaris code because all memory reclaim on Solaris is done
asyncronously.  Linux does both synchronous (direct) and asynchronous
(indirect) reclaim.

This commit addresses a deadlock caused by inode eviction.  A KM_SLEEP
allocation may trigger direct memory reclaim and shrink the inode cache.
This can occur while a mutex in the array of ZFS_OBJ_HOLD mutexes is
held.  Through the ->shrink_icache_memory()->evict()->zfs_inactive()->
zfs_zinactive() call path the same mutex may be reacquired resulting
in a deadlock.  To avoid this deadlock the process must not reacquire
the mutex when it is already holding it.

This is a reasonable fix for now but longer term the ZFS_OBJ_HOLD
mutex locking should be reevaluated.  This infrastructure already
prevents us from ever using the Linux lock dependency analysis tools,
and it may limit scalability.
2011-03-22 12:14:55 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
691f6ac4c2 Use KM_PUSHPAGE instead of KM_SLEEP
It used to be the case that all KM_SLEEP allocations were GFS_NOFS.
Unfortunately this often resulted in the kernel being unable to
reclaim the ARC, inode, and dentry caches in a timely manor.
The fix was to make KM_SLEEP a GFP_KERNEL allocation in the SPL.

However, this increases the posibility of deadlocking the system
on a zfs write thread.  If a zfs write thread attempts to perform
an allocation it may trigger synchronous reclaim.  This reclaim
may attempt to flush dirty data/inode to disk to free memory.
Unforunately, this write cannot finish because the write thread
which would handle it is holding the previous transaction open.
Deadlock.

To avoid this all allocations in the zfs write thread path must
use KM_PUSHPAGE which prohibits synchronous reclaim for that
thread.  In this way forward progress in ensured.  The risk
with this change is I missed updating an allocation for the
write threads leaving an increased posibility of deadlock.  If
any deadlocks remain they will be unlikely but we'll have to
make sure they all get fixed.
2011-03-22 12:14:55 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
0de19dad9c Register .remount_fs handler
Register the missing .remount_fs handler.  This handler isn't strictly
required because the VFS does a pretty good job updating most of the
MS_* flags.  However, there's no harm in using the hook to call the
registered zpl callback for various MS_* flags.  Additionaly, this
allows us to lay the ground work for more complicated argument parsing
in the future.
2011-03-15 13:33:29 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
03f9ba9d99 Register .sync_fs handler
Register the missing .sync_fs handler.  This is a noop in most cases
because the usual requirement is that sync just be initiated.  As part
of the DMU's normal transaction processing txgs will be frequently
synced.  However, when the 'wait' flag is set the requirement is that
.sync_fs must not return until the data is safe on disk.  With the
addition of the .sync_fs handler this is now properly implemented.
2011-03-15 13:33:29 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
04516a45b2 Don't set I/O Scheduler for Partitions
ZFS should only change the i/o scheduler for a disk when it has
ownership of the whole disk.  This is basically the same logic as
adjusting the write cache behavior on a disk.  This change updates
the vdev disk code to skip partitions when setting the i/o scheduler.

Closes #152
2011-03-10 13:34:17 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
adf2e8778e Fix O_APPEND Corruption
Due to an uninitialized variable files opened with O_APPEND may
overwrite the start of the file rather than append to it.  This
was introduced accidentally when I removed the Solaris vnodes.

The zfs_range_lock_writer() function used to key off zf->z_vnode
to determine if a znode_t was for a zvol of zpl object.  With
the removal of vnodes this was replaced by the flag zp->z_is_zvol.
This flag was used to control the append behavior for range locks.

Unfortunately, this value was never properly initialized after
the vnode removal.  However, because most of memory is usually
zeros it happened to be set correctly most of the time making
the bug appear racy.  Properly initializing zp->z_is_zvol to
zero completely resolves the problem with O_APPEND.

Closes #126
2011-03-09 13:31:00 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
17c37660a1 Conserve stack in zfs_setattr()
Move 'bulk' and 'xattr_bulk' from the stack to the heap to minimize
stack space usage.  These two arrays consumed 448 bytes on the stack
and have been replaced by two 8 byte points for a total stack space
saving of 432 bytes.  The zfs_setattr() path had been previously
observed to overrun the stack in certain circumstances.
2011-03-09 13:30:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
450dc149bd Range lock performance improvements
The original range lock implementation had to be modified by commit
8926ab7 because it was unsafe on Linux.  In particular, calling
cv_destroy() immediately after cv_broadcast() is dangerous because
the waiters may still be asleep.  Thus the following cv_destroy()
will free memory which may still be in use.

This was fixed by updating cv_destroy() to block on waiters but
this in turn introduced a deadlock.  The deadlock was resolved
with the use of a taskq to move the offending free outside the
range lock.  This worked well but using the taskq for the free
resulted in a serious performace hit.  This is somewhat ironic
because at the time I felt using the taskq might improve things
by making the free asynchronous.

This patch refines the original fix and moves the free from the
taskq to a private free list.  Then items which must be free'd
are simply inserted in to the list.  When the range lock is dropped
it's safe to free the items.  The list is walked and all rl_t
entries are freed.

This change improves small cached read performance by 26x.  This
was expected because for small reads the number of locking calls
goes up significantly.  More surprisingly this change significantly
improves large cache read performance.  This probably attributable
to better cpu/memory locality.  Very likely the same processor
which allocated the memory is now freeing it.

bs	ext3	zfs	zfs+fix		faster
----------------------------------------------
512     435     3       79      	26x
1k      820     7       160     	22x
2k      1536    14      305     	21x
4k      2764    28      572     	20x
8k      3788    50      1024    	20x
16k     4300    86      1843    	21x
32k     4505    138     2560    	18x
64k     5324    252     3891    	15x
128k    5427    276     4710    	17x
256k    5427    413     5017    	12x
512k    5427    497     5324    	10x
1m      5427    521     5632    	10x

Closes #142
2011-03-08 12:44:06 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
126400a1ca Add zfs_open()/zfs_close()
In the original implementation the zfs_open()/zfs_close() hooks
were dropped for simplicity.  This was functional but not 100%
correct with the expected ZFS sematics.  Updating and re-adding the
zfs_open()/zfs_close() hooks resolves the following issues.

1) The ZFS_APPENDONLY file attribute is once again honored.  While
there are still no Linux tools to set/clear these attributes once
there are it should behave correctly.

2) Minimal virus scan file attribute hooks were added.  Once again
this support in disabled but the infrastructure is back in place.

3) Most importantly correctly handle assigning files which were
opened syncronously to the intent log.  Without this change O_SYNC
modifications could be lost during a system crash even though they
were marked synchronous.
2011-03-08 11:04:51 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
53cf50e081 Set stat->st_dev and statfs->f_fsid
Filesystems like ZFS must use what the kernel calls an anonymous super
block.  Basically, this is just a filesystem which is not backed by a
single block device.  Normally this block device's dev_t is stored in
the super block.  For anonymous super blocks a unique reserved dev_t
is assigned as part of get_sb().

This sb->s_dev must then be set in the returned stat structures as
stat->st_dev.  This allows userspace utilities to easily detect the
boundries of a specific filesystem.  Tools such as 'du' depend on this
for proper accounting.

Additionally, under OpenSolaris the statfs->f_fsid is set to the device
id.  To preserve consistency with OpenSolaris we also set the fsid to
the device id.  Other Linux filesystem (ext) set the fsid to a unique
value determined by the filesystems uuid.  This value is unique but
maintains no relationship to the device id.  This may be desirable
when exporting NFS filesystem because it minimizes to chance of a
client observing the same fsid from two different servers.

Closes #140
2011-03-07 16:06:22 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
6742abf9ec Use Linux ATTR_ versions
The AT_ versions of these macros are used on Solaris and while they
map to their Linux equivilants the code has been updated to use the
ATTR_ versions.
2011-03-03 11:29:15 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
f4ea75d492 Conserve stack in zfs_setattr()
Move 'tmpxvattr' from the stack to the heap to minimize stack
space usage.  This is enough to get us below the 1024 byte stack
frame warning.  That however is still a large stack frame and it
should be further reduced by moving the 'bulk' and 'xattr_bulk'
sa_bulk_attr_t variables to the heap in a future patch.
2011-03-02 14:18:58 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
5484965ab6 Drop HAVE_XVATTR macros
When I began work on the Posix layer it immediately became clear to
me that to integrate cleanly with the Linux VFS certain Solaris
specific things would have to go.  One of these things was to elimate
as many Solaris specific types from the ZPL layer as possible.  They
would be replaced with their Linux equivalents.  This would not only
be good for performance, but for the general readability and health of
the code.  The Solaris and Linux VFS are different beasts and should
be treated as such.  Most of the code remains common for constructing
transactions and such, but there are subtle and important differenced
which need to be repsected.

This policy went quite for for certain types such as the vnode_t,
and it initially seemed to be working out well for the vattr_t.  There
was a relatively small amount of related xvattr_t code I was forced to
comment out with HAVE_XVATTR.  But it didn't look that hard to come
back soon and replace it all with a native Linux type.

However, after going doing this path with xvattr some distance it
clear that this code was woven in the ZPL more deeply than I thought.
In particular its hooks went very deep in to the ZPL replay code
and replacing it would not be as easy as I originally thought.

Rather than continue persuing replacing and removing this code I've
taken a step back and reevaluted things.  This commit reverts many of
my previous commits which removed xvattr related code.  It restores
much of the code to its original upstream state and now relies on
improved xvattr_t support in the zfs package itself.

The result of this is that much of the code which I had commented
out, which accidentally broke things like replay, is now back in
place and working.  However, there may be a small performance
impact for getattr/setattr operations because they now require
a translation from native Linux to Solaris types.  For now that's
a price I'm willing to pay.  Once everything is completely functional
we can revisting the issue of removing the vattr_t/xvattr_t types.

Closes #111
2011-03-02 11:44:34 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
9623f736d9 Remove caller_context_t
Remove the remaining callers of caller_context_t.  This type has
been removed because it is not needed for the Linux port.
2011-03-02 11:35:35 -08:00
Darik Horn
a23cc0a443 Add the zpool and filesystem versions
Print the supported zpool and filesystem versions at module load
time.  This change removes an ambiguity and adds information that
system administrators care about.  The phrase "ZFS pool version %s"
is the same as zpool upgrade -v so that the operator is familiar
with the message.

  ZFS: Loaded module v0.6.0, ZFS pool version 28, ZFS filesystem version 5
  ZFS: Unloaded module v0.6.0

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-02-28 09:46:23 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
fdcd952b4d Fix set block scheduler warnings
There were two cases when attempting to set the vdev block device
scheduler which would causes console warnings.

The first case was when the vdev used a loop, ram, dm, or other
such device which doesn't support a configurable scheduler.  In
these cases attempting to set a scheduler is pointless and can
be safely skipped.

The secord case is slightly more troubling.  We were seeing
transient cases where setting the elevator would return -EFAULT.
On retry everything is fine so there appears to be a small window
where this is possible.  To handle that case we silently retry
up to three times before reporting the warning.

In all of the above cases the warning is harmless and at worse you
may see slightly different performance characteristics from one
or more of your vdevs.
2011-02-25 11:37:11 -08:00
Fajar A. Nugraha
4c0d8e50b9 Use udev to create /dev/zvol/[dataset_name] links
This commit allows zvols with names longer than 32 characters, which
fixes issue on https://github.com/behlendorf/zfs/issues/#issue/102.

Changes include:
- use /dev/zd* device names for zvol, where * is the device minor
  (include/sys/fs/zfs.h, module/zfs/zvol.c).
- add BLKZNAME ioctl to get dataset name from userland
  (include/sys/fs/zfs.h, module/zfs/zvol.c, cmd/zvol_id).
- add udev rule to create /dev/zvol/[dataset_name] and the legacy
  /dev/[dataset_name] symlink. For partitions on zvol, it will create
  /dev/zvol/[dataset_name]-part* (etc/udev/rules.d/60-zvol.rules,
  cmd/zvol_id).

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-02-25 09:43:19 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
dc1d7665c5 Remove rdev packing
Remove custom code to pack/unpack dev_t's.  Under Linux all dev_t's
are an unsigned 32-bit value even on 64-bit platforms.  The lower
20 bits are used for the minor number and the upper 12 for the major
number.

This means if your importing a pool from Solaris you may get strange
major/minor numbers.  But it doesn't really matter because even if
we add compatibility code to translate the encoded Solaris major/minor
they won't do you any good under Linux.  You will still need to
recreate the dev_t with a major/minor which maps to reserved major
numbers used under Linux.

Dropping this code also resolves 32-bit builds by removing the
offending 32-bit compatibility code.
2011-02-23 15:13:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
99c564bc48 Use correct ASSERT3* variant
ASSERT3P should be used instead of ASSERT3U when comparing
pointers.  Using ASSERT3U with the cast causes a compiler
warning for 32-bit builds which is fatal with --enable-debug.
2011-02-23 15:03:30 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
05ff35c602 Increase fragment size to block size
The underlying storage pool actually uses multiple block
size.  Under Solaris frsize (fragment size) is reported as
the smallest block size we support, and bsize (block size)
as the filesystem's maximum block size.  Unfortunately,
under Linux the fragment size and block size are often used
interchangeably.  Thus we are forced to report both of them
as the filesystem's maximum block size.

Closes #112
2011-02-23 14:00:06 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
f6dcdf13f8 Fix 'statement with no effect' warning
Because the secpolicy_* macros are all currently defined to (0).
And because the caller of this function does not check the return
code.  The compiler complains that this statement has no effect
which is correct and OK.  To suppress the warning explictly cast
the result to (void).
2011-02-23 13:03:19 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
a31a70bbd1 Fix enum compiler warning
Generally it's a good idea to use enums for switch statements,
but in this case it causes warning because the enum is really a
set of flags.  These flags are OR'ed together in some cases
resulting in values which are not part of the original enum.
This causes compiler warning such as this about invalid cases.

  error: case value ‘33’ not in enumerated type ‘zprop_source_t’

To handle this we simply case the enum to an int for the switch
statement.  This leaves all other enum type checking in place
and effectively disabled these warnings.
2011-02-23 12:52:51 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
61e909608d Linux 2.6.x compat, blkdev_compat.h
For legacy reasons the zvol.c and vdev_disk.c Linux compatibility
code ended up in sys/blkdev.h and sys/vdev_disk.h headers.  While
there are worse places for this code to live it should be in a
linux/blkdev_compat.h header.  This change moves this block device
Linux compatibility code in to the linux/blkdev_compat.h header
and updates all the correct #include locations.  This is not a
functional change or bug fix, it is just code cleanup.
2011-02-23 12:29:38 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
5d0265c0dd Merge branch 'zpl' 2011-02-18 09:31:25 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf
037849f854 Use provided uid/gid for setattr
When changing the uid/gid of a file via zfs_setattr() use the
Posix id passed in iattr->ia_uid/gid.  While the zfs_fuid_create()
code already had the fuid support disabled for Linux it was
returning the uid/gid from the credential.  With this change
the 'chown' command which relies on setxattr is now working
properly.

Also remove a little stray white space which was in front of
zfs_update_inode() call and the end of zfs_setattr().
2011-02-17 14:23:48 -08:00