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Andreas Gruenbacher authored
gfs2_evict_inode is called to free inodes under memory pressure. The function calls into DLM when an inode's last cluster-wide reference goes away (remote unlink) and to release the glock and associated DLM lock before finally destroying the inode. However, if DLM is blocked on memory to become available, calling into DLM again will deadlock. Avoid that by decoupling releasing glocks from destroying inodes in that case: with gfs2_glock_queue_put, glocks will be dequeued asynchronously in work queue context, when the associated inodes have likely already been destroyed. With this change, inodes can end up being unlinked, remote-unlink can be triggered, and then the inode can be reallocated before all remote-unlink callbacks are processed. To detect that, revalidate the link count in gfs2_evict_inode to make sure we're not deleting an allocated, referenced inode. Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
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