Commit Graph

2009 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Coleman Kane
ad0967638b
Linux 6.0 compat: register_shrinker() now var-arg
The 6.0 kernel added a printf-style var-arg for args > 0 to the
register_shrinker function, in order to add names to shrinkers, in
commit e33c267ab70de4249d22d7eab1cc7d68a889bac2. This enables the
shrinkers to have friendly names exposed in /sys/kernel/debug/shrinker/.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Coleman Kane <ckane@colemankane.org>
Closes #13748
2022-08-08 16:18:30 -07:00
Ryan Moeller
947465b984
libzfs: Remove unused zpool_get_physpath()
This is an oddly specific function that has never had any consumers in
the history of this repo.  Get rid of it and the pile of helper
functions that exist for it.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes #13724
2022-08-04 17:04:09 -07:00
Umer Saleem
9681de4657
Add snapshots_changed as property
Make dd_snap_cmtime property persistent across mount and unmount
operations by storing in ZAP and restore the value from ZAP on hold
into dd_snap_cmtime instead of updating it.

Expose dd_snap_cmtime as 'snapshots_changed' property that provides a
mechanism to quickly determine whether snapshot list for dataset has
changed without having to mount a dataset or iterate the snapshot list.

It specifies the time at which a snapshot for a dataset was last
created or deleted. This allows us to be more efficient how often we
query snapshots.

Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes #13635
2022-08-02 16:45:30 -07:00
Alek P
e8cf3a4f76
Implement a new type of zfs receive: corrective receive (-c)
This type of recv is used to heal corrupted data when a replica
of the data already exists (in the form of a send file for example).
With the provided send stream, corrective receive will read from
disk blocks described by the WRITE records. When any of the reads
come back with ECKSUM we use the data from the corresponding WRITE
record to rewrite the corrupted block.

Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Zuchowski <pzuchowski@datto.com>
Signed-off-by: Alek Pinchuk <apinchuk@axcient.com>
Closes #9372
2022-07-28 15:52:46 -07:00
ixhamza
fb087146de
Add support for per dataset zil stats and use wmsum counters
ZIL kstats are reported in an inclusive way, i.e., same counters are
shared to capture all the activities happening in zil. Added support
to report zil stats for every datset individually by combining them
with already exposed dataset kstats.

Wmsum uses per cpu counters and provide less overhead as compared
to atomic operations. Updated zil kstats to replace wmsum counters
to avoid atomic operations.

Reviewed-by: Christian Schwarz <christian.schwarz@nutanix.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes #13636
2022-07-20 17:14:06 -07:00
Alexander Motin
33dba8c792
Fix scrub resume from newly created hole
It may happen that scan bookmark points to a block that was turned
into a part of a big hole.  In such case dsl_scan_visitbp() may skip
it and dsl_scan_check_resume() will not be called for it.  As result
new scan suspend won't be possible until the end of the object, that
may take hours if the object is a multi-terabyte ZVOL on a slow HDD
pool, stretching TXG to all that time, creating all sorts of problems.

This patch changes the resume condition to any greater or equal block,
so even if we miss the bookmarked block, the next one we find will
delete the bookmark, allowing new suspend.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #13643
2022-07-20 17:02:36 -07:00
ixhamza
f371cc18f8
Expose ZFS dataset case sensitivity setting via sb_opts
Makes the case sensitivity setting visible on Linux in /proc/mounts.

Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes #13607
2022-07-14 10:38:16 -07:00
Tino Reichardt
1d3ba0bf01
Replace dead opensolaris.org license link
The commit replaces all findings of the link:
http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing with this one:
https://opensource.org/licenses/CDDL-1.0

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes #13619
2022-07-11 14:16:13 -07:00
наб
dd66857d92 Remaining {=> const} char|void *tag
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13348
2022-06-29 14:08:59 -07:00
наб
a926aab902 Enable -Wwrite-strings
Also, fix leak from ztest_global_vars_to_zdb_args()

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13348
2022-06-29 14:08:54 -07:00
Kristof Provost
325096545a
FreeBSD: only define B_FALSE/B_TRUE if NEED_SOLARIS_BOOLEAN is not set
If NEED_SOLARIS_BOOLEAN is defined we define an enum boolean_t, which
defines B_TRUE/B_FALSE as well. If we have both the define and the enum
things don't build (because that translates to
'enum { 0, 1 }     boolean_t').

While here also remove an incorrect '#else'. With it in place we only
parse a section if the include guard is triggered. So we'd only use that
code if this file is included twice. This is clearly unintended, and
also means we don't get the 'boolean_t' definition. Fix this.

Reviewed-by: Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Kristof Provost <kprovost@netgate.com>
Sponsored-By: Rubicon Communications, LLC ("Netgate")
Closes #13596
2022-06-28 14:11:38 -07:00
Alexander Motin
827322991f
Fix and disable blocks statistics during scrub
Block statistics calculation during scrub I/O issue in case of sorted
scrub accounted ditto blocks several times.  Embedded blocks on other
side were not accounted at all.  This change moves the accounting from
issue to scan stage, that fixes both problems and also allows to avoid
pool-wide locking and the lock contention it created.

Since this statistics is quite specific and is not even exposed now
anywhere, disable its calculation by default to not waste CPU time.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #13579
2022-06-28 11:23:31 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
b0f7dd276c Fix -Wattribute-warning in zfs_log_xvattr()
Restructure the code in zfs_log_xvattr() to use a lr_attr_end
structure when accessing lr_attr_t elements located after the
variable sized array.  This makes the code more understandable
and resolves the accessing beyond the end of the field warnings.

Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13528
Closes #13575
2022-06-27 14:18:57 -07:00
George Amanakis
80a650b7bb
Avoid panic with recordsize > 128k, raw sending and no large_blocks
The current codebase does not support raw sending buffers with block
size > 128kB when large_blocks is not active. This can happen in the
codepath dsl_dataset_sync()->dmu_objset_sync()->zio_nowait() which
calls back dmu_objset_write_done()->dsl_dataset_block_born(). If
dsl_dataset_sync() completes its run before dsl_dataset_block_born() is
called, we will end up not activating some of the necessary flags, while
having blocks based on those flags written in the filesystem. A
subsequent send will then panic.

Fix this by directly deciding in dmu_objset_sync() whether these flags
need to be activated later by dsl_dataset_sync(). Instead of panicking
due to a NULL pointer dereference in dmu_dump_write() in case of a send,
print out an error message. Also during scrub verify there are no
contradicting filesystem flags.

Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes #12275
Closes #12438
2022-06-27 14:17:25 -07:00
Alexander Motin
c0bf952c84
Several B-tree optimizations
- Introduce first element offset within a leaf.  It allows to reduce
by ~50% average memmove() size when adding/removing elements.  If the
added/removed element is in the first half of the leaf, we may shift
elements before it and adjust the bth_first instead of moving more
elements after it.
 - Use memcpy() instead of memmove() when we know there is no overlap.
 - Switch from uint64_t to uint32_t.  It does not limit anything,
but 32-bit arches should appreciate it greatly in hot paths.
 - Store leaf capacity in struct btree to avoid 64-bit divisions.
 - Adjust zfs_btree_insert_into_leaf() to always result in balanced
leaves after splitting, no matter where the new element was inserted.
Not that we care about it much, but it should also allow B-trees with
as little as two elements per leaf instead of 4 previously.

When scrubbing pool of 12 SSDs, storing 1.5TB of 4KB zvol blocks this
reduces amount of time spent in memmove() inside the scan thread from
13.7% to 5.7% and total scrub time by ~15 seconds out of 9 minutes.
It should also reduce spacemaps load time, but I haven't measured it.

Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #13582
2022-06-24 13:55:58 -07:00
Alexander Motin
1c0c729ab4
Several sorted scrub optimizations
- Reduce size and comparison complexity of q_exts_by_size B-tree.
Previous code used two 64-bit divisions and many other operations to
compare two B-tree elements.  It created enormous overhead.  This
implementation moves the math to the upper level and stores the score
in the B-tree elements themselves.  Since all that we need to store in
that B-tree is the extent score and offset, those can fit into single
8 byte value instead of 24 bytes of q_exts_by_addr element and can be
compared with single operation.
 - Better decouple secondary tree logic from main range_tree by moving
rt_btree_ops and related functions into dsl_scan.c as ext_size_ops.
Those functions are very small to worry about the code duplication and
range_tree does not need to know details such as rt_btree_compare.
 - Instead of accounting number of pending bytes per pool, that needs
atomic on global variable per block, account the number of non-empty
per-vdev queues, that change much more rarely.
 - When extent scan is interrupted by TXG end, continue it in the next
TXG instead of selecting next best extent.  It allows to avoid leaving
one truncated (and so likely not the best any more) extent each TXG.

On top of some other optimizations this saves about 1.5 minutes out of
10 to scrub pool of 12 SSDs, storing 1.5TB of 4KB zvol blocks.

Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tom Caputi <caputit1@tcnj.edu>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #13576
2022-06-24 09:50:37 -07:00
Tino Reichardt
deb1213098
Fix memory allocation issue for BLAKE3 context
The kmem_alloc(sizeof (*ctx), KM_NOSLEEP) call on FreeBSD can't be
used in this code segment. Work around this by pre-allocating a percpu
context array for later use.

Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes #13568
2022-06-21 14:32:09 -07:00
crass
bc00d2c711
Add support for ARCH=um for x86 sub-architectures
When building modules (as well as the kernel) with ARCH=um, the options
-Dsetjmp=kernel_setjmp and -Dlongjmp=kernel_longjmp are passed to the C
preprocessor for C files. This causes the setjmp and longjmp used in
module/lua/ldo.c to be kernel_setjmp and kernel_longjmp respectively in
the object file. However, the setjmp and longjmp that is intended to be
called is defined in an architecture dependent assembly file under the
directory module/lua/setjmp. Since it is an assembly and not a C file,
the preprocessor define is not given and the names do not change. This
becomes an issue when modpost is trying to create the Module.symvers
and sees no defined symbol for kernel_setjmp and kernel_longjmp. To fix
this, if the macro CONFIG_UML is defined, then setjmp and longjmp
macros are undefined.

When building with ARCH=um for x86 sub-architectures, CONFIG_X86 is not
defined. Instead, CONFIG_UML_X86 is defined. Despite this, the UML x86
sub-architecture can use the same object files as the x86 architectures
because the x86 sub-architecture UML kernel is running with the same
instruction set as CONFIG_X86. So the modules/Kbuild build file is
updated to add the same object files that CONFIG_X86 would add when
CONFIG_UML_X86 is defined.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Glenn Washburn <development@efficientek.com>
Closes #13547
2022-06-15 14:22:52 -07:00
Allan Jude
4ff7a8fa2f
Replace ZPROP_INVAL with ZPROP_USERPROP where it means a user property
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-by: Klara Inc.
Closes #12676
2022-06-14 11:27:53 -07:00
Will Andrews
4ed5e25074 Add Linux namespace delegation support
This allows ZFS datasets to be delegated to a user/mount namespace
Within that namespace, only the delegated datasets are visible
Works very similarly to Zones/Jailes on other ZFS OSes

As a user:
```
 $ unshare -Um
 $ zfs list
no datasets available
 $ echo $$
1234
```

As root:
```
 # zfs list
NAME                            ZONED  MOUNTPOINT
containers                      off    /containers
containers/host                 off    /containers/host
containers/host/child           off    /containers/host/child
containers/host/child/gchild    off    /containers/host/child/gchild
containers/unpriv               on     /unpriv
containers/unpriv/child         on     /unpriv/child
containers/unpriv/child/gchild  on     /unpriv/child/gchild

 # zfs zone /proc/1234/ns/user containers/unpriv
```

Back to the user namespace:
```
 $ zfs list
NAME                             USED  AVAIL     REFER  MOUNTPOINT
containers                       129M  47.8G       24K  /containers
containers/unpriv                128M  47.8G       24K  /unpriv
containers/unpriv/child          128M  47.8G      128M  /unpriv/child
```

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Will Andrews <will.andrews@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Piotrowski <mateusz.piotrowski@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Piotrowski <mateusz.piotrowski@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-by: Buddy <https://buddy.works>
Closes #12263
2022-06-10 09:51:46 -07:00
Allan Jude
a1aa8f14c8 Revert parts of 938cfeb0f2
When read and writing the UID/GID, we always want the value
relative to the root user namespace, the kernel will take care
of remapping this to the user namespace for us.

Calling from_kuid(user_ns, uid) with a unmapped uid will return -1
as that uid is outside of the scope of that namespace, and will result
in the files inside the namespace all being owned by 'nobody' and not
being allowed to call chmod or chown on them.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes #12263
2022-06-10 09:51:32 -07:00
Tony Hutter
6f73d02168
zvol: Support blk-mq for better performance
Add support for the kernel's block multiqueue (blk-mq) interface in
the zvol block driver.  blk-mq creates multiple request queues on
different CPUs rather than having a single request queue.  This can
improve zvol performance with multithreaded reads/writes.

This implementation uses the blk-mq interfaces on 4.13 or newer
kernels.  Building against older kernels will fall back to the
older BIO interfaces.

Note that you must set the `zvol_use_blk_mq` module param to
enable the blk-mq API.  It is disabled by default.

In addition, this commit lets the zvol blk-mq layer process whole
`struct request` IOs at a time, rather than breaking them down
into their individual BIOs.  This reduces dbuf lock contention
and overhead versus the legacy zvol submit_bio() codepath.

	sequential dd to one zvol, 8k volblocksize, no O_DIRECT:

	legacy submit_bio()     292MB/s write  453MB/s read
	this commit             453MB/s write  885MB/s read

It also introduces a new `zvol_blk_mq_chunks_per_thread` module
parameter. This parameter represents how many volblocksize'd chunks
to process per each zvol thread.  It can be used to tune your zvols
for better read vs write performance (higher values favor write,
lower favor read).

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes #13148
Issue #12483
2022-06-09 08:10:38 -06:00
Tino Reichardt
985c33b132
Introduce BLAKE3 checksums as an OpenZFS feature
This commit adds BLAKE3 checksums to OpenZFS, it has similar
performance to Edon-R, but without the caveats around the latter.

Homepage of BLAKE3: https://github.com/BLAKE3-team/BLAKE3
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BLAKE_(hash_function)#BLAKE3

Short description of Wikipedia:

  BLAKE3 is a cryptographic hash function based on Bao and BLAKE2,
  created by Jack O'Connor, Jean-Philippe Aumasson, Samuel Neves, and
  Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn. It was announced on January 9, 2020, at Real
  World Crypto. BLAKE3 is a single algorithm with many desirable
  features (parallelism, XOF, KDF, PRF and MAC), in contrast to BLAKE
  and BLAKE2, which are algorithm families with multiple variants.
  BLAKE3 has a binary tree structure, so it supports a practically
  unlimited degree of parallelism (both SIMD and multithreading) given
  enough input. The official Rust and C implementations are
  dual-licensed as public domain (CC0) and the Apache License.

Along with adding the BLAKE3 hash into the OpenZFS infrastructure a
new benchmarking file called chksum_bench was introduced.  When read
it reports the speed of the available checksum functions.

On Linux: cat /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/chksum_bench
On FreeBSD: sysctl kstat.zfs.misc.chksum_bench

This is an example output of an i3-1005G1 test system with Debian 11:

implementation      1k      4k     16k     64k    256k      1m      4m
edonr-generic     1196    1602    1761    1749    1762    1759    1751
skein-generic      546     591     608     615     619     612     616
sha256-generic     240     300     316     314     304     285     276
sha512-generic     353     441     467     476     472     467     426
blake3-generic     308     313     313     313     312     313     312
blake3-sse2        402    1289    1423    1446    1432    1458    1413
blake3-sse41       427    1470    1625    1704    1679    1607    1629
blake3-avx2        428    1920    3095    3343    3356    3318    3204
blake3-avx512      473    2687    4905    5836    5844    5643    5374

Output on Debian 5.10.0-10-amd64 system: (Ryzen 7 5800X)

implementation      1k      4k     16k     64k    256k      1m      4m
edonr-generic     1840    2458    2665    2719    2711    2723    2693
skein-generic      870     966     996     992    1003    1005    1009
sha256-generic     415     442     453     455     457     457     457
sha512-generic     608     690     711     718     719     720     721
blake3-generic     301     313     311     309     309     310     310
blake3-sse2        343    1865    2124    2188    2180    2181    2186
blake3-sse41       364    2091    2396    2509    2463    2482    2488
blake3-avx2        365    2590    4399    4971    4915    4802    4764

Output on Debian 5.10.0-9-powerpc64le system: (POWER 9)

implementation      1k      4k     16k     64k    256k      1m      4m
edonr-generic     1213    1703    1889    1918    1957    1902    1907
skein-generic      434     492     520     522     511     525     525
sha256-generic     167     183     187     188     188     187     188
sha512-generic     186     216     222     221     225     224     224
blake3-generic     153     152     154     153     151     153     153
blake3-sse2        391    1170    1366    1406    1428    1426    1414
blake3-sse41       352    1049    1212    1174    1262    1258    1259

Output on Debian 5.10.0-11-arm64 system: (Pi400)

implementation      1k      4k     16k     64k    256k      1m      4m
edonr-generic      487     603     629     639     643     641     641
skein-generic      271     299     303     308     309     309     307
sha256-generic     117     127     128     130     130     129     130
sha512-generic     145     165     170     172     173     174     175
blake3-generic      81      29      71      89      89      89      89
blake3-sse2        112     323     368     379     380     371     374
blake3-sse41       101     315     357     368     369     364     360

Structurally, the new code is mainly split into these parts:
- 1x cross platform generic c variant: blake3_generic.c
- 4x assembly for X86-64 (SSE2, SSE4.1, AVX2, AVX512)
- 2x assembly for ARMv8 (NEON converted from SSE2)
- 2x assembly for PPC64-LE (POWER8 converted from SSE2)
- one file for switching between the implementations

Note the PPC64 assembly requires the VSX instruction set and the
kfpu_begin() / kfpu_end() calls on PowerPC were updated accordingly.

Reviewed-by: Felix Dörre <felix@dogcraft.de>
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Co-authored-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes #10058
Closes #12918
2022-06-08 15:55:57 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
4c6526208d Linux 5.19 compat: asm/fpu/internal.h
As of the Linux 5.19 kernel the asm/fpu/internal.h header was
entirely removed.  It has been effectively empty since the 5.16
kernel and provides no required functionality.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13529
2022-06-01 09:59:15 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
91350681b8 Linux 5.19 compat: zap_flags_t conflict
As of the Linux 5.19 kernel an identically named zap_flags_t typedef
is declared in the include/linux/mm_types.h linux header.  Sadly,
the inclusion of this header cannot be easily avoided.  To resolve
the conflict a #define is used to remap the name in the OpenZFS
sources when building against the Linux kernel.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13515
2022-05-31 12:04:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
d41e864181 Linux 5.19 compat: bdev_start_io_acct() / bdev_end_io_acct()
As of the Linux 5.19 kernel the disk_*_io_acct() helper functions
have been replaced by the bdev_*_io_acct() functions.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13515
2022-05-31 12:04:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
e2c31f2bc7 Linux 5.19 compat: bdev_max_secure_erase_sectors()
Linux 5.19 commit torvalds/linux@44abff2c0 removed the
blk_queue_secure_erase() helper function.  The preferred
interface is to now use the bdev_max_secure_erase_sectors()
function to check for discard support.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13515
2022-05-31 12:04:22 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
5e4aedaca7 Linux 5.19 compat: bdev_max_discard_sectors()
Linux 5.19 commit torvalds/linux@70200574cc removed the
blk_queue_discard() helper function.  The preferred interface
is to now use the bdev_max_discard_sectors() function to check
for discard support.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13515
2022-05-31 12:04:17 -07:00
Kevin Jin
152d6fda54
Fix inflated quiesce time caused by lwb_tx during zil_commit()
In current zil_commit() process, transaction lwb_tx is assigned in
zil_lwb_write_issue(), and is committed in zil_lwb_flush_vdevs_done().
Thus, during lwb write out process, the txg is held in open or quiesing
state, until zil_lwb_flush_vdevs_done() is called. If the zil's zio
latency is high, it will cause txg_sync_thread() to starve.

The goal here is to defer waiting for zil_lwb_flush_vdevs_done to the
'syncing' txg state. That is, in zil_sync().

In this patch, it achieves the goal without holding transaction.
A new function zil_lwb_flush_wait_all() is introduced. It waits for
the completion of all the zil_lwb_flush_vdevs_done() by given txg.

Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Prakash Surya <prakash.surya@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: jxdking <lostking2008@hotmail.com>
Closes #12321
2022-05-26 09:36:14 -07:00
Ryan Moeller
b62829295e
Silence unused-but-set-variable warning
This was breaking the kmod port build on FreeBSD with Clang 13.

Use the same trick as we do for ASSERT() to make DNODE_VERIFY() use
its parameter at compile time without actually using it at run time
in non-debug builds.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes #13507
2022-05-25 17:26:59 -07:00
Alexander Motin
6aa8c21a2a
More speculative prefetcher improvements
- Make prefetch distance adaptive: up to 4MB prefetch doubles for
every, hit same as before, but after that it grows by 1/8 every time
the prefetch read does not complete in time to satisfy the demand.
My tests show that 4MB is sufficient for wide NVMe pool to saturate
single reader thread at 2.5GB/s, while new 64MB maximum allows the
same thread to reach 1.5GB/s on wide HDD pool.  Further distance
increase may increase speed even more, but less dramatic and with
higher latency.

 - Allow early reuse of inactive prefetch streams: streams that never
saw hits can be reused immediately if there is a demand, while others
can be reused after 1s of inactivity, starting with the oldest.  After
2s of inactivity streams are deleted to free resources same as before.
This allows by several times increase strided read performance on HDD
pool in presence of simultaneous random reads, previously filling the
zfetch_max_streams limit for seconds and so blocking most of prefetch.

 - Always issue intermediate indirect block reads with SYNC priority.
Each of those reads if delayed for longer may delay up to 1024 other
block prefetches, that may be not good for wide pools.

Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #13452
2022-05-25 10:12:52 -07:00
Rich Ercolani
3bbc26097e
Unbreak zstd build on sparc64
It turns out that wrapping the atomic macro in () breaks build
on Linux/SPARC64. Oops.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes #13506
2022-05-25 09:18:49 -07:00
Alexander Motin
84d0a03f3e
Refactor Log Size Limit
Original Log Size Limit implementation blocked all writes in case of
limit reached until the TXG is committed and the log is freed.  It
caused huge delays and following speed spikes in application writes.

This implementation instead smoothly throttles writes, using exactly
the same mechanism as used for dirty data.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: jxdking <lostking2008@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Issue #12284
Closes #13476
2022-05-24 09:46:35 -07:00
Rich Ercolani
f375b23c02
Tiered early abort, zstd edition
It turns out that "do LZ4 and zstd-1 both fail" is a great heuristic
for "don't even bother trying higher zstd tiers".

By way of illustration:
$ cat /incompress | mbuffer | zfs recv -o compression=zstd-12 evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_normal
summary: 39.8 GiByte in  3min 40.2sec - average of  185 MiB/s
$ echo 3 | sudo tee /sys/module/zzstd/parameters/zstd_lz4_pass
3
$ cat /incompress | mbuffer -m 4G | zfs recv -o compression=zstd-12 evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_patched
summary: 39.8 GiByte in 48.6sec - average of  839 MiB/s
$ sudo zfs list -p -o name,used,lused,ratio evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_normal evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_patched
NAME                                         USED        LUSED  RATIO
evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_normal   39549931520  42721221632   1.08
evenfaster/lowcomp_1M_zstd12_patched  39626399744  42721217536   1.07
$ python3 -c "print(39626399744 - 39549931520)"
76468224
$

I'll take 76 MB out of 42 GB for > 4x speedup.

Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Kjeld Schouten <kjeld@schouten-lebbing.nl>
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes #13244
2022-05-24 09:43:22 -07:00
наб
2b4f2fc93c libzfs: return (allocated) strings instead of filling buffers
This also expands the zfs version output from 127 characters to However
Many Are Actually Set

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13330
2022-05-18 12:52:10 -07:00
наб
38f4d99f76 linux: libzfs: simplify module-loaded check
The short-path is now one access() call,
we always modprobe zfs (ZFS_MODULE_LOADING which doesn't use the libzfs
boolean parsing is gone),
and we use a simple inotify IN_CREATE loop with a timerfd timeout
rather than 10ms kernel-style polling

There's one substantial difference: ZFS_MODULE_TIMEOUT=-1
now means "never give up", rather than "wait 10 minutes"

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13330
2022-05-18 12:51:42 -07:00
наб
6b575417e2 libspl/include: remove unused/empty headers
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13447
2022-05-18 12:10:43 -07:00
Andrew
00ac77464e
Expose zpool guids through kstats
There are times when end-users may wish to have
a fast and convenient method to get zpool guid
without having to use libzfs. This commit
exposes the zpool guid via kstats in similar
manner to the zpool state.

Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Walker <awalker@ixsystems.com>
Closes #13466
2022-05-18 10:25:33 -07:00
наб
5ac80603bd libzfs: constify zfs_strip_partition(), zfs_strip_path()
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13413
2022-05-16 15:56:53 -07:00
наб
c25b281378 Remove hw_serial, ddi_strtoul()
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13434
2022-05-13 10:15:31 -07:00
наб
b4d9a82f62 Replace libzfs sharing _nfs() and _smb() APIs with protocol lists
With the additional benefit of removing all the _all() functions and
treating a NULL list as "all" ‒ the remaining all function is for all
/datasets/, which is consistent with the rest of the API

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13165
2022-05-12 09:26:42 -07:00
наб
09a7ad38a5 autoconf: single-step includes
Still descend, but only once: we get a lot of mileage out of nodist_

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13316
2022-05-10 10:18:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
34dbc618f5
Reduce dbuf_find() lock contention
Holding a dbuf is a common operation which can become highly contended
in dbuf_find() when acquiring the dbuf hash mutex.  This is particularly
true on Linux when reading/writing volumes since by default up to 32
threads from the zvol_taskq may be taking a hold of the same dbuf.
This should also be observable on FreeBSD as long as there are enough
processes accessing the volume concurrently.

This is further aggregrated by the fact that only the block id will
be unique when calculating the dbuf hash for a single volume.  The
objset id, object id, and level will be the same for data blocks.
This has been observed to result in a somehwat less than uniform hash
distribution and a longer than expected max hash chain depth (~20)
on a large memory system (256 GB) using volumes.

This commit improves the siutation by switching the hash mutex to
an rwlock to allow concurrent lookups, and increasing DBUF_RWLOCKS
from 2048 to 8192 to further reduce the odds of a hash collision.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13405
2022-05-04 11:17:29 -07:00
Shaan Nobee
411f4a018d
Speed up WB_SYNC_NONE when a WB_SYNC_ALL occurs simultaneously
Page writebacks with WB_SYNC_NONE can take several seconds to complete 
since they wait for the transaction group to close before being 
committed. This is usually not a problem since the caller does not 
need to wait. However, if we're simultaneously doing a writeback 
with WB_SYNC_ALL (e.g via msync), the latter can block for several 
seconds (up to zfs_txg_timeout) due to the active WB_SYNC_NONE 
writeback since it needs to wait for the transaction to complete 
and the PG_writeback bit to be cleared.

This commit deals with 2 cases:

- No page writeback is active. A WB_SYNC_ALL page writeback starts 
  and even completes. But when it's about to check if the PG_writeback 
  bit has been cleared, another writeback with WB_SYNC_NONE starts. 
  The sync page writeback ends up waiting for the non-sync page 
  writeback to complete.

- A page writeback with WB_SYNC_NONE is already active when a 
  WB_SYNC_ALL writeback starts. The WB_SYNC_ALL writeback ends up 
  waiting for the WB_SYNC_NONE writeback.

The fix works by carefully keeping track of active sync/non-sync 
writebacks and committing when beneficial.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Shaan Nobee <sniper111@gmail.com>
Closes #12662
Closes #12790
2022-05-03 13:23:26 -07:00
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
a64d757aa4
FreeBSD: Clean up the use of ioflags
- Prefer O_* flags over F* flags that mostly mirror O_* flags anyway,
  but O_* flags seem to be preferred.
- Simplify the code as all the F*SYNC flags were defined as FFSYNC flag.
- Don't define FRSYNC flag, so we don't generate unnecessary ZIL commits.
- Remove EXCL define, FreeBSD ignores the excl argument for zfs_create()
  anyway.

Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pawel@dawidek.net>
Closes #13400
2022-05-02 16:26:28 -07:00
Alexander Motin
600a02b884
Improve log spacemap load time
Previous flushing algorithm limited only total number of log blocks to
the minimum of 256K and 4x number of metaslabs in the pool.  As result,
system with 1500 disks with 1000 metaslabs each, touching several new
metaslabs each TXG could grow spacemap log to huge size without much
benefits.  We've observed one of such systems importing pool for about
45 minutes.

This patch improves the situation from five sides:
 - By limiting maximum period for each metaslab to be flushed to 1000
TXGs, that effectively limits maximum number of per-TXG spacemap logs
to load to the same number.
 - By making flushing more smooth via accounting number of metaslabs
that were touched after the last flush and actually need another flush,
not just ms_unflushed_txg bump.
 - By applying zfs_unflushed_log_block_pct to the number of metaslabs
that were touched after the last flush, not all metaslabs in the pool.
 - By aggressively prefetching per-TXG spacemap logs up to 16 TXGs in
advance, making log spacemap load process for wide HDD pool CPU-bound,
accelerating it by many times.
 - By reducing zfs_unflushed_log_block_max from 256K to 128K, reducing
single-threaded by nature log processing time from ~10 to ~5 minutes.

As further optimization we could skip bumping ms_unflushed_txg for
metaslabs not touched since the last flush, but that would be an
incompatible change, requiring new pool feature.

Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes #12789
2022-04-26 10:44:21 -07:00
George Amanakis
0409d33273
Improve zpool status output, list all affected datasets
Currently, determining which datasets are affected by corruption is
a manual process.

The primary difficulty in reporting the list of affected snapshots is
that since the error was initially found, the snapshot where the error
originally occurred in, may have been deleted. To solve this issue, we
add the ID of the head dataset of the original snapshot which the error
was detected in, to the stored error report. Then any time a filesystem
is deleted, the errors associated with it are deleted as well. Any time
a clone promote occurs, we modify reports associated with the original
head to refer to the new head. The stored error reports are identified
by this head ID, the birth time of the block which the error occurred
in, as well as some information about the error itself are also stored.

Once this information is stored, we can find the set of datasets
affected by an error by walking back the list of snapshots in the given
head until we find one with the appropriate birth txg, and then traverse
through the snapshots of the clone family, terminating a branch if the
block was replaced in a given snapshot. Then we report this information
back to libzfs, and to the zpool status command, where it is displayed
as follows:

 pool: test
 state: ONLINE
status: One or more devices has experienced an error resulting in data
        corruption.  Applications may be affected.
action: Restore the file in question if possible.  Otherwise restore the
        entire pool from backup.
   see: https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/msg/ZFS-8000-8A
  scan: scrub repaired 0B in 00:00:00 with 800 errors on Fri Dec  3
08:27:57 2021
config:

        NAME        STATE     READ WRITE CKSUM
        test        ONLINE       0     0     0
          sdb       ONLINE       0     0 1.58K

errors: Permanent errors have been detected in the following files:

        test@1:/test.0.0
        /test/test.0.0
        /test/1clone/test.0.0

A new feature flag is introduced to mark the presence of this change, as
well as promotion and backwards compatibility logic. This is an updated
version of #9175. Rebase required fixing the tests, updating the ABI of
libzfs, updating the man pages, fixing bugs, fixing the error returns,
and updating the old on-disk error logs to the new format when
activating the feature.

Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: TulsiJain <tulsi.jain@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes #9175
Closes #12812
2022-04-25 17:25:42 -07:00
наб
ad9e767657 linux: module: weld all but spl.ko into zfs.ko
Originally it was thought it would be useful to split up the kmods
by functionality.  This would allow external consumers to only load
what was needed.  However, in practice we've never had a case where
this functionality would be needed, and conversely managing multiple
kmods can be awkward.  Therefore, this change merges all but the
spl.ko kmod in to a single zfs.ko kmod.

Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes #13274
2022-04-20 13:28:24 -07:00
Mark Johnston
e9084d0712 FreeBSD: Parameterize ZFS_ENTER/ZFS_VERIFY_VP with an error code
For legacy reasons, a couple of VOPs have to return error numbers that
don't come from the usual errno namespace.  To handle the cases where
ZFS_ENTER or ZFS_VERIFY_ZP fail, we need to be able to override the
default error return value of EIO.  Extend the macros to permit this.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes #13311
2022-04-13 09:42:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf
460748d4ae
Switch from _Noreturn to __attribute__((noreturn))
Parts of the Linux kernel build system struggle with _Noreturn.  This
results in the following warnings when building on RHEL 8.5, and likely
other environments.  Switch to using the __attribute__((noreturn)).

  warning: objtool: dbuf_free_range()+0x2b8:
    return with modified stack frame
  warning: objtool: dbuf_free_range()+0x0:
    stack state mismatch: cfa1=7+40 cfa2=7+8
  ...
  WARNING: EXPORT symbol "arc_buf_size" [zfs.ko] version generation
    failed, symbol will not be versioned.
  WARNING: EXPORT symbol "spa_open" [zfs.ko] version generation
    failed, symbol will not be versioned.
  ...

Additionally, __thread_exit() has been renamed spl_thread_exit() and
made a static inline function.  This was needed because the kernel
will generate a warning for symbols which are __attribute__((noreturn))
and then exported with EXPORT_SYMBOL.

While we could continue to use _Noreturn in user space I've also
switched it to __attribute__((noreturn)) purely for consistency
throughout the code base.

Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #13238
2022-03-23 08:51:00 -07:00