1 // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2 /*
3 * Copyright (c) 2000-2003,2005 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
4 * All Rights Reserved.
5 */
6 #ifndef __XFS_LOG_PRIV_H__
7 #define __XFS_LOG_PRIV_H__
8
9 struct xfs_buf;
10 struct xlog;
11 struct xlog_ticket;
12 struct xfs_mount;
13
14 /*
15 * Flags for log structure
16 */
17 #define XLOG_ACTIVE_RECOVERY 0x2 /* in the middle of recovery */
18 #define XLOG_RECOVERY_NEEDED 0x4 /* log was recovered */
19 #define XLOG_IO_ERROR 0x8 /* log hit an I/O error, and being
20 shutdown */
21 #define XLOG_TAIL_WARN 0x10 /* log tail verify warning issued */
22
23 /*
24 * get client id from packed copy.
25 *
26 * this hack is here because the xlog_pack code copies four bytes
27 * of xlog_op_header containing the fields oh_clientid, oh_flags
28 * and oh_res2 into the packed copy.
29 *
30 * later on this four byte chunk is treated as an int and the
31 * client id is pulled out.
32 *
33 * this has endian issues, of course.
34 */
xlog_get_client_id(__be32 i)35 static inline uint xlog_get_client_id(__be32 i)
36 {
37 return be32_to_cpu(i) >> 24;
38 }
39
40 /*
41 * In core log state
42 */
43 #define XLOG_STATE_ACTIVE 0x0001 /* Current IC log being written to */
44 #define XLOG_STATE_WANT_SYNC 0x0002 /* Want to sync this iclog; no more writes */
45 #define XLOG_STATE_SYNCING 0x0004 /* This IC log is syncing */
46 #define XLOG_STATE_DONE_SYNC 0x0008 /* Done syncing to disk */
47 #define XLOG_STATE_DO_CALLBACK \
48 0x0010 /* Process callback functions */
49 #define XLOG_STATE_CALLBACK 0x0020 /* Callback functions now */
50 #define XLOG_STATE_DIRTY 0x0040 /* Dirty IC log, not ready for ACTIVE status*/
51 #define XLOG_STATE_IOERROR 0x0080 /* IO error happened in sync'ing log */
52 #define XLOG_STATE_ALL 0x7FFF /* All possible valid flags */
53 #define XLOG_STATE_NOTUSED 0x8000 /* This IC log not being used */
54
55 /*
56 * Flags to log ticket
57 */
58 #define XLOG_TIC_INITED 0x1 /* has been initialized */
59 #define XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV 0x2 /* permanent reservation */
60
61 #define XLOG_TIC_FLAGS \
62 { XLOG_TIC_INITED, "XLOG_TIC_INITED" }, \
63 { XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV, "XLOG_TIC_PERM_RESERV" }
64
65 /*
66 * Below are states for covering allocation transactions.
67 * By covering, we mean changing the h_tail_lsn in the last on-disk
68 * log write such that no allocation transactions will be re-done during
69 * recovery after a system crash. Recovery starts at the last on-disk
70 * log write.
71 *
72 * These states are used to insert dummy log entries to cover
73 * space allocation transactions which can undo non-transactional changes
74 * after a crash. Writes to a file with space
75 * already allocated do not result in any transactions. Allocations
76 * might include space beyond the EOF. So if we just push the EOF a
77 * little, the last transaction for the file could contain the wrong
78 * size. If there is no file system activity, after an allocation
79 * transaction, and the system crashes, the allocation transaction
80 * will get replayed and the file will be truncated. This could
81 * be hours/days/... after the allocation occurred.
82 *
83 * The fix for this is to do two dummy transactions when the
84 * system is idle. We need two dummy transaction because the h_tail_lsn
85 * in the log record header needs to point beyond the last possible
86 * non-dummy transaction. The first dummy changes the h_tail_lsn to
87 * the first transaction before the dummy. The second dummy causes
88 * h_tail_lsn to point to the first dummy. Recovery starts at h_tail_lsn.
89 *
90 * These dummy transactions get committed when everything
91 * is idle (after there has been some activity).
92 *
93 * There are 5 states used to control this.
94 *
95 * IDLE -- no logging has been done on the file system or
96 * we are done covering previous transactions.
97 * NEED -- logging has occurred and we need a dummy transaction
98 * when the log becomes idle.
99 * DONE -- we were in the NEED state and have committed a dummy
100 * transaction.
101 * NEED2 -- we detected that a dummy transaction has gone to the
102 * on disk log with no other transactions.
103 * DONE2 -- we committed a dummy transaction when in the NEED2 state.
104 *
105 * There are two places where we switch states:
106 *
107 * 1.) In xfs_sync, when we detect an idle log and are in NEED or NEED2.
108 * We commit the dummy transaction and switch to DONE or DONE2,
109 * respectively. In all other states, we don't do anything.
110 *
111 * 2.) When we finish writing the on-disk log (xlog_state_clean_log).
112 *
113 * No matter what state we are in, if this isn't the dummy
114 * transaction going out, the next state is NEED.
115 * So, if we aren't in the DONE or DONE2 states, the next state
116 * is NEED. We can't be finishing a write of the dummy record
117 * unless it was committed and the state switched to DONE or DONE2.
118 *
119 * If we are in the DONE state and this was a write of the
120 * dummy transaction, we move to NEED2.
121 *
122 * If we are in the DONE2 state and this was a write of the
123 * dummy transaction, we move to IDLE.
124 *
125 *
126 * Writing only one dummy transaction can get appended to
127 * one file space allocation. When this happens, the log recovery
128 * code replays the space allocation and a file could be truncated.
129 * This is why we have the NEED2 and DONE2 states before going idle.
130 */
131
132 #define XLOG_STATE_COVER_IDLE 0
133 #define XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED 1
134 #define XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE 2
135 #define XLOG_STATE_COVER_NEED2 3
136 #define XLOG_STATE_COVER_DONE2 4
137
138 #define XLOG_COVER_OPS 5
139
140 /* Ticket reservation region accounting */
141 #define XLOG_TIC_LEN_MAX 15
142
143 /*
144 * Reservation region
145 * As would be stored in xfs_log_iovec but without the i_addr which
146 * we don't care about.
147 */
148 typedef struct xlog_res {
149 uint r_len; /* region length :4 */
150 uint r_type; /* region's transaction type :4 */
151 } xlog_res_t;
152
153 typedef struct xlog_ticket {
154 struct list_head t_queue; /* reserve/write queue */
155 struct task_struct *t_task; /* task that owns this ticket */
156 xlog_tid_t t_tid; /* transaction identifier : 4 */
157 atomic_t t_ref; /* ticket reference count : 4 */
158 int t_curr_res; /* current reservation in bytes : 4 */
159 int t_unit_res; /* unit reservation in bytes : 4 */
160 char t_ocnt; /* original count : 1 */
161 char t_cnt; /* current count : 1 */
162 char t_clientid; /* who does this belong to; : 1 */
163 char t_flags; /* properties of reservation : 1 */
164
165 /* reservation array fields */
166 uint t_res_num; /* num in array : 4 */
167 uint t_res_num_ophdrs; /* num op hdrs : 4 */
168 uint t_res_arr_sum; /* array sum : 4 */
169 uint t_res_o_flow; /* sum overflow : 4 */
170 xlog_res_t t_res_arr[XLOG_TIC_LEN_MAX]; /* array of res : 8 * 15 */
171 } xlog_ticket_t;
172
173 /*
174 * - A log record header is 512 bytes. There is plenty of room to grow the
175 * xlog_rec_header_t into the reserved space.
176 * - ic_data follows, so a write to disk can start at the beginning of
177 * the iclog.
178 * - ic_forcewait is used to implement synchronous forcing of the iclog to disk.
179 * - ic_next is the pointer to the next iclog in the ring.
180 * - ic_log is a pointer back to the global log structure.
181 * - ic_size is the full size of the log buffer, minus the cycle headers.
182 * - ic_io_size is the size of the currently pending log buffer write, which
183 * might be smaller than ic_size
184 * - ic_offset is the current number of bytes written to in this iclog.
185 * - ic_refcnt is bumped when someone is writing to the log.
186 * - ic_state is the state of the iclog.
187 *
188 * Because of cacheline contention on large machines, we need to separate
189 * various resources onto different cachelines. To start with, make the
190 * structure cacheline aligned. The following fields can be contended on
191 * by independent processes:
192 *
193 * - ic_callbacks
194 * - ic_refcnt
195 * - fields protected by the global l_icloglock
196 *
197 * so we need to ensure that these fields are located in separate cachelines.
198 * We'll put all the read-only and l_icloglock fields in the first cacheline,
199 * and move everything else out to subsequent cachelines.
200 */
201 typedef struct xlog_in_core {
202 wait_queue_head_t ic_force_wait;
203 wait_queue_head_t ic_write_wait;
204 struct xlog_in_core *ic_next;
205 struct xlog_in_core *ic_prev;
206 struct xlog *ic_log;
207 u32 ic_size;
208 u32 ic_io_size;
209 u32 ic_offset;
210 unsigned short ic_state;
211 char *ic_datap; /* pointer to iclog data */
212
213 /* Callback structures need their own cacheline */
214 spinlock_t ic_callback_lock ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
215 struct list_head ic_callbacks;
216
217 /* reference counts need their own cacheline */
218 atomic_t ic_refcnt ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
219 xlog_in_core_2_t *ic_data;
220 #define ic_header ic_data->hic_header
221 #ifdef DEBUG
222 bool ic_fail_crc : 1;
223 #endif
224 struct semaphore ic_sema;
225 struct work_struct ic_end_io_work;
226 struct bio ic_bio;
227 struct bio_vec ic_bvec[];
228 } xlog_in_core_t;
229
230 /*
231 * The CIL context is used to aggregate per-transaction details as well be
232 * passed to the iclog for checkpoint post-commit processing. After being
233 * passed to the iclog, another context needs to be allocated for tracking the
234 * next set of transactions to be aggregated into a checkpoint.
235 */
236 struct xfs_cil;
237
238 struct xfs_cil_ctx {
239 struct xfs_cil *cil;
240 xfs_lsn_t sequence; /* chkpt sequence # */
241 xfs_lsn_t start_lsn; /* first LSN of chkpt commit */
242 xfs_lsn_t commit_lsn; /* chkpt commit record lsn */
243 struct xlog_ticket *ticket; /* chkpt ticket */
244 int nvecs; /* number of regions */
245 int space_used; /* aggregate size of regions */
246 struct list_head busy_extents; /* busy extents in chkpt */
247 struct xfs_log_vec *lv_chain; /* logvecs being pushed */
248 struct list_head iclog_entry;
249 struct list_head committing; /* ctx committing list */
250 struct work_struct discard_endio_work;
251 };
252
253 /*
254 * Committed Item List structure
255 *
256 * This structure is used to track log items that have been committed but not
257 * yet written into the log. It is used only when the delayed logging mount
258 * option is enabled.
259 *
260 * This structure tracks the list of committing checkpoint contexts so
261 * we can avoid the problem of having to hold out new transactions during a
262 * flush until we have a the commit record LSN of the checkpoint. We can
263 * traverse the list of committing contexts in xlog_cil_push_lsn() to find a
264 * sequence match and extract the commit LSN directly from there. If the
265 * checkpoint is still in the process of committing, we can block waiting for
266 * the commit LSN to be determined as well. This should make synchronous
267 * operations almost as efficient as the old logging methods.
268 */
269 struct xfs_cil {
270 struct xlog *xc_log;
271 struct list_head xc_cil;
272 spinlock_t xc_cil_lock;
273
274 struct rw_semaphore xc_ctx_lock ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
275 struct xfs_cil_ctx *xc_ctx;
276
277 spinlock_t xc_push_lock ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
278 xfs_lsn_t xc_push_seq;
279 struct list_head xc_committing;
280 wait_queue_head_t xc_commit_wait;
281 xfs_lsn_t xc_current_sequence;
282 struct work_struct xc_push_work;
283 wait_queue_head_t xc_push_wait; /* background push throttle */
284 } ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
285
286 /*
287 * The amount of log space we allow the CIL to aggregate is difficult to size.
288 * Whatever we choose, we have to make sure we can get a reservation for the
289 * log space effectively, that it is large enough to capture sufficient
290 * relogging to reduce log buffer IO significantly, but it is not too large for
291 * the log or induces too much latency when writing out through the iclogs. We
292 * track both space consumed and the number of vectors in the checkpoint
293 * context, so we need to decide which to use for limiting.
294 *
295 * Every log buffer we write out during a push needs a header reserved, which
296 * is at least one sector and more for v2 logs. Hence we need a reservation of
297 * at least 512 bytes per 32k of log space just for the LR headers. That means
298 * 16KB of reservation per megabyte of delayed logging space we will consume,
299 * plus various headers. The number of headers will vary based on the num of
300 * io vectors, so limiting on a specific number of vectors is going to result
301 * in transactions of varying size. IOWs, it is more consistent to track and
302 * limit space consumed in the log rather than by the number of objects being
303 * logged in order to prevent checkpoint ticket overruns.
304 *
305 * Further, use of static reservations through the log grant mechanism is
306 * problematic. It introduces a lot of complexity (e.g. reserve grant vs write
307 * grant) and a significant deadlock potential because regranting write space
308 * can block on log pushes. Hence if we have to regrant log space during a log
309 * push, we can deadlock.
310 *
311 * However, we can avoid this by use of a dynamic "reservation stealing"
312 * technique during transaction commit whereby unused reservation space in the
313 * transaction ticket is transferred to the CIL ctx commit ticket to cover the
314 * space needed by the checkpoint transaction. This means that we never need to
315 * specifically reserve space for the CIL checkpoint transaction, nor do we
316 * need to regrant space once the checkpoint completes. This also means the
317 * checkpoint transaction ticket is specific to the checkpoint context, rather
318 * than the CIL itself.
319 *
320 * With dynamic reservations, we can effectively make up arbitrary limits for
321 * the checkpoint size so long as they don't violate any other size rules.
322 * Recovery imposes a rule that no transaction exceed half the log, so we are
323 * limited by that. Furthermore, the log transaction reservation subsystem
324 * tries to keep 25% of the log free, so we need to keep below that limit or we
325 * risk running out of free log space to start any new transactions.
326 *
327 * In order to keep background CIL push efficient, we only need to ensure the
328 * CIL is large enough to maintain sufficient in-memory relogging to avoid
329 * repeated physical writes of frequently modified metadata. If we allow the CIL
330 * to grow to a substantial fraction of the log, then we may be pinning hundreds
331 * of megabytes of metadata in memory until the CIL flushes. This can cause
332 * issues when we are running low on memory - pinned memory cannot be reclaimed,
333 * and the CIL consumes a lot of memory. Hence we need to set an upper physical
334 * size limit for the CIL that limits the maximum amount of memory pinned by the
335 * CIL but does not limit performance by reducing relogging efficiency
336 * significantly.
337 *
338 * As such, the CIL push threshold ends up being the smaller of two thresholds:
339 * - a threshold large enough that it allows CIL to be pushed and progress to be
340 * made without excessive blocking of incoming transaction commits. This is
341 * defined to be 12.5% of the log space - half the 25% push threshold of the
342 * AIL.
343 * - small enough that it doesn't pin excessive amounts of memory but maintains
344 * close to peak relogging efficiency. This is defined to be 16x the iclog
345 * buffer window (32MB) as measurements have shown this to be roughly the
346 * point of diminishing performance increases under highly concurrent
347 * modification workloads.
348 *
349 * To prevent the CIL from overflowing upper commit size bounds, we introduce a
350 * new threshold at which we block committing transactions until the background
351 * CIL commit commences and switches to a new context. While this is not a hard
352 * limit, it forces the process committing a transaction to the CIL to block and
353 * yeild the CPU, giving the CIL push work a chance to be scheduled and start
354 * work. This prevents a process running lots of transactions from overfilling
355 * the CIL because it is not yielding the CPU. We set the blocking limit at
356 * twice the background push space threshold so we keep in line with the AIL
357 * push thresholds.
358 *
359 * Note: this is not a -hard- limit as blocking is applied after the transaction
360 * is inserted into the CIL and the push has been triggered. It is largely a
361 * throttling mechanism that allows the CIL push to be scheduled and run. A hard
362 * limit will be difficult to implement without introducing global serialisation
363 * in the CIL commit fast path, and it's not at all clear that we actually need
364 * such hard limits given the ~7 years we've run without a hard limit before
365 * finding the first situation where a checkpoint size overflow actually
366 * occurred. Hence the simple throttle, and an ASSERT check to tell us that
367 * we've overrun the max size.
368 */
369 #define XLOG_CIL_SPACE_LIMIT(log) \
370 min_t(int, (log)->l_logsize >> 3, BBTOB(XLOG_TOTAL_REC_SHIFT(log)) << 4)
371
372 #define XLOG_CIL_BLOCKING_SPACE_LIMIT(log) \
373 (XLOG_CIL_SPACE_LIMIT(log) * 2)
374
375 /*
376 * ticket grant locks, queues and accounting have their own cachlines
377 * as these are quite hot and can be operated on concurrently.
378 */
379 struct xlog_grant_head {
380 spinlock_t lock ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
381 struct list_head waiters;
382 atomic64_t grant;
383 };
384
385 /*
386 * The reservation head lsn is not made up of a cycle number and block number.
387 * Instead, it uses a cycle number and byte number. Logs don't expect to
388 * overflow 31 bits worth of byte offset, so using a byte number will mean
389 * that round off problems won't occur when releasing partial reservations.
390 */
391 struct xlog {
392 /* The following fields don't need locking */
393 struct xfs_mount *l_mp; /* mount point */
394 struct xfs_ail *l_ailp; /* AIL log is working with */
395 struct xfs_cil *l_cilp; /* CIL log is working with */
396 struct xfs_buftarg *l_targ; /* buftarg of log */
397 struct workqueue_struct *l_ioend_workqueue; /* for I/O completions */
398 struct delayed_work l_work; /* background flush work */
399 uint l_flags;
400 uint l_quotaoffs_flag; /* XFS_DQ_*, for QUOTAOFFs */
401 struct list_head *l_buf_cancel_table;
402 int l_iclog_hsize; /* size of iclog header */
403 int l_iclog_heads; /* # of iclog header sectors */
404 uint l_sectBBsize; /* sector size in BBs (2^n) */
405 int l_iclog_size; /* size of log in bytes */
406 int l_iclog_bufs; /* number of iclog buffers */
407 xfs_daddr_t l_logBBstart; /* start block of log */
408 int l_logsize; /* size of log in bytes */
409 int l_logBBsize; /* size of log in BB chunks */
410
411 /* The following block of fields are changed while holding icloglock */
412 wait_queue_head_t l_flush_wait ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
413 /* waiting for iclog flush */
414 int l_covered_state;/* state of "covering disk
415 * log entries" */
416 xlog_in_core_t *l_iclog; /* head log queue */
417 spinlock_t l_icloglock; /* grab to change iclog state */
418 int l_curr_cycle; /* Cycle number of log writes */
419 int l_prev_cycle; /* Cycle number before last
420 * block increment */
421 int l_curr_block; /* current logical log block */
422 int l_prev_block; /* previous logical log block */
423
424 /*
425 * l_last_sync_lsn and l_tail_lsn are atomics so they can be set and
426 * read without needing to hold specific locks. To avoid operations
427 * contending with other hot objects, place each of them on a separate
428 * cacheline.
429 */
430 /* lsn of last LR on disk */
431 atomic64_t l_last_sync_lsn ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
432 /* lsn of 1st LR with unflushed * buffers */
433 atomic64_t l_tail_lsn ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
434
435 struct xlog_grant_head l_reserve_head;
436 struct xlog_grant_head l_write_head;
437
438 struct xfs_kobj l_kobj;
439
440 /* The following field are used for debugging; need to hold icloglock */
441 #ifdef DEBUG
442 void *l_iclog_bak[XLOG_MAX_ICLOGS];
443 /* log record crc error injection factor */
444 uint32_t l_badcrc_factor;
445 #endif
446 /* log recovery lsn tracking (for buffer submission */
447 xfs_lsn_t l_recovery_lsn;
448 };
449
450 #define XLOG_BUF_CANCEL_BUCKET(log, blkno) \
451 ((log)->l_buf_cancel_table + ((uint64_t)blkno % XLOG_BC_TABLE_SIZE))
452
453 #define XLOG_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(log) ((log)->l_flags & XLOG_IO_ERROR)
454
455 /* common routines */
456 extern int
457 xlog_recover(
458 struct xlog *log);
459 extern int
460 xlog_recover_finish(
461 struct xlog *log);
462 extern void
463 xlog_recover_cancel(struct xlog *);
464
465 extern __le32 xlog_cksum(struct xlog *log, struct xlog_rec_header *rhead,
466 char *dp, int size);
467
468 extern kmem_zone_t *xfs_log_ticket_zone;
469 struct xlog_ticket *
470 xlog_ticket_alloc(
471 struct xlog *log,
472 int unit_bytes,
473 int count,
474 char client,
475 bool permanent,
476 xfs_km_flags_t alloc_flags);
477
478
479 static inline void
xlog_write_adv_cnt(void ** ptr,int * len,int * off,size_t bytes)480 xlog_write_adv_cnt(void **ptr, int *len, int *off, size_t bytes)
481 {
482 *ptr += bytes;
483 *len -= bytes;
484 *off += bytes;
485 }
486
487 void xlog_print_tic_res(struct xfs_mount *mp, struct xlog_ticket *ticket);
488 void xlog_print_trans(struct xfs_trans *);
489 int
490 xlog_write(
491 struct xlog *log,
492 struct xfs_log_vec *log_vector,
493 struct xlog_ticket *tic,
494 xfs_lsn_t *start_lsn,
495 struct xlog_in_core **commit_iclog,
496 uint flags);
497
498 /*
499 * When we crack an atomic LSN, we sample it first so that the value will not
500 * change while we are cracking it into the component values. This means we
501 * will always get consistent component values to work from. This should always
502 * be used to sample and crack LSNs that are stored and updated in atomic
503 * variables.
504 */
505 static inline void
xlog_crack_atomic_lsn(atomic64_t * lsn,uint * cycle,uint * block)506 xlog_crack_atomic_lsn(atomic64_t *lsn, uint *cycle, uint *block)
507 {
508 xfs_lsn_t val = atomic64_read(lsn);
509
510 *cycle = CYCLE_LSN(val);
511 *block = BLOCK_LSN(val);
512 }
513
514 /*
515 * Calculate and assign a value to an atomic LSN variable from component pieces.
516 */
517 static inline void
xlog_assign_atomic_lsn(atomic64_t * lsn,uint cycle,uint block)518 xlog_assign_atomic_lsn(atomic64_t *lsn, uint cycle, uint block)
519 {
520 atomic64_set(lsn, xlog_assign_lsn(cycle, block));
521 }
522
523 /*
524 * When we crack the grant head, we sample it first so that the value will not
525 * change while we are cracking it into the component values. This means we
526 * will always get consistent component values to work from.
527 */
528 static inline void
xlog_crack_grant_head_val(int64_t val,int * cycle,int * space)529 xlog_crack_grant_head_val(int64_t val, int *cycle, int *space)
530 {
531 *cycle = val >> 32;
532 *space = val & 0xffffffff;
533 }
534
535 static inline void
xlog_crack_grant_head(atomic64_t * head,int * cycle,int * space)536 xlog_crack_grant_head(atomic64_t *head, int *cycle, int *space)
537 {
538 xlog_crack_grant_head_val(atomic64_read(head), cycle, space);
539 }
540
541 static inline int64_t
xlog_assign_grant_head_val(int cycle,int space)542 xlog_assign_grant_head_val(int cycle, int space)
543 {
544 return ((int64_t)cycle << 32) | space;
545 }
546
547 static inline void
xlog_assign_grant_head(atomic64_t * head,int cycle,int space)548 xlog_assign_grant_head(atomic64_t *head, int cycle, int space)
549 {
550 atomic64_set(head, xlog_assign_grant_head_val(cycle, space));
551 }
552
553 /*
554 * Committed Item List interfaces
555 */
556 int xlog_cil_init(struct xlog *log);
557 void xlog_cil_init_post_recovery(struct xlog *log);
558 void xlog_cil_destroy(struct xlog *log);
559 bool xlog_cil_empty(struct xlog *log);
560
561 /*
562 * CIL force routines
563 */
564 xfs_lsn_t
565 xlog_cil_force_lsn(
566 struct xlog *log,
567 xfs_lsn_t sequence);
568
569 static inline void
xlog_cil_force(struct xlog * log)570 xlog_cil_force(struct xlog *log)
571 {
572 xlog_cil_force_lsn(log, log->l_cilp->xc_current_sequence);
573 }
574
575 /*
576 * Unmount record type is used as a pseudo transaction type for the ticket.
577 * It's value must be outside the range of XFS_TRANS_* values.
578 */
579 #define XLOG_UNMOUNT_REC_TYPE (-1U)
580
581 /*
582 * Wrapper function for waiting on a wait queue serialised against wakeups
583 * by a spinlock. This matches the semantics of all the wait queues used in the
584 * log code.
585 */
xlog_wait(wait_queue_head_t * wq,spinlock_t * lock)586 static inline void xlog_wait(wait_queue_head_t *wq, spinlock_t *lock)
587 {
588 DECLARE_WAITQUEUE(wait, current);
589
590 add_wait_queue_exclusive(wq, &wait);
591 __set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
592 spin_unlock(lock);
593 schedule();
594 remove_wait_queue(wq, &wait);
595 }
596
597 /*
598 * The LSN is valid so long as it is behind the current LSN. If it isn't, this
599 * means that the next log record that includes this metadata could have a
600 * smaller LSN. In turn, this means that the modification in the log would not
601 * replay.
602 */
603 static inline bool
xlog_valid_lsn(struct xlog * log,xfs_lsn_t lsn)604 xlog_valid_lsn(
605 struct xlog *log,
606 xfs_lsn_t lsn)
607 {
608 int cur_cycle;
609 int cur_block;
610 bool valid = true;
611
612 /*
613 * First, sample the current lsn without locking to avoid added
614 * contention from metadata I/O. The current cycle and block are updated
615 * (in xlog_state_switch_iclogs()) and read here in a particular order
616 * to avoid false negatives (e.g., thinking the metadata LSN is valid
617 * when it is not).
618 *
619 * The current block is always rewound before the cycle is bumped in
620 * xlog_state_switch_iclogs() to ensure the current LSN is never seen in
621 * a transiently forward state. Instead, we can see the LSN in a
622 * transiently behind state if we happen to race with a cycle wrap.
623 */
624 cur_cycle = READ_ONCE(log->l_curr_cycle);
625 smp_rmb();
626 cur_block = READ_ONCE(log->l_curr_block);
627
628 if ((CYCLE_LSN(lsn) > cur_cycle) ||
629 (CYCLE_LSN(lsn) == cur_cycle && BLOCK_LSN(lsn) > cur_block)) {
630 /*
631 * If the metadata LSN appears invalid, it's possible the check
632 * above raced with a wrap to the next log cycle. Grab the lock
633 * to check for sure.
634 */
635 spin_lock(&log->l_icloglock);
636 cur_cycle = log->l_curr_cycle;
637 cur_block = log->l_curr_block;
638 spin_unlock(&log->l_icloglock);
639
640 if ((CYCLE_LSN(lsn) > cur_cycle) ||
641 (CYCLE_LSN(lsn) == cur_cycle && BLOCK_LSN(lsn) > cur_block))
642 valid = false;
643 }
644
645 return valid;
646 }
647
648 #endif /* __XFS_LOG_PRIV_H__ */
649