Commit graph

324 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris Mason 5a3f23d515 Btrfs: add extra flushing for renames and truncates
Renames and truncates are both common ways to replace old data with new
data.  The filesystem can make an effort to make sure the new data is
on disk before actually replacing the old data.

This is especially important for rename, which many application use as
though it were atomic for both the data and the metadata involved.  The
current btrfs code will happily replace a file that is fully on disk
with one that was just created and still has pending IO.

If we crash after transaction commit but before the IO is done, we'll end
up replacing a good file with a zero length file.  The solution used
here is to create a list of inodes that need special ordering and force
them to disk before the commit is done.  This is similar to the
ext3 style data=ordering, except it is only done on selected files.

Btrfs is able to get away with this because it does not wait on commits
very often, even for fsync (which use a sub-commit).

For renames, we order the file when it wasn't already
on disk and when it is replacing an existing file.  Larger files
are sent to filemap_flush right away (before the transaction handle is
opened).

For truncates, we order if the file goes from non-zero size down to
zero size.  This is a little different, because at the time of the
truncate the file has no dirty bytes to order.  But, we flag the inode
so that it is added to the ordered list on close (via release method).  We
also immediately add it to the ordered list of the current transaction
so that we can try to flush down any writes the application sneaks in
before commit.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-31 14:27:58 -04:00
Chris Mason 12fcfd22fe Btrfs: tree logging unlink/rename fixes
The tree logging code allows individual files or directories to be logged
without including operations on other files and directories in the FS.
It tries to commit the minimal set of changes to disk in order to
fsync the single file or directory that was sent to fsync or O_SYNC.

The tree logging code was allowing files and directories to be unlinked
if they were part of a rename operation where only one directory
in the rename was in the fsync log.  This patch adds a few new rules
to the tree logging.

1) on rename or unlink, if the inode being unlinked isn't in the fsync
log, we must force a full commit before doing an fsync of the directory
where the unlink was done.  The commit isn't done during the unlink,
but it is forced the next time we try to log the parent directory.

Solution: record transid of last unlink/rename per directory when the
directory wasn't already logged.  For renames this is only done when
renaming to a different directory.

mkdir foo/some_dir
normal commit
rename foo/some_dir foo2/some_dir
mkdir foo/some_dir
fsync foo/some_dir/some_file

The fsync above will unlink the original some_dir without recording
it in its new location (foo2).  After a crash, some_dir will be gone
unless the fsync of some_file forces a full commit

2) we must log any new names for any file or dir that is in the fsync
log.  This way we make sure not to lose files that are unlinked during
the same transaction.

2a) we must log any new names for any file or dir during rename
when the directory they are being removed from was logged.

2a is actually the more important variant.  Without the extra logging
a crash might unlink the old name without recreating the new one

3) after a crash, we must go through any directories with a link count
of zero and redo the rm -rf

mkdir f1/foo
normal commit
rm -rf f1/foo
fsync(f1)

The directory f1 was fully removed from the FS, but fsync was never
called on f1, only its parent dir.  After a crash the rm -rf must
be replayed.  This must be able to recurse down the entire
directory tree.  The inode link count fixup code takes care of the
ugly details.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-24 16:14:52 -04:00
Chris Mason 5d13a98f3b Btrfs: readahead checksums during btrfs_finish_ordered_io
This reads in blocks in the checksum btree before starting the
transaction in btrfs_finish_ordered_io.  It makes it much more likely
we'll be able to do operations inside the transaction without
needing any btree reads, which limits transaction latencies overall.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-24 16:14:51 -04:00
Chris Mason b9473439d3 Btrfs: leave btree locks spinning more often
btrfs_mark_buffer dirty would set dirty bits in the extent_io tree
for the buffers it was dirtying.  This may require a kmalloc and it
was not atomic.  So, anyone who called btrfs_mark_buffer_dirty had to
set any btree locks they were holding to blocking first.

This commit changes dirty tracking for extent buffers to just use a flag
in the extent buffer.  Now that we have one and only one extent buffer
per page, this can be safely done without losing dirty bits along the way.

This also introduces a path->leave_spinning flag that callers of
btrfs_search_slot can use to indicate they will properly deal with a
path returned where all the locks are spinning instead of blocking.

Many of the btree search callers now expect spinning paths,
resulting in better btree concurrency overall.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-24 16:14:28 -04:00
Chris Mason 7f366cfecf Btrfs: reduce stack in cow_file_range
The fs/btrfs/inode.c code to run delayed allocation during writout
needed some stack usage optimization.  This is the first pass, it does
the check for compression earlier on, which allows us to do the common
(no compression) case higher up in the call chain.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-24 16:14:27 -04:00
Chris Mason b7ec40d784 Btrfs: reduce stalls during transaction commit
To avoid deadlocks and reduce latencies during some critical operations, some
transaction writers are allowed to jump into the running transaction and make
it run a little longer, while others sit around and wait for the commit to
finish.

This is a bit unfair, especially when the callers that jump in do a bunch
of IO that makes all the others procs on the box wait.  This commit
reduces the stalls this produces by pre-reading file extent pointers
during btrfs_finish_ordered_io before the transaction is joined.

It also tunes the drop_snapshot code to politely wait for transactions
that have started writing out their delayed refs to finish.  This avoids
new delayed refs being flooded into the queue while we're trying to
close off the transaction.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-03-24 16:14:26 -04:00
Josef Bacik 6a63209fc0 Btrfs: add better -ENOSPC handling
This is a step in the direction of better -ENOSPC handling.  Instead of
checking the global bytes counter we check the space_info bytes counters to
make sure we have enough space.

If we don't we go ahead and try to allocate a new chunk, and then if that fails
we return -ENOSPC.  This patch adds two counters to btrfs_space_info,
bytes_delalloc and bytes_may_use.

bytes_delalloc account for extents we've actually setup for delalloc and will
be allocated at some point down the line. 

bytes_may_use is to keep track of how many bytes we may use for delalloc at
some point.  When we actually set the extent_bit for the delalloc bytes we
subtract the reserved bytes from the bytes_may_use counter.  This keeps us from
not actually being able to allocate space for any delalloc bytes.

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@redhat.com>
2009-02-20 11:00:09 -05:00
Jeff Mahoney e00f730865 Btrfs: remove btrfs_init_path
btrfs_init_path was initially used when the path objects were on the
stack.  Now all the work is done by btrfs_alloc_path and btrfs_init_path
isn't required.

This patch removes it, and just uses kmem_cache_zalloc to zero out the object.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-12 14:11:25 -05:00
Yan Zheng b335b0034e Btrfs: Avoid using __GFP_HIGHMEM with slab allocator
btrfs_releasepage may call kmem_cache_alloc indirectly,
and provide same GFP flags it gets to kmem_cache_alloc.
So it's possible to use __GFP_HIGHMEM with the slab
allocator.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2009-02-12 10:06:04 -05:00
Chris Mason 42f15d77df Btrfs: Make sure dir is non-null before doing S_ISGID checks
The S_ISGID check in btrfs_new_inode caused an oops during subvol creation
because sometimes the dir is null.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-06 11:35:57 -05:00
Chris Mason 06d9a8d7c2 Btrfs: Change btrfs_truncate_inode_items to stop when it hits the inode
btrfs_truncate_inode_items is setup to stop doing btree searches when
it has finished removing the items for the inode.  It used to detect the
end of the inode by looking for an objectid that didn't match the
one we were searching for.

But, this would result in an extra search through the btree, which
adds extra balancing and cow costs to the operation.

This commit adds a check to see if we found the inode item, which means
we can stop searching early.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-04 09:30:58 -05:00
Chris Mason f03d9301f1 Btrfs: Don't try to compress pages past i_size
The compression code had some checks to make sure we were only
compressing bytes inside of i_size, but it wasn't catching every
case.  To make things worse, some incorrect math about the number
of bytes remaining would make it try to compress more pages than the
file really had.

The fix used here is to fall back to the non-compression code in this
case, which does all the proper cleanup of delalloc and other accounting.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-04 09:31:06 -05:00
Chris Ball 8c087b5183 Btrfs: Handle SGID bit when creating inodes
Before this patch, new files/dirs would ignore the SGID bit on their
parent directory and always be owned by the creating user's uid/gid.

Signed-off-by: Chris Ball <cjb@laptop.org>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-04 09:29:54 -05:00
Chris Mason bd56b30205 Btrfs: Make btrfs_drop_snapshot work in larger and more efficient chunks
Every transaction in btrfs creates a new snapshot, and then schedules the
snapshot from the last transaction for deletion.  Snapshot deletion
works by walking down the btree and dropping the reference counts
on each btree block during the walk.

If if a given leaf or node has a reference count greater than one,
the reference count is decremented and the subtree pointed to by that
node is ignored.

If the reference count is one, walking continues down into that node
or leaf, and the references of everything it points to are decremented.

The old code would try to work in small pieces, walking down the tree
until it found the lowest leaf or node to free and then returning.  This
was very friendly to the rest of the FS because it didn't have a huge
impact on other operations.

But it wouldn't always keep up with the rate that new commits added new
snapshots for deletion, and it wasn't very optimal for the extent
allocation tree because it wasn't finding leaves that were close together
on disk and processing them at the same time.

This changes things to walk down to a level 1 node and then process it
in bulk.  All the leaf pointers are sorted and the leaves are dropped
in order based on their extent number.

The extent allocation tree and commit code are now fast enough for
this kind of bulk processing to work without slowing the rest of the FS
down.  Overall it does less IO and is better able to keep up with
snapshot deletions under high load.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-04 09:27:02 -05:00
Chris Mason b4ce94de9b Btrfs: Change btree locking to use explicit blocking points
Most of the btrfs metadata operations can be protected by a spinlock,
but some operations still need to schedule.

So far, btrfs has been using a mutex along with a trylock loop,
most of the time it is able to avoid going for the full mutex, so
the trylock loop is a big performance gain.

This commit is step one for getting rid of the blocking locks entirely.
btrfs_tree_lock takes a spinlock, and the code explicitly switches
to a blocking lock when it starts an operation that can schedule.

We'll be able get rid of the blocking locks in smaller pieces over time.
Tracing allows us to find the most common cause of blocking, so we
can start with the hot spots first.

The basic idea is:

btrfs_tree_lock() returns with the spin lock held

btrfs_set_lock_blocking() sets the EXTENT_BUFFER_BLOCKING bit in
the extent buffer flags, and then drops the spin lock.  The buffer is
still considered locked by all of the btrfs code.

If btrfs_tree_lock gets the spinlock but finds the blocking bit set, it drops
the spin lock and waits on a wait queue for the blocking bit to go away.

Much of the code that needs to set the blocking bit finishes without actually
blocking a good percentage of the time.  So, an adaptive spin is still
used against the blocking bit to avoid very high context switch rates.

btrfs_clear_lock_blocking() clears the blocking bit and returns
with the spinlock held again.

btrfs_tree_unlock() can be called on either blocking or spinning locks,
it does the right thing based on the blocking bit.

ctree.c has a helper function to set/clear all the locked buffers in a
path as blocking.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-02-04 09:25:08 -05:00
Jim Owens 0279b4cd86 Btrfs: selinux support
Add call to LSM security initialization and save
resulting security xattr for new inodes.

Add xattr support to symlink inode ops.

Set inode->i_op for existing special files.

Signed-off-by: jim owens <jowens@hp.com>
2009-02-04 09:29:13 -05:00
Chris Mason 89f135d8b5 Btrfs: fix readdir on 32 bit machines
After btrfs_readdir has gone through all the directory items, it
sets the directory f_pos to the largest possible int.  This way
applications that mix readdir with creating new files don't
end up in an endless loop finding the new directory items as they go.

It was a workaround for a bug in git, but the assumption was that if git
could make this looping mistake than it would be a common problem.

The largest possible int chosen was INT_LIMIT(typeof(file->f_pos),
and it is possible for that to be a larger number than 32 bit glibc
expects to come out of readdir.

This patches switches that to INT_LIMIT(off_t), which should keep
applications happy on 32 and 64 bit machines.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-28 15:34:27 -05:00
Yehuda Sadeh 1506fcc818 Btrfs: fiemap support
Now that bmap support is gone, this is the only way to get extent
mappings for userland.  These are still not valid for IO, but they
can tell us if a file has holes or how much fragmentation there is.

Signed-off-by: Yehuda Sadeh <yehuda@hq.newdream.net>
2009-01-21 14:39:14 -05:00
Chris Mason 35054394c4 Btrfs: stop providing a bmap operation to avoid swapfile corruptions
Swapfiles use bmap to build a list of extents belonging to the file,
and they assume these extents won't change over the life of the file.
They also use resulting list to do IO directly to the block device.

This causes problems for btrfs in a few ways:

btrfs returns logical block numbers through bmap, and these are not suitable
for IO.  They might translate to different devices, raid etc.

COW means that file block mappings are going to change frequently.

Using swapfiles on btrfs will lead to corruption, so we're avoiding the
problem for now by dropping bmap support entirely.  A later commit
will add fiemap support for people that really want to know how
a file is laid out.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-21 13:11:13 -05:00
Qinghuang Feng c6e308713a Btrfs: simplify iteration codes
Merge list_for_each* and list_entry to list_for_each_entry*

Signed-off-by: Qinghuang Feng <qhfeng.kernel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-21 10:59:08 -05:00
Huang Weiyi 7eaebe7d50 Btrfs: removed unused #include <version.h>'s
Removed unused #include <version.h>'s in btrfs

Signed-off-by: Huang Weiyi <weiyi.huang@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-21 10:49:16 -05:00
Chris Mason 9ab86c8e01 Btrfs: kmap_atomic(KM_USER0) is safe for btrfs_readpage_end_io_hook
None of the checksum verification code schedules, so we can use the faster
kmap_atomic

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-07 09:48:51 -05:00
Chris Mason cc7172defc Btrfs: Don't use kmap_atomic(..., KM_IRQ0) during checksum verifies
Checksum verification happens in a helper thread, and there is no
need to mess with interrupts.  This switches to kmap() instead.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-06 13:26:40 -05:00
Yan Zheng 07d400a6df Btrfs: tree logging checksum fixes
This patch contains following things.

1) Limit the max size of btrfs_ordered_sum structure to PAGE_SIZE.  This
struct is kmalloced so we want to keep it reasonable.

2) Replace copy_extent_csums by btrfs_lookup_csums_range.  This was
duplicated code in tree-log.c

3) Remove replay_one_csum. csum items are replayed at the same time as
   replaying file extents. This guarantees we only replay useful csums.

4) nbytes accounting fix.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2009-01-06 11:42:00 -05:00
Yan Zheng 180591bcfe Btrfs: Use btrfs_join_transaction to avoid deadlocks during snapshot creation
Snapshot creation happens at a specific time during transaction commit.  We
need to make sure the code called by snapshot creation doesn't wait
for the running transaction to commit.

This changes btrfs_delete_inode and finish_pending_snaps to use
btrfs_join_transaction instead of btrfs_start_transaction to avoid deadlocks.

It would be better if btrfs_delete_inode didn't use the join, but the
call path that triggers it is:

btrfs_commit_transaction->create_pending_snapshots->
create_pending_snapshot->btrfs_lookup_dentry->
fixup_tree_root_location->btrfs_read_fs_root->
btrfs_read_fs_root_no_name->btrfs_orphan_cleanup->iput

This will be fixed in a later patch by moving the orphan cleanup to the
cleaner thread.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-06 09:58:06 -05:00
Chris Mason d397712bcc Btrfs: Fix checkpatch.pl warnings
There were many, most are fixed now.  struct-funcs.c generates some warnings
but these are bogus.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2009-01-05 21:25:51 -05:00
Chris Mason cad321ad52 Btrfs: shift all end_io work to thread pools
bio_end_io for reads without checksumming on and btree writes were
happening without using async thread pools.  This means the extent_io.c
code had to use spin_lock_irq and friends on the rb tree locks for
extent state.

There were some irq safe vs unsafe lock inversions between the delallock
lock and the extent state locks.  This patch gets rid of them by moving
all end_io code into the thread pools.

To avoid contention and deadlocks between the data end_io processing and the
metadata end_io processing yet another thread pool is added to finish
off metadata writes.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-17 14:51:42 -05:00
Chris Mason 75eff68ea6 Btrfs: Don't use spin*lock_irq for the delalloc lock
The delalloc lock doesn't need to have irqs disabled, nobody that
changes the number of delalloc bytes in the FS is running with irqs off.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-15 15:54:40 -05:00
Chris Mason 42dc7babdc Btrfs: Fix compressed writes on truncated pages
The compression code was using isize to limit the amount of data it
sent through zlib.  But, it wasn't properly limiting the looping to
just the pages inside i_size.  The end result was trying to compress
too many pages, including those that had not been setup and properly locked
down.  This made the compression code oops while trying find_get_page on a
page that didn't exist.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-15 11:44:56 -05:00
Yan Zheng 17d217fe97 Btrfs: fix nodatasum handling in balancing code
Checksums on data can be disabled by mount option, so it's
possible some data extents don't have checksums or have
invalid checksums. This causes trouble for data relocation.
This patch contains following things to make data relocation
work.

1) make nodatasum/nodatacow mount option only affects new
files. Checksums and COW on data are only controlled by the
inode flags.

2) check the existence of checksum in the nodatacow checker.
If checksums exist, force COW the data extent. This ensure that
checksum for a given block is either valid or does not exist.

3) update data relocation code to properly handle the case
of checksum missing.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-12-12 10:03:38 -05:00
Yan Zheng d2fb3437e4 Btrfs: fix leaking block group on balance
The block group structs are referenced in many different
places, and it's not safe to free while balancing.  So, those block
group structs were simply leaked instead.

This patch replaces the block group pointer in the inode with the starting byte
offset of the block group and adds reference counting to the block group
struct.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-12-11 16:30:39 -05:00
Chris Mason c3027eb552 Btrfs: Add inode sequence number for NFS and reserved space in a few structs
This adds a sequence number to the btrfs inode that is increased on
every update.  NFS will be able to use that to detect when an inode has
changed, without relying on inaccurate time fields.

While we're here, this also:

Puts reserved space into the super block and inode

Adds a log root transid to the super so we can pick the newest super
based on the fsync log as well as the main transaction ID.  For now
the log root transid is always zero, but that'll get fixed.

Adds a starting offset to the dev_item.  This will let us do better
alignment calculations if we know the start of a partition on the disk.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-08 16:40:21 -05:00
Chris Mason d20f7043fa Btrfs: move data checksumming into a dedicated tree
Btrfs stores checksums for each data block.  Until now, they have
been stored in the subvolume trees, indexed by the inode that is
referencing the data block.  This means that when we read the inode,
we've probably read in at least some checksums as well.

But, this has a few problems:

* The checksums are indexed by logical offset in the file.  When
compression is on, this means we have to do the expensive checksumming
on the uncompressed data.  It would be faster if we could checksum
the compressed data instead.

* If we implement encryption, we'll be checksumming the plain text and
storing that on disk.  This is significantly less secure.

* For either compression or encryption, we have to get the plain text
back before we can verify the checksum as correct.  This makes the raid
layer balancing and extent moving much more expensive.

* It makes the front end caching code more complex, as we have touch
the subvolume and inodes as we cache extents.

* There is potentitally one copy of the checksum in each subvolume
referencing an extent.

The solution used here is to store the extent checksums in a dedicated
tree.  This allows us to index the checksums by phyiscal extent
start and length.  It means:

* The checksum is against the data stored on disk, after any compression
or encryption is done.

* The checksum is stored in a central location, and can be verified without
following back references, or reading inodes.

This makes compression significantly faster by reducing the amount of
data that needs to be checksummed.  It will also allow much faster
raid management code in general.

The checksums are indexed by a key with a fixed objectid (a magic value
in ctree.h) and offset set to the starting byte of the extent.  This
allows us to copy the checksum items into the fsync log tree directly (or
any other tree), without having to invent a second format for them.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-08 16:58:54 -05:00
Chris Mason 4022abf449 Btrfs: delete unused function: btrfs_invalidate_dcache_root
Snapshot and subvolume creation no longer need this helper.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-12-02 09:57:03 -05:00
Christoph Hellwig b2950863c6 Btrfs: make things static and include the right headers
Shut up various sparse warnings about symbols that should be either
static or have their declarations in scope.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2008-12-02 09:54:17 -05:00
Liu Hui ce397c0616 Btrfs: Fix cow semantic in run_delalloc_nocow()
The file preallocation code reversed the logic to force nodatacow.
This fixes it.
2008-12-01 20:31:40 -05:00
Chris Mason 4b4e25f2a6 Btrfs: compat code fixes
The btrfs git kernel trees is used to build a standalone tree for
compiling against older kernels.  This commit makes the standalone tree
work with 2.6.27

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-20 10:22:27 -05:00
Chris Mason 79683f2d68 Btrfs: Use current_fsuid/gid
This fixes compile problems with linux-next

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-19 22:00:53 -05:00
Chris Mason d2c3f4f695 Btrfs: Avoid writeback stalls
While building large bios in writepages, btrfs may end up waiting
for other page writeback to finish if WB_SYNC_ALL is used.

While it is waiting, the bio it is building has a number of pages with the
writeback bit set and they aren't getting to the disk any time soon.  This
lowers the latencies of writeback in general by sending down the bio being
built before waiting for other pages.

The bio submission code tries to limit the total number of async bios in
flight by waiting when we're over a certain number of async bios.  But,
the waits are happening while writepages is building bios, and this can easily
lead to stalls and other problems for people calling wait_on_page_writeback.

The current fix is to let the congestion tests take care of waiting.

sync() and others make sure to drain the current async requests to make
sure that everything that was pending when the sync was started really get
to disk.  The code would drain pending requests both before and after
submitting a new request.

But, if one of the requests is waiting for page writeback to finish,
the draining waits might block that page writeback.  This changes the
draining code to only wait after submitting the bio being processed.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-19 12:44:22 -05:00
Chris Mason 0660b5af3f Btrfs: Add backrefs and forward refs for subvols and snapshots
Subvols and snapshots can now be referenced from any point in the directory
tree.  We need to maintain back refs for them so we can find lost
subvols.

Forward refs are added so that we know all of the subvols and
snapshots referenced anywhere in the directory tree of a single subvol.  This
can be used to do recursive snapshotting (but they aren't yet) and it is
also used to detect and prevent directory loops when creating new snapshots.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-17 20:37:39 -05:00
Chris Mason 3394e1607e Btrfs: Give each subvol and snapshot their own anonymous devid
Each subvolume has its own private inode number space, and so we need
to fill in different device numbers for each subvolume to avoid confusing
applications.

This commit puts a struct super_block into struct btrfs_root so it can
call set_anon_super() and get a different device number generated for
each root.

btrfs_rename is changed to prevent renames across subvols.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-17 20:42:26 -05:00
Chris Mason 3de4586c52 Btrfs: Allow subvolumes and snapshots anywhere in the directory tree
Before, all snapshots and subvolumes lived in a single flat directory.  This
was awkward and confusing because the single flat directory was only writable
with the ioctls.

This commit changes the ioctls to create subvols and snapshots at any
point in the directory tree.  This requires making separate ioctls for
snapshot and subvol creation instead of a combining them into one.

The subvol ioctl does:

btrfsctl -S subvol_name parent_dir

After the ioctl is done subvol_name lives inside parent_dir.

The snapshot ioctl does:

btrfsctl -s path_for_snapshot root_to_snapshot

path_for_snapshot can be an absolute or relative path.  btrfsctl breaks it up
into directory and basename components.

root_to_snapshot can be any file or directory in the FS.  The snapshot
is taken of the entire root where that file lives.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-17 21:02:50 -05:00
Yan Zheng c146afad2c Btrfs: mount ro and remount support
This patch adds mount ro and remount support. The main
changes in patch are: adding btrfs_remount and related
helper function; splitting the transaction related code
out of close_ctree into btrfs_commit_super; updating
allocator to properly handle read only block group.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-11-12 14:34:12 -05:00
Chris Mason 5b050f04c8 Btrfs: Fix compile warnings on 32 bit machines
Simple casting here and there to fix things up.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-11 09:34:41 -05:00
Chris Mason 445a694499 Btrfs: Fix usage of struct extent_map->orig_start
This makes sure the orig_start field in struct extent_map gets set
everywhere the extent_map structs are created or modified.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-10 11:53:33 -05:00
Yan Zheng ff5b7ee33d Btrfs: Fix csum error for compressed data
The decompress code doesn't take the logical offset in extent
pointer into account. If the logical offset isn't zero, data
will be decompressed into wrong pages.

The solution used here is to record the starting offset of the extent
in the file separately from the logical start of the extent_map struct.
This allows us to avoid problems inserting overlapping extents.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-11-10 07:34:43 -05:00
Chris Mason 771ed689d2 Btrfs: Optimize compressed writeback and reads
When reading compressed extents, try to put pages into the page cache
for any pages covered by the compressed extent that readpages didn't already
preload.

Add an async work queue to handle transformations at delayed allocation processing
time.  Right now this is just compression.  The workflow is:

1) Find offsets in the file marked for delayed allocation
2) Lock the pages
3) Lock the state bits
4) Call the async delalloc code

The async delalloc code clears the state lock bits and delalloc bits.  It is
important this happens before the range goes into the work queue because
otherwise it might deadlock with other work queue items that try to lock
those extent bits.

The file pages are compressed, and if the compression doesn't work the
pages are written back directly.

An ordered work queue is used to make sure the inodes are written in the same
order that pdflush or writepages sent them down.

This changes extent_write_cache_pages to let the writepage function
update the wbc nr_written count.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-06 22:02:51 -05:00
Chris Mason 4a69a41009 Btrfs: Add ordered async work queues
Btrfs uses kernel threads to create async work queues for cpu intensive
operations such as checksumming and decompression.  These work well,
but they make it difficult to keep IO order intact.

A single writepages call from pdflush or fsync will turn into a number
of bios, and each bio is checksummed in parallel.  Once the checksum is
computed, the bio is sent down to the disk, and since we don't control
the order in which the parallel operations happen, they might go down to
the disk in almost any order.

The code deals with this somewhat by having deep work queues for a single
kernel thread, making it very likely that a single thread will process all
the bios for a single inode.

This patch introduces an explicitly ordered work queue.  As work structs
are placed into the queue they are put onto the tail of a list.  They have
three callbacks:

->func (cpu intensive processing here)
->ordered_func (order sensitive processing here)
->ordered_free (free the work struct, all processing is done)

The work struct has three callbacks.  The func callback does the cpu intensive
work, and when it completes the work struct is marked as done.

Every time a work struct completes, the list is checked to see if the head
is marked as done.  If so the ordered_func callback is used to do the
order sensitive processing and the ordered_free callback is used to do
any cleanup.  Then we loop back and check the head of the list again.

This patch also changes the checksumming code to use the ordered workqueues.
One a 4 drive array, it increases streaming writes from 280MB/s to 350MB/s.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-11-06 22:03:00 -05:00
Chris Mason 70b99e6959 Btrfs: Compression corner fixes
Make sure we keep page->mapping NULL on the pages we're getting
via alloc_page.  It gets set so a few of the callbacks can do the right
thing, but in general these pages don't have a mapping.

Don't try to truncate compressed inline items in btrfs_drop_extents.
The whole compressed item must be preserved.

Don't try to create multipage inline compressed items.  When we try to
overwrite just the first page of the file, we would have to read in and recow
all the pages after it in the same compressed inline items.  For now, only
create single page inline items.

Make sure we lock pages in the correct order during delalloc.  The
search into the state tree for delalloc bytes can return bytes before
the page we already have locked.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-31 12:46:39 -04:00
Yan Zheng d899e05215 Btrfs: Add fallocate support v2
This patch updates btrfs-progs for fallocate support.

fallocate is a little different in Btrfs because we need to tell the
COW system that a given preallocated extent doesn't need to be
cow'd as long as there are no snapshots of it.  This leverages the
-o nodatacow checks.
 
Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 14:25:28 -04:00
Yan Zheng 80ff385665 Btrfs: update nodatacow code v2
This patch simplifies the nodatacow checker. If all references
were created after the latest snapshot, then we can avoid COW
safely. This patch also updates run_delalloc_nocow to do more
fine-grained checking.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 14:20:02 -04:00
Yan Zheng 6643558db2 Btrfs: Fix bookend extent race v2
When dropping middle part of an extent, btrfs_drop_extents truncates
the extent at first, then inserts a bookend extent.

Since truncation and insertion can't be done atomically, there is a small
period that the bookend extent isn't in the tree. This causes problem for
functions that search the tree for file extent item. The way to fix this is
lock the range of the bookend extent before truncation.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 14:19:50 -04:00
Yan Zheng 9036c10208 Btrfs: update hole handling v2
This patch splits the hole insertion code out of btrfs_setattr
into btrfs_cont_expand and updates btrfs_get_extent to properly
handle the case that file extent items are not continuous.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 14:19:41 -04:00
Chris Mason 19b9bdb054 Btrfs: Fix logic to avoid reading checksums for -o nodatasum,compress
When compression was on, we were improperly ignoring -o nodatasum.  This
reworks the logic a bit to properly honor all the flags.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 14:23:13 -04:00
Chris Mason cfbc246eaa Btrfs: walk compressed pages based on the nr_pages count instead of bytes
The byte walk counting was awkward and error prone.  This uses the
number of pages sent the higher layer to build bios.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-30 13:22:14 -04:00
Chris Mason c8b978188c Btrfs: Add zlib compression support
This is a large change for adding compression on reading and writing,
both for inline and regular extents.  It does some fairly large
surgery to the writeback paths.

Compression is off by default and enabled by mount -o compress.  Even
when the -o compress mount option is not used, it is possible to read
compressed extents off the disk.

If compression for a given set of pages fails to make them smaller, the
file is flagged to avoid future compression attempts later.

* While finding delalloc extents, the pages are locked before being sent down
to the delalloc handler.  This allows the delalloc handler to do complex things
such as cleaning the pages, marking them writeback and starting IO on their
behalf.

* Inline extents are inserted at delalloc time now.  This allows us to compress
the data before inserting the inline extent, and it allows us to insert
an inline extent that spans multiple pages.

* All of the in-memory extent representations (extent_map.c, ordered-data.c etc)
are changed to record both an in-memory size and an on disk size, as well
as a flag for compression.

From a disk format point of view, the extent pointers in the file are changed
to record the on disk size of a given extent and some encoding flags.
Space in the disk format is allocated for compression encoding, as well
as encryption and a generic 'other' field.  Neither the encryption or the
'other' field are currently used.

In order to limit the amount of data read for a single random read in the
file, the size of a compressed extent is limited to 128k.  This is a
software only limit, the disk format supports u64 sized compressed extents.

In order to limit the ram consumed while processing extents, the uncompressed
size of a compressed extent is limited to 256k.  This is a software only limit
and will be subject to tuning later.

Checksumming is still done on compressed extents, and it is done on the
uncompressed version of the data.  This way additional encodings can be
layered on without having to figure out which encoding to checksum.

Compression happens at delalloc time, which is basically singled threaded because
it is usually done by a single pdflush thread.  This makes it tricky to
spread the compression load across all the cpus on the box.  We'll have to
look at parallel pdflush walks of dirty inodes at a later time.

Decompression is hooked into readpages and it does spread across CPUs nicely.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-29 14:49:59 -04:00
Christoph Hellwig cb8e70901d Btrfs: Fix subvolume creation locking rules
Creating a subvolume is in many ways like a normal VFS ->mkdir, and we
really need to play with the VFS topology locking rules.  So instead of
just creating the snapshot on disk and then later getting rid of
confliting aliases do it correctly from the start.  This will become
especially important once we allow for subvolumes anywhere in the tree,
and not just below a hidden root.

Note that snapshots will need the same treatment, but do to the delay
in creating them we can't do it currently.  Chris promised to fix that
issue, so I'll wait on that.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
2008-10-09 13:39:39 -04:00
Yan Zheng 5b84e8d6ee Btrfs: Fix leaf reference cache miss
Due to the optimization for truncate, tree leaves only containing
checksum items can be deleted without being COW'ed first. This causes
reference cache misses. The way to fix the miss is create cache
entries for tree leaves only contain checksum.

This patch also fixes a -EEXIST issue in shared reference cache.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-09 11:46:19 -04:00
Yan Zheng 3bb1a1bc42 Btrfs: Remove offset field from struct btrfs_extent_ref
The offset field in struct btrfs_extent_ref records the position
inside file that file extent is referenced by. In the new back
reference system, tree leaves holding references to file extent
are recorded explicitly. We can scan these tree leaves very quickly, so the
offset field is not required.

This patch also makes the back reference system check the objectid
when extents are in deleting.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-09 11:46:24 -04:00
Yan Zheng a76a3cd40c Btrfs: Count space allocated to file in bytes
This patch makes btrfs count space allocated to file in bytes instead
of 512 byte sectors.

Everything else in btrfs uses a byte count instead of sector sizes or
blocks sizes, so this fits better.

Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
2008-10-09 11:46:29 -04:00
Chris Mason a62b940160 Btrfs: cast bio->bi_sector to a u64 before shifting
On 32 bit machines without CONFIG_LBD, the bi_sector field is only 32 bits.
Btrfs needs to cast it before shifting up, or we end up doing IO into
the wrong place.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-03 16:31:08 -04:00
Chris Mason 323ac95bce Btrfs: don't read leaf blocks containing only checksums during truncate
Checksum items take up a significant portion of the metadata for large files.
It is possible to avoid reading them during truncates by checking the keys in
the higher level nodes.

If a given leaf is followed by another leaf where the lowest key is a checksum
item from the same file, we know we can safely delete the leaf without
reading it.

For a 32GB file on a 6 drive raid0 array, Btrfs needs 8s to delete
the file with a cold cache.  It is read bound during the run.

With this change, Btrfs is able to delete the file in 0.5s

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-10-01 19:05:46 -04:00
Chris Mason d352ac6814 Btrfs: add and improve comments
This improves the comments at the top of many functions.  It didn't
dive into the guts of functions because I was trying to
avoid merging problems with the new allocator and back reference work.

extent-tree.c and volumes.c were both skipped, and there is definitely
more work todo in cleaning and commenting the code.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-29 15:18:18 -04:00
Chris Mason 8c8bee1d7c Btrfs: Wait for IO on the block device inodes of newly added devices
btrfs-vol -a /dev/xxx will zero the first and last two MB of the device.
The kernel code needs to wait for this IO to finish before it adds
the device.

btrfs metadata IO does not happen through the block device inode.  A
separate address space is used, allowing the zero filled buffer heads in
the block device inode to be written to disk after FS metadata starts
going down to the disk via the btrfs metadata inode.

The end result is zero filled metadata blocks after adding new devices
into the filesystem.

The fix is a simple filemap_write_and_wait on the block device inode
before actually inserting it into the pool of available devices.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-29 11:19:10 -04:00
Zheng Yan 5b21f2ed3f Btrfs: extent_map and data=ordered fixes for space balancing
* Add an EXTENT_BOUNDARY state bit to keep the writepage code
from merging data extents that are in the process of being
relocated.  This allows us to do accounting for them properly.

* The balancing code relocates data extents indepdent of the underlying
inode.  The extent_map code was modified to properly account for
things moving around (invalidating extent_map caches in the inode).

* Don't take the drop_mutex in the create_subvol ioctl.  It isn't
required.

* Fix walking of the ordered extent list to avoid races with sys_unlink

* Change the lock ordering rules.  Transaction start goes outside
the drop_mutex.  This allows btrfs_commit_transaction to directly
drop the relocation trees.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-26 10:05:38 -04:00
Chris Mason 2b1f55b0f0 Remove Btrfs compat code for older kernels
Btrfs had compatibility code for kernels back to 2.6.18.  These have
been removed, and will be maintained in a separate backport
git tree from now on.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 15:41:59 -04:00
Chris Mason 3435302953 Btrfs: Fix race against disk_i_size updates
The code to update the on disk i_size happens before the
ordered_extent record is removed.  So, it is possible for multiple
ordered_extent completion routines to run at the same time, and to
find each other in the ordered tree.

The end result is they both decide not to update disk_i_size, leaving
it too small.  This temporary fix just puts the updates inside
the extent_mutex.  A real solution would be stronger ordering of
disk_i_size updates against removing the ordered extent from the tree.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Zheng Yan 31840ae1a6 Btrfs: Full back reference support
This patch makes the back reference system to explicit record the
location of parent node for all types of extents. The location of
parent node is placed into the offset field of backref key. Every
time a tree block is balanced, the back references for the affected
lower level extents are updated.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Josef Bacik 0f9dd46cda Btrfs: free space accounting redo
1) replace the per fs_info extent_io_tree that tracked free space with two
rb-trees per block group to track free space areas via offset and size.  The
reason to do this is because most allocations come with a hint byte where to
start, so we can usually find a chunk of free space at that hint byte to satisfy
the allocation and get good space packing.  If we cannot find free space at or
after the given offset we fall back on looking for a chunk of the given size as
close to that given offset as possible.  When we fall back on the size search we
also try to find a slot as close to the size we want as possible, to avoid
breaking small chunks off of huge areas if possible.

2) remove the extent_io_tree that tracked the block group cache from fs_info and
replaced it with an rb-tree thats tracks block group cache via offset.  also
added a per space_info list that tracks the block group cache for the particular
space so we can lookup related block groups easily.

3) cleaned up the allocation code to make it a little easier to read and a
little less complicated.  Basically there are 3 steps, first look from our
provided hint.  If we couldn't find from that given hint, start back at our
original search start and look for space from there.  If that fails try to
allocate space if we can and start looking again.  If not we're screwed and need
to start over again.

4) small fixes.  there were some issues in volumes.c where we wouldn't allocate
the rest of the disk.  fixed cow_file_range to actually pass the alloc_hint,
which has helped a good bit in making the fs_mark test I run have semi-normal
results as we run out of space.  Generally with data allocations we don't track
where we last allocated from, so everytime we did a data allocation we'd search
through every block group that we have looking for free space.  Now searching a
block group with no free space isn't terribly time consuming, it was causing a
slight degradation as we got more data block groups.  The alloc_hint has fixed
this slight degredation and made things semi-normal.

There is still one nagging problem I'm working on where we will get ENOSPC when
there is definitely plenty of space.  This only happens with metadata
allocations, and only when we are almost full.  So you generally hit the 85%
mark first, but sometimes you'll hit the BUG before you hit the 85% wall.  I'm
still tracking it down, but until then this seems to be pretty stable and make a
significant performance gain.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Chris Mason 49eb7e46d4 Btrfs: Dir fsync optimizations
Drop i_mutex during the commit

Don't bother doing the fsync at all unless the dir is marked as dirtied
and needing fsync in this transaction.  For directories, this means
that someone has unlinked a file from the dir without fsyncing the
file.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Chris Mason 98509cfc5a Btrfs: Fix releasepage to properly keep dirty and writeback pages
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Chris Mason 8d5bf1cb35 Btrfs: Update the highest objectid in a root after log replay is done
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Christoph Hellwig a237d2a2bd remove unused function btrfs_ilookup
btrfs_ilookup is unused, which is good because a normal filesystem
should never have to use ilookup anyway.  Remove it.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Chris Mason e02119d5a7 Btrfs: Add a write ahead tree log to optimize synchronous operations
File syncs and directory syncs are optimized by copying their
items into a special (copy-on-write) log tree.  There is one log tree per
subvolume and the btrfs super block points to a tree of log tree roots.

After a crash, items are copied out of the log tree and back into the
subvolume.  See tree-log.c for all the details.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
Christoph Hellwig 95819c0573 Btrfs: optimize btrget/set/removexattr
btrfs actually stores the whole xattr name, including the prefix ondisk,
so using the generic resolver that strips off the prefix is not very
helpful.  Instead do the real ondisk xattrs manually and only use the
generic resolver for synthetic xattrs like ACLs.

(Sorry Josef for guiding you towards the wrong direction here intially)

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:07 -04:00
David Woodhouse f2322b1c65 Btrfs: Optimise NFS readdir hack slightly; don't call readdir() again when done
Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 17:12:56 +0100
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
David Woodhouse 49593bfa57 Minor cleanup of btrfs_real_readdir()
Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 17:08:36 +0100
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
David Woodhouse 5ecc7e5d1d Btrfs: Remove special cases for "." and ".."
Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 15:14:48 +0100
We never get asked by the VFS to lookup either of them, and we can
handle the readdir() case a lot more simply, too.

Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
David Woodhouse cbdf5a2442 Btrfs: Implement our own copy of the nfsd readdir hack, for older kernels
Date: Wed, 6 Aug 2008 19:42:33 +0100
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Balaji Rao 1a54ef8c11 Introduce btrfs_iget helper
Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2008 02:01:04 +0530
This patch introduces a btrfs_iget helper to be used in NFS support.

Signed-off-by: Balaji Rao <balajirrao@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Woodhouse <David.Woodhouse@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 4d1b5fb4d7 Btrfs: Lookup readpage checksums on bio submission again
This optimization had been removed because I thought it was triggering
csum errors.  The real cause of the errors was elsewhere, and so
this optimization is back.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 7c2fe32a23 Btrfs: Fix add_extent_mapping to check for duplicates across the whole range
add_extent_mapping was allowing the insertion of overlapping extents.
This never used to happen because it only inserted the extents from disk
and those were never overlapping.

But, with the data=ordered code, the disk and memory representations of the
file are not the same.  add_extent_mapping needs to ensure a new extent
does not overlap before it inserts.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 53863232ef Btrfs: Lower contention on the csum mutex
This takes the csum mutex deeper in the call chain and releases it
more often.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason db69e0ebae Btrfs: Init address_space->writeback_index properly
The writeback_index field is used by write_cache_pages to pick up where
writeback on a given inode left off.  But, it is never set to a sane
value, so writeback can often start at a random offset in the file.

Kernels 2.6.28 and higher will have this fixed, but for everyone else,
we also fill in the value in btrfs.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 4ca8b41e3f Btrfs: Avoid calling into the FS for the final iput on fake root inodes
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Yan Zheng 7ea394f119 Btrfs: Fix nodatacow for the new data=ordered mode
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 00e4e6b33a Get rid of BTRFS_I(inode)->index and use local vars instead
rename and link don't always have a lock on the source inode, and
our use of a per-inode index variable was racy.  This changes things to
store the index in a local variable instead.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 3de9d6b649 btrfs_lookup_bio_sums seems broken, go back to the readpage_io_hook for now
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason ea8c281947 Btrfs: Maintain a list of inodes that are delalloc and a way to wait on them
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 6dab815743 Btrfs: Hold csum mutex while reading in sums during readpages
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:06 -04:00
Chris Mason 3ce7e67a06 Btrfs: Drop some debugging around the extent_map pinned flag
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Chris Mason 61b4944018 Btrfs: Fix streaming read performance with checksumming on
Large streaming reads make for large bios, which means each entry on the
list async work queues represents a large amount of data.  IO
congestion throttling on the device was kicking in before the async
worker threads decided a single thread was busy and needed some help.

The end result was that a streaming read would result in a single CPU
running at 100% instead of balancing the work off to other CPUs.

This patch also changes the pre-IO checksum lookup done by reads to
work on a per-bio basis instead of a per-page.  This results in many
extra btree lookups on large streaming reads.  Doing the checksum lookup
right before bio submit allows us to reuse searches while processing
adjacent offsets.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Sven Wegener 0ee0fda06b Btrfs: Add compatibility for kernels >= 2.6.27-rc1
Add a couple of #if's to follow API changes.

Signed-off-by: Sven Wegener <sven.wegener@stealer.net>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Yan bcc63abbf3 Btrfs: implement memory reclaim for leaf reference cache
The memory reclaiming issue happens when snapshot exists. In that
case, some cache entries may not be used during old snapshot dropping,
so they will remain in the cache until umount.

The patch adds a field to struct btrfs_leaf_ref to record create time. Besides,
the patch makes all dead roots of a given snapshot linked together in order of
create time. After a old snapshot was completely dropped, we check the dead
root list and remove all cache entries created before the oldest dead root in
the list.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Yan Zheng f321e49103 Btrfs: Update and fix mount -o nodatacow
To check whether a given file extent is referenced by multiple snapshots, the
checker walks down the fs tree through dead root and checks all tree blocks in
the path.

We can easily detect whether a given tree block is directly referenced by other
snapshot. We can also detect any indirect reference from other snapshot by
checking reference's generation. The checker can always detect multiple
references, but can't reliably detect cases of single reference. So btrfs may
do file data cow even there is only one reference.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Chris Mason ab78c84de1 Btrfs: Throttle operations if the reference cache gets too large
A large reference cache is directly related to a lot of work pending
for the cleaner thread.  This throttles back new operations based on
the size of the reference cache so the cleaner thread will be able to keep
up.

Overall, this actually makes the FS faster because the cleaner thread will
be more likely to find things in cache.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Chris Mason 017e5369eb Btrfs: Leaf reference cache update
This changes the reference cache to make a single cache per root
instead of one cache per transaction, and to key by the byte number
of the disk block instead of the keys inside.

This makes it much less likely to have cache misses if a snapshot
or something has an extra reference on a higher node or a leaf while
the first transaction that added the leaf into the cache is dropping.

Some throttling is added to functions that free blocks heavily so they
wait for old transactions to drop.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Yan 445dceb78f Btrfs: Fix .. lookup corner case
Inode ref item can be in the next leaf when we find "path->slots[0] ==
btrfs_header_nritems(...)".

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Balaji Rao 45467261ed Btrfs: Remove unused variable in fixup_tree_root_location
Remove a unused variable 'path' in fixup_tree_root_location.

Signed-off-by: Balaji Rao <balajirrao@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00
Josef Bacik 7b12876623 Btrfs: Create orphan inode records to prevent lost files after a crash
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
2008-09-25 11:04:05 -04:00