Linux 6.2 changes the second argument of the set_acl operation to be a
"struct dentry *" rather than a "struct inode *". The inode* parameter
is still available as dentry->d_inode, so adjust the call to the _impl
function call to dereference and pass that pointer to it.
Also document that the get_acl -> get_inode_acl member name change from
commit 884a693 was an API change also introduced in Linux 6.2.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Coleman Kane <ckane@colemankane.org>
Closes#14415
d_alias may need to be converted to du.d_alias
depending on the kernel version.
d_alias is currently in only one place in the code which
changes
"hlist_for_each_entry(dentry, &inode->i_dentry, d_alias)"
to
"hlist_for_each_entry(dentry, &inode->i_dentry, d_u.d_alias)"
as neccesary.
This effectively results in a double macro expansion
for code that uses the zfs headers but already has its
own macro for just d_alias (lustre in this case).
Remove the conditional code for hlist_for_each_entry
and have a macro for "d_alias -> du.d_alias" instead.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gian-Carlo DeFazio <defazio1@llnl.gov>
Closes#14377
There is an external assembly declaration extension in GNU C that glibc
uses when building with ieee128 floating point support on ppc64le.
Marking that as volatile makes no sense, so the build breaks.
It does not make sense to only mark this as volatile on Linux, since if
do not want the compiler reordering things on Linux, we do not want the
compiler reordering things on any other platform, so we stop treating
Linux specially and just manually inline the CPP macro so that we can
eliminate it. This should fix the build on ppc64le.
Tested-by: @gyakovlev
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14308Closes#14384
If a user that uses systemd and dracut wants to overide certain
settings, they typically use `systemctl edit [unit]` or place a file in
`/etc/systemd/system/[unit].d/override.conf` directly.
The zfs-dracut module did not include those overrides however, so this
did not have any effect at boot time.
For zfs-import-scan.service and zfs-import-cache.service, overrides are
now included in the dracut initramfs image.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Vince van Oosten <techhazard@codeforyouand.me>
Closes#14075Closes#14076
Authored by: Dan McDonald <danmcd@mnx.io>
Reviewed by: Patrick Mooney <pmooney@pfmooney.com>
Reviewed by: Richard Lowe <richlowe@richlowe.net>
Approved by: Joshua M. Clulow <josh@sysmgr.org>
Ported-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Illumos-issue: https://www.illumos.org/issues/15286
Illumos-commit: https://github.com/illumos/illumos-gate/commit/f137b22e734e85642da3e56e8b94da3f5f027c73
Porting Notes:
The patch in illumos did not have much of a commit message, and did not
provide attribution to the reporter, while original patch proposed to
OpenZFS did, so I am listing the reporter (myself) and original patch
author (also myself) below while including the original commit message
with some minor corrections as part of the porting notes:
In do_composition(), we have:
size = u8_number_of_bytes[*p];
if (size <= 1 || (p + size) > oslast)
break;
There, we have type promotion from int8_t to size_t, which is unsigned.
C will sign extend the value as part of the widening before treating the
value as unsigned and the negative values we can counter are error
values from U8_ILLEGAL_CHAR and U8_OUT_OF_RANGE_CHAR, which are -1 and
-2 respectively. The unsigned versions of these under two's complement
are SIZE_MAX and SIZE_MAX-1 respectively.
The bounds check is written under the assumption that `size <= 1` does a
signed comparison. This is followed by a pointer comparison to see if
the string has the correct length, which is fine.
A little further down we have:
for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
tc[i] = *p++;
When an error condition is encountered, this will attempt to iterate at
least SIZE_MAX-1 times, which will massively overflow the buffer, which
is not fine.
The kernel will kill the loop as soon as it hits the kernel stack guard
on Linux systems built with CONFIG_VMAP_STACK=y, which should be just
about all of them. That prevents arbitrary code execution and just about
any other bad thing that a black hat attacker might attempt with
knowledge of this buffer overflow. Other systems' kernels have
mitigations for unbounded in-kernel buffer overflows that will catch
this too.
Also, the patch in illumos-gate made an effort to fix C style issues
that had been fixed in the OpenZFS/ZFSOnLinux repository. Those issues
had been mentioned in the email that I originally sent them about this
issue. One of the fixes had not been already done, so it is included.
Another to collect_a_seq()'s arguments was handled differently in
OpenZFS. For the sake of avoiding unnecessary differences, it has been
adopted. This has the interesting effect that if you correct the paths
in the illumos-gate patch to match the current OpenZFS repository, you
can reverse apply it cleanly.
Original-patch-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reported-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Co-authored-by: Dan McDonald <danmcd@mnx.io>
Closes#14318Closes#14342
The 22.0 release of the python `packaging` package removed the
`LegacyVersion` trait, causing ZFS to no longer compile.
This commit replaces the sections of `ax_python_dev.m4` that rely on
`LegacyVersion` with updated implementations from the upstream
`autoconf-archive`.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#14297
- Update the link to the OpenZFS Code of Conduct.
- Remove extra "the" from contrib/initramfs/scripts/zfs
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#14298Closes#14307
This adds support to color zfs diff (in the style of git diff)
conditional on the ZFS_COLOR environment variable.
Signed-off-by: Ethan Coe-Renner <coerenner1@llnl.gov>
Outgoing mails for ZFS pool events include the pool GUID,
but not the actual pool name. Let's change this for better
readability, as it is already done in the mails for finished
pool resilvers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Marcel Menzel <mail@mcl.gg>
Closes#14272
When inside a jail, visibility on datasets not "jailed" to the
jail is restricted. However, it was possible to enumerate all
datasets in the pool by looking at the kstats sysctl MIB.
Only the kstats corresponding to datasets that the user has
visibility on are accessible now.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Closes#14254
If the bp is NULL, we have a hole. However, when we build with
assertions, we will dereference bp when `blkid == DMU_SPILL_BLKID`. When
this happens on a hole, we will have a NULL pointer dereference.
Reported-by: Coverity (CID-1524670)
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14264
The ZPOOL_SCRIPTS_PATH environment variable can be passed here. This
allows for arbitrarily long strings to be passed to sprintf(), which can
overflow the buffer.
I missed this in my earlier audit of the codebase. CodeQL's
cpp/unbounded-write check caught this.
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14264
I read the following article and noticed a couple of ZFS bugs mentioned:
https://pvs-studio.com/en/blog/posts/cpp/0377/
I decided to search for them in the modern OpenZFS codebase and then
found one that matched the description of the first one:
V593 Consider reviewing the expression of the 'A = B != C' kind. The
expression is calculated as following: 'A = (B != C)'. zfs_vfsops.c 498
The consequence of this is that the error value is replaced with `1`
when there is an error. When there is no error, 0 is correctly passed.
This is a very minor issue that is unlikely to cause any real problems.
The incorrect error code would either be returned to the mount command
on a failure or any of `zfs receive`, `zfs recv`, `zfs rollback` or `zfs
upgrade`.
The second one has already been fixed.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14261
Encrypted blocks can have up to 2 DVA's, as the third DVA is reserved
for the salt+IV. However, dmu_write_policy() allows non-encrypted
blocks (e.g. DMU_OT_OBJSET) inside encrypted datasets to request and
allocate 3 DVA's, since they don't need a salt+IV (they are merely
authenicated).
However, if such a block becomes a gang block, the gang code incorrectly
limits the gang block header to 2 DVA's. This leads to a "NDVAs
inversion", where a parent block (the gang block header) has less DVA's
than its children (the gang members), causing an assertion failure in
zio_write_gang_member_ready().
This commit addresses the problem by only restricting the gang block
header to 2 DVA's if the block is actually encrypted (and thus its gang
block members can have at most 2 DVA's).
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Closes#14250Closes#14356
Currently, if API tests fail, we either ignore the failures, or
unconditionally halt the kernel build. This leads to situations where
incompatibilities with existing APIs may develop, but not trip the
configure compatibility checks.
This introduces a new mechanism to require APIs for kernels above a
particular version. While not perfect, this at least guarantees
mainline kernels do not break existing APIs without at least providing
some warning.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Closes#14343
The bi_rw member of struct bio was renamed to bi_opf in Linux 6.2.
As well, Linux's implementation of bio_set_op_attrs(...) has been
removed.
The HAVE_BIO_BI_OPF macro already appears to be defined, but the
removal of the bio_set_op_attrs(...) implementation makes the build
fall back on the locally-defined implementation, which isn't updated
for the bio->bi_opf change. This commit adds that update.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Coleman Kane <ckane@colemankane.org>
Closes#14324Closes#14331
commit d27c81847b upstream
Linux 863f144 modified the .tmpfile interface to pass a struct file,
rather than a struct dentry, and expect the tmpfile implementation to
open inside of tmpfile().
This patch implements a configuration test that checks for this new API
and appropriately sets a HAVE_TMPFILE_DENTRY flag that tracks this old
API. Contingent on this flag, the appropriate API is implemented.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Closes#14301Closes#14343
commit a7304ab9c1 upstream
mmapwrite is used during the ZTS to identify issues with mmap-ed files.
This helper program exercises this pathway by continuously writing to a
file. ee6bf97c7 modified the writing threads to terminate after a set
amount of total data is written. This change allows standard program
execution to reach the end of a writer thread without closing the file
descriptor, introducing a resource "leak."
This patch appeases resource leak analyses by close()-ing the file at
the end of the thread.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Closes#14353
commit ee6bf97c77 upstream
mmapwrite spawns several threads, all of which perform writes on a file
for the purpose of testing the behavior of mmap(2)-ed files. One
thread performs an mmap and a write to the beginning of that region,
while the others perform regular writes after lseek(2)-ing the end of
the file.
Because these regular writes are set in a while (1) loop, they will
write an unbounded amount of data to disk. The mmap_write_001_pos test
script SIGKILLs them after 30 seconds, but on fast testbeds, this may
be enough time to exhaust the available space in the filesystem,
leading to spurious test failures.
Instead, limit the total file size by checking that the lseek return
value is no greater than 250 * 1024*1024 bytes, which is less than the
default minimum vdev size defined in includes/default.cfg .
This also includes part of 2a493a4c71,
which checks the return value of lseek.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Russo <aerusso@aerusso.net>
Closes#14277Closes#14345
zfs_zaccess_trivial() calls the generic_permission() to read
xattr attributes. This causes deadlock if called from
zpl_xattr_set_dir() context as xattr and the dent locks are
already held in this scenario. This commit skips the permissions
checks for extended attributes since the Linux VFS stack already
checks it before passing us the control.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Currently, the receiver fails to override the encryption
property for the plain replicated dataset with the error:
"cannot receive incremental stream: encryption property
'encryption' cannot be set for incremental streams.". The
problem is resolved by allowing the receiver to override
the encryption property for plain replicated send.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
If the attached disk already contains a vdev GUID, it
means the disk is not clean. In such a scenario, the
physical path would be a match that makes the disk
faulted when trying to online it. So, we would only
want to proceed if either GUID matches with the last
attached disk or the disk is in a clean state.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
vdev_geom_read_pool_label() can leave NULL in configs. Check for it
and skip consistently when generating rootconf.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#14291
(cherry picked from commit dc8c2f6158)
Linux has an unresolved hang if you resize a pipe with bytes
in it.
Since there's no obvious way to detect this happening, added a
workaround to disable resizing the pipe buffer if you set an
environment variable.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#13309
Legacy mountpoint datasets should not pass `-o zfsutil` to `mount.zfs`.
Fix the logic in `mount_fs()` to not forget we have a legacy mountpoint
when checking for an `org.zol:mountpoint` userprop.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#14274
(cherry picked from commit 786ff6a6cb)
The zfs-2.1.7 branch is still using the older 'python-dev'
package names rather than the newer 'python3-dev' packages that
are required for 'ubuntu-latest'. Use 'ubuntu-20.04' instead of
'ubuntu-latest' to get around this.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
We are not allowed to dirty a filesystem when done receiving
a snapshot. In this case the flag SPA_FEATURE_LARGE_BLOCKS will
not be set on that filesystem since the filesystem is not on
dp_dirty_datasets, and a subsequent encrypted raw send will fail.
Fix this by checking in dsl_dataset_snapshot_sync_impl() if the feature
needs to be activated and do so if appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#13699Closes#13782
When local properties (e.g., from -o and -x) are provided, don't leak
the packed representation of the received properties due to variable
reuse.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brooks Davis <brooks.davis@sri.com>
Closes#14197
When ZFS is built with assertions, a prefetch is done on a redacted
blkptr and `dpa->dpa_dnode` is NULL, we will have a NULL pointer
dereference in `dbuf_prefetch_indirect_done()`.
Both Coverity and Clang's Static Analyzer caught this.
Reported-by: Coverity (CID 1524671)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14210
The port of lua to OpenZFS modified lua to use int64_t for numbers
instead of double. As part of this, a function for calculating
exponentiation was replaced with a bit shift. Unfortunately, it did not
handle negative values. Also, it only supported exponents numbers with
7 digits before before overflow. This supports exponents up to 15 digits
before overflow.
Clang's static analyzer reported this as "Result of operation is garbage
or undefined" because the exponent was negative.
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14204
```
os/linux/zfs/zvol_os.c:1111:3: error: ignoring return value of function
declared with 'warn_unused_result' attribute [-Werror,-Wunused-result]
add_disk(zv->zv_zso->zvo_disk);
^~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
zpl_xattr.c:1579:1: warning: no previous prototype for function
'zpl_posix_acl_release_impl' [-Wmissing-prototypes]
```
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: szubersk <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Closes#13551
(cherry picked from commit 9884319666)
In #13709, as in #11294 before it, it turns out that 63a26454 still had
the same failure mode as when it was first landed as d1d47691, and
fails to unlock certain datasets that formerly worked.
Rather than reverting it again, let's add handling to just throw out
the accounting metadata that failed to unlock when that happens, as
well as a test with a pre-broken pool image to ensure that we never get
bitten by this again.
Fixes: #13709
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
The original ARC paper called for an initial 50/50 MRU/MFU split
and this is accounted in various places where arc_p = arc_c >> 1,
with further adjustment based on ghost lists size/hit. However, in
current code both arc_adapt() and arc_get_data_impl() aggressively
grow arc_p until arc_c is reached, causing unneeded pressure on
MFU and greatly reducing its scan-resistance until ghost list
adjustments kick in.
This patch restores the original behavior of initially having arc_p
as 1/2 of total ARC, without preventing MRU to use up to 100% total
ARC when MFU is empty.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#14137Closes#14120
There is an off by 1 error in the check. Fortunately, this function does
not appear to be used in kernel space, despite being compiled as part of
the kernel module. However, it is used in userspace. Callers of
lzc_ioctl_fd() likely will crash if they attempt to use the
unimplemented request number.
This was reported by FreeBSD's coverity scan.
Reported-by: Coverity (CID 1432059)
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14135
Some of our customers have been occasionally hitting zfs import failures
in Linux because udevd doesn't create the by-id symbolic links in time
for zpool import to use them. The main issue is that the
systemd-udev-settle.service that zfs-import-cache.service and other
services depend on is racy. There is also an openzfs issue filed (see
https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/10891) outlining the problem and
potential solutions.
With the proper solutions being significant in terms of complexity and
the priority of the issue being low for the time being, this patch
exposes `zfs_vdev_open_timeout_ms` as a tunable so people that are
experiencing this issue often can increase it as a workaround.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Closes#14133
This fixes -Wsingle-bit-bitfield-constant-conversion warning from
clang-16 like:
lib/libzfs/libzfs_dataset.c:4529:19: error: implicit truncation
from 'int' to a one-bit wide bit-field changes value from
1 to -1 [-Werror,-Wsingle-bit-bitfield-constant-conversion]
flags.nounmount = B_TRUE;
^ ~~~~~~
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Brooks Davis <brooks.davis@sri.com>
Closes#14125
* The complaint in ztest_replay_write() is only possible if something
went horribly wrong. An assertion will silence this and if it goes
off, we will know that something is wrong.
* The complaint in spa_estimate_metaslabs_to_flush() is not impossible,
but seems very unlikely. We resolve this by passing the value from
the `MIN()` that does not go to infinity when the variable is zero.
There was a third report from Clang's scan-build, but that was a
definite false positive and disappeared when checked again through
Clang's static analyzer with Z3 refution via CodeChecker.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14124
CodeQL reported that when the VERIFY3U condition is false, we do not
pass enough arguments to `spl_panic()`. This is because the format
string from `snprintf()` was concatenated into the format string for
`spl_panic()`, which causes us to have an unexpected format specifier.
A CodeQL developer suggested fixing the macro to have a `%s` format
string that takes a stringified RIGHT argument, which would fix this.
However, upon inspection, the VERIFY3U check was never necessary in the
first place, so we remove it in favor of just calling `snprintf()`.
Lastly, it is interesting that every other static analyzer run on the
codebase did not catch this, including some that made an effort to catch
such things. Presumably, all of them relied on header annotations, which
we have not yet done on `spl_panic()`. CodeQL apparently is able to
track the flow of arguments on their way to annotated functions, which
llowed it to catch this when others did not. A future patch that I have
in development should annotate `spl_panic()`, so the others will catch
this too.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14098
Open files, which aren't present in the snapshot, which is being
roll-backed to, need to disappear from the visible VFS image of
the dataset.
Kernel provides d_drop function to drop invalid entry from
the dcache, but inode can be referenced by dentry multiple dentries.
The introduced zpl_d_drop_aliases function walks and invalidates
all aliases of an inode.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Closes#9600Closes#14070
Clang's static analyzer complains about this.
In get_configs(), if we have an invalid configuration that has no top
level vdevs, we can read a couple of uninitialized variables. Aborting
upon seeing this would break the userland tools for healthy pools, so we
instead initialize the two variables to 0 to allow the userland tools to
continue functioning for the pools with valid configurations.
In zfs_do_wait(), if no wait activities are enabled, we read an
uninitialized error variable.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14043
If we encounter an EXDEV error when using the redacted snapshots
feature, the memory used by dspp.fromredactsnaps is leaked.
Clang's static analyzer caught this during an experiment in which I had
annotated various headers in an attempt to improve the results of static
analysis.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13973
If mechanism->cm_param is NULL, passing mechanism to
PROV_SHA2_GET_DIGEST_LEN() will dereference a NULL pointer.
Coverity reported this.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14044
Calling spa_open() will pass a NULL pointer to spa_open_common()'s
config parameter. Under the right circumstances, we will dereference the
config parameter without doing a NULL check.
Clang's static analyzer found this.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14044
Clang's static analyzer pointed out that whenever zap_lookup_by_dnode()
is called, we have the following stack where strlcpy() is passed a NULL
pointer for realname from zap_lookup_by_dnode():
strlcpy()
zap_lookup_impl()
zap_lookup_norm_by_dnode()
zap_lookup_by_dnode()
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14044
Clang's static analyzer complained that we dereference a NULL pointer in
dump_path() if we return 0 when there is an error.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14044
Coverity complained about a couple of uninitialized value reads in ZED.
* zfs_deliver_dle() can pass an uninitialized string to zed_log_msg()
* An uninitialized sev.sigev_signo is passed to timer_create()
The former would log garbage while the latter is not a real issue, but
we might as well suppress it by initializing the field to 0 for
consistency's sake.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14047
Out of the 12 defects in lua that coverity reports, 5 of them involve
`lua_typename()` and out of the dozens of defects in ZFS that lua
reports, 3 of them involve `lua_typename()` due to the ZCP code. Given
all of the uses of `lua_typename()` in the ZCP code, I was surprised
that there were not more. It appears that only 2 were reported because
only 3 called `lua_type()`, which does a defective sanity check that
allows invalid types to be passed.
lua/lua@d4fb848be7 addressed this in
upstream lua 5.3. Unfortunately, we did not get that fix since we use
lua 5.2 and we do not have assertions enabled in lua, so the upstream
solution would not do anything.
While we could adopt the upstream solution and enable assertions, a
simpler solution is to fix the issue by making `lua_typename()` return
`internal_type_error` whenever it is called with an invalid type. This
avoids the array overflow and if we ever see it appear somewhere, we
will know there is a problem with the lua interpreter.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13947
Users are allowed to pass NULL to resultp, but we unconditionally assume
that they never do. When an external user does pass NULL to resultp, we
dereference a NULL pointer.
Clang's static analyzer complained about this.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14008
This is a portability issue. The issue had already been fixed for
scripts/cstyle.pl by 2dbf1bf829.
scripts/enum-extract.pl was added to the repository the following year
without this portability fix.
Michael Bishop informed me that this broke his attempt to build ZFS
2.1.6 on NixOS, since he was building manually outside of their package
manager (that usually rewrites the shebangs to NixOS' unusual paths).
NixOS puts all of the paths into $PATH, so scripts that portably rely
on env to find the interpreter still work.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14012
9a49c6b782 was intended to fix this issue,
but I had missed the case in pam_sm_open_session(). Clang's static
analyzer had not reported it and I forgot to look for other cases.
Interestingly, GCC gcc-12.1.1_p20220625's static analyzer had caught
this as multiple double-free bugs, since another failure after the
failure in zfs_key_config_load() will cause us to attempt to free the
memory that zfs_key_config_load() was supposed to allocate, but had
cleaned up upon failure.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13978
If the `list_head()` returns NULL, we dereference it, right before we
check to see if it returned NULL.
We have defined two different pointers that both point to the same
thing, which are `origin_head` and `origin_ds`. Almost everything uses
`origin_ds`, so we switch them to use `origin_ds`.
We also promote `origin_ds` to a const pointer so that the compiler
verifies that nothing modifies it.
Coverity complained about this.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13967
82226e4f44 was intended to prevent a
warning from being printed in situations where it was inappropriate, but
accidentally disabled it entirely by setting featureflags in the wrong
case statement.
Coverity reported this as dead code.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13946
Clang's static analyzer found that config.uid is uninitialized when
zfs_key_config_load() returns an error.
Oddly, this was not included in the unchecked return values that
Coverity found.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13957
A comment says that the caller should free k_out, but the pointer passed
via k_out is not the same pointer we received from strdup(). Instead,
it is a pointer into the region we received from strdup(). The free
function should always be called with the original pointer, so this is
likely a bug.
We solve this by calling `strdup()` a second time and then freeing the
original pointer.
Coverity reported this as a memory leak.
Reviewed-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13867
Commit ecd6cf800b63704be73fb264c3f5b6e0dafc068d by marks in OpenSolaris
at Tue Jun 26 07:44:24 2007 -0700 introduced a bug where we fail to call
`va_end()` before returning.
The man page for va_start() says:
"Each invocation of va_start() must be matched by a corresponding
invocation of va_end() in the same function."
Coverity complained about this.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Chunwei Chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13904
Coverity reported that we pass a pointer to zfsvfs to
`dmu_objset_disown()` after freeing zfsvfs in zfsvfs_create_impl() after
a failure in zfsvfs_init().
We have nearly identical duplicate versions of this code for FreeBSD and
Linux, but interestingly, the FreeBSD version of this code differs in
such a way that it does not suffer from this bug. We remove the
difference from the FreeBSD version to fix this bug.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13883
These were reported by Coverity as "Read from pointer after free" bugs.
Presumably, it did not report it as a use-after-free bug because it does
not understand the inline assembly that implements the atomic
instruction.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13881
We inherited membar_consumer() and membar_producer() from OpenSolaris,
but we had replaced membar_consumer() with Linux's smp_rmb() in
zfs_ioctl.c. The FreeBSD SPL consequently implemented a shim for the
Linux-only smp_rmb().
We reinstate membar_consumer() in platform independent code and fix the
FreeBSD SPL to implement membar_consumer() in a way analogous to Linux.
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Belousov <kib@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13843
Currently, only Blake3 x86 Asm code has signs of being ENDBR-aware.
At least, under certain conditions it includes some header file and
uses some custom macro from there.
Linux has its own NOENDBR since several releases ago. It's defined
in the same <asm/linkage.h>, so currently <sys/asm_linkage.h>
already is provided with it.
Let's unify those two into one %ENDBR macro. At first, check if it's
present already. If so -- use Linux kernel version. Otherwise, try
to go that second way and use %_CET_ENDBR from <cet.h> if available.
If no, fall back to just empty definition.
This fixes a couple more 'relocations to !ENDBR' across the module.
And now that we always have the latest/actual ENDBR definition, use
it at the entrance of the few corresponding functions that objtool
still complains about. This matches the way how it's used in the
upstream x86 core Asm code.
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Lobakin <alobakin@pm.me>
Closes#14035
objtool properly complains that it can't decode some of the
instructions from ICP x86 Asm code. As mentioned in the Makefile,
where those object files were excluded from objtool check (but they
can still be visible under IBT and LTO), those are just constants,
not code.
In that case, they must be placed in .rodata, so they won't be
marked as "allocatable, executable" (ax) in EFL headers and this
effectively prevents objtool from trying to decode this data. That
reveals a whole bunch of other issues in ICP Asm code, as previously
objtool was bailing out after that warning message.
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Lobakin <alobakin@pm.me>
Closes#14035
Conflicts:
module/Kbuild.in
Commit 43569ee374 ("Fix objtool: missing int3 after ret warning")
addressed replacing all `ret`s in x86 asm code to a macro in the
Linux kernel in order to enable SLS. That was done by copying the
upstream macro definitions and fixed objtool complaints.
Since then, several more mitigations were introduced, including
Rethunk. It requires to have a jump to one of the thunks in order
to work, so the RET macro was changed again. And, as ZFS code
didn't use the mainline defition, but copied it, this is currently
missing.
Objtool reminds about it time to time (Clang 16, CONFIG_RETHUNK=y):
fs/zfs/lua/zlua.o: warning: objtool: setjmp+0x25: 'naked' return
found in RETHUNK build
fs/zfs/lua/zlua.o: warning: objtool: longjmp+0x27: 'naked' return
found in RETHUNK build
Do it the following way:
* if we're building under Linux, unconditionally include
<linux/linkage.h> in the related files. It is available in x86
sources since even pre-2.6 times, so doesn't need any conftests;
* then, if RET macro is available, it will be used directly, so that
we will always have the version actual to the kernel we build;
* if there's no such macro, we define it as a simple `ret`, as it
was on pre-SLS times.
This ensures we always have the up-to-date definition with no need
to update it manually, and at the same time is safe for the whole
variety of kernels ZFS module supports.
Then, there's a couple more "naked" rets left in the code, they're
just defined as:
.byte 0xf3,0xc3
In fact, this is just:
rep ret
`rep ret` instead of just `ret` seems to mitigate performance issues
on some old AMD processors and most likely makes no sense as of
today.
Anyways, address those rets, so that they will be protected with
Rethunk and SLS. Include <sys/asm_linkage.h> here which now always
has RET definition and replace those constructs with just RET.
This wipes the last couple of places with unpatched rets objtool's
been complaining about.
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Lobakin <alobakin@pm.me>
Closes#14035
User props trigger an assert in zfs_prop_inheritable(), we must check
if the prop is a user prop first.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Backported as snippit from:
63652e1 Add --enable-asan and --enable-ubsan switches
zed aborts and dumps core in vdev_whole_disk_from_config() if
wholedisk property does not exist. make_leaf_vdev() adds the
property but there may be already pools that don't have the
wholedisk in the label.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#14062
Commit 68ddc06b61 introduced support
for receiving unencrypted datasets as children of encrypted ones but
unfortunately got the logic upside down. This resulted in failing to
deny receives of incremental sends into encrypted datasets without
their keys loaded. If receiving a filesystem, the receive was done
into a newly created unencrypted child dataset of the target. In
case of volumes the receive made the target volume undeletable since
a dataset was created below it, which we obviously can't handle.
Incremental streams with embedded blocks are affected as well.
We fix the broken logic to properly deny receives in such cases.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Closes#13598Closes#14055Closes#14119
Rather than panic debug builds when we fail to parse a whole ZIL, let's
instead improve the logging of errors and continue like in a release
build.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#14116
This patch relax the quota limitation for dataset by around 3%.
What this means is that user can write more data then the quota is
set to. However thanks to that we can get more stable bandwidth, in
case when we are overwriting data in-place, and not consuming any
additional space.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Mariusz Zaborski <oshogbo@vexillium.org>
Sponsored-by: Zededa Inc.
Sponsored-by: Klara Inc.
Closes#13839
Reclaim metadata when arc_available_memory < 0 even if
meta_used is not bigger than arc_meta_limit.
As described in https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/14054 if
zfs_arc_meta_limit_percent=100 then ARC target can collapse to
arc_min due to arc_purge not freeing any metadata.
This patch lets arc_prune to do its work when arc_available_memory
is negative even if meta_used is not bigger than arc_meta_limit,
avoiding ARC target collapse.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#14054Closes#14093
The autotrim thread only reads zfs_trim_extent_bytes_min and
zfs_trim_extent_bytes_max variable only on thread start. We
should check for parameter changes during thread execution to
allow parameter changes take effect without needing to disable
then restart the autotrim.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Václav Skála <skala@vshosting.cz>
Closes#14077
After Linux 6.1-rc1 came out, the build started failing to build a
couple of the files in the linux spl code due to the mutex_init
redefinition. Moving the sys/mutex.h include to a lower position within
these two files appears to fix the problem.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Coleman Kane <ckane@colemankane.org>
Closes#14040
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 6.0 kernel.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#14091
ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE_HEADER macro doesn't take CONFIG_ZFS=y into
account. As a result, on several latest Linux versions, configure
script marks DECLARE_EVENT_CLASS() available for non-GPL when ZFS
is being built as a module, but marks it unavailable when ZFS is
built-in.
Follow the logic of the neighbor macros and adjust
ZFS_LINUX_TRY_COMPILE_HEADER accordingly, so that it doesn't try
to look for a .ko when ZFS is built-in.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Lobakin <alobakin@pm.me>
Closes#14006
Before this patch, in zfs_domount, if zfs_root or d_make_root fails, we
leave zfsvfs != NULL. This will lead to execution of the error handling
`if` statement at the `out` label, and hence to a call to
dmu_objset_disown and zfsvfs_free.
However, zfs_umount, which we call upon failure of zfs_root and
d_make_root already does dmu_objset_disown and zfsvfs_free.
I suppose this patch rather adds to the brittleness of this part of the
code base, but I don't want to invest more time in this right now.
To add a regression test, we'd need some kind of fault injection
facility for zfs_root or d_make_root, which doesn't exist right now.
And even then, I think that regression test would be too closely tied
to the implementation.
To repro the double-disown / double-free, do the following:
1. patch zfs_root to always return an error
2. mount a ZFS filesystem
Here's the stack trace you would see then:
VERIFY3(ds->ds_owner == tag) failed (0000000000000000 == ffff9142361e8000)
PANIC at dsl_dataset.c:1003:dsl_dataset_disown()
Showing stack for process 28332
CPU: 2 PID: 28332 Comm: zpool Tainted: G O 5.10.103-1.nutanix.el7.x86_64 #1
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0x74/0x92
spl_dumpstack+0x29/0x2b [spl]
spl_panic+0xd4/0xfc [spl]
dsl_dataset_disown+0xe9/0x150 [zfs]
dmu_objset_disown+0xd6/0x150 [zfs]
zfs_domount+0x17b/0x4b0 [zfs]
zpl_mount+0x174/0x220 [zfs]
legacy_get_tree+0x2b/0x50
vfs_get_tree+0x2a/0xc0
path_mount+0x2fa/0xa70
do_mount+0x7c/0xa0
__x64_sys_mount+0x8b/0xe0
do_syscall_64+0x38/0x50
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xa9
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian.schwarz@nutanix.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schwarz <christian.schwarz@nutanix.com>
Closes#14025
On older kernels, the definition for `module_param_call()` typecasts
function pointers to `(void *)`, which triggers -Werror, causing the
check to return false when it should return true.
Fixing this breaks the build process on some older kernels because they
define a `__check_old_set_param()` function in their headers that checks
for a non-constified `->set()`. We workaround that through the c
preprocessor by defining `__check_old_set_param(set)` to `(set)`, which
prevents the build failures.
However, it is now apparent that all kernels that we support have
adopted the GRSecurity change, so there is no need to have an explicit
autotools check for it anymore. We therefore remove the autotools check,
while adding the workaround to our headers for the build time
non-constified `->set()` check done by older kernel headers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13984Closes#14004
= Problem
While examining a customer's system we noticed unreasonable space
usage from a few snapshots due to gang blocks. Under some further
analysis we discovered that the pool would create gang blocks because
all its disks had non-zero write error counts and they'd be skipped
for normal metaslab allocations due to the following if-clause in
`metaslab_alloc_dva()`:
```
/*
* Avoid writing single-copy data to a failing,
* non-redundant vdev, unless we've already tried all
* other vdevs.
*/
if ((vd->vdev_stat.vs_write_errors > 0 ||
vd->vdev_state < VDEV_STATE_HEALTHY) &&
d == 0 && !try_hard && vd->vdev_children == 0) {
metaslab_trace_add(zal, mg, NULL, psize, d,
TRACE_VDEV_ERROR, allocator);
goto next;
}
```
= Proposed Solution
Get rid of the predicate in the if-clause that checks the past
write errors of the selected vdev. We still try to allocate from
HEALTHY vdevs anyway by checking vdev_state so the past write
errors doesn't seem to help us (quite the opposite - it can cause
issues in long-lived pools like the one from our customer).
= Testing
I first created a pool with 3 vdevs:
```
$ zpool list -v volpool
NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE
volpool 22.5G 117M 22.4G
xvdb 7.99G 40.2M 7.46G
xvdc 7.99G 39.1M 7.46G
xvdd 7.99G 37.8M 7.46G
```
And used `zinject` like so with each one of them:
```
$ sudo zinject -d xvdb -e io -T write -f 0.1 volpool
```
And got the vdevs to the following state:
```
$ zpool status volpool
pool: volpool
state: ONLINE
status: One or more devices has experienced an unrecoverable error.
...<cropped>..
action: Determine if the device needs to be replaced, and clear the
...<cropped>..
config:
NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM
volpool ONLINE 0 0 0
xvdb ONLINE 0 1 0
xvdc ONLINE 0 1 0
xvdd ONLINE 0 4 0
```
I also double-checked their write error counters with sdb:
```
sdb> spa volpool | vdev | member vdev_stat.vs_write_errors
(uint64_t)0 # <---- this is the root vdev
(uint64_t)2
(uint64_t)1
(uint64_t)1
```
Then I checked that I the problem was reproduced in my VM as I the
gang count was growing in zdb as I was writting more data:
```
$ sudo zdb volpool | grep gang
ganged count: 1384
$ sudo zdb volpool | grep gang
ganged count: 1393
$ sudo zdb volpool | grep gang
ganged count: 1402
$ sudo zdb volpool | grep gang
ganged count: 1414
```
Then I updated my bits with this patch and the gang count stayed the
same.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Closes#14003
Setups that have a lot of zvols may see zvol_wait terminate prematurely
even though the script is still making progress. For example, we have a
customer that called zvol_wait for ~7100 zvols and by the last iteration
of that script it was still waiting on ~2900. Similarly another one
called zvol_wait for 2200 and by the time the script terminated there
were only 50 left.
This patch adjusts the logic to stay within the outer loop of the script
if we are making any progress whatsoever.
Reviewed-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Closes#13998
arc_summary currently list prefetch stats as "demand prefetch"
However, a hit/miss can be due to demand or prefetch, not both.
To remove any confusion, this patch removes the "Demand" word
from the affected lines.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#13985
= Issue
Recently we hit an assertion panic in `dsl_process_sub_livelist` while
exporting the spa and interrupting `bpobj_iterate_nofree`. In that case
`bpobj_iterate_nofree` stops mid-way returning an EINTR without clearing
the intermediate AVL tree that keeps track of the livelist entries it
has encountered so far. At that point the code has a VERIFY for the
number of elements of the AVL expecting it to be zero (which is not the
case for EINTR).
= Fix
Cleanup any intermediate state before destroying the AVL when
encountering EINTR. Also added a comment documenting the scenario where
the EINTR comes up. There is no need to do anything else for the calles
of `dsl_process_sub_livelist` as they already handle the EINTR case.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Closes#13939
The current value causes significant artificial slowdown during mass
parallel file removal, which can be observed both on FreeBSD and Linux
when running real workloads.
Sample results from Linux doing make -j 96 clean after an allyesconfig
modules build:
before: 4.14s user 6.79s system 48% cpu 22.631 total
after: 4.17s user 6.44s system 153% cpu 6.927 total
FreeBSD results in the ticket.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@gmail.com>
Closes#13932Closes#13938
Currently, additional/extra copies are created for metadata in
addition to the redundancy provided by the pool(mirror/raidz/draid),
due to this 2 times more space is utilized per inode and this decreases
the total number of inodes that can be created in the filesystem. By
setting redundant_metadata to none, no additional copies of metadata
are created, hence can reduce the space consumed by the additional
metadata copies and increase the total number of inodes that can be
created in the filesystem. Additionally, this can improve file create
performance due to the reduced amount of metadata which needs
to be written.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Dipak Ghosh <dipak.ghosh@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Closes#13680
vm_object_page_clean() expects that the associated vnode is locked
as VOP_PUTPAGES() may get called on the vnode.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#14079
(cherry picked from commit 41133c9794)
- Add a zfs_exit() call in an error path, otherwise a lock is leaked.
- Remove the fid_gen > 1 check. That appears to be Linux-specific:
zfsctl_snapdir_fid() sets fid_gen to 0 or 1 depending on whether the
snapshot directory is mounted. On FreeBSD it fails, making snapshot
dirs inaccessible via NFS.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Fixes: 43dbf88178 ("FreeBSD: vfsops: use setgen for error case")
Closes#14001Closes#13974
(cherry picked from commit ed566bf1cd)
This patch handles the race condition on simultaneous failure of
2 drives, which misses the vdev_rebuild_reset_wanted signal in
vdev_rebuild_thread. We retry to catch this inside the
vdev_rebuild_complete_sync function.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Dipak Ghosh <dipak.ghosh@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Samuel Wycliffe J <samwyc@hpe.com>
Closes#14041Closes#14050
Due to a missing semicolon on the ExecStart line, it wasn't possible
to specify the snapshot name on the bootfs.{rollback,snapshot}
kernel parameters if the boot dataset name was obtained from the
root=zfs:... kernel parameter.
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gregory Bartholomew <gregory.lee.bartholomew@gmail.com>
Closes#13585
This error occurred when building on Gentoo with debugging enabled:
zfs-kmod-2.1.6/work/zfs-2.1.6/module/icp/core/kcf_sched.c:1277:14:
error: a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated
in all versions of C [-Werror,-Wstrict-prototypes]
kcfpool_alloc()
^
void
1 error generated.
This function is not present in master.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#14023
Otherwise, systemd-sysv-generator will generate a service equivalent
that breaks the boot: under systemd this is covered by
zfs-mount-generator
We already do this for zfs-import.service, and other init scripts are
suppressed automatically by the "actual" .service files
Fixes: commit f04b976200 ("Add init script
to load keys")
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#14010Closes#14019
A followup to d7a67402a8
For `mount -t zfs -o opts ds mp` command line
some implementations of `mount(8)`, e. g. Busybox in Debian
work as follows:
```
newfstatat(AT_FDCWD, "ds", 0x7fff826f4ab0, 0) = -1
mount("ds", "mp", "zfs", MS_SILENT, NULL) = 0
```
The logic above skips completely `mount.zfs` and prevents us
from reading filesystem properties and applying mount options.
For comparison, the coreutils `mount(8)` implementation does:
```
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/filesystems", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
// figure out that zfs is a `nodev` filesystem and look for a helper
newfstatat(AT_FDCWD, "/sbin/mount.zfs" ...) = 0
execve("/sbin/mount.zfs" ...) = 0
```
Using `mount.zfs` in initramfs would help circumvent deficiencies
of some of `mount(8)` implementations. `mount -t zfs` translates
to `mount.zfs` invocation, except for cases when explicitly disabled
by `-i`.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: szubersk <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Closes#13305
(cherry picked from commit 35d81a75a8)
Clang's static analyzer found a bad free caused by skein_mac_atomic().
It will allocate a context on the stack and then pass it to
skein_final(), which attempts to free it. Upon inspection,
skein_digest_atomic() also has the same problem.
These functions were created to match the OpenSolaris ICP API, so I was
curious how we avoided this in other providers and looked at the SHA2
code. It appears that SHA2 has a SHA2Final() helper function that is
called by the exported sha2_mac_final()/sha2_digest_final() as well as
the sha2_mac_atomic() and sha2_digest_atomic() functions. The real work
is done in SHA2Final() while some checks and the free are done in
sha2_mac_final()/sha2_digest_final().
We fix the use after free in the skein code by taking inspiration from
the SHA2 code. We introduce a skein_final_nofree() that does most of the
work, and make skein_final() into a function that calls it and then
frees the memory.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13954
If you force fault a drive that's resilvering, it's scan stats can get
frozen in time, giving the false impression that it's being resilvered.
This commit checks the vdev state to see if the vdev is healthy before
reporting "resilvering" or "repairing" in zpool status.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#13927Closes#13930
When reviewing #13875, I noticed that our FreeBSD code has an issue
where it converts from `int64_t` to `int` when calling
`vnlru_free{,_vfsops}()`. The result is that if the int64_t is `1 <<
36`, the int will be 0, since the low bits are 0. Even when some low
bits are set, a value such as `((1 << 36) + 1)` would truncate to 1,
which is wrong.
There is protection against this on 32-bit platforms, but on 64-bit
platforms, there is no check to protect us, so we add a check.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13882
Coverity complained about this. An error from `hkdf_sha512()` before uio
initialization will cause pointers to uninitialized memory to be passed
to `zio_crypt_destroy_uio()`. This is a regression that was introduced
by cf63739191. Interestingly, this never
affected FreeBSD, since the FreeBSD version never had that patch ported.
Since moving uio initialization to the top of this function would slow
down the qat_crypt() path, we only move the `memset()` calls to the top
of the function. This is sufficient to fix this problem.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13944
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 #12284Closes#13476
This reverts commit 34dbc618f5. While this
change resolved the lock contention observed for certain workloads, it
inadventantly reduced the maximum hash inserts/removes per second. This
appears to be due to the slightly higher acquisition cost of a rwlock vs
a mutex.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
I see a few issues in the issue tracker that might be aided by being
able to turn this on. We have no module parameter for it, so I would
like to add one.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13874
We pass sizeof (struct redact_record *) rather than sizeof (struct
redact_record). Passing the pointer size is wrong.
Coverity caught this in two places.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Closes#13885
For encrypted raw receive, objset creation is delayed until a call to
dmu_recv_stream(). ZFS_PROP_SHARESMB property requires objset to be
populated when calling zpl_earlier_version(). To correctly handle the
ZFS_PROP_SHARESMB property for encrypted raw receive, this change
delays setting the property.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#13878
- Some optimizations for bqueue enqueue/dequeue.
- Added a fix to prevent deadlock when both bqueue_enqueue_impl()
and bqueue_dequeue() waits for signal to be triggered.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#13855
When iterating through children physical ashifts for vdev, prefer
ones above the maximum logical ashift, that we can actually use,
but within the administrator defined maximum.
When selecting top-level vdev ashift, do not set it to the defined
maximum in case physical ashift is even higher, but just ignore one.
Using the maximum does not prevent misaligned writes, but reduces
space efficiency. Since ZFS tries to write data sequentially and
aggregates the writes, in many cases large misanigned writes may be
not as bad as the space penalty otherwise.
Allow internal physical ashifts for vdevs higher than SHIFT_MAX.
May be one day allocator or aggregation could benefit from that.
Reduce zfs_vdev_max_auto_ashift default from 16 (64KB) to 14 (16KB),
so that ZFS may still use bigger ashifts up to SHIFT_MAX (64KB),
but only if it really has to or explicitly told to, but not as an
"optimization".
There are some read-intensive NVMe SSDs that report Preferred Write
Alignment of 64KB, and attempt to build RAIDZ2 of those leads to a
space inefficiency that can't be justified. Instead these changes
make ZFS fall back to logical ashift of 12 (4KB) by default and
only warn user that it may be suboptimal for performance.
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#13798
For #13083, curiously, it did not print the actual error, just
that the compile failed with "Error 1".
In theory, this flag should cause it to report errors twice sometimes.
In practice, I'm pretty okay with reporting some twice if it avoids
reporting some never.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Damian Szuberski <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#13086
zfs_wrlog_data_max
The upper limit of TX_WRITE log data. Once it is reached,
write operation is blocked, until log data is cleared out
after txg sync. It only counts TX_WRITE log with WR_COPIED
or WR_NEED_COPY.
Reviewed-by: Prakash Surya <prakash.surya@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: jxdking <lostking2008@hotmail.com>
Closes#12284
Use dp_dirty_pertxg[] for txg_kick(), instead of dp_dirty_total in
original code. Extra parameter "txg" is added for txg_kick(), thus it
knows which txg to kick. Also txg_kick() call is moved from
dsl_pool_need_dirty_delay() to dsl_pool_dirty_space() so that we can
know the txg number assigned for txg_kick().
Some unnecessary code regarding dp_dirty_total in txg_sync_thread() is
also cleaned up.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: jxdking <lostking2008@hotmail.com>
Closes#12274
- Some optimizations for bqueue enqueue/dequeue.
- Added a fix to prevent deadlock when both bqueue_enqueue_impl()
and bqueue_dequeue() waits for signal to be triggered.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#13855
Without this patch, the
ASSERT3U(dbuf_is_metadata(db), ==, arc_is_metadata(buf));
at the beginning of dbuf_assign_arcbuf can panic
if the object type is a DMU_OT_NEWTYPE that has
DMU_OT_METADATA set.
While we're at it, fix DMU_OT_IS_ENCRYPTED as well.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Christian Schwarz <christian.schwarz@nutanix.com>
Closes#13842
Add physical device size/capacity only for physical devices in
'zpool list -v' instead of displaying "-" in the SIZE column.
This would make it easier to see the individual device capacity and
to determine which spares are large enough to replace which devices.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Dipak Ghosh <dipak.ghosh@hpe.com>
Signed-off-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Closes#12561Closes#13106
Special allocation class or dedup vdevs may have roughly the same
performance as L2ARC vdevs. Introduce a new tunable to exclude those
buffers from being cacheable on L2ARC.
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#11761Closes#12285
Before:
$ time make cstyle
real 0m23.118s
user 0m23.002s
sys 0m0.114s
After:
$ time make cstyle
real 0m4.577s
user 0m31.487s
sys 0m0.699s
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Issue #12899
Users were seeing floods of `config_sync` events when autoexpand was
enabled. This happened because all "disk status change" udev events
invoke the autoexpand codepath, which calls zpool_relabel_disk(),
which in turn cause another "disk status change" event to happen,
in a feedback loop. Note that "disk status change" happens every time
a user calls close() on a block device.
This commit breaks the feedback loop by only allowing an autoexpand
to happen if the disk actually changed size.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes: #7132Closes: #7366Closes#13729
Some ARM BSPs run the Android kernel, which has
a modified xattr_handler->get() function signature.
This adds support to compile against these kernels.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Walter Huf <hufman@gmail.com>
Closes#13824
ZFS_MODULE_PARAM_CALL handlers implement their own locking if needed
and do not require Giant.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Closes#13756
It makes sense to free memory in smaller chunks when approaching
arc_c_min to let other kernel subsystems to free more, since after
that point we can't free anything. This also matches behavior on
Linux, where to shrinker reported only the size above arc_c_min.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13794
When importing from cachefile, it is possible that the builtin retry
logic will trip an assertion because it also fails to find the pool.
This fix addresses that case and returns the correct error message to
the user.
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <ryao@gentoo.org>
Reviewed-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheim@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Wilson <gwilson@delphix.com>
Closes#13781
`zpool_expand_001_pos` was often failing due to not seeing autoexpand
commands in the `zpool history`. During testing, I found this to be
unreliable (sometimes the "online" wouldn't appear in `zpool history`)
and unnecessary, as we could simply check that the pool increased in
size.
This commit revamps the test to check for the expanded pool size
and corresponding new free space.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#13743
We tried replacing an NVMe drive using autoreplace, only
to see zed reject it with:
zed[27955]: zed_udev_monitor: /dev/nvme5n1 no devid source
This happened because ZED saw that ID_BUS was not set by udev
for the NVMe drive, and thus didn't think it was "real drive".
This commit allows NVMe drives to be autoreplaced even if
ID_BUS is not set.
Reviewed-by: Don Brady <don.brady@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#13512Closes#13646
libudev will sometimes falsely identify an 'atari' partition on a
blank disk, preventing it from being used in an autoreplace. This
seems to be a known issue. The workaround is to just ignore the
fake partition and continue with the autoreplace.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#13497Closes#13632
Get rid of RPM warnings on AlmaLinux 9:
"It's not recommended to have unversioned Obsoletes"
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#13584Closes#13638
This tightly links the subpackages together and ensures that everything
is upgraded together.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Closes#13489
When the zfs-snapshot-bootfs service attempts to create a snapshot
that already exists, the exit status of the command is non-zero and
the service reports failed to the systemd service manager. This is a
common occurrence if bootfs.snapshot is left set on the kernel command
line and it should not be considered a failure.
This service was originally set to ignore this error by prefixing
the command with - on the ExecStart line, but the leading - appears
to have been dropped in #13359.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gregory Bartholomew <gregory.lee.bartholomew@gmail.com>
Closes#13769
When the -p option is used, a list of floats is passed to sep.join(),
which expects strings. Fix this by converting each value to a string.
Reviewed-by: Richard Elling <Richard.Elling@RichardElling.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Roberto Ricci <ricci@disroot.org>
Closes#12916Closes#13767
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
As of the Linux 5.20 kernel blk_cleanup_disk() has been removed,
all callers should use put_disk().
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13728
As of the Linux 5.20 kernel bdevname() has been removed, all
callers should use snprintf() and the "%pg" format specifier.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13728
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 5.19 kernel.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13715
zdb -d <pool>/<objset ID> does not work when
other command line arguments are included i.e.
zdb -U <cachefile> -d <pool>/<objset ID>
This change fixes the command line parsing
to handle this situation. Also fix issue
where zdb -r <dataset> <file> does not handle
the root <dataset> of the pool. Introduce -N
option to force <objset ID> to be interpreted
as a numeric objsetID.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Zuchowski <pzuchowski@datto.com>
Closes#12845Closes#12944
Currently, dmu_read_uio_dnode can read 64K of a requested 1M in one
loop, get EFAULT back from zfs_uiomove() (because the iovec only holds
64k), and return EFAULT, which turns into EAGAIN on the way out. EAGAIN
gets interpreted as "I didn't read anything", the caller tries again
without consuming the 64k we already read, and we're stuck.
This apparently works on newer kernels because the caller which breaks
on older Linux kernels by happily passing along a 1M read request and a
64k iovec just requests 64k at a time.
With this, we now won't return EFAULT if we got a partial read.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12370Closes#12509Closes#12516
Not all Linux distribution kernels enable io_uring support by
default. Update the run time check to verify that the booted
kernel was built with CONFIG_IO_URING=y.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Co-authored-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13648Closes#13685
Since the assembly routines calculating SHA checksums don't use
a standard stack layout, CFI directives are needed to unroll the
stack.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Closes#11733
Switch to using asprintf() to satisfy the compiler and resolve the
potential format-overflow warning. Not the conditional before the
sprintf() would have prevented this regardless.
cmd/zfs/zfs_project.c: In function ‘zfs_project_handle_dir’:
cmd/zfs/zfs_project.c:241:38: error: ‘/’ directive writing
1 byte into a region of size between 0 and 4352
[-Werror=format-overflow=]
cmd/zfs/zfs_project.c:241:17: note: ‘sprintf’ output between
2 and 4609 bytes into a destination of size 4352
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
Extend the buffer slightly resolve the warning.
cmd/zfs/zfs_main.c: In function ‘upgrade_set_callback’:
cmd/zfs/zfs_main.c:2446:22: error: ‘%llu’ directive output
may be truncated writing between 1 and 20 bytes into a
region of size 16 [-Werror=format-truncation=]
cmd/zfs/zfs_main.c:2445:24: note: ‘snprintf’ output between
2 and 21 bytes into a destination of size 16
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
Move the use of the db pointer after it is freed. It's only used as
a tag so a dereference would never occur, but there's no reason we
can't invert the order to resolve the warning.
module/zfs/dbuf.c: In function 'dbuf_destroy':
module/zfs/dbuf.c:2953:17: error:
pointer 'db' may be used after 'free' [-Werror=use-after-free]
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
Move the use of the private pointer after it is freed. It's only
used as a tag so a dereference would never occur, but there's no
harm in inverting the order to resolve the warning.
module/zfs/dbuf.c: In function 'dbuf_issue_final_prefetch_done':
module/zfs/dbuf.c:3204:17: error:
pointer 'private' may be used after 'free' [-Werror=use-after-free]
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
The memcpy(), memmove(), and memset() functions have been annotated
to perform bounds checking when using FORTIFY_SOURCE. A warning is
now generted when writing beyond the end of the specified field.
Alternately, the new struct_group() macro could be used to create
an anonymous union member for use by memcpy(). However, since this
is the only place the macro would be helpful it's preferable to
restructure the code slights to avoid the need for additional
compatibility code when the macro does not exist.
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20211118183807.1283332-1-keescook@chromium.org/T/
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
The wrong union memory was being accessed in EdonRInit resulting in
a write beyond size of field compiler warning. Reference the correct
member to resolve the warning. The warning was correct and this in
case the mistake was harmless.
In function ‘fortify_memcpy_chk’,
inlined from ‘EdonRInit’ at zfs/module/icp/algs/edonr/edonr.c:494:3:
./include/linux/fortify-string.h:344:25: error: call to
‘__write_overflow_field’ declared with attribute warning:
detected write beyond size of field (1st parameter);
maybe use struct_group()? [-Werror=attribute-warning]
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
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#13528Closes#13575
This code should be kept inline with the upstream lua version as much
as possible. Therefore, we simply want to silence the warning. This
check was enabled by default as part of -Wall in gcc 12.1.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13528Closes#13575
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.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Before this change for every valid parity column raidz_parity_verify()
allocated new buffer and copied there existing data, then recalculated
the parity and compared the result with the copy. This patch removes
the memory copy, simply swapping original buffer pointers with newly
allocated empty ones for parity recalculation and comparison. Original
buffers with potentially incorrect parity data are then just freed,
while new recalculated ones are used for repair.
On a pool of 12 4-wide raidz vdevs, storing 1.5TB of 16MB blocks, this
change reduces memory traffic during scrub by 17% and total unhalted
CPU time by 25%.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13613
Issuing several scrub reads for a block we may use the parent ZIO
buffer for one of child ZIOs. If that read complete successfully,
then we won't need to copy the data explicitly. If block has only
one copy (typical for root vdev, which is also a mirror inside),
then we never need to copy -- succeed or fail as-is. Previous
code also copied data from buffer of every successfully completed
child ZIO, but that just does not make any sense.
On healthy N-wide mirror this saves all N+1 (or even more in case
of ditto blocks) memory copies for each scrubbed block, allowing
CPU to focus mostly on check-summing. For other vdev types it
should save one memory copy per block copy at root vdev.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13606
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
Change math to make it like the ARC, using multiplications instead.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13591
- 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
- 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
Handle crypto_dispatch() return values same as crp->crp_etype errors.
On FreeBSD 12 many drivers returned same errors both ways, and lack
of proper handling for the first ended up in assertion panic later.
It was changed in FreeBSD 13, but there is no reason to not be safe.
While there, skip waiting for completion, including locking and
wakeup() call, for sessions on synchronous crypto drivers, such as
typical aesni and software.
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13563
During sorted scrub multiple threads (one per vdev) are issuing many
ZIOs same time, all using the same scn->scn_zio_root ZIO as parent.
It causes huge lock contention on the single global lock on that ZIO.
Improve it by introducing per-queue null ZIOs, children to that one,
and using them instead as proxy.
For 12 SSD pool storing 1.5TB of 4KB blocks on 80-core system this
dramatically reduces lock contention and reduces scrub time from 21
minutes down to 12.5, while actual read stages (not scan) are about
3x faster, reaching 100K blocks per second per vdev.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13553
Modern Clang and GCC can successfully implement simple conditions
without branching with math and flag operations. Use of arrays for
translation no longer helps as much as it was 14+ years ago.
Disassemble of the code generated by Clang 13.0.0 on FreeBSD 13.1,
Clang 14.0.4 on FreeBSD 14 and GCC 10.2.1 on Debian 11 with this
change still shows no branching instructions.
Profiling of CPU-bound scan stage of sorted scrub shows reproducible
reduction of time spent inside avl_find() from 6.52% to 4.58%.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13540
- 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
When calculating mg_aliquot alike to #12046 use number of unique data
disks in the vdev, not the total number of children vdev. Increase
default value of the tunable from 512KB to 1MB to compensate.
Before this change each disk in striped pool was getting 512KB of
sequential data, in 2-wide mirror -- 1MB, in 3-wide RAIDZ1 -- 768KB.
After this change in all the cases each disk should get 1MB.
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#13388
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
Use error thresholds from policy to control whether to scrub data
and/or metadata. If threshold is set to UINT64_MAX, then caller
probably does not care about result and we may skip that part.
By default import neither set the data error threshold nor read
the error counter, so skip the data scrub for faster import.
Metadata are still scrubbed and fail if even single error found.
While there just for symmetry return number of metadata errors in
case threshold is not set to zero and we haven't reached it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Zakharov <pavel.zakharov@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13022
The fnvlist versions of the functions are fatal if they fail,
saving each call from having to include checking the result.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
It is wrong for arc_write_ready() to use zfs_abd_scatter_enabled to
decide whether to reallocate/copy the buffer, because the answer is
OS-specific and depends on the buffer size. Instead of that use
abd_size_alloc_linear(), moved into public header.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#12425
The only reason for spa_config_*() to use refcount instead of simple
non-atomic (thanks to scl_lock) variable for scl_count is tracking,
hard disabled for the last 8 years. Switch to simple int scl_count
reduces the lock hold time by avoiding atomic, plus makes structure
fit into single cache line, reducing the locks contention.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#12287
When scrubbing a raidz/draid pool, which contains a replacing or
sparing mirror with multiple online children, only one child will
be read. This is not normally a serious concern because the DTL
records are used to determine where a good copy of the data is.
As long as the data can be read from one child the mirror vdev
will use it to repair gaps in any of its children. Furthermore,
even if the data which was read is corrupt the raidz code will
detect this and issue its own repair I/O to correct the damage
in the mirror vdev.
However, in the scenario where the DTL is wrong due to silent
data corruption (say due to overwriting one child) and the scrub
happens to read from a child with good data, then the other damaged
mirror child will not be detected nor repaired.
While this is possible for both raidz and draid vdevs, it's most
pronounced when using draid. This is because by default the zed
will sequentially rebuild a draid pool to a distributed spare,
and the distributed spare half of the mirror is always preferred
since it delivers better performance. This means the damaged
half of the mirror will go undetected even after scrubbing.
For system administrations this behavior is non-intuitive and in
a worst case scenario could result in the only good copy of the
data being unknowingly detached from the mirror.
This change resolves the issue by reading all replacing/sparing
mirror children when scrubbing. When the BP isn't available for
verification, then compare the data buffers from each child. They
must all be identical, if not there's silent damage and an error
is returned to prompt the top-level vdev to issue a repair I/O to
rewrite the data on all of the mirror children. Since we can't
tell which child was wrong a checksum error is logged against the
replacing or sparing mirror vdev.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mark.maybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13555
The zfs-load-module.service service is not currently provided by
the OpenZFS repository so we cannot safely assume it exists.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Thode <mthode@mthode.org>
Closes#13574
Since we use two B-trees q_exts_by_size and q_exts_by_addr, we should
count 2x sizeof (range_seg_gap_t) per node. And since average B-tree
memory efficiency is about 75%, we should increase it to 3x.
Previous code under-counted up to 30% of the memory usage.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13537
I genuinely don't know why this didn't come up before,
but adding the LZ4 early abort pointed out this flaw,
in which we're allocating a buffer of one size, and
then telling the compressor that we're handing it buffers
of a different size, which may be Very Different - say,
allocating 512b and then telling it the inputs are 128k.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#13375
It is typical, but not generally true that if log summary has more
blocks it must also have unflushed metaslabs. Normally with metaslabs
flushed in order it works, but there are known exceptions, such as
device removal or metaslab being loaded during its flush attempt.
Before 600a02b884 if spa_flush_metaslabs() hit loading metaslab it
usually stopped (unless memlimit is also exceeded), but now it may
flush more metaslabs, just skipping that particular one. This
increased chances of assertion to fire when the skipped metaslab is
flushed on next iteration if all other metaslabs in that summary
entry are already flushed out of order.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-By: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#13486Closes#13513
When a dataset is in the process of being received it gets marked as
inconsistent and should not be used. We should check for this when
opening a dataset handle in libzfs and return with an appropriate error
set, rather than hitting an abort because of the incomplete data.
zfs_open() passes errno to zfs_standard_error() after observing
make_dataset_handle() fail, which ends up aborting if errno is 0.
Set errno before returning where we know it has not been set already.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13077
Make the wording more consistent for the kernel AC_MSG_CHECKING
output (e.g. "checking whether ...".). Additionally, group some
of the VFS interface checks with the others. No functional change.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13529
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
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
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
As of the Linux 5.19 kernel the readpage() address space operation
has been replaced by read_folio().
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13515
Linux 5.19 commit torvalds/linux@44abff2c0 splits the secure
erase functionality from the blkdev_issue_discard() function.
The blkdev_issue_secure_erase() must now be issued to issue
a secure erase.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13515
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
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
As for the Linux 5.18 kernel bio_alloc() expects a block_device struct
as an argument. This removes the need for the bio_set_dev() compatibility
code for 5.18 and newer kernels.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13515
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
Some minimal MUAs don't support passing the subjects as cmdline option.
This commit checks if "@SUBJECT@" is missing in ZED_EMAIL_OPTS and then
prepends a subject header to the notification message.
Also set a default for ${subject}.
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemia<C5><84>ska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Hiepler <d-git@coderdu.de>
Closes#13440
Do not strip debug information from packages if '--enable-debuginfo' is
configured.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#13500
Makes getmntent and getmntany thread-safe for external consumers of
libzfs zpool_disable_datasets, zfs_iter_mounted, libzfs_mnttab_update,
libzfs_mnttab_find.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13484
This is a follow up to 3c35662299 which standardizes how the RHEL
version check is done. This simpler "0%{?rhel}" check is used
elsewhere in the packages so we do the same here.
Reviewed-by: Neal Gompa <ngompa@datto.com>
Reviewed-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13501
When scrubbing/resilvering a pool it can be counter productive to
cancel the scan and kick of a replace operation to a hot spare
when encountering checksum errors. In this case, the best course
of action is to allow the scrub/resilver to complete as quickly
as possible and to keep the vdevs fully online if possible.
Realistically, this is less of an issue for a RAIDZ since a
traditional resilver must be used and checksums will be verified.
However, this is not the case for a mirror or dRAID pool which is
sequentially resilvered and checksum verification is deferred
until after the replace operation completes.
Regardless, we apply this policy to all pool types since it's
a good idea for all vdevs. Degrading additional vdevs has the
potential to make a bad situation worse. Note the checksum
errors will still be reported as both an event and by
`zpool status`. This change only prevents the ZED from
proactively taking any action.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13499
The SA attribute containing the symlink target does not include a nul
terminator, so when printing the target zdb would sometimes include
garbage at the end of the string.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13482
- Replaced intances of `dracut_install` with `inst_simple`
- Removed calls to `test -x mark_hostonly` because the function is an
inbuilt dracut function
- Removed redundant installation of `systemd-ask-password` and
`systemd-tty-ask-password-agent` because they are already installed by
the systemd module. There is no need to install them again
- Removed multiple calls to the `mark_hostonly` function because the
`inst_simple` has a command-line switch for it
- Cleaned up the installation of the `zpool.cache`, `vdev_id.conf` and
`hostid` files to make the logic easier to follow
- Cleaned up and simplified the systemd service installation logic by
invoking systemctl instead of creating symlinks manually
- Replaced various hard-coded paths with dracut equivalents to better
conform with expected dracut behaviour
- Removed redundant call to `mkdir` (`inst_simple` creates the parent
directory if it does not exist on the destination initrd)
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew J. Hesford <ajh@sideband.org>
Signed-off-by: Savyasachee Jha <hi@savyasacheejha.com>
Closes#13010
Since dracut functions can locate both udev rules and binaries, there is
no point in keeping absolute paths in the module setup script. It also
breaks the --sysroot option in dracut. This commit removes mentions to
absolute paths for binaries and udev rules.
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew J. Hesford <ajh@sideband.org>
Signed-off-by: Savyasachee Jha <hi@savyasacheejha.com>
Closes#13010
Setting up the module involves multiple redundant calls to a bunch of
dracut functions wheich can be combined into one. Additionally, the mass
of code required to load libgcc_s.so* can be replaced with one dracut
function. This has the additional effect of removing errors involving
the non-installation of libgcc_s.so* which are seen on debian bullseye
when using version 2.1.2-1~bpo11+1 from the backports repository.
The systemd binaries are separated out into their own `dracut_install`
function call so they do not get pulled in when dracut does not load the
systemd module.
Reviewed-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew J. Hesford <ajh@sideband.org>
Signed-off-by: Savyasachee Jha <hi@savyasacheejha.com>
Closes#13010
The compiler appears to be expanding the unused NULL pointer into a
zero-length array via the inline bitops code. When -Werror=array-bounds
is used, this causes a build failure. Recommended solution is allocate
temporary structures, fill with zeros (to avoid uninitialized data use
warnings), and pass the pointer to those to the inline calls.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Coleman Kane <ckane@colemankane.org>
Closes#13463Closes#13465
Refcount creation for abd_zero_scatter->abd_children is redundant in
abd_alloc_zero_scatter, as it has been done in abd_init_struct.
In addition, abd_children is undefined when ZFS_DEBUG is disabled, the
reference of abd_children in abd_alloc_zero_scatter breaks build of
libzpool when ZFS_DEBUG is disabled.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ping Huang <huangping@smartx.com>
Closes#13429
clang-15 emits the following error message for functions without
a prototype:
fs/zfs/os/linux/spl/spl-kmem-cache.c:1423:27: error:
a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated
in all versions of C [-Werror,-Wstrict-prototypes]
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Aidan Harris <me@aidanharr.is>
Closes#13421
Linux 5.12 PPC 5.12 get_user() and __copy_from_user_inatomic()
inline helpers very indirectly include a reference to the GPL'd
array mmu_feature_keys[] and fails to build. Workaround this by
using copy_from_user() and throwing EFAULT for any calls to
__copy_from_user_inatomic(). This is a workaround until a fix
for Linux commit 7613f5a66becfd0e43a0f34de8518695888f5458
"powerpc/64s/kuap: Use mmu_has_feature()" is fully addressed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Authored-by: Colin Ian King <colin.king@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: szubersk <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Closes#11958Closes#12590Closes#13367
On some architectures ZERO_PAGE is unavailable because it references
a GPL exported symbol of empty_zero_page. Originally e08b993 removed
the call to PAGE_ZERO(0) for assignment to the abd_zero_page. However,
a simple check can be done to avoid a kernel allocation and free for
the abd_zero_page if ZERO_PAGE is available.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#13199
- Unconditionally inject `CONFIG_MODULES` make variable
and `#define CONFIG_MODULES` to Kbuild in `ZFS_LINUX_COMPILE`
autoconf function to emulate loadable kernel modules support.
This allows OpenZFS to perform Linux checks despite
`CONFIG_MODULES=n` in the actual Linux config.
- Add `ZFS_AC_KERNEL_CONFIG_MODULES` check which encompasses
the logic from `ZFS_AC_KERNEL_TEST_MODULE` with additional
diagnostic messages to the user
- Removed `ZFS_AC_KERNEL_TEST_MODULE` as it merely duplicates
every check in `ZFS_AC_KERNEL_CONFIG_DEFINED`
- Moved `ZFS_AC_MODULE_SYMVERS` after `ZFS_AC_KERNEL_CONFIG_DEFINED`
so the user has a chance to see the proper diagnostic from the
steps before.
A workaround for Linux's
```
commit 3e3005df73b535cb849cf4ec8075d6aa3c460f68
Author: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
Date: Wed Mar 31 22:38:03 2021 +0900
kbuild: unify modules(_install) for in-tree and external modules
If you attempt to build or install modules ('make modules(_install)'
with CONFIG_MODULES disabled, you will get a clear error message, but
nothing for external module builds.
Factor out the modules and modules_install rules into the common part,
so you will get the same error message when you try to build external
modules with CONFIG_MODULES=n.
Signed-off-by: Masahiro Yamada <masahiroy@kernel.org>
```
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: szubersk <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Closes#10832Closes#13361
- Add `CONFIG_BLOCK` Linux config requirement to
`ZFS_AC_KERNEL_CONFIG_DEFINED`. OpenZFS won't compile without
that block device support due to large amount of functional
dependencies on it.
- Remove dependency on `groups_alloc()` in
`ZFS_AC_KERNEL_SRC_GROUP_INFO_GID` to circumvent the missing stub
in Linux 4.X kernel headers.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: szubersk <szuberskidamian@gmail.com>
Closes#13351
This adds supports for hole-punching facilities in the FreeBSD kernel
starting from __FreeBSD_version 1400032.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Ka Ho Ng <khng@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Closes#12458
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
Thorough documentation with a dracut.bootup(7)-style flowchart,
dracut.cmdline(7)-style cmdline listing,
and per-file docs like the old README
Upstream-commit: e3fc330d6c
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#13291
So far, everything parsed root= manually, which meant that while
zfs-parse.sh was updated, and supposedly supported + -> ' ' conversion,
it meant nothing
Instead, centralise parsing, and allow:
root=
root=zfs
root=zfs:
root=zfs:AUTO
root=ZFS=data/set
root=zfs:data/set
root=zfs:ZFS=data/set (as a side-effect; allowed but undocumented)
rootfstype=zfs AND root=data/set <=> root=data/set
rootfstype=zfs AND root= <=> root=zfs:AUTO
So rootfstype=zfs /also/ behaves as expected, and + decoding works
Upstream-commit: 245529d85f
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#13291
It was added in the original ae26d0465a ("Add dracut support") commit
in 2011, and was then broken a bit later with the advent of
dracut-zfs-generator, or maybe earlier as part of other churn
Either way, it's broken, and has been in 2.0+ as well, and no-one
complained. Stop pretending we support it at all
Upstream-commit: 2c74617bcf
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#13291
There was a fallback case I overlooked in the initial patch, with
a similarly imperfect version extractor.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#12045Closes#12673
Clang 13.0.0 added support for `Wunused-but-set-parameter` and
`-Wunused-but-set-variable` which correctly detects two unused
variables in zstd resulting in a build failure. This commit
annotates these instances accordingly.
https://releases.llvm.org/13.0.1/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html#id6
In FSE_createCTable(), malloc() is intentionally defined as NULL when
compiled in the kernel so the variable is unused.
zstd/lib/compress/fse_compress.c:307:12: error: variable 'size'
set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Additionally, in ZSTD_seqDecompressedSize() the assert is compiled
out similarly resulting in an unused variable.
zstd/lib/compress/zstd_compress_superblock.c:412:12: error: variable
'litLengthSum' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
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
When using a Linux kernel which predates the iov_iter interface the
O_APPEND flag should be applied in zpl_aio_write() via the call to
generic_write_checks(). The updated pos variable was incorrectly
ignored resulting in the current offset being used.
This issue should only realistically impact the RHEL/CentOS 7.x
kernels which are based on Linux 3.10.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13370Closes#13377
In hypothetical case of non-linear ABD with single segment, multiple
to page size but not aligned to it, vdev_geom_fill_unmap_cb() could
fill one page less into bio_ma array.
I am not sure it is expoitable, but better to be safe than sorry.
Reported-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
(cherry picked from commit 5352f85cddce44e82fb1c4caec3b333e3666d7fd)
It turns out, no, in fact, ZERO_RANGE and PUNCH_HOLE do
have differing semantics in some ways - in particular,
one requires KEEP_SIZE, and the other does not.
Also added a zero-range test to catch this, corrected a flaw
that made the punch-hole test succeed vacuously, and a typo
in file_write.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#13329Closes#13338
As of the 5.17 kernel the GENHD_FL_EXT_DEVT flag has been removed
and the GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN flag renamed GENHD_FL_NO_PART. Update
zvol_alloc() to set GENHD_FL_NO_PART for the newer kernels which
is sufficient. The behavior for prior kernels remains unchanged.
1ebe2e5f ("block: remove GENHD_FL_EXT_DEVT")
46e7eac6 ("block: rename GENHD_FL_NO_PART_SCAN to GENHD_FL_NO_PART")
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#13294Closes#13297
FreeBSD's memory management system uses its own error numbers and gets
confused when these VOPs return EIO.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ryan Moeller <ryan@iXsystems.com>
Reported-by: Peter Holm <pho@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13311
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
->readpages was removed and replaced by ->readahead. Define
zpl_readahead for kernels that don't have ->readpages.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Riccardo Schirone <rschirone91@gmail.com>
Closes#13278
blkdev.h includes genhd.h since dawn of upstream git, so this is
globally safe
Upstream-commit: 322cbb50de711814c42fb088f6d31901502c711a ("block:
remove genhd.h")
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#13251
bio_alloc(gfp_t gfp_mask, unsigned short nr_iovecs)
became
bio_alloc(struct block_device *bdev, unsigned short nr_vecs,
unsigned int opf, gfp_t gfp_mask)
passing NULL/0 continues previous behaviour
Upstream-commit: 07888c665b405b1cd3577ddebfeb74f4717a84c4 ("block:
pass a block_device and opf to bio_alloc")
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Closes#13251
NDF_ONLY_PNBUF has been removed from FreeBSD in favor of NDFREE_PNBUF.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ryan Moeller <freqlabs@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#13277
Lustre makes light use of the zfs_refcount interfaces which
isn't a problem when using a non-debug build of OpenZFS. However,
when debugging is enabled the required symbols are not exported.
Reviewed-by: Olaf Faaland <faaland1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#12613
Strict hole reporting was previously disabled by default as a
performance optimization. However, this has lead to confusion
over the expected behavior and a variety of workarounds being
adopted by consumers of ZFS. Change the default behavior to
always report holes and force the TXG sync.
Reviewed-by: Matthew Ahrens <mahrens@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Upstream-commit: 05b3eb6d23
Ref: #13261Closes#12746
* etc/systemd/zfs-mount-generator: serialise
The wins for a relatively normal workload are rather slim:
real 0.02119s/0.00985s=2.15029x
user 0.02130s/0.00346s=6.15560x
sys 0.03858s/0.00643s=6.00062x
wall-total 0.014518s/0.005925s=2.45009x
wall-init 0.014518s/0.002457s=5.90684x
wall-real 0.014518s/0.003467s=4.18668x
But this is a big win on machines with a lot of datasets and expensive
forks.
For example, the gain on a VM on my work laptop with 900+ legacy-mount
Docker datasets, the original gains from the C rewrite were
only five-fold:
real 0.516s/0.102s=5.05882x
user 0.237s/0.143s=1.65734x
sys 0.287s/0.100s=2.87x
And this serial variant gains this back there as well:
real 0.102s/0.008s=12.75x
user 0.143s/0.007s=20.42857
sys 0.100s/0.001s=100x
wall-total 0.09717s/0.00319s=30.40255x
wall-init 0.00203s/0.00200s=1.015941x
wall-real 0.09513s/0.00118s=80.02043x
For a total of
real 0.516s/0.008s=64.5x
user 0.237s/0.007s=33.85714x
sys 0.287s/0.001s=287x
Suggested-by: Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
* etc/systemd/zfs-mount-generator: pull in network for keylocation=https
Also simplify RequiresMountsFor= handling
Ref: #11956
Reviewed-by: Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Ahelenia Ziemiańska <nabijaczleweli@nabijaczleweli.xyz>
Upstream-commit: 4325de09cdCloses#12138
which `-Rf` rolls back to `$root_dataset@$(uname -r)` (or, in the second form, `$root_dataset@snapshot-name`)
after pool import but before the rootfs is mounted.
Failure to roll back will fall down to the rescue shell.
This has obvious potential for data loss: make sure your persistent data is not below the rootfs and you don't care about any intermediate snapshots.
*`root=...`: If not set, importable pools are searched for a bootfs
5. If both`bootfs.snapshot` and `bootfs.rollback` are set, `bootfs.rollback` is ordered *after*`bootfs.snapshot`.
attribute. If an explicitly set root is desired, you may use
`root=ZFS:pool/dataset`
*`zfs_force=0`: If set to 1, the initramfs will run `zpool import -f` when
6.`zfs_force`, `zfs.force`, `zfsforce`: add `-f` to all `zpool import` invocations.
attempting to import pools if the required pool isn't automatically imported
May be useful. Use with caution.
by the zfs module. This can save you a trip to a bootcd if hostid has
changed, but is dangerous and can lead to zpool corruption, particularly in
cases where storage is on a shared fabric such as iSCSI where multiple hosts
can access storage devices concurrently. _Please understand the implications
of force-importing a pool before enabling this option!_
* `spl_hostid`: By default, the hostid used by the SPL module is read from
/etc/hostid inside the initramfs. This file is placed there from the host
system when the initramfs is built which effectively ties the ramdisk to the
host which builds it. If a different hostid is desired, one may be set in
this attribute and will override any file present in the ramdisk. The
format should be hex exactly as found in the `/etc/hostid` file, IE
`spl_hostid=0x00bab10c`.
Note that changing the hostid between boots will most likely lead to an
un-importable pool since the last importing hostid won't match. In order
to recover from this, you may use the `zfs_force` option or boot from a
different filesystem and `zpool import -f` then `zpool export` the pool
before rebooting with the new hostid.
* `bootfs.snapshot`: If listed, enables the zfs-snapshot-bootfs service on a Dracut system. The zfs-snapshot-bootfs service simply runs `zfs snapshot $BOOTFS@%v` after the pool has been imported but before the bootfs is mounted. `$BOOTFS` is substituted with the value of the bootfs setting on the pool. `%v` is substituted with the version string of the kernel currently being booted (e.g. 5.6.6-200.fc31.x86\_64). Failure to create the snapshot (e.g. because one with the same name already exists) will be logged, but will not otherwise interrupt the boot process.
It is safe to leave the bootfs.snapshot flag set persistently on your kernel command line so that a new snapshot of your bootfs will be created on every kernel update. If you leave bootfs.snapshot set persistently on your kernel command line, you may find the below script helpful for automatically removing old snapshots of the bootfs along with their associated kernel.
#!/usr/bin/sh
if [[ "$1" == "remove" ]] && grep -q "\bbootfs.snapshot\b" /proc/cmdline; then
To use the above script place it in a plain text file named /etc/kernel/install.d/99-zfs-cleanup.install and mark it executable with the following command:
On Red Hat based systems, you can change the value of `installonly_limit` in /etc/dnf/dnf.conf to adjust the number of kernels and their associated snapshots that are kept.
* `bootfs.snapshot=<snapname>`: Is identical to the bootfs.snapshot parameter explained above except that the value substituted for \<snapname\> will be used when creating the snapshot instead of the version string of the kernel currently being booted.
* `bootfs.rollback`: If listed, enables the zfs-rollback-bootfs service on a Dracut system. The zfs-rollback-bootfs service simply runs `zfs rollback -Rf $BOOTFS@%v` after the pool has been imported but before the bootfs is mounted. If the rollback operation fails, the boot process will be interrupted with a Dracut rescue shell. __Use this parameter with caution. Intermediate snapshots of the bootfs will be destroyed!__ TIP: Keep your user data (e.g. /home) on separate file systems (it can be in the same pool though).
* `bootfs.rollback=<snapname>`: Is identical to the bootfs.rollback parameter explained above except that the value substituted for \<snapname\> will be used when rolling back the bootfs instead of the version string of the kernel currently being booted. If you use this form, choose a snapshot that is new enough to contain the needed kernel modules under /lib/modules or use a kernel that has all the needed modules built-in.
How it Works
============
The Dracut module consists of the following files (less Makefile's):
* `module-setup.sh`: Script run by the initramfs builder to create the
ramdisk. Contains instructions on which files are required by the modules
and z* programs. Also triggers inclusion of `/etc/hostid` and the zpool
cache. This file is not included in the initramfs.
* `90-zfs.rules`: udev rules which trigger loading of the ZFS modules at boot.
* `zfs-lib.sh`: Utility functions used by the other files.
* `parse-zfs.sh`: Run early in the initramfs boot process to parse kernel
command line and determine if ZFS is the active root filesystem.
* `mount-zfs.sh`: Run later in initramfs boot process after udev has settled
to mount the root dataset.
* `export-zfs.sh`: Run on shutdown after dracut has restored the initramfs
and pivoted to it, allowing for a clean unmount and export of the ZFS root.
`zfs-lib.sh`
------------
This file provides a few handy functions for working with ZFS. Those
functions are used by the `mount-zfs.sh` and `export-zfs.sh` files.
However, they could be used by any other file as well, as long as the file
sources `/lib/dracut-zfs-lib.sh`.
`module-setup.sh`
-----------------
This file is run by the Dracut script within the live system, not at boot
time. It's not included in the final initramfs. Functions in this script
describe which files are needed by ZFS at boot time.
Currently all the various z* and spl modules are included, a dependency is
asserted on udev-rules, and the various zfs, zpool, etc. helpers are included.
Dracut provides library functions which automatically gather the shared libs
necessary to run each of these binaries, so statically built binaries are
not required.
The zpool and zvol udev rules files are copied from where they are
installed by the ZFS build. __PACKAGERS TAKE NOTE__: If you move
`/etc/udev/rules/60-z*.rules`, you'll need to update this file to match.
Currently this file also includes `/etc/hostid` and `/etc/zfs/zpool.cache`
which means the generated ramdisk is specific to the host system which built
it. If a generic initramfs is required, it may be preferable to omit these
files and specify the `spl_hostid` from the boot loader instead.
`parse-zfs.sh`
--------------
Run during the cmdline phase of the initramfs boot process, this script
performs some basic sanity checks on kernel command line parameters to
determine if booting from ZFS is likely to be what is desired. Dracut
requires this script to adjust the `root` variable if required and to set
`rootok=1` if a mountable root filesystem is available. Unfortunately this
script must run before udev is settled and kernel modules are known to be
loaded, so accessing the zpool and zfs commands is unsafe.
If the root=ZFS... parameter is set on the command line, then it's at least
certain that ZFS is what is desired, though this script is unable to
determine if ZFS is in fact available. This script will alter the `root`
parameter to replace several historical forms of specifying the pool and
dataset name with the canonical form of `zfs:pool/dataset`.
If no root= parameter is set, the best this script can do is guess that
ZFS is desired. At present, no other known filesystems will work with no
root= parameter, though this might possibly interfere with using the
compiled-in default root in the kernel image. It's considered unlikely
that would ever be the case when an initramfs is in use, so this script
sets `root=zfs:AUTO` and hopes for the best.
Once the root=... (or lack thereof) parameter is parsed, a dummy symlink
is created from `/dev/root` -> `/dev/null` to satisfy parts of the Dracut
process which check for presence of a single root device node.
Finally, an initqueue/finished hook is registered which causes the initqueue
phase of Dracut to wait for `/dev/zfs` to become available before attempting
to mount anything.
`mount-zfs.sh`
--------------
This script is run after udev has settled and all tasks in the initqueue
have succeeded. This ensures that `/dev/zfs` is available and that the
various ZFS modules are successfully loaded. As it is now safe to call
zpool and friends, we can proceed to find the bootfs attribute if necessary.
If the root parameter was explicitly set on the command line, no parsing is
necessary. The list of imported pools is checked to see if the desired pool
is already imported. If it's not, and attempt is made to import the pool
explicitly, though no force is attempted. Finally the specified dataset
is mounted on `$NEWROOT`, first using the `-o zfsutil` option to handle
non-legacy mounts, then if that fails, without zfsutil to handle legacy
mount points.
If no root parameter was specified, this script attempts to find a pool with
its bootfs attribute set. First, already-imported pools are scanned and if
an appropriate pool is found, no additional pools are imported. If no pool
with bootfs is found, any additional pools in the system are imported with
`zpool import -N -a`, and the scan for bootfs is tried again. If no bootfs
is found with all pools imported, all pools are re-exported, and boot fails.
Assuming a bootfs is found, an attempt is made to mount it to `$NEWROOT`,
first with, then without the zfsutil option as above.
Ordinarily pools are imported _without_ the force option which may cause
boot to fail if the hostid has changed or a pool has been physically moved
between servers. The `zfs_force` kernel parameter is provided which when
set to `1` causes `zpool import` to be run with the `-f` flag. Forcing pool
import can lead to serious data corruption and loss of pools, so this option
should be used with extreme caution. Note that even with this flag set, if
the required zpool was auto-imported by the kernel module, no additional
`zpool import` commands are run, so nothing is forced.
`export-zfs.sh`
---------------
Normally the zpool containing the root dataset cannot be exported on
shutdown as it is still in use by the init process. To work around this,
Dracut is able to restore the initramfs on shutdown and pivot to it.
All remaining process are then running from a ramdisk, allowing for a
clean unmount and export of the ZFS root. The theory of operation is
described in detail in the [Dracut manual](https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/boot/dracut/dracut.html#_dracut_on_shutdown).
This script will try to export all remaining zpools after Dracut has
pivoted to the initramfs. If an initial regular export is not successful,
Dracut will call this script once more with the `final` option,
in which case a forceful export is attempted.
Other Dracut modules include similar shutdown scripts and Dracut
invokes these scripts round-robin until they succeed. In particular,
the `90dm` module installs a script which tries to close and remove
all device mapper targets. Thus, if there are ZVOLs containing
dm-crypt volumes or if the zpool itself is backed by a dm-crypt
volume, the shutdown scripts will try to untangle this.
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