Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17443
There are three possible cases where dmu_tx_assign() may
encounter a fatal error. When there is a true lack of free
space (ENOSPC), when there is a lack of quota space (EDQUOT),
or when data required to perform the transaction cannot be
read from disk (EIO). See the dmu_tx_check_ioerr() function
for additional details of on the motivation for check for
I/O error early.
Prior to this change dmu_tx_assign() would return the
contents of tx->tx_err which covered a wide range of possible
error codes (EIO, ECKSUM, ESRCH, etc). In practice, none
of the callers could do anything useful with this level of
detail and simply returned the error.
Therefore, this change converts all tx->tx_err errors to EIO,
adds ASSERTs to dmu_tx_assign() to cover the only possible
errors, and clarifies the function comment to include EIO as
a possible fatal error.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian D Behlendorf <behlendo@slag12.llnl.gov>
Closes#17463
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17473
While FreeBSD itself does not support projects, there is no reason
why it can't be controlled via `zfs project` and other subcommands.
Most of the code is actually already there and just needs some
revival and sync with Linux, plus enabling some tests not depending
on the OS support.
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17423
There are still a variety of bugs involving the vdev_nonrot property
that will cause problems if you try to run the test suite with
segment-based weighting disabled, and with other things in the weighting
code. Parents' nonrot property need to be updated when children are
added. When vdevs are expanded and more metaslabs are added, the weights
have to be recalculated (since the number of metaslabs is an input to
the lba bias function). When opening, faulted or unopenable children
should not be considered for whether a vdev is nonrot or not (since the
nonrot property is determined during a successful open, this can cause
false negatives). And draid spares need to have the nonrot property set
correctly.
Sponsored-by: Eshtek, creators of HexOS
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17469
FreeBSD provides CI-IMAGES since some time. These images are
based on nuageinit, which does not support fqdn and sudo for
example. So we need currently some workarounds to get it
working.
The FreeBSD images will be more compatible with cloud-init in
some near future. Then we can remove the workaround things.
These versions are used for testing:
- freebsd13-4r (RELEASE)
- freebsd14-3s (STABLE)
- freebsd15-0c (CURRENT)
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#17462
Linux 5.16 by default fails the build on objtool warnings. We have
known and understood objtool warnings we can't fix without
involving Linux maintainers.
To work around this we introduce an objtool wrapper script which
removes the `--Werror` flag.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Closes#17456
ZIL introduced dependencies between its write ZIOs to permit flush
defer, when we flush vdev caches only once all the write ZIOs has
completed. But it was recently spotted that it serializes not only
ZIO completions handling, but also their ready stage. It means ZIO
pipeline can't calculate checksums for the following ZIOs until all
the previous are checksumed, even though it is not required. On a
systems where memory throughput of a single CPU core is limited,
it creates single-core CPU bottleneck, which is difficult to see
due to ZIO pipeline design with many taskqueue threads.
While it would be great to bypass the ready stage waits, it would
require changes to ZIO code, and I haven't found a clean way to do
it. But I've noticed that we don't need any dependency between
the write ZIOs if the previous one has some waiters, which means
it won't defer any flushes and work as a barrier for the earlier
ones.
Bypassing it won't help large single-thread writes, since all the
write ZIOs except the last in that case won't have waiters, and
so will be dependent. But in that case the ZIO processing might
not be a bottleneck, since there will be only one thread populating
the write buffers, that will likely be the bottleneck.
But bypassing the ZIO dependency on multi-threaded write workloads
really allows them to scale beyond the checksuming throughput of
one CPU core.
My tests with writing 12 files on a same dataset on a pool with
4 striped NVMes as SLOGs from 12 threads with 1MB blocks on a
system with Xeon Silver 4114 CPU show total throughput increase
from 4.3GB/s to 8.5GB/s, increasing the SLOGs busy from ~30% to
~70%.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17458
zfs_putpages() would put the entire range of pages onto the ZIL, then
return VM_PAGER_OK for each page to the kernel. However, an associated
zil_commit() or txg sync had not happened at this point, so the write
may not actually be on disk.
So, we rework it to use a ZIL commit callback, and do the post-write
work of undirtying the page and signaling completion there. We return
VM_PAGER_PEND to the kernel instead so it knows that we will take care
of it.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17445
If a write is split across mutliple itxs, we only want the callback on
the last one, otherwise it will be called for every itx associated with
this single write, which makes it very hard to know what to clean up.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17445
If the kernel will honour our error returns, use them. If not, fool it
by setting a writeback error on the superblock, if available.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17420
If the pool is suspended, we'll just block in zil_commit(). If the
system is shutting down, blocking wouldn't help anyone. So, we should
keep this test for now, but at least return an error for anyone who is
actually interested.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17420
The superblock pointer will always be set, as will z_log, so remove code
supporting cases that can't occur (on Linux at least).
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17420
Fairly coarse, but if it returns while the pool suspends, it must be
with an error.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17420
Previous dmu_tx_count_clone() was broken, stating that cloning is
similar to free. While they might be from some points, cloning
is not net-free. It will likely consume space and memory, and
unlike free it will do it no matter whether the destination has
the blocks or not (usually not, so previous code did nothing).
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17431
Looking on txg_wait_synced(, 0) I've noticed that it always syncs
5 TXGs: 3 TXG_CONCURRENT_STATES + 2 TXG_DEFER_SIZE. But in case
of dmu_offset_next() we do not care about deferred frees. And even
concurrent TXGs we might not need sync all 3 if the dnode was not
dirtied in last few TXGs.
This patch makes dmu_offset_next() to sync one TXG at a time until
the dnode is clean, but no more than 3 TXG_CONCURRENT_STATES times.
My tests with random simultaneous writes and seeks over many files
on HDD pool show 7-14% performance increase.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17434
dbuf_verify(): Don't need the lock, since we only compare pointers.
dbuf_findbp(): Don't need the lock, since aside of unneeded assert
we only produce the pointer, but don't de-reference it.
dnode_next_offset_level(): When working on top level indirection
should lock dnode buffer's db_rwlock, since it is our parent. If
dnode has no buffer, then it is meta-dnode or one of quotas and we
should lock the dataset's ds_bp_rwlock instead.
Reviewed-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17441
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/Closes#17426
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/Closes#17426
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/Closes#17426
And make its check and sync functions visible, so I can hook them up to
zcp_synctask. Rename not strictly necessary, but it definitely looks
more like a dsl_dataset thing than a dmu_objset thing, to the extent
that those things even have a meaningful distinction.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/Closes#17426
It is not right, but there are few examples when TX is aborted
after being assigned in case of error. To handle it better on
production systems add extra cleanup steps.
While here, replace couple dmu_tx_abort() in simple cases.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17438
Having high-refcount dedup entries for zero blocks is inefficient
when they could be recorded as a holes instead. Normally, zero
compression is not done if compression is disabled to not confuse
naive benchmarks. But with dedup enabled, it is expected that the
write will be skipped anyway, so we are just optimizing the way it
is skipped.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17435
The io_uring interface is available as a Technology Preview.
Details: https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4723221
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#17447
The `scn_min_txg` can now be used not only with resilver. Instead
of checking `scn_min_txg` to determine whether it’s a resilver or
a scrub, simply check which function is defined. Thanks to this
change, a scrub_finish event is generated when performing a scrub
from the saved txg.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mariusz Zaborski <mariusz.zaborski@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17432
* zfs_link: allow tempfile sync to fail if pool suspends
4653e2f7d3 (#17355) allows dmu_tx_assign() to fail if the pool suspends
when failmode=continue, but zfs_link() can fall back to
txg_wait_synced() if it has to wait for a tempfile to be fully created
before continuing, which will block if the pool suspends.
Handle this by requesting an error return if the pool suspends when
failmode=continue, and if that happens, return EIO.
* zfs_clone_range: allow dirty wait to fail if pool suspends
4653e2f7d3 (#17355) allows dmu_tx_assign() to fail if the pool suspends
when failmode=continue, but zfs_clone_range() can fall back to
txg_wait_synced() if it has to wait for a dirty block to be written out,
which will block if the pool suspends.
Handle this by requesting an error return if the pool suspends when
failmode=continue, and if that happens, return EIO.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17413
After #17401 the Linux build produces some stack related warnings.
Silence them with the `STACK_FRAME_NON_STANDARD` macro.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Co-authored-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#17410
It makes no sense to limit read size below the block size, since
DMU will any way consume resources for the whole block, while the
current zfs_vnops_read_chunk_size is only 1MB, which is smaller
that maximum block size of 16MB. Plus in case of misaligned
Uncached I/O the buffer may get evicted between the chunks,
requiring repeating I/Os.
On 64-bit platforms increase zfs_vnops_read_chunk_size to 32MB.
It allows to less depend on speculative prefetcher if application
requests specific size, first not waiting for prefetcher to start
and later not prefetching more than needed.
Also while there, we don't need to align reads to the chunk size,
but only to a block size, which is smaller and so more forgiving.
My profiles show ~4% of CPU time saving when reading 16MB blocks.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Igor Kozhukhov <ikozhukhov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17415
With increasing number of metaslab classes it can be helpful for
debugging to know what we are looking at.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17409
Before this change in case of any allocation error ZFS always fallen
back to normal class. But with more of different classes available
we migth want more sophisticated logic. For example, it makes sense
to fall back from dedup first to special class (if it is allowed to
put DDT there) and only then to normal, since in a pool with dedup
and special classes populated normal class likely has performance
characteristics unsuitable for dedup.
This change implements general mechanism where fallback order is
controlled by the same spa_preferred_class() as the initial class
selection. And as first application it implements the mentioned
dedup->special->normal fallbacks. I have more plans for it later.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17391
The module parameter name was not changed in FreeBSD sysctls
list: 'vfs.zfs.vol.mode'. Also, on Linux side the name is:
/sys/module/zfs/parameters/zvol_volmode.
Sponsored-by: vStack, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#17386
The module parameter now is represented in FreeBSD sysctls list
with name: 'vfs.zfs.vol.prefetch_bytes'. The default value is 131072,
same as on Linux side.
Sponsored-by: vStack, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#17385
The child locking difference is simple enough to handle with a boolean.
The actual work is more involved, and it's easy to forget to change
things in both places when experimenting. Just collapse them.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17382
Fedora 40 has gone EOL as of May 2025, retire the CI builder.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#17408
Rewrite is a one-time/rare bulk administrative operation, which
should minimally affect payload caching. Plus some avoided memory
copies in its data path allow to significantly increase its speed.
My tests show reduction of time to rewrite 28GB of uncompressed
files on NVMe pool from 17 to 9 seconds and minimal ARC usage.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17407
The io_uring interface is available as a Technology Preview.
Details: https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4723221
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#17397
Make 'zvol_threads', 'zvol_num_taskqs' and 'zvol_request_sync' names
compatible with FreeBSD sysctl naming convention. Now the sysctls are
have a next form:
$ sysctl vfs.zfs.vol.threads
vfs.zfs.vol.threads: 0
$ sysctl vfs.zfs.vol.num_taskqs
vfs.zfs.vol.num_taskqs: 0
$ sysctl vfs.zfs.vol.request_sync
vfs.zfs.vol.request_sync: 0
Sponsored-by: vStack, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#17406
5b9e695 added specific userspace versions of abd_os.h and abd_impl_os.h
for libzpool. However, abd.h and abd_impl.h, which include them, are
packaged with libzfs, so other programs building against libzfs can
fail to build, either because the headers aren't installed, or because
they aren't on any standard include path.
So, move abd_os.h and abd_impl_os.h to libspl, where they we will be
installed alongside abd.h and abd_impl.h in a known path.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16940Closes#17390Closes#17394
I've noticed that after some dedup tests system reboot ends up in
assertion about ms_defer tree not free. It seems to be caused by
DDT flushing still freeing some blocks while ZFS trying to reach
a final steady state due to spa_final_txg, while being set by
spa_export_common() on pool export, is not set when spa_unload()
is called by spa_evict_all() on system reboot/shutdown. Setting
spa_final_txg in spa_unload() fixes this issue.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17395
Disks can be removed either by the administrator via hotplug or by the
kernel when a disk failure occurs. The previous message implied that
removal was always manual, which could be confusing.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17400
This patch fixes a race where vdev_remove_wanted may be set after probe
initiation, which could otherwise trigger redundant fault and removal.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17400
Ubuntu 20.04 has gone EOL as of April 2025, retire the CI builder.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#17403
Since it was disabled for 2.3, there's been no confirmed sightings of
strange IO errors, misalignments or related shenanigans. Absence of
evidence and all that, but I'd rather fix bugs in the new code than in
the old.
"It isn't hubris until he's failed."
-- Chrisjen Avasarala
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17399
Usually the IO type can be inferred from the other fields (in
particular, priority and flags) sometimes it's not easy to see. This is
just another little debug helper.
May 27 2025 00:54:54.024110493 ereport.fs.zfs.data
class = "ereport.fs.zfs.data"
ena = 0x1f5ecfae600801
...
zio_delta = 0x0
zio_type = 0x2 [WRITE]
zio_priority = 0x3 [ASYNC_WRITE]
zio_objset = 0x0
Document zio_type and zio_priority.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17381
If the kernel fails to allocate the gendisk, zvo_disk will be NULL, and
derefencing it will explode. So don't do that.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17396
We silence `objtool` warnings on some object files using
`OBJECT_FILES_NON_STANDARD_some_file.o`. Nowadays `objtool` is
needed for CPU vulnerability mitigations and a lot more
functionality so its use is desirable.
Just remove the `OBJECT_FILES_NON_STANDARD` definitions. A follow-up
commit is needed to make the offending files standard and address
the compile time warnings.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Closes#17401Closes#17364
The module parameter now is represented in FreeBSD sysctls list with
name: 'vfs.zfs.vol.inhibit_dev'. The default value is '0', same as on
Linux side.
Sponsored-by: vStack, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#17384
As commit 320f0c6 did for Linux, connect POSIX_FADV_WILLNEED
up to dmu_prefetch() on FreeBSD.
While there, fix portability problems in tests/functional/fadvise.
1. Instead of relying on the numerical values of POSIX_FADV_XXX macros,
accept macro names as arguments to the file_fadvise program. (The
numbers happen to match on Linux and FreeBSD, but future systems may
vary and it seems a little strange/raw to count on that.)
2. For implementation reasons, SEQUENTIAL doesn't reach ZFS via FreeBSD
VFS currently (perhaps something that should be investigated in
FreeBSD). Since on Linux we're treating SEQUENTIAL and WILLNEED the
same, it doesn't really matter which one we use, so switch the test
over to WILLNEED exercise the new prefetch code on both OSes the
same way.
Reviewed-by: Mateusz Guzik <mjg@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Munro <tmunro@FreeBSD.org>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#17379
Three occurences with an 'e', and all of them mine. Maybe it's an
British thing?
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
This was fully removed from Linux in 4.15, so we won't be seeing it
again.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Since 3.17 Linux has provided param ops for 64-bit ints, so we don't
need to use our own anymore.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Nothing uses them now.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
The use for spl_taskq_kick was the only use, and the comment that
module_param_call is obsolete is no longer true - it's still very much
used even in recent kernels.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Nothing in any FreeBSD code uses them.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
If a variable is only available in the kernel, then the tunable should
also only be available there.
This matters very little so long as we don't have userspace tunables,
but its still good hygeine.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
It actually doesn't matter if it's not initialised when we first query
the current value; it just returns empty-string. A crash is quite
obnoxious even if it is a rare case.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Likely it's only int64 for comparison with ssize_t, which is signed.
However, it would make no sense for it to be less than 0 or greater than
4G, so making it a regular uint will make it safe for comparison and
remove the only S64 tunable in core.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17377
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 6.15
kernel.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17393
failmode=continue is in a sorry state. Originally designed to fix a very
specific problem, it causes crashes and panics for most people who end
up trying to use it. At this point, we should either remove it entirely,
or try to make it more usable.
With this patch, I choose the latter. While the feature is fundamentally
unpredictable and prone to race conditions, it should be possible to get
it to the point where it can at least sometimes be useful for some
users. This patch fixes one of the major issues with failmode=continue:
it interrupts even ZIOs that are patiently waiting in line behind stuck
IOs.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17372
By the assertion, vdev_geom_io_done() only expects ENXIO on an error
when the geom is a top-level (allocating) vdev[1][2]. However, zinject
currently can't insert ENXIO directly, possibly because on Solaris
outright disk failures were reported with EIO[2][3].
This is a narrow workaround to convert EIO to ENXIO when injections are
enabled, to avoid the assertion and allow the test suite to test
behaviour related to probe failure on FreeBSD.
1. freebsd/freebsd-src@37ec52ca7a
2. freebsd/freebsd-src@cd730bd6b2
3. illumos/illumos-gate@ea8dc4b6d2
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
This is the cheap way to keep non-user functions working after
break-on-suspend becomes default.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
This adjusts dmu_tx_assign/dmu_tx_wait to be interruptable if the pool
suspends while they're waiting, rather than just on the initial check
before falling back into a wait.
Since that's not always wanted, add a DMU_TX_SUSPEND flag to ignore
suspend entirely, effectively returning to the previous behaviour.
With that, it shouldn't be possible for anything with a standard
dmu_tx_assign/wait/abort loop to block under failmode=continue.
Also should be a bit tighter than the old behaviour, where a
VERIFY0(dmu_tx_assign(DMU_TX_WAIT)) could technically fail if the pool
is already suspended and failmode=continue.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
Mostly for a little more type checking and debugging visibility.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
This allows a caller to request a wait for txg sync, with an appropriate
error return if the pool is suspended or becomes suspended during the
wait.
To support this, txg_wait_kick() is added to signal the sync condvar,
which wakes up the waiters, causing them to loop and reconsider their
wait conditions again. zio_suspend() now calls this to trigger the break
if the pool suspends while waiting.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17355
It was reported that channel programs' zfs.get_prop doesn't work for
dataset properties encryption and encryptionroot.
They are handled in get_special_prop due to the need to call
dsl_dataset_crypt_stats to load those dsl props.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Co-authored-by: Graham Christensen <graham@grahamc.com>
Closes#17280
2aa3fbe761 extended zinject_record_t, and in doing so inadvertently
extended zfs_cmd_t, which broke compatibility with userspace tools
without the change.
This fixes that by using some of the unused space in zfs_cmd_t for the
extra fields. We also add an assert to trigger a compile error if the
size ever changes.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17367
It has existed as a warning since 0.8.3, 5+ years ago. I think people
have had enough time.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17376
It's been many years, we can probably do without.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17376
In truenas_pylibzfs, we query list of encrypted datasets several times,
which is expensive. This commit exposes a public API zfs_is_encrypted()
to get encryption status from fast stat path without having to refresh
the properties.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17368
Before this change write log size TXG throttling mechanism was
accounting only user payload bytes. But the actual ZIL both on
disk and especially in memory include headers of hundred(s) of
bytes. Not accouting those may allow applications like
bonnie++, in their wisdom writing one byte at a time, to consume
excessive amount of memory and ZIL/SLOG in one TXG.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17373
This test covers a bug fixed by commit ea74cde: performing an
incremental non-raw send from an encrypted filesystem followed by
exporting the pool. Before that commit, exporting the sending pool
in this scenario would trigger a panic:
VERIFY(avl_is_empty(&sk->sk_dsl_keys)) failed
PANIC at dsl_crypt.c:353:spa_keystore_fini()
Call Trace:
spl_dumpstack+0x29/0x2f [spl]
spl_panic+0xd1/0xe9 [spl]
spl_assert.constprop.0+0x1a/0x30 [zfs]
spa_keystore_fini+0xc2/0xf0 [zfs]
spa_deactivate+0x25f/0x610 [zfs]
spa_evict_all+0xf4/0x200 [zfs]
spa_fini+0x13/0x140 [zfs]
zfs_kmod_fini+0x72/0xc0 [zfs]
openzfs_fini_os+0x13/0x3a [zfs]
openzfs_fini+0x9/0x6b8 [zfs]
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#17366
The man page and the usage statement from the CLI have been refactored
to abide by the ManDoc standard. Style changes include:
* Upper-case letters before lower-case
* List short options w/o arguments first
* Then list short options w/ arguments
* Then list long arguments
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Cameron Harr <harr1@llnl.gov>
Closes#17357
The man page and CLI usage statements were both a little out
of sync and neither fully alphabetized correctly. That has
been fixed. One outstanding question is whether to get rid of
the ellipses on the CLI usage.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Cameron Harr <harr1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16004Closes#17357
Without this fix, zfs_range_tree_find_in could return an overlap when
the found range starts immediately after the searched range, with no
actual overlap.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: Igor Kozhukhov <ikozhukhov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17363
We don't really need to access space map to know where the metaslab
ends, while msp->ms_sm might be NULL.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed by: Igor Kozhukhov <ikozhukhov@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Fixes#17164Fixes#17359Closes#17361
Add support to alias md-type devices in udev rules.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Andres <a-d-j-i@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#17345
When set, dumps all ZFS ioctl calls and returns and their nvlists to
STDERR, to make debugging and understanding a lot easier.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17344
Name the OS-specific call lzc_ioctl_fd_os(), and make lzc_ioctl_fd()
wrap it, so we can do more in the wrapper.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17344
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17344
PRs like #17352 have no applicable checkbox, so let us add one.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard@ryao.dev>
Closes#17354
This was caught when doing a manual check to see if #17352 needed to be
improved to catch mismatches across stack frames of the kind that were
first found in #17340.
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard@ryao.dev>
Closes#17353
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard@ryao.dev>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17348
Renamed in 6.2, and the compat wrapper removed in 6.15. No signature or
functional change apart from that, so a very minimal update for us.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17229
The intent is that the filesystem may have a reference to an "old"
version of the new directory, eg if it was keeping it alive because a
remote NFS client still had it open.
We don't need anything like that, so this really just changes things so
we return error codes encoded in pointers.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17229
d634d20d1b had been intended to fix a
potential information leak issue where the compiler's optimization
passes appeared to remove `memset()` operations that sanitize sensitive
data before memory is freed for use by the rest of the kernel.
When I wrote it, I had assumed that the compiler would not remove the
other `memset()` operations, but upon reflection, I have realized that
this was a bad assumption to make. I would rather have a very slight
amount of additional overhead when calling `gcm_clear_ctx()` than risk a
future compiler remove `memset()` calls. This is likely to happen if
someone decides to try doing link time optimization and the person will
not think to audit the assembly output for issues like this, so it is
best to preempt the possibility before it happens.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Signed-off-by: Richard Yao <richard@ryao.dev>
Closes#17343
Bisecting identified the redacted send/receive as the source of the bug
for issue #12014. Specifically the call to
dsl_dataset_hold_obj(&fromds) has been replaced by
dsl_dataset_hold_obj_flags() which passes a DECRYPT flag and creates
a key mapping. A subsequent dsl_dataset_rele_flag(&fromds) is missing
and the key mapping is not cleared. This may be inadvertedly used, which
results in arc_untransform failing with ECKSUM in:
arc_untransform+0x96/0xb0 [zfs]
dbuf_read_verify_dnode_crypt+0x196/0x350 [zfs]
dbuf_read+0x56/0x770 [zfs]
dmu_buf_hold_by_dnode+0x4a/0x80 [zfs]
zap_lockdir+0x87/0xf0 [zfs]
zap_lookup_norm+0x5c/0xd0 [zfs]
zap_lookup+0x16/0x20 [zfs]
zfs_get_zplprop+0x8d/0x1d0 [zfs]
setup_featureflags+0x267/0x2e0 [zfs]
dmu_send_impl+0xe7/0xcb0 [zfs]
dmu_send_obj+0x265/0x360 [zfs]
zfs_ioc_send+0x10c/0x280 [zfs]
Fix this by restoring the call to dsl_dataset_hold_obj().
The same applies for to_ds: here replace dsl_dataset_rele(&to_ds) with
dsl_dataset_rele_flags().
Both leaked key mappings will cause a panic when exporting the
sending pool or unloading the zfs module after a non-raw send from
an encrypted filesystem.
Contributions-by: Hank Barta <hbarta@gmail.com>
Contributions-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Yao <richard.yao@alumni.stonybrook.edu>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#12014Closes#17340
UIO_DIRECT means we can do Direct I/O, while DMU_DIRECTIO we want
to do it. First does not automatically means second. Add few
checks to not use Direct I/O in few cases we don't want it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17342
Loss of one indirect block of the meta dnode likely means loss of
the whole dataset. It is worse than one file that the man page
promises, and in my opinion is not much better than "none" mode.
This change restores redundancy of the meta-dnode indirect blocks,
while same time still corrects expectations in the man page.
Reviewed-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17339
Currently, commands that resume a scrub/errorscrub from a paused state
don't get logged in the pool history. This is because resumes actually
return ECANCELED, instead of 0. This causes the tsd code in the common
ioctl logic to not think the ioctl succeeded, which causes the
log_history ioctl to fail with EPERM. However, for resuming a scrub from
a paused state, ECANCELED is success.
There are two options for how to deal with this. The first is the one
that I implemented here; I can't find a good reason for dmu_scan to
return ECANCELED on resume instead of 0, so let's just not. The only
place we check for the ECANCELED value is in zpool_scan, where we just
convert it back to zero. However, I am aware that this is changing an
ioctl interface, which I believe is a breaking change. I don't think
it's an important change, but maybe there is someone who relies on it.
The other option that could be implemented is to either allow ECANCELED
specifically from dsl_scan in the common ioctl code, or add a generic
facility to the common ioctl code that allows each command to specify
whether or not success happened, regardless of the return values. I am
open to feedback on which option people think would be better.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Closes#17301
On systems with enormous amounts of memory, the single arc_evict thread
can become a bottleneck if reads and writes are stuck behind it, waiting
for old data to be evicted before new data can take its place.
This commit adds support for evicting from multiple ARC lists in
parallel, by farming the evict work out to some number of threads and
then accumulating their results.
A new tuneable, zfs_arc_evict_threads, sets the number of threads. By
default, it will scale based on the number of CPUs.
Sponsored-by: Expensify, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Youzhong Yang <youzhong@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Piotrowski <mateusz.piotrowski@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Stetsenko <alex.stetsenko@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Piotrowski <mateusz.piotrowski@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Stetsenko <alex.stetsenko@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16486
ARC target size might drop significantly under memory pressure,
especially if current ARC size was much smaller than the target.
Since dbuf cache size is a fraction of the target ARC size, it
might need eviction too. Aside of memory from the dbuf eviction
itself, it might help ARC by making more buffers evictable.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17314
I've found that QEMU/KVM guest memory accounted as shared also
included into NR_FILE_PAGES. But it is actually a non-evictable
anonymous memory. Using it as a base for zfs_arc_pc_percent
parameter makes ARC to ignore shrinker requests while page cache
does not really have anything to evict, ending up in OOM killer
killing the QEMU process.
Instead use of NR_ACTIVE_FILE + NR_INACTIVE_FILE should represent
the part of a page cache that is actually evictable, which should
be safer to use as a reference for ARC scaling.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17334
Allow installing a custom kernel version from the Fedora experimental
kernel repos onto the github runners. This is useful for testing if
ZFS works against a newer kernel.
Fedora has a number of repos with experimental kernel packages. This
PR allows installs from kernels in these repos:
@kernel-vanilla/stable
@kernel-vanilla/mainline
(https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Kernel_Vanilla_Repositories)
You will need to manually kick of a github runner to test with a custom
kernel version. To do that, go to the github actions tab under
'zfs-qemu' and click the drop-down for 'run workflow'. In there you
will see a text box to specify the version (like '6.14'). The scripts
will do their best to match the version to the newest matching version
that the repos support (since they're may be multiple nightly versions
of, say, '6.14'). A full list of kernel versions can be seen in the
dependency stage output if you kick off a manual run.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17156
Before Direct I/O was implemented, I've implemented lighter version
I called Uncached I/O. It uses normal DMU/ARC data path with some
optimizations, but evicts data from caches as soon as possible and
reasonable. Originally I wired it only to a primarycache property,
but now completing the integration all the way up to the VFS.
While Direct I/O has the lowest possible memory bandwidth usage,
it also has a significant number of limitations. It require I/Os
to be page aligned, does not allow speculative prefetch, etc. The
Uncached I/O does not have those limitations, but instead require
additional memory copy, though still one less than regular cached
I/O. As such it should fill the gap in between. Considering this
I've disabled annoying EINVAL errors on misaligned requests, adding
a tunable for those who wants to test their applications.
To pass the information between the layers I had to change a number
of APIs. But as side effect upper layers can now control not only
the caching, but also speculative prefetch. I haven't wired it to
VFS yet, since it require looking on some OS specifics. But while
there I've implemented speculative prefetch of indirect blocks for
Direct I/O, controllable via all the same mechanisms.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Fixes#17027
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
It has been observed that the symlinks are not being created
for the disk partitions on multipath enabled systems.
This fix addresses the issue.
Signed-off-by: Diwakar Kristappagari <diwakar-k@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Once we've selected a best ident for the AUTHORS file, it makes sense to
set up a corresponding mailmap entry for any other ident for that
committer, to ensure the git history also reflects this into the future.
So, here we output potential mailmap updates for a human to consider.
For the moment, this needs to be done by a human, because update_authors
uses git to get the author names, and thus is reliant on the mailmap
contents to generate its output, so having it update mailmap directly
would introduce a circular dependency that I'm not totally sure about.
It's definitely better than having to go back through the history and
check each commit by hand though.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
I've increasingly found that commits from new contributors have the
author set in the "Github noreply" obfuscated style. If they do have a
better canonical choice, it's usually in the Signed-off-by: trailer in
the commit message.
I had avoided using these in the first version of this program because
they aren't always present, aren't always correct, and some commits have
multiple signoffs. It seems however that requiring either the name or
the email address to match the commit author sufficiently narrows the
scope to be useful for the "Github noreply" situation, which is really
the main sticking point. And of course, if it gets it wrong, overriding
in .mailmap or AUTHORS is always an option.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Nothing modifies them, and nothing should, so lets try to enforce that.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
This allows to rewrite content of specified file(s) as-is without
modifications, but at a different location, compression, checksum,
dedup, copies and other parameter values. It is faster than read
plus write, since it does not require data copying to user-space.
It is also faster for sync=always datasets, since without data
modification it does not require ZIL writing. Also since it is
protected by normal range range locks, it can be done under any
other load. Also it does not affect file's modification time or
other properties.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
The old code would compare all the test group names to work out some
sort of common path, but it didn't appear to work consistently,
sometimes placing output in a top-level dir, other times in one or more
subdirs. (I confess, I do not quite understand what it's supposed to
do).
This is a very simple rework that simply looks at all the test group
paths, removes common leading components, and uses the remainder as the
output directory. This should work because groups paths are unique, and
means we get a output dir tree of roughly the same shape as the test
groups in the runfiles and the test source dirs themselves.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17167
For UIO_ITER, we are just wrapping a kernel iterator. It will take care
of its own offsets if necessary. We don't need to do anything, and if we
do try to do anything with it (like advancing the iterator by the skip
in zfs_uio_advance) we're just confusing the kernel iterator, ending up
at the wrong position or worse, off the end of the memory region.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17298
db.db_mtx must be held any time that db.db_data is accessed. All of
these functions do have the lock held by a parent; add assertions to
ensure that it stays that way.
See https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/discussions/17118
* Refactor dbuf_read_bonus to make it obvious why db_rwlock isn't
required.
* Refactor dbuf_hold_copy to eliminate the db_rwlock
Copy data into the newly allocated buffer before assigning it to the db.
That way, there will be no need to take db->db_rwlock.
* Refactor dbuf_read_hole
In the case of an indirect hole, initialize the newly allocated buffer
before assigning it to the dmu_buf_impl_t.
Sponsored by: ConnectWise
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#17209
Make zvol I/O requests processing asynchronous on FreeBSD side in some
cases. Clone zvol threading logic and required module parameters from
Linux side. Make zvol threadpool creation/destruction logic shared for
both Linux and FreeBSD.
The IO requests are processed asynchronously in next cases:
- volmode=geom: if IO request thread is geom thread or cannot sleep.
- volmode=cdev: if IO request passed thru struct cdevsw .d_strategy
routine, mean is AIO request.
In all other cases the IO requests are processed synchronously. The
volthreading zvol property is ignored on FreeBSD side.
Sponsored-by: vStack, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Signed-off-by: Fedor Uporov <fuporov.vstack@gmail.com>
Closes#17169
It's been dead ever since 5fa356ea44
Sponsored by: ConnectWise
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#17119
These are only required to support these ioctls on Linux <4.5. Since
4.18 is our cutoff, we don't need this code anymore.
Also removing related test things that will never match again.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17308
SYSCTL_SIZEOF() has been introduced in FreeBSD by commit "sysctl(9):
Ease exporting struct sizes; Discourage doing that" (713abc9880aa) in
branch 'main'. It will soon be backported to 'stable/14'. We will thus
be able to remove the old, alternate version left in the '#else' branch
as soon as 'stable/13' goes out of support (April 30, 2026).
Sponsored-by: The FreeBSD Foundation
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Olivier Certner <olce@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#17309
With certain combinations of target ARC states balance and ghost
hit rates it was possible to get the fractions outside of allowed
range. This patch limits maximum balance adjustment speed, which
should make it impossible, and also asserts it.
Fixes#17210
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
When forced to resort to ganging, ZFS currently allocates three child
blocks, each one third of the size of the original. This is true
regardless of whether larger allocations could be made, which would
allow us to have fewer gang leaves. This improves performance when
fragmentation is high enough to require ganging, but not so high that
all the free ranges are only just big enough to hold a third of the
recordsize. This is also useful for improving the behavior of a future
change to allow larger gang headers.
We add the ability for the allocation codepath to allocate a range of
sizes instead of a single fixed size. We then use this to pre-allocate
the DVAs for the gang children. If those allocations fail, we fall back
to the normal write path, which will likely re-gang.
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
txg_wait_synced_sig() is "wait for txg, unless a signal arrives". We
expect that future development will require similar "wait unless X"
behaviour.
This generalises the API as txg_wait_synced_flags(), where the provided
flags describe the events that should cause the call to return.
Instead of a boolean, the return is now an error code, which the caller
can use to know which event caused the call to return.
The existing call to txg_wait_synced_sig() is now
txg_wait_synced_flags(TXG_WAIT_SIGNAL).
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
After more CI runs and code reading after #17259 I've found that
online starts resilver via async mechanism, which does not provide
wait primitives at this time. Restore some delays to restore CI
until this is properly fixed.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
We should not clear scn_state and notify waiters until we call
vdev_dtl_reassess(), otherwise following offline/detach request
may fail with "no valid replicas".
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
`S_IFMT` is declared in `sys/stat.h`, but we cannot include this header
because it redeclares the `statx` function with different argument
types. Therefore, we define `S_IFMT` ourselves, in the same way as the
other definitions.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: José Luis Salvador Rufo <salvador.joseluis@gmail.com>
Closes#17293Closes#17294
zpool_status_003 and zpool_status_004_pos use 'dd' to trigger a read of
a file without specifying 'of=/dev/null'. This spams the ZTS logs
with ~20MB of garbage data. This commit adds 'of=/dev/null'.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
It's possible for two spares to get attached to a single failed vdev.
This happens when you have a failed disk that is spared, and then you
replace the failed disk with a new disk, but during the resilver
the new disk fails, and ZED kicks in a spare for the failed new
disk. This commit checks for that condition and disallows it.
Reviewed-by: Akash B <akash-b@hpe.com>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes: #16547Closes: #17231
Decrease the RESILVER_MIN_TIME_MS variable from 50 to 20.
So the test, which expects two 2 resilver starts will see them.
Logfile of the seen failures before this fix:
log: NOTE: expected 2 resilver start(s) after offline/online, found 1
log: expected 2 resilver start(s) after offline/online, found 1
The test time decreases also from around 00:42 to 00:24 seconds.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16822Closes#17279
When multiple snapshots prevent the destruction/rollback of the
respective dataset/snapshot/volume via zfs destroy or zfs rollback,
the error message does not list the blocking snapshots sorted
according to their order of creation. This causes inconvenience and can
lead to confusion, and also creates a contrast with a returned message
from zfs list -t snap function.
Closes: #12751
Signed-off-by: Artem-OSSRevival <artem.vlasenko@ossrevival.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
This change goes through and quotes variables where appropriate to
avoid issues with incorrect splitting. The performance tests ran into
an issue with $SUDO_COMMAND splitting incorrectly because it was not
quoted. This change fixes that issue and hopefully gets ahead of any
other similar problems.
Reviewed by: John Wren Kennedy <jwk404@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Aleksandr Liber <aleksandr.liber@perforce.com>
Closes#17235
A user reported that when your upgrade your kernel packages on Fedora
with ZFS installed, only the kernel-devel package gets held back to the
ZFS-supported version, but not the other kernel packages. So if ZFS only
supports the 6.13 kernel, Fedora will still happily upgrade the kernel
RPM to 6.14, but hold back kernel-devel at 6.13, for example.
This commit includes version checks for the 'kernel-uname-r' dependency,
typically provided by the 'kernel-core' package.
Original-patch-by: @jkool702
Reviewed-by: @jkool702
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17265Closes#17271
### Background
Various admin operations will be invoked by some userspace task, but the
work will be done on a separate kernel thread at a later time. Snapshots
are an example, which are triggered through zfs_ioc_snapshot() ->
dsl_dataset_snapshot(), but the actual work is from a task dispatched to
dp_sync_taskq.
Many such tasks end up in dsl_enforce_ds_ss_limits(), where various
limits and permissions are enforced. Among other things, it is necessary
to ensure that the invoking task (that is, the user) has permission to
do things. We can't simply check if the running task has permission; it
is a privileged kernel thread, which can do anything.
However, in the general case it's not safe to simply query the task for
its permissions at the check time, as the task may not exist any more,
or its permissions may have changed since it was first invoked. So
instead, we capture the permissions by saving CRED() in the user task,
and then using it for the check through the secpolicy_* functions.
### Current implementation
The current code calls CRED() to get the credential, which gets a
pointer to the cred_t inside the current task and passes it to the
worker task. However, it doesn't take a reference to the cred_t, and so
expects that it won't change, and that the task continues to exist. In
practice that is always the case, because we don't let the calling task
return from the kernel until the work is done.
For Linux, we also take a reference to the current task, because the
Linux credential APIs for the most part do not check an arbitrary
credential, but rather, query what a task can do. See
secpolicy_zfs_proc(). Again, we don't take a reference on the task, just
a pointer to it.
### Changes
We change to calling crhold() on the task credential, and crfree() when
we're done with it. This ensures it stays alive and unchanged for the
duration of the call.
On the Linux side, we change the main policy checking function
priv_policy_ns() to use override_creds()/revert_creds() if necessary to
make the provided credential active in the current task, allowing the
standard task-permission APIs to do the needed check. Since the task
pointer is no longer required, this lets us entirely remove
secpolicy_zfs_proc() and the need to carry a task pointer around as
well.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Kyle Evans <kevans@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Don't use KSM on the FreeBSD VMs and optimize KSM settings for
Linux to have faster run times.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#17247
Sometimes it fails unable to see any injected write errors.
I guess writing 25KB of zeroes might be not enough to trigger
errors with probability set to 10%. Lets try to write more.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17270
Those tests are write-mostly at the nested pool. Considering we have
3 more layers of caching underneath, we can hint ZFS how to use the
memory better by setting primarycache=metadata.
While there, add missing zpool sync after rm in checkpoint_capacity
before we could potentially see the freed space, would not there be
a pool checkpoint.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
This commit adds support for using llvm-libunwind for kernels built
using llvm and clang. The two differences are that the largest register
index is given by _LIBUNWIND_HIGHEST_DWARF_REGISTER, we need to check
whether the register is a floating point register and the prototype
for unw_regname takes the unwind cursor as the first argument.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Pauka <me@spauka.se>
Closes#17230
Originally the Lustre ZFS OSD code was going to use zfs_uio_t structs
for supporting Direct I/O with ZFS. However, this has changed to using
abd_t structs instead. This exports the proper symbols that will be used
by the Lustre ZFS OSD code.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#17256
Replace `sleep 15` with `zpool wait`, which should take much less
than the 15 seconds. And considering it is called 16 times, this
should save us up to 4 minutes total.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes: #17257
- Kill workload first for faster cleanup.
- Use `zpool wait` for resilver instead of `sleep`.
- Remove irrelevant workload from `online_offline_003_neg`.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes: #17259
With the advent of fast dedup, there are no longer separate dedup tables
for different copies values. There is now logic that will add DVAs to
the dedup table entry if more copies are needed for new writes. However,
this interacts poorly with ganging. There are two different cases that
can result in mixed gang/non-gang BPs, which are illegal in ZFS.
This change modifies updates of existing FDT; if there are already gang
DVAs in the FDT, we prevent the new write from extending the DDT
entry. We cannot safely mix different gang trees in one block
pointer. if there are non-gang DVAs in the FDT, then this allocation may
not be gangs. If it would gang, we have to redo the whole write as a
non-dedup write.
This change also fixes a refcount leak that could occur if the lead DDT
write failed.
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes: #17123
The test writes 1M of 1KB blocks, which may produce up to 1GB of
dirty data. On top of that ashift=12 likely produces additional
4GB of ZIO buffers during sync process. On top of that we likely
need some page cache since the pool reside on files. And finally
we need to cache the DDT. Not surprising that the test regularly
ends up in OOMs, possibly depending on TXG size variations.
Also replace fio with pretty strange parameter set with a set of
dd writes and TXG commits, just as we neeed here.
While here, remove compression. It has nothing to do here, but
waste CI CPU time.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Add nvlist_snprintf() to print a nvlist to a buffer. This is basically
the snprintf() version of dump_nvlist(). Along with that, add a
zfs_dbgmsg_nvlist() to print out an nvlist to dbgmsg. This will aid in
debugging.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17215
Fix build errors on Fedora 42 like:
module/zcommon/zfs_valstr.c:193:16: error: initializer-string for
array of 'char' truncates NUL terminator but destination lacks
'nonstring' attribute (3 chars into 2 available)
The arrays in zpool_vdev_os.c and zfs_valstr.c don't need to be
NULL terminated, but we do so to make GCC happy.
Closes: #17242
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
- Fix VERIFY3B() when given non-boolean values.
- Map EQUIV() into VERIFY3B(,==,) as equivalent.
- Tune messages for better readability and to closer match source
code for easier search. Unify user-space messages with kernel.
- Tune printed types and remove %px outside of Linux kernel.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Various tools will display draid vdev names with parameters embedded in
them, but would not accept them as valid vdev names when looking them
up, making it difficult to build pipelines involving draid vdevs.
This commit makes it so that if a full draid name is offered for match,
it gets truncated at the first ':' character.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
zfs_notify_email will now include an empty line separating the header
from the body of the email in case the subject is not provided via a
command line argument. This is necessary for programs like sendmail to
function correctly (everything up to the first empty line is interpreted
as header, which previously resulted in either missing message parts or
unsent emails)
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Felix Schmidt <felixschmidt20@aol.com>
Closed#17238
The tiniest typo in dd2a46b5e6 (#17106) broke it, by setting the wrong
var with the test var, resulting in it always producing "no".
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#17236
The 6.0 kernel removes the 'migratepage' VFS op. Check for
migratepage.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org
dbuf_prefetch_impl() should look on level of current indirect, not
the target prefetch level. dbuf_prefetch_indirect_done() should
call dnode_level_is_l2cacheable() if we have dpa_dnode to pass it.
It should fix some both false positive and negative L2ARC caching.
While there, fix redacted feature activation assertions. One was
always true, while another could give false positive if dpa_dnode
is NULL.
George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17204
The problem was identified in handling of the zpool get state command
line arguments. A pointer vdev was used to point to the argv[1], and
its address set to cb.cb_vdevs.cb_names(pointer to array of strings)
so any increment to cb_names resulted in a segfault. Fix covers a
special case of root parameter at argv[1] and remaining cases are
handled by passing in the argv + 1, which allows cb_names iteration
of next command line arguments (vdevs).
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Signed-off-by: Syed Shahrukh Hussain <syed.shahrukh@ossrevival.org>
When a dedup write fails, we try to roll the DDT entry back to a known
good state. However, this also rolls the refcounts and the last-update
time back to the state they were at when we started this write. This
doesn't appear to be able to cause any refcount leaks (after the fix in
17123). This PR prevents that from happening by only rolling back the
parts of the DDT entry that have been updated by the write so far.
Sponsored-by: iXsystems, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Extend project quota test coverage to verify defaultprojectquota
behavior. These build on existing project quota tests with additional
cases specific to defaultprojectquota functionality.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Extend test coverage to verify default user and group quota
functionality. These build on existing user/group quota tests with
additional cases specific to default quotas functionality.
Added on top of: https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/16283/commits/e08cd97
Signed-off-by: Todd Seidelmann <seidelma@wharton.upenn.edu>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Update zfs userspace, groupspace, and projectspace to display the
default quotas when no per-ID specific quota is configured. This
ensures tool outputs align with enforced limits.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Ensure default user/group/project quotas are visible through quota
tools and filesystem stats when no per-ID quota is configured. This
maintains consistency between quota visibility and configured defaults.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Update zfs_id_overobjquota() and zfs_id_overblockquota() to enforce
default user/group/project quotas (block and object-based) when no
per-user, per-group, or per-project quota exists. If a specific quota
is not configured for an ID, the default quota value is applied.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
This adds default userquota, groupquota, and projectquota properties to
MASTER_NODE_OBJ to make them accessible during zfsvfs_init() (regular
DSL properties require dsl_config_lock, which cannot be safely acquired
in this context). The zfs_fill_zplprops_impl() logic is updated to read
these default properties directly from MASTER_NODE_OBJ.
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
When opening a vdev and setting the nonrot property, we used to wait for
each child to be opened before examining its nonrot property. When the
change was made to open vdevs asynchronously, we didn't move the nonrot
check out of the main loop. As a result, the nonrot property is almost
always set to false, regardless of the actual type of the underlying
disks. The fix is simply to move the nonrot check to a separate loop
after the taskq has been waited for.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Eshtek, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Currently, the zfs initramfs-tools boot script under local-top calls
`vgchange -ay`, which unconditionally activates all logical volumes
(LVs) in all discovered volume groups (VGs). This causes all LVs to be
active after boot. However, users may prefer to not activate certain
VGs/LVs on boot. They might normally use the `--setautoactivation n`
VG/LV flag or the `auto_activation_volume_list` LVM config option to
achieve this, but since the script unconditionally activates all LVs,
neither has an effect.
To fix this, call `vgchange -aay` instead. This triggers LVM
autoactivation, which honors autoactivation settings such as the
`--setautoactivation` flag. It is also more in line with the LVM
documentation, which says autoactivation is "meant to be used by
activation commands that are run automatically by the system" [1].
Note that this change might break misconfigured setups that have ZFS
on top of an LV for which autoactivation is disabled.
[1] https://gitlab.com/lvmteam/lvm2/-/blob/cff93e4d/conf/example.conf.in#L1579
Reviewed-by: Fabian Grünbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Signed-off-by: Friedrich Weber <f.weber@proxmox.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
cmd/zinject/zinject.c:
- use PRIu64 when printing uint64_t
tests/zfs-tests/cmd/clonefile.c:
- use an unsigned long long to store result from strtoull()
- use %jd for printing off_t, %zu for size_t, %zd for ssize_t
tests/zfs-tests/tests/functional/vdev_disk/page_alignment.c:
- use %zx to print size_t
Discovered when compiling on FreeBSD i386.
Signed-off-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
FreeBSD kernel's WITNESS code detected lock ordering violation in
spa_vdev_remove_cancel_sync(). It took svr_lock while holding
ms_lock, which is opposite to other places. I was thinking to
resolve it similar to #17145, but looking closer I don't think
we even need svr_lock at that point, since we already asserted
svr_allocd_segs is empty, and we don't need to add there segments
we are going to call free_mapped_segment_cb for.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17164
Since spa_dspace accounts only normal allocation class space,
spa_nonallocating_dspace should do the same. Otherwise we may get
negative overflow or respective assertion spa_update_dspace() if
removed special/dedup vdev is bigger than all normal class space.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17183
FreeBSD nowadays supports FPU in the kernel on powerpc*, so enable it.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Piotr Kubaj <pkubaj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#17191
Firmly in the "shouldn't happen" camp, but at least GCC 7.4 (Ubuntu
18.04) complained about them, and it's easy to shut up, so do so.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17189
Previous code allowed each metaslab group to have different number
of allocators. But in practice it worked only for embedded SLOGs,
relying on a number of conditions and creating a significant mine
field if any of those change. I just stepped on one myself.
This change makes all groups to have spa_alloc_count allocators.
It may cost us extra 192 bytes of memory per normal top-level vdev
on large systems, but I find it a small price for cleaner and more
reliable code.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Fixes#17188
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
In addition to hotplug events, the kernel may also mark a failing vdev
as REMOVED. This was observed in a customer report and reproduced by
forcing the NVMe host driver to disable the device after a failed reset
due to command timeout. In such cases, the spare was not activated
because the device had already transitioned to a REMOVED state before
zed processed the event.
To address this, explicitly attempt hot spare activation when the
kernel marks a device as REMOVED.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17187
Kernel checks are the heaviest part of the configure checks. This allows
the results to be cached through the normal autoconf cache.
Since we don't want to reuse cached values for different kernels, but
don't want to discard the entire cache on every kernel, we instead add a
short checksum to kernel config cache keys, based on the version and
path, so the cache can hold results for multiple different kernels.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
When after device removal we handle block pointers remap, skip blocks
that might be cloned. BRTs are indexed by vdev id and offset from
block pointer's DVA[0]. So if we start addressing the same block by
some different DVA, we won't get the proper reference counter. As
result, we might either remap the block twice, that may result in
assertion during indirect mapping condense, or free it prematurely,
that may result in data overwrite, or free it twice, that may result
in assertion in spacemap code.
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#15604Closes#17180
The initial tarballs we built for for zfs-2.3.1 were incorrect since
they did not have a ./configure script, and their files were not
in a top level zfs-2.3.1/ directory. This commit copies the way we
built them on buildbot so the tarballs are created as expected.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
The zfs-qemu-packages workflow was incorrectly copying the built
zfs-release RPMs to ~/zfsonlinux.github.com rather than ~/zfs. This
meant that the RPMs were not being correctly picked in the artifacts
files. This fixes the issue.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
It turns out that approach taken in the original version of the patch
was wrong. So now, we're taking approach in-line with how kernel
actually does it - when sb is being torn down, access to it
is serialized via sb->s_umount rwsem, only when that lock is taken
is it okay to work with s_flags - and the other mistake I was doing
was trying to make SB_ACTIVE work, but apparently the kernel checks
the negative variant - not SB_DYING and not SB_BORN.
Kernels pre-6.6 don't have SB_DYING, but check if sb is hashed
instead.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 6.14
kernel.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Update 'zfs-helpers.sh -i' to install the compatibility.d/ file
symlinks. These are need to run the zpool_status_features_001_pos test
from a local workspace (as opposed to running ZTS from a formal
'make install' or install from RPMs, which are unaffected).
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
A minor nitpick that is kind of obvious based on the surrounding context
and reference to powers of two. It's better to be explicit, though.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Unlike some of my other fixes which are more subtle, these are
unambigously spelling errors.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
This is admittedly a nitpicky change, but `umount` is the command that
performs an *unmount*. So if we are talking about unmounting something
we should phrase it that way.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
These are mostly acronyms (CPUs; ZILs) but also proper nouns such as
"Unix" and "Unicode" which should also be capitalized.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
As per Wiktionary: "descendent" may be used as an adjective (e.g.
"a descendent dataset") but for nouns (e.g. "descendants of this
dataset"), "descendant" is the correct spelling.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
This is the most common way it is written throughout the manpages, but
there are a few cases where it is written slightly differently.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Most of the documentation is written in American English, so it makes
sense to be consistent.
Signed-off-by: Simon Howard <fraggle@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Existing allocation throttling had a goal to improve write speed
by allocating more data to vdevs that are able to write it faster.
But in the process it completely broken the original mechanism,
designed to balance vdev space usage. With severe vdev space use
imbalance it is possible that some with higher use start growing
fragmentation sooner than others and after getting full will stop
any writes at all. Also after vdev addition it might take a very
long time for pool to restore the balance, since the new vdev does
not have any real preference, unless the old one is already much
slower due to fragmentation. Also the old throttling was request-
based, which was unpredictable with block sizes varying from 512B
to 16MB, neither it made much sense in case of I/O aggregation,
when its 32-100 requests could be aggregated into few, leaving
device underutilized, submitting fewer and/or shorter requests,
or in opposite try to queue up to 1.6GB of writes per device.
This change presents a completely new throttling algorithm. Unlike
the request-based old one, this one measures allocation queue in
bytes. It makes possible to integrate with the reworked allocation
quota (aliquot) mechanism, which is also byte-based. Unlike the
original code, balancing the vdevs amounts of free space, this one
balances their free/used space fractions. It should result in a
lower and more uniform fragmentation in a long run.
This algorithm still allows to improve write speed by allocating
more data to faster vdevs, but does it in more controllable way.
On top of space-based allocation quota, it also calculates minimum
queue depth that vdev is allowed to maintain, and respectively the
amount of extra allocations it can receive if it appear faster.
That amount is based on vdev's capacity and space usage, but also
applied only when the pool is busy. This way the code can choose
between faster writes when needed and better vdev balance when not,
with the choice gradually reducing together with the free space.
This change also makes allocation queues per-class, allowing them
to throttle independently and in parallel. Allocations that are
bounced between classes due to allocation errors will be able to
properly throttle in the new class. Allocations that should not
be throttled (ZIL, gang, copies) are not, but may still follow
the rotor and allocation quota mechanism of the class without
disrupting it.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
They are out of support and we are really low on CI resources.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
This extends the existing special-case for zfs/poolname to split and
create any number of intermediate sysctl names, so that multi-level
module names are possible.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Syneto
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Module names are mapped directly to directory names in procfs, but
nothing is done to create the intermediate directories, or remove them.
This makes it impossible to sensibly present kstats about sub-objects.
This commit loops through '/'-separated names in the full module name,
creates a separate module for each, and hooks them up with a parent
pointer and child counter, and then unrolls this on the other side when
deleting a module.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Syneto
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Missed in #17073, probably because that PR was branched before #17001
was landed and never rebased.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
The redundant_metadata setting in ZFS allows users to trade resilience
for performance and space savings. This applies to all data and metadata
blocks in zfs, with one exception: gang blocks. Gang blocks currently
just take the copies property of the IO being ganged and, if it's 1,
sets it to 2. This means that we always make at least two copies of a
gang header, which is good for resilience. However, if the users care
more about performance than resilience, their gang blocks will be even
more of a penalty than usual.
We add logic to calculate the number of gang headers copies directly,
and store it as a separate IO property. This is stored in the IO
properties and not calculated when we decide to gang because by that
point we may not have easy access to the relevant information about what
kind of block is being stored. We also check the redundant_metadata
property when doing so, and use that to decide whether to store an extra
copy of the gang headers, compared to the underlying blocks.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
There was a recent CI ZTS test failure on FreeBSD 14 for the
dio_read_verify test case. The failure reported there was no ARC reads
while the buffer wes being manipulated. All checksum verify errors for
Direct I/O reads are rerouted through the ARC, so there should be ARC
reads accounted for. In order to help debug any future failures of this
test case, the order of checks has been changed. First there is a check
for DIO verify failures for the reads and then ARC read counts are
checked.
This PR also contains general cleanup of the comments in the test
script.
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
spa_vdev_remove_thread() should not hold svr_lock while loading a
metaslab. It may block ZIO threads, required to handle metaslab
loading, at least in case of read errors causing recovery writes.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17145
The vd->vdev_ms access can overflow due to on-disk corruption, not just
due to programming bugs. So it makes sense to check its boundaries even
in production builds.
Sponsored by: ConnectWise
Reviewed by: Alek Pinchuk <pinchuk.alek@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#17136
- Don't drop L2ARC header if we have more buffers in this header.
Since we leave them the header, leave them the L2ARC header also.
Honestly we are not required to drop it even if there are no other
buffers, but then we'd need to allocate it a separate header, which
we might drop soon if the old block is really deleted. Multiple
buffers in a header likely mean active snapshots or dedup, so we
know that the block in L2ARC will remain valid. It might be rare,
but why not?
- Remove some impossible assertions and conditions.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17126
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
This helps to avoids confusion with the similarly-named
txg_wait_synced().
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Mariusz Zaborski <mariusz.zaborski@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
It seems `fio` in `ddt_dedup_vdev_limit` overwhelms the system
with the amount of dirty data caused by DDT updates within one
TXG due to tiny 1KB records used, while I see no reason for this
test to extend the TXGs beyond default.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: @ImAwsumm
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Force receive (zfs receive -F) can rollback or destroy snapshots and
file systems that do not exist on the sending side (see zfs-receive man
page). This means an user having the receive permission can effectively
delete data on receiving side, even if such user does not have explicit
rollback or destroy permissions.
This patch adds the receive:append permission, which only permits
limited, non-forced receive. Behavior for users with full receive
permission is not changed in any way.
Fixes#16943
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#17015
This PR condenses the FDT dedup log syncing into a single sync
pass. This reduces the overhead of modifying indirect blocks for the
dedup table multiple times per txg. In addition, changes were made to
the formula for how much to sync per txg. We now also consider the
backlog we have to clear, to prevent it from growing too large, or
remaining large on an idle system.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Authored-by: Don Brady <don.brady@klarasystems.com>
Authored-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17038
* FreeBSD 12 is EoL. Drop it.
* Use the latest FreeBSD 13 and 14 versions.
* Add FreeBSD 15.0-CURRENT.
* Use the current python version.
Sponsored by: ConnectWise
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#17139
Implementation of DDT pruning introduced verification of DVAs in
a block pointer during ddt_lookup() to not by mistake free previous
pruned incarnation of the entry. But when writing a new block in
zio_ddt_write() we might have the DVAs only from override pointer,
which may never have "D" flag to be confused with pruned DDT entry,
and we'll abandon those DVAs if we find a matching entry in DDT.
This fixes deduplication for blocks written via dmu_sync() for
purposes of indirect ZIL write records, that I have tested. And
I suspect it might actually allow deduplication for Direct I/O,
even though in an odd way -- first write block directly and then
delete it later during TXG commit if found duplicate, which part
I haven't tested.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17120
Since embedded blocks introduction 11 years ago, their writing was
blocked if dedup is enabled. After searching through the modern
code I see no reason for this restriction to exist. Same time
embedded blocks are dramatically cheaper. Even regular write of
so small blocks would likely be cheaper than deduplication, even
if the last is successful, not mentioning otherwise.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17113
This statx(2) mask returns the alignment restrictions for O_DIRECT
access on the given file.
We're expected to return both memory and IO alignment. For memory, it's
always PAGE_SIZE. For IO, we return the current block size for the file,
which is the required alignment for an arbitrary block, and for the
first block we'll fall back to the ARC when necessary, so it should
always work.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16972
Now instead of crashing when attempting to read the corrupt block
pointer, ZFS will return ECKSUM, in a stack that looks like this:
```
none:set-error
zfs.ko`arc_read+0x1d82
zfs.ko`dbuf_read+0xa8c
zfs.ko`dmu_buf_hold_array_by_dnode+0x292
zfs.ko`dmu_read_uio_dnode+0x47
zfs.ko`zfs_read+0x2d5
zfs.ko`zfs_freebsd_read+0x7b
kernel`VOP_READ_APV+0xd0
kernel`vn_read+0x20e
kernel`vn_io_fault_doio+0x45
kernel`vn_io_fault1+0x15e
kernel`vn_io_fault+0x150
kernel`dofileread+0x80
kernel`sys_read+0xb7
kernel`amd64_syscall+0x424
kernel`0xffffffff810633cb
```
This patch should hopefully also prevent such corrupt block pointers
from being written to disk in the first place.
And in zdb, don't crash when printing a block pointer with no valid
DVAs. If a block pointer isn't embedded yet doesn't have any valid
DVAs, that's a data corruption bug. zdb should be able to handle the
situation gracefully.
Finally, remove an extra check for gang blocks in SNPRINTF_BLKPTR. This
check, which compares the asizes of two different DVAs within the same
BP, was added by illumos-gate commit b24ab67[^1], and I can't understand
why. It doesn't appear to do anything useful, so remove it.
[^1]: b24ab67627
Fixes #17077
Sponsored by: ConnectWise
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed by: Alek Pinchuk <pinchuk.alek@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Closes#17078
since 4.10, bio->bi_opf needs to be checked to determine all kinds of
flush requests. this was the case prior to the commit referenced below,
but the order of ifdefs was not the usual one (newest up top), which
might have caused this to slip through.
this fixes a regression when using zvols as Qemu block devices, but
might have broken other use cases as well. the symptoms are that all
sync writes from within a VM configured to use such a virtual block
devices are ignored and treated as async writes by the host ZFS layer.
this can be verified using fio in sync mode inside the VM, for example
with
fio \
--filename=/dev/sda --ioengine=libaio --loops=1 --size=10G \
--time_based --runtime=60 --group_reporting --stonewall --name=cc1 \
--description="CC1" --rw=write --bs=4k --direct=1 --iodepth=1 \
--numjobs=1 --sync=1
which shows an IOPS number way above what the physical device underneath
supports, with "zpool iostat -r 1" on the hypervisor side showing no
sync IO occuring during the benchmark.
with the regression fixed, both fio inside the VM and the IO stats on
the host show the expected numbers.
Fixes: 846b598519
"config: remove HAVE_REQ_OP_* and HAVE_REQ_*"
Signed-off-by: Fabian-Gruenbichler <f.gruenbichler@proxmox.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
We had a case where we were autoreplacing a disk and
zpool_prepare_disk failed for some reason, and ZED
didn't log the return code. This commit logs the code.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17124
PR #14161 made spa_do_crypt_objset_mac_abd() to ignore MAC errors
if local MAC can not be calculated at the time. But it does not
mean we should also ignore portable MAC errors there.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17122
Add a new 'zfs-qemu-packages' GH workflow for manually building RPMs
and test installing ZFS RPMs from a yum repo. The workflow has a
dropdown menu in the Github runners tab with two options:
Build RPMs - Build release RPMs and tarballs and put them into an
artifact ZIP file. The directory structure used in
the ZIP file mirrors the ZFS yum repo.
Test repo - Test install the ZFS RPMs from the ZFS repo. On
Almalinux, this will do a DKMS and KMOD test install
from both the regular and testing repos. On Fedora,
it will do a DKMS install from the regular repo. All
test install results will be displayed in the Github
runner Summary page. Note that the workflow provides an
optional text box where you can specify the full URL to
an alternate repo. If left blank, it will install from
the default repo from the zfs-release RPM.
Most developers will never need to use this workflow. It is intended
to be used by the ZFS admins for building and testing releases.
This commit also modularizes many of the runner scripts so they can
be used by both the zfs-qemu and zfs-qemu-packages workflows.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17005
The new Fast Dedup feature has a lot of moving parts, and only some of
them have tests. We have some tests for prefetch and quota, and a
generic ZAP shrinking test, but we don't have anything for the pruning
command or specific to DDT zap shrinking. Here we add a couple small new
tests for zpool ddtprune and DDT-specific ZAP shrinking.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17049
Most of these are trying to use TMPDIR to put their work files somewhere
sensible. Now that we've set up correctly, they can all just use mktemp
to do the job.
In a couple of places cleaning up temp files wasn't being done
correctly, which has been fixed.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
In all cases, rely on mktemp itself to make the best decision about
where to place the file or directory. In all cases, that decision will
be $TMPDIR, which we have set globally.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Many tests use mktemp to create temporary files and dirs, which will
usually put them in /tmp unless instructed otherwise. This had led to
many tests trying to give mktemp a useful temp path in ad-hoc ways, and
others just using it directly without knowing they're potentially
leaving stuff lying around.
So we set TMPDIR to FILEDIR, which makes the simplest uses of mktemp put
things in the wanted work dir.
Included here is a hack to get TMPDIR into the test. If a test has to be
run as a different user (most of them), it is run through sudo. ld.so
from glibc will not pass TMPDIR to a setuid program, so instead we
re-set TMPDIR after sudo before running the target command.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
The default outputdir had a timestamp appended in TestRun.__init__, and
then the timestamp was unconditionally applied again after the runfile
had been loaded, assuming that an outputdir would be set in the runfile
too. If the runfile didn't have an outputdir, then the outputdir would
get a second timestamp appended.
Further, if test groups or individual tests themselves specificed an
outputdir, those would be set on their config, but would not get a
timestamp appended. It's not entirely clear if that's wrong or not, but
it is certainly not consistent with the rest.
To clean all this up, change things to append a timestamp to a received
outputdir (from arg or runfile) before setting it in any TestRun,
TestGroup or Test object.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
The config file value overrides any set by the operator, making it quite
difficult to put the test output elsewhere. The default is
/var/tmp/test_results (via BASEDIR in test-runner) so this shouldn't
change anything for the default case.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
The default file vdevs, constrained binpath and temporary runfiles were
all explicitly places in /var/tmp. Instead, put them under FILEDIR,
which is set from -d and defaults to /var/tmp. TEST_BASE_DIR is also
initialised from FILEDIR, which means all data for the run will now end
up under the operator-specified data dir.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
The operator can override TEST_BASE_DIR by setting its source var
FILEDIR through zfs-tests.sh -d. There were a handful of cases where
this was not honoured.
By default FILEDIR (and so TEST_BASE_DIR) is /var/tmp, so there should
be no functional change if the operator does nothing.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 6.13 kernel.
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
IVs != 96 bits get hashed with GHASH to bring them to 96 bits. Any call
to GHASH will mix the ghash state in gcm_ghash. This is expected to be
zero at first use in an encrypt or decrypt operation, so it needs to be
zeroed after using GHASH in setup.
gcm_init() does this, but gcm_avx_init() zeroed it before setup, not
after, resulting in incorrect encrypt/decrypt results when using AVX GCM
with an IV != 96 bits.
OpenZFS _always_ uses a 96 bit IV (ZIO_DATA_IV_LEN) so this will never
have been hit in any real-world use, which is extremely fortunate, as we
would have incorrectly-encrypted data on-disk. Still, as long as we have
this code here we should make sure it's correct.
Thanks-to: Joel Low <joel@joelsplace.sg>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
This commit adds tests that ensure that the ICP crypto_encrypt() and
crypto_decrypt() produce the correct results for all implementations
available on this platform.
The actual ZTS scripts are simple drivers for the crypto_test program in
it's "correctness" mode. This mode takes a file full of test vectors
(inputs and expected outputs), runs them, and checks that the results
are expected. It will run the tests for each implementation of the
algorithm provided by the ICP.
The test vectors are taken from Project Wycheproof, which provides a
huge number of tests, including exercising many edge cases and common
implementation mistakes. These tests are provided are JSON files, so a
program is included here to convert them into a simpler line-based
format for crypto_test to consume.
crypto_test also has a "performance" mode, which will run simple
benchmarks against all implementations provded by the ICP and output
them for comparison. This is not used by ZTS, but is available to assist
with development of new implementations of the underlying primitives.
Thanks-to: Joel Low <joel@joelsplace.sg>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Attila Fülöp <attila@fueloep.org>
`zpool create` won't let you use relative paths to disks. This is
annoying when you want to do:
zpool create tank ./diskfile
But have to do..
zpool create tank `pwd`/diskfile
This fixes it.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#17042
In l2arc_evict(), the config lock may be acquired in reverse order
(e.g., first the config lock (writer), then a hash lock) unlike in
arc_read() during scenarios like L2ARC device removal. To avoid
deadlocks, if the attempt to acquire the config lock (reader) fails
in arc_read(), release the hash lock, wait for the config lock, and
retry from the beginning.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#17071
Don't try to get mg of hole vdev in removal
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17080
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: SHENGYI HONG <aokblast@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#17088
Before this change zfs_metaslab_switch_threshold tunable switched
metaslabs each time ones index reduced by two (which means biggest
contiguous chunk reduced to 1/4). It is a good idea to balance
metaslabs fragmentation. But for empty metaslabs (having power-
of-2 sizes) this means switching when they get just below the half
of their capacity. Inspection with zdb after filling new pool to
half capacity shown most of its metaslabs filled to half capacity.
I consider this sub-optimal for pool fragmentation in a long run.
This change blocks the metaslabs switching if most of the metaslab
free space (15/16) is represented by a single contiguous range.
Such metaslab should not be considered fragmented until it actually
fail some big allocation. More contiguous filling should improve
data locality and increase time before previously filled and
partially freed metaslab is touched again, giving it more time to
free more contiguous chunks for lower fragmentation. It should
also slightly reduce spacemap traffic.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#17081
If the timing is unfortunate, the pool can suspend just as we're failing
because it didn't suspend. If we don't resume the pool, we hang trying
to destroy it.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17054
It's included so it's effectively already part of it, but it's not
always installed as a userspace header, making zfs.h effectively
useless. Might as well just combine it.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Close#17066
zfs_file_fsync() and zfs_file_deallocate() are both blocking ops, so the
zio_taskq thread is active and blocked both while waiting for the IO
call and then while calling zio_execute() for the next stage. This is a
particular issue for FLUSH, as the z_flush_iss queue typically only has
one thread; multiple flushes arriving at once can cause long delays if
the underlying fsync() response is particularly slow.
To fix this, we dispatch both FLUSH and TRIM to the z_vdev_file taskq,
just as we do for reads and writes. Further, we return all results
through zio_interrupt(), so neither the issue nor the file taskqs are
blocked.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17064
Need to use arc_free_data_abd to free abd type buffer.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Chunwei Chen <tuxoko@gmail.com>
Closes#17079
Kernel & userspace specifics are in zfs_file_os.c, so there's no
particular reason these have to be separate.
The one platform-specific part is in the Linux kernel part, to offload
flushes to a taskq if we're already inside a filesystem transaction.
This would be normally be an unsatisfying wart, but I'm intending to
remove this shortly, so I'm content to leave it gated for the moment.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Since we are calculating a free space fragmentation, we should
weight metaslabs by the amount of their free space, not a full
size. Fragmentation of full metaslabs may not matter in presence
empty ones. The old algorithm did not differentiate metaslabs
having only one free 4KB block from metaslabs having 50% of space
free in 4KB blocks, reporting higher fragmentation.
While there, move metaslab_group_alloc_update() call after setting
mg_fragmentation, otherwise the effect may be delayed by one TXG.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dagnelie <pcd@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Linux 6.12 has conflicting range_tree_{find,destroy,clear} symbols.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Volosyuk <Ivan.Volosyuk@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
skc->skc_name also needs to be freed in an error path.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Vandana Rungta <vrungta@amazon.com>
Closes#17041
For zfs_rename, after the dataset name is successfully updated,
the dataset handle that was passed to zfs_rename, still contains
the old name, due to which, the dataset handle becomes invalid.
The following operations performed using this handle result in
error since the dataset with old name cannot be found anymore.
changelist_rename does update the names in dataset handles,
but those are temporary handles that were created during
changelist_gather. The original handle that was used to call
zfs_rename is not updated.
We should update the name in original ZFS handle after the IOCTL
for rename returns success for the operation.
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
The purpose of no-op is to simulate a failure between a device cache and
its permanent store. We still want it to go through the queue and
respond in the same way to everything else.
So, inject "success" as the very last thing, and then move on to
VDEV_IO_DONE to be dequeued and so any followup work can occur.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17029
"DESTDIR=/path/to/target/root/ make install" may fail when installing to
a root that contains an existing lib/modules structure. When run as root
we may even affect the wrong kernel (the build system's one, or, if
running a different version, some other directory in /lib/modules, but
not the desired one installed in DESTDIR).
Add a missing reference to the INSTALL_MOD_PATH root when calling
"depmod" during "make install"
Also add a switch "DONT_DELETE_MODULES_FILES=1" that skips the removal
of files named "modules.*" prior to running depmod.
Signed-off-by: Christian Kohlschütter <christian@kohlschutter.com>
Closes#16994
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
recv_fix_encryption_hierarchy() in its present state goes through all
stream filesystems, and for each one traverses the snapshots in order to
find one that exists locally. This happens by calling guid_to_name() for
each snapshot, which iterates through all children of the filesystem.
This results in CPU utilization of 100% for several minutes (for ~1000
filesystems on a Ryzen 4350G) for 1 thread at the end of a raw receive
(-w, regardless whether encrypted or not, dryrun or not).
Fix this by following a different logic: using the top_fs name, call
gather_nvlist() to gather the nvlists for all local filesystems. For
each one filesystem, go through the snapshots to find the corresponding
stream's filesystem (since we know the snapshots guid and can search
with it in stream_avl for the stream's fs). Then go on to fix the
encryption roots and locations as in its present state.
Avoiding guid_to_name() iteratively makes
recv_fix_encryption_hierarchy() significantly faster (from several
minutes to seconds for ~1000 filesystems on a Ryzen 4350G).
Another problem is the following: in case we have promoted a clone of
the filesystem outside the top filesystem specified in zfs send, zfs
receive does not fail but returns an error:
recv_incremental_replication() fails to find its origin and errors out
with needagain=1. This results in recv_fix_hierarchy() not being called
which may render some children of the top fs not mountable since their
encryption root was not updated. To circumvent this make
recv_incremental_replication() silently ignore this error.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Closes#16929
Gang blocks have a significant impact on the long and short term
performance of a zpool, but there is not a lot of observability into
whether they're being used. This change adds gang-specific kstats to
ZFS, to better allow users to see whether ganging is happening.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17003
When you are using large recordsizes in conjunction with raidz, with
incompressible data, you can pretty reliably be making 21 MB
allocations. Unfortunately, the fragmentation metric in ZFS considers
any metaslabs with 16 MB free chunks completely unfragmented, so you can
have a metaslab report 0% fragmented and be unable to satisfy an
allocation. When using the segment-based metaslab weight, this is
inconvenient; when using the space-based one, it can seriously degrade
performance.
We expand the fragmentation table to extend up to 512MB, and redefine
the table size based on the actual table, rather than having a static
define. We also tweak the one variable that depends on fragmentation
directly.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Paul Dagnelie <paul.dagnelie@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16986
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Mateusz Piotrowski <0mp@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
The current documentation of `zfs destroy` in application to snapshots
is particularly difficult to understand. The following changes are made:
- Remove circular reference to `zfs destroy` in the documentation of
that command.
- Remove use of "for example", which implies there are more,
undocumented reasons that ZFS may fail to destroy a snapshot
immediately.
- Mention properties `defer_destroy` and `userrefs`.
- Add `zfsprops(8)` to "SEE ALSO" list.
- Clarify meaning of `-d` option.
Requires-builders: none
Signed-off-by: mnrx <83848843+mnrx@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
According to the upstream change, all callers set it, and all block
devices either honoured it or ignored it, so removing it entirely allows
a bunch of handling for the "unset" case to be removed, and it becomes
effectively implied.
We follow suit, and keep setting it for older kernels.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
This is a convenience for filesystems that need the inode of their
parent or their own name, as its often complicated to get that
information. We don't need those things, so this is just detecting which
prototype is expected and adjusting our callback to match.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
As zios are reexecuted after resume from suspension, their ready and
wait states need to be propagated to wait counts on all their parents.
It's possible for those parents to have active children passing through
READY or DONE, which then end up in zio_notify_parent(), take their
parent's lock, and decrement the wait count. Without also taking a lock
here, it's possible for an increment race to occur, which leads to
either there being no references left (tripping the assert in
zio_notify_parent()), or a parent waiting forever for a nonexistent
child to complete.
To protect against this, we simply take the appropriate zio locks in
zio_reexecute() before updating the wait counts.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#17016
This change will prevent prefetch to perform unnecessary ARC buffer
fill when reading from disk.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Jaydeep Kshirsagar <jkshirsagar@maxlinear.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#17013
Introduced functionality to recursively mount datasets with a new
config option `mount_recursively`. Adjusted existing functions to
handle the recursive behavior and added tests to validate the feature.
This enhances support for managing hierarchical ZFS datasets within
a PAM context.
Signed-off-by: Jerzy Kołosowski <jerzy@kolosowscy.pl>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Originally #16856 updated Linux Direct I/O requests to use the new
pin_user_pages API. However, it was an oversight that this PR only
handled iov_iter's of type ITER_IOVEC and ITER_UBUF. Other iov_iter
types may try and use the pin_user_pages API if it is available. This
can lead to panics as the iov_iter is not being iterated over correctly
in zfs_uio_pin_user_pages().
Unfortunately, generic iov_iter API's that call pin_user_page_fast() are
protected as GPL only. Rather than update zfs_uio_pin_user_pages() to
account for all iov_iter types, we can simply just call
zfs_uio_get_dio_page_iov_iter() if the iov_iter type is not ITER_IOVEC
or ITER_UBUF. zfs_uio_get_dio_page_iov_iter() calls the
iov_iter_get_pages() calls that can handle any iov_iter type.
In the future it might be worth using the exposed iov_iter iterator
functions that are included in the header iov_iter.h since v6.7. These
functions allow for any iov_iter type to be iterated over and advanced
while applying a step function during iteration. This could possibly be
leveraged in zfs_uio_pin_user_pages().
A new ZFS test case was added to test that a ITER_BVEC is handled
correctly using this new code path. This test case was provided though
issue #16956.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#16956Closes#17006
The flag VFCF_FILEREV was recently defined in FreeBSD
so that a file system could indicate that it increments
va_filerev by one for each change.
Since ZFS does do this, set the flag if defined for the
kernel being built. This allows the NFSv4.2 server to
reply with the correct change_attr_type attribute value.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rick Macklem <rmacklem@uoguelph.ca>
Closed#16976
Injecting a device probe failure is not possible by matching IO types,
because probe IO goes to the label regions, which is explicitly excluded
from injection. Even if it were possible, it would be awkward to do,
because a probe is sequence of reads and writes.
This commit adds a new IO "type" to match for injection, which looks for
the ZIO_FLAG_PROBE flag instead. Any probe IO will be match the
injection record and recieve the wanted error.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16947
I'm about to add a new "type", and I need somewhere to put it!
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16947
It's now a simple wrapper, so lets just call kstat direct.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Removes other custom helpers and direct accesses to /proc.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
The old kstat helper function was barely used, I suspect in part because
it was very limited in the kinds of kstats it could gather.
This adds new functions to replace it, for each kind of thing that can
have stats: global, pool and dataset. There's options in there to get a
single stat value, or all values within a group.
Most importantly, the interface is the same for both platforms.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tim Smith <tsmith84@gmail.com>
Closes#16965
The warning at the end of the second example in the description section
was actually inside the options table. Move the El macro to match what
is done in the first section for improved readability.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Ziaee <ziaee@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16962
2.3.0 is out now, so make 2.2.x the LTS release.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#16945Closes#16948
Removed three unnecessary spaces in the definition of the
sa_attr_reg_t structure to improve code style consistency
and adhere to OpenZFS coding standards.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Peng Liu <littlenewton6@gmail.com>
Closes#16955
To do a cross-build using only kbuild rather than a full source tree,
ARCH= needs to be passed for the kbuild Makefile to find the
archspecific Makefile.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16944
When building tests with zinject, it can be quite difficult to work out
if you're producing the right kind of IO to match the rules you've set
up.
So, here we extend injection records to count the number of times a
handler matched the operation, and how often an error was actually
injected (ie after frequency and other exclusions are applied).
Then, display those counts in the `zinject` output.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Closes#16938
We should not hardcode 512-byte read size when checking for loader
in the boot area before RAIDZ expansion. Disk might be unable to
handle that I/O as is, and the code zio_vdev_io_start() handling
the padding asserts doing it only for top-level vdev.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16942
Added in b1e46f869, but empty, so no point keeping it around.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16931
In order to correctly cross-compile, one has to pass ARCH and
CROSS_COMPILE make flags to kernel module build calls. Facilitate this
in the same way as for custom CC flag by recognizing KERNEL_-prefixed
configure environment variables of same name.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc>
Closes#16924
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Robert Evans <evansr@google.com>
Closes#16926
#15793 wanted to make zfs_strerror threadsafe, unfortunately, it
turned out that strerror_l() usage was wrong, and also, some libc
implementations dont have strerror_l().
zfs_strerror() now simply calls original strerror() and copies the
result to a thread-local buffer, then returns that.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Richard Kojedzinszky <richard@kojedz.in>
Closes#15793Closes#16640Closes#16923
Similar to what we saw in #16569, we need to consider that a
replacing vdev should not be considered as fully contributing
to the redundancy of a raidz vdev even though current IO has
enough redundancy.
When a failed vdev_probe() is faulting a disk, it now checks
if that disk is required, and if so it suspends the pool until
the admin can return the missing disks.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Don Brady <don.brady@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16864
This updates the Makefile to be more correct for parallel make.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Robert Evans <evansr@google.com>
Closes#16030Closes#16922
Instead of using hardwired value for SPA_DISCARD_MEMORY_LIMIT,
use save_tunable and restore_tunable to restore the pre-test state.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#16919
It's possible for a vdev to be flagged for async remove after the pool
has suspended. If the removed device has been returned when the pool is
resumed, the ASYNC_REMOVE task will still run at the end of txg, and
remove the device from the pool again.
To fix, we clear the async remove flag at reopen, just as we did for the
async fault flag in 5de3ac223.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16921
Remove TESTDIRS as it is not set for pam tests.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#16920
This works around
/usr/lib/go-1.18/pkg/tool/linux_amd64/link:
mapping output file failed: invalid argument
It's happened to me under a Linux jail, but it's also happened to other
people, see https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=270247#c4
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: pstef <pstef@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#16918
Originally hex value is used as decimal.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#16917
cleanup.ksh is assuming we have TESTDIRS set.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#16915
Before we can remove test files, we need to unmount datasets
used by test first.
See also: zfs_mount_all_mountpoints.ksh
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Closes#16914
Added centos as optional runners via workflow_dispatch
removed centos-stream9 from the FULL_OS runner list as CentOS is not
officially support by ZFS. This commit will add preliminary support for
EL10 and allow testing ZFS ahead of EL10 codebase solidifying in ~6
months
Signed-off-by: James Reilly <jreilly1821@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
zfs_vget doesn't zfs_exit when erroring out due to snapdir
being disabled.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Walker <awalker@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: @bmeagherix
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
zfs_arc_shrinker_limit was introduced to avoid ARC collapse due to
aggressive kernel reclaim. While useful, the current default (10000) is
too prone to OOM especially when MGLRU-enabled kernels with default
min_ttl_ms are used. Even when no OOM happens, it often causes too much
swap usage.
This patch sets zfs_arc_shrinker_limit=0 to not ignore kernel reclaim
requests. ARC now plays better with both kernel shrinker and pagecache
but, should ARC collapse happen again, MGLRU behavior can be tuned or
even disabled.
Anyway, zfs should not cause OOM when ARC can be released.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#16909
In Linux, block devices currently lack support for `copy_file_range`
API because the kernel does not provide the necessary functionality.
However, there is an ongoing upstream effort to address this
limitation: https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/dm-devel/cover/20240520102033.9361-1-nj.shetty@samsung.com/.
We have adopted this upstream kernel patch into the TrueNAS kernel and
made some additional modifications to enable block cloning specifically
for the zvol block device. This patch implements the platform-
independent portions of these changes for inclusion in OpenZFS.
This patch does not introduce any new functionality directly into
OpenZFS. The `TX_CLONE_RANGE` replay capability is only relevant when
zvols are migrated to non-TrueNAS systems that support Clone Range
replay in the ZIL.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16901
This test takes 3 minutes on RELEASE FreeBSD bots, but on CURRENT,
probably due to debugging it has in kernel, it does not complete
within 10 minutes, ending up killed. As I see all the redacting
here happens within the first ~128MB of the file, so I hope it
won't matter if there is 1GB of data instead of 2GB.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by:Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#11141
procfs might be not mounted on FreeBSD. Plus checking for specific
PID might be not exactly reliable. Check for empty list of jobs
instead.
Premature loop exit can result in failed test and failed cleanup,
failing also some following tests.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by:Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#11141
FreeBSD recently removed non-standard hex numbers support from awk.
Neither it supports -n argument, enabling it in gawk. Instead of
depending on those rewrite list_file_blocks() fuction to handle the
hex math in shell instead of awk.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by:Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#11141
Confirming that clearing pool and vdev userprops produce the same
result: an empty value, with default source.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16887
People have noted there's no way to remove a pool userprop, only zero
it. Turns vdev userprops had a method, by setting empty-string. So this
makes pool userprops follow the same behaviour.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16887
If a vdev userprop is not found, present it as value '-', default
source, so it matches the output from pool userprops.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16887
Many RAIDZ/dRAID tests filled files doing millions of 100 or even
10 byte writes. It makes very little sense since we are not
micro-benchmarking syscalls or VFS layer here, while before the
blocks reach the vdev layer absolute majority of the small writes
will be aggregated. In some cases I see we spend almost as much
time creating the test files as actually running the tests. And
sometimes the tests even time out after that.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16905
The count of chunks in a microzap block is stored as an uint16_t
(mze_chunkid). Each chunk is 64 bytes, and the first is used to store a
header, so there are 32767 usable chunks, which is just under 2M. 1M is
the largest power-2-rounded block size under 2M, so we must set the
limit there.
If it goes higher, the loop in mzap_addent can overflow and fall into
the PANIC case.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16888
VDEV_PROP_USERPROP is equal do VDEV_PROP_INVAL and so is not a real
property. That's why vdev_prop_readonly() does not work right for
it. In particular it may declare all vdev user properties readonly
on FreeBSD.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16890
Setting sharenfs and sharesmb properties on a dataset can become costly
if there are large number of snapshots, since setting the share
properties iterates over all snapshots present for a dataset. If it is
the root dataset for which we are trying to set the share property,
snapshots for all child datasets and their children will also be
iterated.
There is no need to iterate over snapshots for share properties
because we do not allow share properties or any other property,
to be set on a snapshot itself execpt for user properties.
This commit skips iterating over snapshots for share properties,
instead iterate over all child dataset and their children for share
properties.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16877
I guess we've got some long property names since this was first set up!
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16883
In #16869 we added FreeBSD 13.4 STABLE, but forget the special
thing, that the virtio nic within FreeBSD 13.x is buggy.
This fix adds the needed rtl8139 nic to the VM.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16885
It's a percentage and documented as such, but we were showing it as
<size>.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16881
Update the CI to include FreeBSD 14.2 as a regularly tested platform.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16869
As of kernel v5.8, pin_user_pages* interfaced were introduced. These
interfaces use the FOLL_PIN flag. This is preferred interface now for
Direct I/O requests in the kernel. The reasoning for using this new
interface for Direct I/O requests is explained in the kernel
documenetation:
Documentation/core-api/pin_user_pages.rst
If pin_user_pages_unlocked is available, the all Direct I/O requests
will use this new API to stay uptodate with the kernel API requirements.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#16856
There were checks still in place to verify we could completely use
iov_iter's on the Linux side. All interfaces are available as of kernel
4.18, so there is no reason to check whether we should use that
interface at this point. This PR completely removes the UIO_USERSPACE
type. It also removes the check for the direct_IO interface checks.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#16856
CONFIG_KERNEL_MODE_NEON depends on CONFIG_NEON. Neither is defined
on armel. Add a guard to avoid compilation errors.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Shengqi Chen <harry-chen@outlook.com>
Closes#16871
This is purely a cosmetic fix which removes a stray "no" from
the configure output.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16867
We should not dereference rra after the last zio_nowait() is called.
It seems very unlikely, but ASAN in ztest managed to catch it.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16868
The one-shot zfs-mount.service is incorrectly deemed active by
Systemd after a systemctl soft-reboot. As such, soft-rebooting
prevents zfs mount -a from being ran automatically.
This commit makes it so that zfs-mount.service is marked as being
undone by the time umount.target is reached, so that zfs.target then
pulls it in again and gets it restarted after a soft reboot.
Reviewed by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: kotauskas <v.toncharov@gmail.com>
Closes#16845
It seems there's no good reason for vdev_disk & vdev_geom to explicitly
detect no support for flush and set vdev_nowritecache. Instead, just
signal it by setting the error to ENOTSUP, and let zio_vdev_io_assess()
take care of it in one place.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16855
The first time a device returns ENOTSUP in repsonse to a flush request,
we set vdev_nowritecache so we don't issue flushes in the future and
instead just pretend the succeeded. However, we still return an error
for the initial flush, even though we just decided such errors are
meaningless!
So, when setting vdev_nowritecache in response to a flush error, also
reset the error code to assume success.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16855
sizeof("foo") includes the trailing null byte, so all the output had
nulls through it. Most terminals quietly ignore it, but it makes some
tools misdetect file types and other annoyances.
Easy fix: subtract 1.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16862
In dbuf_sync_leaf, we clone the arc_buf in dr if we share it with db
except for overridden case. However, this exception causes a race where
dbuf_new_size could free the arc_buf after the last dereference of
*datap and causes use-after-free. We fix this by cloning the buf
regardless if it's overridden.
The race:
--
P0 P1
dbuf_hold_impl()
// dbuf_hold_copy passed
// because db_data_pending NULL
dbuf_sync_leaf()
// doesn't clone *datap
// *datap derefed to db_buf
dbuf_write(*datap)
dbuf_new_size()
dmu_buf_will_dirty()
dbuf_fix_old_data()
// alloc new buf for P0 dr
// but can't change *datap
arc_alloc_buf()
arc_buf_destroy()
// alloc new buf for db_buf
// and destroy old buf
dbuf_write() // continue
abd_get_from_buf(data->b_data,
arc_buf_size(data))
// use-after-free
--
Here's an example when it happens:
BUG: kernel NULL pointer dereference, address: 000000000000002e
RIP: 0010:arc_buf_size+0x1c/0x30 [zfs]
Call Trace:
dbuf_write+0x3ff/0x580 [zfs]
dbuf_sync_leaf+0x13c/0x530 [zfs]
dbuf_sync_list+0xbf/0x120 [zfs]
dnode_sync+0x3ea/0x7a0 [zfs]
sync_dnodes_task+0x71/0xa0 [zfs]
taskq_thread+0x2b8/0x4e0 [spl]
kthread+0x112/0x130
ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Chunwei Chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Co-authored-by: Chunwei Chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Closes#16854
When vdev first sees some block cloning, there is a window when
brt_maybe_exists() might already return true since something was
cloned, but bv_mos_entries is still 0 since BRT ZAP was not yet
created. In such case we should not try to look into the ZAP
and dereference NULL bv_mos_entries_dnode.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16851
cstyle can handle these cases now, so we don't need to disable it.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16840
In code generation macros, we often use names like `uint` when
constructing handler functions. These are not being used as types, so
exclude them from the admonishment to use POSIX type names.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16840
It's not uncommon to have empty parameters in code generator macros,
usually when multiple parameters are concatenated or stringified into a
single token or literal. So, exclude the space-before-comma check, which
will allow construction like `MACRO_CALL(foo, , baz)`.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16840
We quite often invoke macros outside of functions, usually to generate
functions or data. cstyle inteprets these as function headers, which at
least have opinions for indenting.
This introduces a separate state for top-level macro invocations, and
excludes it from matching functions. For the moment, most of the
existing rules will continue to apply, but this gives us a way to add or
removes rules targeting macros specifically.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16840
- Instead of copying one ashift-sized block per ZIO, copy as much
as we have contiguous data up to 16MB per old vdev. To avoid data
moves use gang ABDs, so that read ZIOs can directly fill buffers
for write ZIOs. ABDs have much smaller overhead than ZIOs in both
memory usage and processing time, plus big I/Os do not depend on
I/O aggregation and scheduling to reach decent performance on HDDs.
- Reduce raidz_expand_max_copy_bytes to 16MB on 32bit platforms.
- Use 32bit range tree when possible (practically always now) to
slightly reduce memory usage.
- Use ZIO_PRIORITY_REMOVAL for early stages of expansion, same as
for main ones.
- Fix rate overflows in `zpool status` reporting.
With these changes expanding RAIDZ1 from 4 to 5 children I am able
to reach 6-12GB/s rate on SSDs and ~500MB/s on HDDs, both are
limited by devices instead of CPU.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#15680Closes#16819
Same as writes block cloning can increase block size and number of
indirection levels. That means it can dirty block 0 at level 0 or
at new top indirection level without explicitly holding them.
A block cloning test case for large offsets has been added.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Co-authored-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16825
This also includes removing L2 vdevs asynchronously.
This commit also guarantees that spa_load_guid is unique.
The zpool reguid feature introduced the spa_load_guid, which is a
transient value used for runtime identification purposes in the ARC.
This value is not the same as the spa's persistent pool guid.
However, the value is seeded from spa_generate_load_guid() which
does not check for uniqueness against the spa_load_guid from other
pools. Although extremely rare, you can end up with two different
pools sharing the same spa_load_guid value! So we guarantee that
the value is always unique and additionally not still in use by an
async arc flush task.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Don Brady <don.brady@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16215
In 6f50f8e16 we added flex arrays to lr_XX_t structs to silence kernel
bounds check warnings. Userspace code was mostly not updated to use them
though.
It seems that in the right circumstances, compilers can get confused
about sizes in the same way, and throw warnings. This commits switch
those uses over to use the flex array fields also.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/Closes#16832
- Issue prescient prefetches for demand indirect blocks after the
first one. It should be quite rare for reads/writes, but much more
useful for cloning due to much bigger (up to 1022 blocks) accesses.
It covers the gap during the first couple accesses when we can not
speculate yet, but we know what is needed right now. It reduces
dbuf_hold() sync read delays in dmu_buf_hold_array_by_dnode().
- Increase maximum prefetch distance for indirect blocks from 64
to 128MB. It should cover the maximum 1022 blocks of block cloning
access size in case of default 128KB recordsize used. In case of
bigger recordsize the above prescient prefetch should also help.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16814
In some cases like dsl_dataset_hold_obj() it is possible to handle
those errors, so failure to hold dataset should be better than
kernel panic. Some other places where these errors are still not
handled but asserted should be less dangerous just as unreachable.
We have a user report about pool corruption leading to assertions
on these errors. Hopefully this will make behavior a bit nicer.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16836
The pages in the array may become valid after this initial unbusying,
so the assertion only holds during the first iteration of the outer
loop.
Later in zfs_getpages(), the dmu_read_pages() loop handles already-valid
pages. Just drop the assertion, it's not terribly useful.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reported-by: Peter Holm <pho@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Closes#16810Closes#16834
Some users might want to scrub only new data because they would like
to know if the new write wasn't corrupted. This PR adds possibility
scrub only newly written data.
This introduces new `last_scrubbed_txg` property, indicating the
transaction group (TXG) up to which the most recent scrub operation
has checked and repaired the dataset, so users can run scrub only
from the last saved point. We use a scn_max_txg and scn_min_txg
which are already built into scrub, to accomplish that.
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Mariusz Zaborski <mariusz.zaborski@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-By: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Sponsored-By: Klara Inc.
Closes#16301
When replacing a disk, a child process is forked to run a script called
zfs_prepare_disk (which can be useful for disk firmware update or health
check). The parent than calls waitpid and checks the child error/status
code.
However, the _reap_children thread (created from zed_exec_process to
manage zedlets) also waits for all children with the same PGID and can
stole the signal, causing the replace operation to be aborted.
As waitpid returns -1, the parent incorrectly assume that the child
process had an error or was killed. This, in turn, leaves the newly
added disk in REMOVED or UNAVAIL status rather than completing the
replace process.
This patch changes the PGID of the child process execuing the
prepare script, shielding it from the _reap_children thread.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Gionatan Danti <g.danti@assyoma.it>
Closes#16801
Should make no difference, just some dead code cleanup.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by:Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16808
FreeBSD's libprocstat seems to build kernel code in user space,
which does not work here due to undefined vnode_t.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by:Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16808
Doc bug missed in d7605ae77.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16827
Direct I/O implementation added condition to call dbuf_undirty()
only in case of block cloning. But the condition is not right if
the block is no longer dirty in this TXG, but still in DB_NOFILL
state. It resulted in block not reverting to DB_UNCACHED and
following NULL de-reference on attempt to access absent db_data.
While there, add assertions for db_data to make debugging easier.
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16829
Without them the order of operations might get unexpected.
Reviewed-by: Adam Moss <c@yotes.com>
Reviewed-by: Jorgen Lundman <lundman@lundman.net>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16826
The intent here is to replace the zero page pointer in the array of
pointers to pages in the struct.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Closes#16812Closes#16689Closes#16642
Adjust the m4 function to mimic sentinel we use in spl-proc.c
This fixes the detection on kernels compiled with CONFIG_RANDSTRUCT=y
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ivan Volosyuk <Ivan.Volosyuk@gmail.com>
Closes: #16620Closes: #16805
There's interesting info in there that is going to help with
understanding dedup behavior at any given moment.
Since this is a format change, tests that rely on that output have been
modified to match.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Closes#16755
This allowed to debug #16714, fixed in #16782. Without assertions
added here it is difficult to figure out what logs cause the problem,
since the assertion happens in sync thread context.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16795
Linux locks copy_file_range() source as shared. FreeBSD was doing
it also, but then was changed to exclusive, partially because KPI
of that time was doing so, and partially seems out of caution.
Considering zfs_clone_range() uses range locks on both source and
destination, neither should require exclusive vnode locks. But one
step at a time, just sync it with Linux for now.
Reviewed-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16789Closes#16797
Previously vnode was not locked there, unlike Linux. It required
locking it in vn_flush_cached_data(), which recursed on the lock
if called from zfs_clone_range(), having the vnode locked.
Reviewed-by: Alan Somers <asomers@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16789Closes#16796
by protecting against sb->s_shrink eviction on umount with newer kernels
deactivate_locked_super calls shrinker_free and only then
sops->kill_sb cb, resulting in UAF on umount when trying
to reach for the shrinker functions in zpl_prune_sb of
in-umount dataset
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Adam Moss <c@yotes.com>
Signed-off-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Closes#16770
This fixes assertion in brt_sync_table() on debug builds when last
cloned block on the vdev is freed and bv_meta_dirty is cleared,
while bv_entcount_dirty is not. Should not matter in production.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16791
Update the META file to reflect compatibility with the 6.12 kernel.
Reviewed-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16793
Previous implementation of zap_leaf_array_free() put chunks on the
free list in reverse order. Also zap_leaf_transfer_entry() and
zap_entry_remove() were freeing name and value arrays in reverse
order. Together this created a mess in the free list, making
following allocations much more fragmented than necessary.
This patch re-implements zap_leaf_array_free() to keep existing
chunks order, and implements non-destructive zap_leaf_array_copy()
to be used in zap_leaf_transfer_entry() to allow properly ordered
freeing name and value arrays there and in zap_entry_remove().
With this change test of some writes and deletes shows percent of
non-contiguous chunks in DDT reducing from 61% and 47% to 0% and
17% for arrays and frees respectively. Sure some explicit sorting
could do even better, especially for ZAPs with variable-size arrays,
but it would also cost much more, while this should be very cheap.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16766
The current "Requires" lines only ensure the old kernel is
available on the system but it does not prevent fedora from
updating to an incompatible and breaking user's system.
Set Conflicts to block incompatible kernels from being installed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: tleydxdy <shironeko.github@tesaguri.club>
Closes#16139
zio_delay_interrupt(), apparently used for fault injection, is executed
in the I/O pipeline. It can cause the calling thread to go to sleep,
which is not allowed on FreeBSD. This happens only for small delays,
though, and there's no apparent reason to avoid deferring to a taskqueue
in that case, as it already does otherwise.
Simply go to sleep unconditionally. This fixes an occasional panic I
see when running the ZTS on FreeBSD. Also remove an unhelpful comment
referencing the non-existent timeout_generic().
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16785
- With both pending and current AVL-trees being per-vdev and having
effectively identical comparison functions (pending tree compared
also birth time, but I don't believe it is possible for them to be
different for the same offset within one transaction group), it
makes no sense to move entries from one to another. Instead inline
dramatically simplified brt_entry_addref() into brt_pending_apply().
It no longer requires bv_lock, since there is nothing concurrent
to it at the time. And it does not need to search the tree for the
previous entries, since it is the same tree, we already have the
entry and we know it is unique.
- Put brt_vdev_lookup() and brt_vdev_addref() into different tree
traversals to avoid false positives in the first due to the second
entcount modifications. It saves dramatic amount of time when a
file cloned first time by not looking for non-existent ZAP entries.
- Remove avl_is_empty(bv_tree) check from brt_maybe_exists(). I
don't think it is needed, since by the time all added entries are
already accounted in bv_entcount. The extra check must be producing
too many false positives for no reason. Also we don't need bv_lock
there, since bv_entcount pointer must be table at this point, and
we don't care about false positive races here, while false negative
should be impossible, since all brt_vdev_addref() have already
completed by this point. This dramatically reduces lock contention
on massive deletes of cloned blocks. The only remaining one is
between multiple parallel free threads calling brt_entry_decref().
- Do not update ZAP if net change for a block over the TXG was 0.
In combination with above it makes file move between datasets as
cheap operation as originally intended if it fits into one TXG.
- Do not allocate vdevs on pool creation or import if it did not
have active block cloning. This allows to save a bit in few cases.
- While here, add proper error handling in brt_load() on pool
import instead of assertions.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16773
Increase the injected delay to 1000ms and the ZIO_SLOW_IO_MS threshold
to 750ms to avoid false positives due to unrelated slow IOs which may
occur in the CI environment. Additionally, clear the fault injection as
soon as it is no longer required for the test case.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16769
Without doing that there is a race window on export when history
log write by completed rebuild dirties transaction beyond final,
triggering assertion.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Amanakis <gamanakis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16714Closes#16782
Those values require global atomics to get current hash_elements
values in few of the hottest code paths, while in all the years I
never cared about it. If somebody wants, it should be easy to
get it by periodic sampling, since neither ARC header nor DBUF
counts change so fast that it would be difficult to catch.
For now I've left hash_elements_max kstat for ARC, since it was
used/reported by arc_summary and it would break older versions,
but now it just reports the current value.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16759
Compression names actually aren't used in dedup table names, but
checksum names are.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16776
Also fix comment cross-referencing to zpool.8.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Steve Mokris <smokris@softpixel.com>
Closes#16777
It should be __VA_ARGS__, not __VA_ARGS.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16780
When an OFFLINE device is physically removed, a spare is automatically
activated. However, this behavior differs in FreeBSD, where we do not
transition from OFFLINE state to REMOVED.
Our support team has encountered cases where customers experienced
unexpected behavior during drive replacements, with multiple spares
activating for the same VDEV due to a single disk replacement. This
patch ensures that a drive in an OFFLINE state remains in that state,
preventing it from transitioning to REMOVED and being automatically
replaced by a spare.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16751
While block cloning operation from the beginning was made per-vdev,
before this change most of its data were protected by two pool-
wide locks. It created lots of lock contention in many workload.
This change makes most of block cloning data structures per-vdev,
which allows to lock them separately. The only pool-wide lock now
it spa_brt_lock, protecting array of per-vdev pointers and in most
cases taken as reader. Also this splits per-vdev locks into three
different ones: bv_pending_lock protects the AVL-tree of pending
operations in open context, bv_mos_entries_lock protects BRT ZAP
object from while being prefetched, and bv_lock protects the rest
of per-vdev context during TXG commit process. There should be
no functional difference aside of some optimizations.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16740
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16740
We are doing exactly the same checks around all brt_pending_add().
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16740
If we write less than 113 bytes with enabled compression we get
embeded block, which then fails check for number of cloned blocks
in bclone_test.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16740
Welcome to the party 🎉
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16762
This patch fixes compilation with uClibc by applying the same fallback
as commit e12d76176d to the `getversion.c`
file, which was previously overlooked.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: José Luis Salvador Rufo <salvador.joseluis@gmail.com>
Closes#16735Closes#16741
Since zvol read and write can process up to (DMU_MAX_ACCESS / 2) bytes
in a single operation, the current optimal I/O size is too low. SCST
directly reports this value as the optimal transfer length for the
target SCSI device. Increasing it from the previous volblocksize results
in performance improvement for large block parallel I/O workloads.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16750
- If we don't want dmu_read_pages() to perform extra readahead/behind,
pass a pointer to 0 instead of a null pointer, as dum_read_pages()
expects rahead and rbehind to be non-null.
- Avoid unneeded iterations in a loop.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Reported-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16758
dsl_free() calls zio_free() to free the block. For most blocks, this
simply calls metaslab_free() without doing any IO or putting anything on
the IO pipeline.
Some blocks however require additional IO to free. This at least
includes gang, dedup and cloned blocks. For those, zio_free() will issue
a ZIO_TYPE_FREE IO and return.
If a huge number of blocks are being freed all at once, it's possible
for dsl_dataset_block_kill() to be called millions of time on a single
transaction (eg a 2T object of 128K blocks is 16M blocks). If those are
all IO-inducing frees, that then becomes 16M FREE IOs placed on the
pipeline. At time of writing, a zio_t is 1280 bytes, so for just one 2T
object that requires a 20G allocation of resident memory from the
zio_cache. If that can't be satisfied by the kernel, an out-of-memory
condition is raised.
This would be better handled by improving the cases that the
dmu_tx_assign() throttle will handle, or by reducing the overheads
required by the IO pipeline, or with a better central facility for
freeing blocks.
For now, we simply check for the cases that would cause zio_free() to
create a FREE IO, and instead put the block on the pool's freelist. This
is the same place that blocks from destroyed datasets go, and the async
destroy machinery will automatically see them and trickle them out as
normal.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#6783Closes#16708Closes#16722Closes#16697
..., before we make the header or the log block visible to others.
It should fix assertion on allocated space going negative if the
header is freed once the lock is dropped, while the write is still
going.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16040Closes#16743
As a deadlock avoidance measure, zfs_getpages() would only try to
acquire a rangelock, falling back to a single-page read if this was not
possible. However, this is incompatible with direct I/O.
Instead, release the busy lock before trying to acquire the rangelock in
blocking mode. This means that it's possible for the page to be
replaced, so we have to re-lookup.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16643
mappedread_sf() may allocate pages; if it fails to populate a page
can't free it, it needs to ensure that it's placed into a page queue,
otherwise it can't be reclaimed until the vnode is destroyed.
I think this is quite unlikely to happen in practice, it was noticed by
code inspection.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Mark Johnston <markj@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16643
In zpool_get_user_prop, when called from zpool_expand_proplist and
collect_pool, we often have zpool_props present in zpool_handle_t equal
to NULL. This mostly happens when only one user property is requested
using zpool list -o <user_property>. Checking for this case and
correctly initializing the zpool_props field in zpool_handle_t fixes
this issue.
Interestingly, this issue does not occur if we query any other property
like name or guid along with a user property with -o flag because while
accessing properties like guid, zpool_prop_get_int is called which
checks for this case specifically and calls zpool_get_all_props.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16734
This commit fixes JSON output for zpool list when user properties are
requested with -o flag. This case needed to be handled specifically
since zpool_prop_to_name does not return property name for user
properties, instead it is stored in pl->pl_user_prop.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16734
This commit fixes JSON output for zfs list when user properties are
requested with -o flag. This case needed to be handled specifically
since zfs_prop_to_name does not return property name for user
properties, instead it is stored in pl->pl_user_prop.
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16732
When building on musl, we get:
```
In file included from tests/zfs-tests/cmd/getversion.c:22:
/usr/include/sys/fcntl.h:1:2: error: #warning redirecting incorrect
#include <sys/fcntl.h> to <fcntl.h> [-Werror=cpp]
1 | #warning redirecting incorrect #include <sys/fcntl.h> to <fcntl.h>
In file included from module/os/linux/zfs/vdev_file.c:36:
/usr/include/sys/fcntl.h:1:2: error: #warning redirecting incorrect
#include <sys/fcntl.h> to <fcntl.h> [-Werror=cpp]
1 | #warning redirecting incorrect #include <sys/fcntl.h> to <fcntl.h>
```
Bug: https://bugs.gentoo.org/925235
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Closes#15925
a10e552 updated abd_free_linear_page() to no longer call
abd_update_scatter_stat(). This meant that linear pages that were not
attached to Direct I/O requests were not doing waste accounting for the
ARC. This led to performance issues due to incorrect ARC accounting that
resulted in 100% of CPU time being spent in arc_evict() during prolonged
I/O workloads with the ARC.
The call to abd_update_scatter_stats() is now conditionally called in
abd_free_linear_page() when the ABD is not from a Direct I/O request.
Reviewed-by: Mark Maybee <mmaybee@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Tony Nguyen <tony.nguyen@delphix.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#16729
Currently, even though send_reader_thread prefetches spill block,
do_dump() will not use it and issues its own blocking arc_read. This
causes significant performance degradation when sending datasets with
lots of spill blocks.
For unmodified spill blocks, we also create send_range struct for them
in send_reader_thread and issue prefetches for them. We piggyback them
on the dnode send_range instead of enqueueing them so we don't break
send_range_after check.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Chunwei Chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Co-authored-by: david.chen <david.chen@nutanix.com>
Closes#16701
Avoids using fallback_migrate_folio, which starts unnecessary writeback
(leading to BUG in migrate_folio_extra).
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: tstabrawa <59430211+tstabrawa@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#16568Closes#16723
This reverts commit b052035990.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: tstabrawa <59430211+tstabrawa@users.noreply.github.com>
Closes#16568Closes#16723
- Set/remove "Work in Progress"/"Code Review Needed" for drafts.
- Remove "Accepted", "Inactive", "Revision Needed" and "Stale" on
pushes and reopens.
I hope this reduce chances of PRs being forgotten after requested
modifications done due to stale labels. It is better to have no
labels than incorrect ones saying there is nothing to look at.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16721
Not all udev devices have parent devices.
Calling udev_device_get_ functions yield an assertion error
if called with a NULL pointer.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Sietse <sietse@wizdom.nu>
Co-authored-by: Sietse <sietse@wizdom.nu>
Closes#16705Closes#16717
Small block workloads may use a very large number of dirty records.
During simple block cloning test due to BRT still using 4KB blocks
I can easily see up to 2.5M of those used. Before this change
dbuf_dirty_record_t structures representing them were allocated via
kmem_zalloc(), that rounded their size up to 512 bytes.
Introduction of specialized kmem cache allows to reduce the size
from 512 to 408 bytes. Additionally, since override and raw params
in dirty records are mutually exclusive, puting them into a union
allows to reduce structure size down to 368 bytes, increasing the
saving to 28%, that can be a 0.5GB or more of RAM.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16694
I think we've done enough experiments.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16189Closes#16712
Fedora 41 was released 10/29/24, and Fedora 39 will be EOL on 11/12/24.
Update Fedora runners in the test suite. Some minor tweaks also needed
to support ksh 1.0.10.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#16700
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16692
I was surprised to discover today that `zpool online` and
`zpool offline` don't print any information about why they failed in
many cases, they just return 1 with no information about why.
Let's improve that where we can without changing the library function.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Allan Jude <allan@klarasystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rich Ercolani <rincebrain@gmail.com>
Closes#16244
Now that we can handle these different alignments, we don't this
workaround.
This reverts commit aefc2da8a5.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16687
Freeing an ABD can take sleeping locks to update various stats. We
aren't allowed to sleep on an interrupt handler. So, move the free off
to the io_done callback.
We should never have been freeing things in the interrupt handler, but
we got away with it because we were usually freeing a linear ABD, which
at most is returning two objects to a cache and never sleeping. Scatter
ABDs can be used now, and those have more complex locking.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16687
It seems out our notion of "properly" aligned IO was incomplete. In
particular, dm-crypt does its own splitting, and assumes that a logical
block will never cross an order-0 page boundary (ie, the physical page
size, not compound size). This effectively means that it needs to be
possible to split a BIO at any page or block size boundary and have it
work correctly.
This updates the alignment check function to enforce these rules (to the
extent possible).
Our response to misaligned data is to make some new allocation that is
properly aligned, and copy the data into it. It turns out that
linearising (via abd_borrow_buf()) is not enough, because we allocate eg
4K blocks from a general purpose slab, and so may receive (or already
have) a 4K block that crosses pages.
So instead, we allocate a new ABD, which is guaranteed to be aligned
properly to block sizes, and then copy everything into it, and back out
on the way back.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16687#16631#15646#15533#14533
While reading some code @grwilson came across the above function that
seemingly had no consumers besides a ztest callback that ensures that
the tx_callback infrastructure works correctly. It turns out that Lustre
is the main (and potentially the only) consumer of this. Refer to
`osd_trans_commit_cb` of `lustre/osd-zfs/osd_handler.c` in the Lustre
repo for more info. Let's add a comment highlighting this before someone
removes it by mistake.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Serapheim Dimitropoulos <serapheimd@gmail.com>
Closes#16698
If on the first open device's logical ashift is bigger than set
by pool's ashift property, ignore the last as unusable instead of
creating vdev that will fail most of I/Os due to misalignment.
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16690
In FreeBSD's `zio_do_crypt_data()`, ensure that two `struct uio`
variables are cleared before copying data out of them. This avoids
accessing garbage data, and fixes gcc `-Wuninitialized` warnings.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry@andric.com>
Closes#16688
The macros `simd_stat_init()` and `simd_stat_fini()` in FreeBSD's
`simd.h` are defined as zero, but they are actually only used as
statements. Replace the definitions with `do {} while (0)` instead, to
avoid gcc `-Wunused-value` warnings.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Toomas Soome <tsoome@me.com>
Signed-off-by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry@andric.com>
Closes#16693
Add a LUKS sanity test to trigger: #16631
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Closes#16681
On 64bit FreeBSD this reduces one from 296 to 280 bytes. On small
block workloads dbufs may consume gigabytes of ARC, and this saves
5% of it.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16684
Adding cryptsetup breaks some dialog things on Debian 11.
Apply some workaround for it.
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
in some cases not linearizing buffers with disk sector crossing a
page boundary. It is fine for hardware, but somehow required by LUKS.
It is not typical for ZFS to produce such buffers, but it may happen
if 6KB block is compressed to 4KB, while still having 2KB alignment.
Banning the 6KB buffers helps vdevs with ashifh=12.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
The following tests have been observed to occasionally fail when
running under the CI. Updated our exceptions list to track them.
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16670
All of our thread entry functions have this signature:
void (*)(void*) __attribute__((noreturn))
The low-level `__thread_create()` function accepts a `thread_func_t` as
the entry point, which is defined more simply as:
void (*)(void *)
And then the `thread_create()` and `thread_create_named()` macros cast
the passed-in function point down to `thread_func_t`, that is, casting
away the `noreturn` attribute.
Clang considers casting between these two types to be invalid because
both the caller and the callee may have elided parts of the stack frame
save and restore, knowing that they won't be needed.
Recent Linux appears to be setting `-Wcast-function-type-strict`, which
causes this invalid cast to emit a warning, which with `-Werror` is
converted to an error, breaking the build.
This commit fixes this in the simplest possible way: adding `noreturn`
to the `thread_func_t` attribute. Since all our thread entry functions
already have this attribute, it's arguably a just a consistency fix
anyway.
I considered removing the casts in the macros, which silences the
warnings, but it turns out that Clang has a bug that won't emit this
error for implicit conversions, only explicit casts. So leaving them
there seems like a reasonable belt-and-suspenders approach. Also,
frankly, this whole mechanism seems a little undercooked inside LLVM, so
I'm content go with my intuition about the smallest, least invaisve
change.
**NOTE**: `__thread_create` is exported by `spl.ko` and has a
`thread_func_t` arg, so this is an ABI break. Whether that matters in
practice, I have no idea.
Further reading:
- 1aad641c79
- https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/7325
- https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/41465
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16672Closes#16673
Before 4.20, kernel_siginfo_t was just called siginfo_t. This was
causing the kthread_dequeue_signal_3arg_task check, which uses
kernel_siginfo_t, to fail on older kernels.
In d6b8c17f1, we started checking for the "new" three-arg
dequeue_signal() by testing for the "old" version. Because that test is
explicitly using kernel_siginfo_t, it would fail, leading to the build
trying to use the new three-arg version, which would then not compile.
This commit fixes that by avoiding checking for the old 3-arg
dequeue_signal entirely. Instead, we check for the new one, as well as
the 4-arg form, and we use the old form as a fallback. This way, we
never have to test for it explicitly, and once we're building
HAVE_SIGINFO will make sure we get the right kernel_siginfo_t for it, so
everything works out nice.
Original-patch-by: Finix <yancw@info2soft.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16666
Just another useful nugget of info in times of strife.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16667
Some compiler/versions warn these typedefs according to #16660.
The platform specific header sys/abd_os.h shouldn't define or use abd_t,
as it's defined in its non-platform specific consumer sys/abd.h.
Do the same as what FreeBSD header does.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tomohiro Kusumi <kusumi.tomohiro@gmail.com>
Closes#16660Closes#16665
For some reason it was dropped when split from kernel, that makes
raidz_test to accumulate in RAM up to 100GB of logs we don't need.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Igor Kozhukhov <igor@dilos.org>
Reviewed-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Sponsored by: iXsystems, Inc.
Closes#16492Closes#16566Closes#16664
This is the sort of code that we get right once and never look at again.
Anyone reading this code is already likely in the middle of a debugging
nightmare, and then they have a wall of manual string construction and
an unfamiliar and idiosyncratic library to deal with. So, comment the
whole thing to try to make it clear what's going on.
In pursuit of the above, I've added return checks to some of the
libunwind calls, fixed the frame loop to not skip the "top" frame
(however unseful it may be), and fix a couple of calls to
spl_bt_u64_to_hex_str() which requested 18 digits instead of 16.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16653
My eyes are going blurry looking at all those write calls. This is much
nicer.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Close#16653
More useful stuff, especially when trying to follow a disassembly.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16653
While mounting ZFS root during boot on Linux distributions from initrd,
mount from busybox is effectively used which executes mount system call
directly. This skips the ZFS helper mount.zfs, which checks and enables
the mount options as specified in dataset properties. As a result,
datasets mounted during boot from initrd do not have correct mount
options as specified in ZFS dataset properties.
There has been an attempt to use mount.zfs in zfs initrd script,
responsible for mounting the ZFS root filesystem (PR#13305). This was
later reverted (PR#14908) after discovering that using mount.zfs breaks
mounting of snapshots on root (/) and other child datasets of root have
the same issue (Issue#9461).
This happens because switching from busybox mount to mount.zfs correctly
parses the mount options but also adds 'mntpoint=/root' to the mount
options, which is then prepended to the snapshot mountpoint in
'.zfs/snapshot'. '/root' is the directory on Debian with initramfs-tools
where root filesystem is mounted before pivot_root. When Linux runtime
is reached, trying to access the snapshots on root results in
automounting the snapshot on '/root/.zfs/*', which fails.
This commit attempts to fix the automounting of snapshots on root, while
using mount.zfs in initrd script. Since the mountpoint of dataset is
stored in vfs_mntpoint field, we can check if current mountpoint of
dataset and vfs_mntpoint are same or not. If they are not same, reset
the vfs_mntpoint field with current mountpoint. This fixes the
mountpoints of root dataset and children in respective vfs_mntpoint
fields when we try to access the snapshots of root dataset or its
children. With correct mountpoint for root dataset and children stored
in vfs_mntpoint, all snapshots of root dataset are mounted correctly
and become accessible.
This fix will come into play only if current process, that is trying to
access the snapshots is not in chroot context. The Linux kernel API
that is used to convert struct path into char format (d_path), returns
the complete path for given struct path. It works in chroot environment
as well and returns the correct path from original filesystem root.
However d_path fails to return the complete path if any directory from
original root filesystem is mounted using --bind flag or --rbind flag
in chroot environment. In this case, if we try to access the snapshot
from outside the chroot environment, d_path returns the path correctly,
i.e. it returns the correct path to the directory that is mounted with
--bind flag. However inside the chroot environment, it only returns the
path inside chroot.
For now, there is not a better way in my understanding that gives the
complete path in char format and handles the case where directories from
root filesystem are mounted with --bind or --rbind on another path which
user will later chroot into. So this fix gets enabled if current
process trying to access the snapshot is not in chroot context.
With the snapshots issue fixed for root filesystem, using mount.zfs in
ZFS initrd script, mounts the datasets with correct mount options.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Ameer Hamza <ahamza@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16646
The FreeBSD linux/compiler.h in OpenZFS was copied from a very old
version of FreeBSD's linuxkpi's linux/compiler.h. There's no need for
this duplication. Use FreeBSD's linuxkpi version instead, and provide
zfs_fallthrough to augment it (it's all that's needed). Use #pragma once
to avoid naming issues for guard variables. Since this is a complete
rewrite, use my copyright here (the original code in FreeBSD still
credits everybody). This works back at least to FreeBSD 12.4, which
is not out of support, and all newer releases.
Remove extra copies of macros that were defined elsewhere, but are now
properly defined in LinuxKPI so are redundant.
Sponsored-by: Netflix
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Warner Losh <imp@bsdimp.com>
Closes#16650
With CPU pinning, we should get some speedup because of better
cpu cache re-use.
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16641
Kernel same-page Merging (KSM) allows KVM guests to share identical
memory pages. These shared pages are usually common libraries or other
identical, high-use data.
The current configuration was a bit to lazy - so KSM didn't work very
well. With the new configuration I could run 3 Linux VMs in parralel.
FreeBSD can't benefit from it. But FreeBSD is not so memory hungry in
general, so there is no need for it ;)
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16641
This partially reverts commit 41210597. Now that b4e4cbeb2 has
been merged Direct IO can be enabled by default for Linux, but
for FreeBSD there still remains a potentially insufficient range
locking in zfs_getpages() which needs to be resolved.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16629
Some C libraries, such as uClibc, do not provide strerror_l() in
which case we fallback to strerror().
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16636Closes#16640
Increase the pool import time allowed by assuming a minimum reduction
to 1/2 instead of 1/3 when comparing sequential to parallel import
times. This is sufficient to verify parallel imports are working as
intended and should address the occasional false positive failure
when the time is slightly exceeded.
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16638
As described in the comment above this check the space used by
logged entries is not accounted for and some margin needs to be
added in. While uncommon we have slightly exceeded the 600,000
threshold on some CI run so we increase the limit a bit more.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16637
The ubuntu-latest alias now refers to ubuntu-24.04 instead of
ubuntu-22.04 which causes CodeQL's autobuild to fail with:
cpp/autobuilder: deptrace not supported in ubuntu 24.04
Until deptrace is supported by ubuntu-24.04 hosted runners request
ubuntu-22.04 which is supported.
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: George Melikov <mail@gmelikov.ru>
Closes#16639
When compiling zdb.c on 32-bit platforms, a format conversion error
is reported for a printf() in dump_zap(). Change %l to macro
%" PRIu64 " to match the platform size of a 64-bit unsigned integer.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16635
Mostly so that with the JSON formatting options are also used, they all
look the same. To my eye, `-j --json-flat-vdevs` suggests that they are
different or unrelated, while `--json --json-flat-vdevs` invites no
further questions.
Sponsored-by: Klara, Inc.
Sponsored-by: Wasabi Technology, Inc.
Reviewed-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <rob.norris@klarasystems.com>
Closes#16632
This fixes an oversight in the Direct I/O PR. There is nothing that
stops a process from manipulating the contents of a buffer for a
Direct I/O read while the I/O is in flight. This can lead checksum
verify failures. However, the disk contents are still correct, and this
would lead to false reporting of checksum validation failures.
To remedy this, all Direct I/O reads that have a checksum verification
failure are treated as suspicious. In the event a checksum validation
failure occurs for a Direct I/O read, then the I/O request will be
reissued though the ARC. This allows for actual validation to happen and
removes any possibility of the buffer being manipulated after the I/O
has been issued.
Just as with Direct I/O write checksum validation failures, Direct I/O
read checksum validation failures are reported though zpool status -d in
the DIO column. Also the zevent has been updated to have both:
1. dio_verify_wr -> Checksum verification failure for writes
2. dio_verify_rd -> Checksum verification failure for reads.
This allows for determining what I/O operation was the culprit for the
checksum verification failure. All DIO errors are reported only on the
top-level VDEV.
Even though FreeBSD can write protect pages (stable pages) it still has
the same issue as Linux with Direct I/O reads.
This commit updates the following:
1. Propogates checksum failures for reads all the way up to the
top-level VDEV.
2. Reports errors through zpool status -d as DIO.
3. Has two zevents for checksum verify errors with Direct I/O. One for
read and one for write.
4. Updates FreeBSD ABD code to also check for ABD_FLAG_FROM_PAGES and
handle ABD buffer contents validation the same as Linux.
5. Updated manipulate_user_buffer.c to also manipulate a buffer while a
Direct I/O read is taking place.
6. Adds a new ZTS test case dio_read_verify that stress tests the new
code.
7. Updated man pages.
8. Added an IMPLY statement to zio_checksum_verify() to make sure that
Direct I/O reads are not issued as speculative.
9. Removed self healing through mirror, raidz, and dRAID VDEVs for
Direct I/O reads.
This issue was first observed when installing a Windows 11 VM on a ZFS
dataset with the dataset property direct set to always. The zpool
devices would report checksum failures, but running a subsequent zpool
scrub would not repair any data and report no errors.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Signed-off-by: Brian Atkinson <batkinson@lanl.gov>
Closes#16598
The function abd_alloc_from_pages() is used only in kernel.
Excluding sys/vm.h, and vm/vm_page.h includes avoids dependency
problems.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16616
The scrub code may return EBUSY under several possible scenarios
causing ztest to incorrectly ASSERT when verifying the result of
a raidz expansion. Update the test case to allow EBUSY since it
does not indicate pool damage.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16627
Add ability to generate disk names that contain both a slot number
and a lun number in order to support multi-actuator SAS hard drives
with multiple luns. Also add the ability to zero pad slot numbers to
a desired digit length for easier sorting.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Matthew Heller <matthew.f.heller@accre.vanderbilt.edu>
Closes#16603
Update resilver_restart_001.ksh to restore the default
resilver_defer_percent when the test completes.
Reviewed-by: Tony Hutter <hutter2@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Snajdr <snajpa@snajpa.net>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes#16618
.NOTPARALLEL target is being forced on userspace as well. This commit
removes .NOTPARALEL target and only serializes the execution of
native-deb* targets.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Closes#16622
The -j option added a round of getopt, which didn't know the magic
version flags. So just bypass the whole thing and go straight to the
human output function for the special case.
Sponsored-by: https://despairlabs.com/sponsor/
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Umer Saleem <usaleem@ixsystems.com>
Signed-off-by: Rob Norris <robn@despairlabs.com>
Closes#16615Closes#16617
The inline functions zfs_dio_offset_aligned(), zfs_dio_size_aligned()
and zfs_dio_aligned() are declared as boolean_t but return the bool
type.
This fixes the build of FreeBSD.
Reviewed-by: Alexander Motin <mav@FreeBSD.org>
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org>
Closes#16613
The ABI of libzfs and libzpool have breaking changes since last
SONAME bump in commit fe6babc:
* libzfs: `zpool_print_unsup_feat` removed (used by zpool cmd).
* libzpool: multiple `ddt_*` symbols removed (used by zdb cmd).
Bump them to avoid ABI breakage.
See: https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/11817
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Shengqi Chen <harry-chen@outlook.com>
Closes#16609
`zvol_rename_minors()` needs to be given the full path not just the
snapshot name. Use code removed in a0bd735ad as a guide
to providing the necessary values.
Add ZTS check for /dev changes after snapshot rename. After
renaming a snapshot with 'snapdev=visible' ensure that the /dev
entries are updated to reflect the rename.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: James Dingwall <james@dingwall.me.uk>
Closes#14223Closes#16600
In PR #16599 I used 'return' like in C - which is wrong :/
This fix generates the summary as needed.
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16611
Current CI is failing on FreeBSD 13.4-STABLE, because samba4 can't be
installed there. Lets remove it for now.
Update also the FreeBSD version definitions a bit.
The naming is like this now:
FreeBSD variants:
- freebsd13-3r, freebsd13-4r, freebsd14-0r, freebsd14-1r (RELEASE)
- freebsd13-4s, freebsd14-1s (STABLE)
- freebsd15-0c (CURRENT)
RHL based distros:
- almalinux8, almalinux9, centos-stream9, fedora39, fedora40
Debian based:
- debian11, debian12, ubuntu20, ubuntu22, ubuntu24
Misc Linux distros:
- archlinux, tumbleweed
Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Tino Reichardt <milky-zfs@mcmilk.de>
Closes#16610
Increase the version to 2.3.99 to indicate the master branch is
newer than the 2.3.x release. This ensures packages built from
master branch are considered to be newer than the last release.
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2024-10-04 14:20:10 -07:00
3411 changed files with 49242 additions and 10661 deletions
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