1. 05 May, 2017 1 commit
    • Bob Peterson's avatar
      GFS2: Allow glocks to be unlocked after withdraw · ed17545d
      Bob Peterson authored
      This bug fixes a regression introduced by patch 0d1c7ae9.
      
      The intent of the patch was to stop promoting glocks after a
      file system is withdrawn due to a variety of errors, because doing
      so results in a BUG(). (You should be able to unmount after a
      withdraw rather than having the kernel panic.)
      
      Unfortunately, it also stopped demotions, so glocks could not be
      unlocked after withdraw, which means the unmount would hang.
      
      This patch allows function do_xmote to demote locks to an
      unlocked state after a withdraw, but not promote them.
      Signed-off-by: default avatarBob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
      ed17545d
  2. 19 Apr, 2017 1 commit
    • Bob Peterson's avatar
      GFS2: Non-recursive delete · d552a2b9
      Bob Peterson authored
      Implement truncate/delete as a non-recursive algorithm. The older
      algorithm was implemented with recursion to strip off each layer
      at a time (going by height, starting with the maximum height.
      This version tries to do the same thing but without recursion,
      and without needing to allocate new structures or lists in memory.
      
      For example, say you want to truncate a very large file to 1 byte,
      and its end-of-file metapath is: 0.505.463.428. The starting
      metapath would be 0.0.0.0. Since it's a truncate to non-zero, it
      needs to preserve that byte, and all metadata pointing to it.
      So it would start at 0.0.0.0, look up all its metadata buffers,
      then free all data blocks pointed to at the highest level.
      After that buffer is "swept", it moves on to 0.0.0.1, then
      0.0.0.2, etc., reading in buffers and sweeping them clean.
      When it gets to the end of the 0.0.0 metadata buffer (for 4K
      blocks the last valid one is 0.0.0.508), it backs up to the
      previous height and starts working on 0.0.1.0, then 0.0.1.1,
      and so forth. After it reaches the end and sweeps 0.0.1.508,
      it continues with 0.0.2.0, and so on. When that height is
      exhausted, and it reaches 0.0.508.508 it backs up another level,
      to 0.1.0.0, then 0.1.0.1, through 0.1.0.508. So it has to keep
      marching backwards and forwards through the metadata until it's
      all swept clean. Once it has all the data blocks freed, it
      lowers the strip height, and begins the process all over again,
      but with one less height. This time it sweeps 0.0.0 through
      0.505.463. When that's clean, it lowers the strip height again
      and works to free 0.505. Eventually it strips the lowest height, 0.
      For a delete or truncate to 0, all metadata for all heights of
      0.0.0.0 would be freed. For a truncate to 1 byte, 0.0.0.0 would
      be preserved.
      
      This isn't much different from normal integer incrementing,
      where an integer gets incremented from 0000 (0.0.0.0) to 3021
      (3.0.2.1). So 0000 gets increments to 0001, 0002, up to 0009,
      then on to 0010, 0011 up to 0099, then 0100 and so forth. It's
      just that each "digit" goes from 0 to 508 (for a total of 509
      pointers) rather than from 0 to 9.
      
      Note that the dinode will only have 483 pointers due to the
      dinode structure itself.
      
      Also note: this is just an example. These numbers (509 and 483)
      are based on a standard 4K block size. Smaller block sizes will
      yield smaller numbers of indirect pointers accordingly.
      
      The truncation process is accomplished with the help of two
      major functions and a few helper functions.
      
      Functions do_strip and recursive_scan are obsolete, so removed.
      
      New function sweep_bh_for_rgrps cleans a buffer_head pointed to
      by the given metapath and height. By cleaning, I mean it frees
      all blocks starting at the offset passed in metapath. It starts
      at the first block in the buffer pointed to by the metapath and
      identifies its resource group (rgrp). From there it frees all
      subsequent block pointers that lie within that rgrp. If it's
      already inside a transaction, it stays within it as long as it
      can. In other words, it doesn't close a transaction until it knows
      it's freed what it can from the resource group. In this way,
      multiple buffers may be cleaned in a single transaction, as long
      as those blocks in the buffer all lie within the same rgrp.
      
      If it's not in a transaction, it starts one. If the buffer_head
      has references to blocks within multiple rgrps, it frees all the
      blocks inside the first rgrp it finds, then closes the
      transaction. Then it repeats the cycle: identifies the next
      unfreed block, uses it to find its rgrp, then starts a new
      transaction for that set. It repeats this process repeatedly
      until the buffer_head contains no more references to any blocks
      past the given metapath.
      
      Function trunc_dealloc has been reworked into a finite state
      automaton. It has basically 3 active states:
      DEALLOC_MP_FULL, DEALLOC_MP_LOWER, and DEALLOC_FILL_MP:
      
      The DEALLOC_MP_FULL state implies the metapath has a full set
      of buffers out to the "shrink height", and therefore, it can
      call function sweep_bh_for_rgrps to free the blocks within the
      highest height of the metapath. If it's just swept the lowest
      level (or an error has occurred) the state machine is ended.
      Otherwise it proceeds to the DEALLOC_MP_LOWER state.
      
      The DEALLOC_MP_LOWER state implies we are finished with a given
      buffer_head, which may now be released, and therefore we are
      then missing some buffer information from the metapath. So we
      need to find more buffers to read in. In most cases, this is
      just a matter of releasing the buffer_head and moving to the
      next pointer from the previous height, so it may be read in and
      swept as well. If it can't find another non-null pointer to
      process, it checks whether it's reached the end of a height
      and needs to lower the strip height, or whether it still needs
      move forward through the previous height's metadata. In this
      state, all zero-pointers are skipped. From this state, it can
      only loop around (once more backing up another height) or,
      once a valid metapath is found (one that has non-zero
      pointers), proceed to state DEALLOC_FILL_MP.
      
      The DEALLOC_FILL_MP state implies that we have a metapath
      but not all its buffers are read in. So we must proceed to read
      in buffer_heads until the metapath has a valid buffer for every
      height. If the previous state backed us up 3 heights, we may
      need to read in a buffer, increment the height, then repeat the
      process until buffers have been read in for all required heights.
      If it's successful reading a buffer, and it's at the highest
      height we need, it proceeds back to the DEALLOC_MP_FULL state.
      If it's unable to fill in a buffer, (encounters a hole, etc.)
      it tries to find another non-zero block pointer. If they're all
      zero, it lowers the height and returns to the DEALLOC_MP_LOWER
      state. If it finds a good non-null pointer, it loops around and
      reads it in, while keeping the metapath in lock-step with the
      pointers it examines.
      
      The state machine runs until the truncation request is
      satisfied. Then any transactions are ended, the quota and
      statfs data are updated, and the function is complete.
      
      Helper function metaptr1 was introduced to be an easy way to
      determine the start of a buffer_head's indirect pointers.
      
      Helper function lookup_mp_height was introduced to find a
      metapath index and read in the buffer that corresponds to it.
      In this way, function lookup_metapath becomes a simple loop to
      call it for every height.
      
      Helper function fillup_metapath is similar to lookup_metapath
      except it can do partial lookups. If the state machine
      backed up multiple levels (like 2999 wrapping to 3000) it
      needs to find out the next starting point and start issuing
      metadata reads at that point.
      
      Helper function hptrs is a shortcut to determine how many
      pointers should be expected in a buffer. Height 0 is the dinode
      which has fewer pointers than the others.
      Signed-off-by: default avatarBob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
      d552a2b9
  3. 05 Apr, 2017 1 commit
  4. 03 Apr, 2017 3 commits
  5. 22 Mar, 2017 20 commits
  6. 21 Mar, 2017 14 commits