at v3.5 32 kB view raw
1/* 2 * linux/include/linux/jbd.h 3 * 4 * Written by Stephen C. Tweedie <sct@redhat.com> 5 * 6 * Copyright 1998-2000 Red Hat, Inc --- All Rights Reserved 7 * 8 * This file is part of the Linux kernel and is made available under 9 * the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2, or at your 10 * option, any later version, incorporated herein by reference. 11 * 12 * Definitions for transaction data structures for the buffer cache 13 * filesystem journaling support. 14 */ 15 16#ifndef _LINUX_JBD_H 17#define _LINUX_JBD_H 18 19/* Allow this file to be included directly into e2fsprogs */ 20#ifndef __KERNEL__ 21#include "jfs_compat.h" 22#define JFS_DEBUG 23#define jfs_debug jbd_debug 24#else 25 26#include <linux/types.h> 27#include <linux/buffer_head.h> 28#include <linux/journal-head.h> 29#include <linux/stddef.h> 30#include <linux/bit_spinlock.h> 31#include <linux/mutex.h> 32#include <linux/timer.h> 33#include <linux/lockdep.h> 34#include <linux/slab.h> 35 36#define journal_oom_retry 1 37 38/* 39 * Define JBD_PARANOID_IOFAIL to cause a kernel BUG() if ext3 finds 40 * certain classes of error which can occur due to failed IOs. Under 41 * normal use we want ext3 to continue after such errors, because 42 * hardware _can_ fail, but for debugging purposes when running tests on 43 * known-good hardware we may want to trap these errors. 44 */ 45#undef JBD_PARANOID_IOFAIL 46 47/* 48 * The default maximum commit age, in seconds. 49 */ 50#define JBD_DEFAULT_MAX_COMMIT_AGE 5 51 52#ifdef CONFIG_JBD_DEBUG 53/* 54 * Define JBD_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING to enable more expensive internal 55 * consistency checks. By default we don't do this unless 56 * CONFIG_JBD_DEBUG is on. 57 */ 58#define JBD_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING 59extern u8 journal_enable_debug; 60 61#define jbd_debug(n, f, a...) \ 62 do { \ 63 if ((n) <= journal_enable_debug) { \ 64 printk (KERN_DEBUG "(%s, %d): %s: ", \ 65 __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__); \ 66 printk (f, ## a); \ 67 } \ 68 } while (0) 69#else 70#define jbd_debug(f, a...) /**/ 71#endif 72 73static inline void *jbd_alloc(size_t size, gfp_t flags) 74{ 75 return (void *)__get_free_pages(flags, get_order(size)); 76} 77 78static inline void jbd_free(void *ptr, size_t size) 79{ 80 free_pages((unsigned long)ptr, get_order(size)); 81}; 82 83#define JFS_MIN_JOURNAL_BLOCKS 1024 84 85 86/** 87 * typedef handle_t - The handle_t type represents a single atomic update being performed by some process. 88 * 89 * All filesystem modifications made by the process go 90 * through this handle. Recursive operations (such as quota operations) 91 * are gathered into a single update. 92 * 93 * The buffer credits field is used to account for journaled buffers 94 * being modified by the running process. To ensure that there is 95 * enough log space for all outstanding operations, we need to limit the 96 * number of outstanding buffers possible at any time. When the 97 * operation completes, any buffer credits not used are credited back to 98 * the transaction, so that at all times we know how many buffers the 99 * outstanding updates on a transaction might possibly touch. 100 * 101 * This is an opaque datatype. 102 **/ 103typedef struct handle_s handle_t; /* Atomic operation type */ 104 105 106/** 107 * typedef journal_t - The journal_t maintains all of the journaling state information for a single filesystem. 108 * 109 * journal_t is linked to from the fs superblock structure. 110 * 111 * We use the journal_t to keep track of all outstanding transaction 112 * activity on the filesystem, and to manage the state of the log 113 * writing process. 114 * 115 * This is an opaque datatype. 116 **/ 117typedef struct journal_s journal_t; /* Journal control structure */ 118#endif 119 120/* 121 * Internal structures used by the logging mechanism: 122 */ 123 124#define JFS_MAGIC_NUMBER 0xc03b3998U /* The first 4 bytes of /dev/random! */ 125 126/* 127 * On-disk structures 128 */ 129 130/* 131 * Descriptor block types: 132 */ 133 134#define JFS_DESCRIPTOR_BLOCK 1 135#define JFS_COMMIT_BLOCK 2 136#define JFS_SUPERBLOCK_V1 3 137#define JFS_SUPERBLOCK_V2 4 138#define JFS_REVOKE_BLOCK 5 139 140/* 141 * Standard header for all descriptor blocks: 142 */ 143typedef struct journal_header_s 144{ 145 __be32 h_magic; 146 __be32 h_blocktype; 147 __be32 h_sequence; 148} journal_header_t; 149 150 151/* 152 * The block tag: used to describe a single buffer in the journal 153 */ 154typedef struct journal_block_tag_s 155{ 156 __be32 t_blocknr; /* The on-disk block number */ 157 __be32 t_flags; /* See below */ 158} journal_block_tag_t; 159 160/* 161 * The revoke descriptor: used on disk to describe a series of blocks to 162 * be revoked from the log 163 */ 164typedef struct journal_revoke_header_s 165{ 166 journal_header_t r_header; 167 __be32 r_count; /* Count of bytes used in the block */ 168} journal_revoke_header_t; 169 170 171/* Definitions for the journal tag flags word: */ 172#define JFS_FLAG_ESCAPE 1 /* on-disk block is escaped */ 173#define JFS_FLAG_SAME_UUID 2 /* block has same uuid as previous */ 174#define JFS_FLAG_DELETED 4 /* block deleted by this transaction */ 175#define JFS_FLAG_LAST_TAG 8 /* last tag in this descriptor block */ 176 177 178/* 179 * The journal superblock. All fields are in big-endian byte order. 180 */ 181typedef struct journal_superblock_s 182{ 183/* 0x0000 */ 184 journal_header_t s_header; 185 186/* 0x000C */ 187 /* Static information describing the journal */ 188 __be32 s_blocksize; /* journal device blocksize */ 189 __be32 s_maxlen; /* total blocks in journal file */ 190 __be32 s_first; /* first block of log information */ 191 192/* 0x0018 */ 193 /* Dynamic information describing the current state of the log */ 194 __be32 s_sequence; /* first commit ID expected in log */ 195 __be32 s_start; /* blocknr of start of log */ 196 197/* 0x0020 */ 198 /* Error value, as set by journal_abort(). */ 199 __be32 s_errno; 200 201/* 0x0024 */ 202 /* Remaining fields are only valid in a version-2 superblock */ 203 __be32 s_feature_compat; /* compatible feature set */ 204 __be32 s_feature_incompat; /* incompatible feature set */ 205 __be32 s_feature_ro_compat; /* readonly-compatible feature set */ 206/* 0x0030 */ 207 __u8 s_uuid[16]; /* 128-bit uuid for journal */ 208 209/* 0x0040 */ 210 __be32 s_nr_users; /* Nr of filesystems sharing log */ 211 212 __be32 s_dynsuper; /* Blocknr of dynamic superblock copy*/ 213 214/* 0x0048 */ 215 __be32 s_max_transaction; /* Limit of journal blocks per trans.*/ 216 __be32 s_max_trans_data; /* Limit of data blocks per trans. */ 217 218/* 0x0050 */ 219 __u32 s_padding[44]; 220 221/* 0x0100 */ 222 __u8 s_users[16*48]; /* ids of all fs'es sharing the log */ 223/* 0x0400 */ 224} journal_superblock_t; 225 226#define JFS_HAS_COMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \ 227 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \ 228 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_compat & cpu_to_be32((mask)))) 229#define JFS_HAS_RO_COMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \ 230 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \ 231 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_ro_compat & cpu_to_be32((mask)))) 232#define JFS_HAS_INCOMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \ 233 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \ 234 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_incompat & cpu_to_be32((mask)))) 235 236#define JFS_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_REVOKE 0x00000001 237 238/* Features known to this kernel version: */ 239#define JFS_KNOWN_COMPAT_FEATURES 0 240#define JFS_KNOWN_ROCOMPAT_FEATURES 0 241#define JFS_KNOWN_INCOMPAT_FEATURES JFS_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_REVOKE 242 243#ifdef __KERNEL__ 244 245#include <linux/fs.h> 246#include <linux/sched.h> 247#include <linux/jbd_common.h> 248 249#define J_ASSERT(assert) BUG_ON(!(assert)) 250 251#define J_ASSERT_BH(bh, expr) J_ASSERT(expr) 252#define J_ASSERT_JH(jh, expr) J_ASSERT(expr) 253 254#if defined(JBD_PARANOID_IOFAIL) 255#define J_EXPECT(expr, why...) J_ASSERT(expr) 256#define J_EXPECT_BH(bh, expr, why...) J_ASSERT_BH(bh, expr) 257#define J_EXPECT_JH(jh, expr, why...) J_ASSERT_JH(jh, expr) 258#else 259#define __journal_expect(expr, why...) \ 260 ({ \ 261 int val = (expr); \ 262 if (!val) { \ 263 printk(KERN_ERR \ 264 "EXT3-fs unexpected failure: %s;\n",# expr); \ 265 printk(KERN_ERR why "\n"); \ 266 } \ 267 val; \ 268 }) 269#define J_EXPECT(expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why) 270#define J_EXPECT_BH(bh, expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why) 271#define J_EXPECT_JH(jh, expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why) 272#endif 273 274struct jbd_revoke_table_s; 275 276/** 277 * struct handle_s - this is the concrete type associated with handle_t. 278 * @h_transaction: Which compound transaction is this update a part of? 279 * @h_buffer_credits: Number of remaining buffers we are allowed to dirty. 280 * @h_ref: Reference count on this handle 281 * @h_err: Field for caller's use to track errors through large fs operations 282 * @h_sync: flag for sync-on-close 283 * @h_jdata: flag to force data journaling 284 * @h_aborted: flag indicating fatal error on handle 285 * @h_lockdep_map: lockdep info for debugging lock problems 286 */ 287struct handle_s 288{ 289 /* Which compound transaction is this update a part of? */ 290 transaction_t *h_transaction; 291 292 /* Number of remaining buffers we are allowed to dirty: */ 293 int h_buffer_credits; 294 295 /* Reference count on this handle */ 296 int h_ref; 297 298 /* Field for caller's use to track errors through large fs */ 299 /* operations */ 300 int h_err; 301 302 /* Flags [no locking] */ 303 unsigned int h_sync: 1; /* sync-on-close */ 304 unsigned int h_jdata: 1; /* force data journaling */ 305 unsigned int h_aborted: 1; /* fatal error on handle */ 306 307#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_LOCK_ALLOC 308 struct lockdep_map h_lockdep_map; 309#endif 310}; 311 312 313/* The transaction_t type is the guts of the journaling mechanism. It 314 * tracks a compound transaction through its various states: 315 * 316 * RUNNING: accepting new updates 317 * LOCKED: Updates still running but we don't accept new ones 318 * RUNDOWN: Updates are tidying up but have finished requesting 319 * new buffers to modify (state not used for now) 320 * FLUSH: All updates complete, but we are still writing to disk 321 * COMMIT: All data on disk, writing commit record 322 * FINISHED: We still have to keep the transaction for checkpointing. 323 * 324 * The transaction keeps track of all of the buffers modified by a 325 * running transaction, and all of the buffers committed but not yet 326 * flushed to home for finished transactions. 327 */ 328 329/* 330 * Lock ranking: 331 * 332 * j_list_lock 333 * ->jbd_lock_bh_journal_head() (This is "innermost") 334 * 335 * j_state_lock 336 * ->jbd_lock_bh_state() 337 * 338 * jbd_lock_bh_state() 339 * ->j_list_lock 340 * 341 * j_state_lock 342 * ->t_handle_lock 343 * 344 * j_state_lock 345 * ->j_list_lock (journal_unmap_buffer) 346 * 347 */ 348 349struct transaction_s 350{ 351 /* Pointer to the journal for this transaction. [no locking] */ 352 journal_t *t_journal; 353 354 /* Sequence number for this transaction [no locking] */ 355 tid_t t_tid; 356 357 /* 358 * Transaction's current state 359 * [no locking - only kjournald alters this] 360 * [j_list_lock] guards transition of a transaction into T_FINISHED 361 * state and subsequent call of __journal_drop_transaction() 362 * FIXME: needs barriers 363 * KLUDGE: [use j_state_lock] 364 */ 365 enum { 366 T_RUNNING, 367 T_LOCKED, 368 T_FLUSH, 369 T_COMMIT, 370 T_COMMIT_RECORD, 371 T_FINISHED 372 } t_state; 373 374 /* 375 * Where in the log does this transaction's commit start? [no locking] 376 */ 377 unsigned int t_log_start; 378 379 /* Number of buffers on the t_buffers list [j_list_lock] */ 380 int t_nr_buffers; 381 382 /* 383 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers reserved but not yet 384 * modified by this transaction [j_list_lock] 385 */ 386 struct journal_head *t_reserved_list; 387 388 /* 389 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers under writeout during 390 * commit [j_list_lock] 391 */ 392 struct journal_head *t_locked_list; 393 394 /* 395 * Doubly-linked circular list of all metadata buffers owned by this 396 * transaction [j_list_lock] 397 */ 398 struct journal_head *t_buffers; 399 400 /* 401 * Doubly-linked circular list of all data buffers still to be 402 * flushed before this transaction can be committed [j_list_lock] 403 */ 404 struct journal_head *t_sync_datalist; 405 406 /* 407 * Doubly-linked circular list of all forget buffers (superseded 408 * buffers which we can un-checkpoint once this transaction commits) 409 * [j_list_lock] 410 */ 411 struct journal_head *t_forget; 412 413 /* 414 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers still to be flushed before 415 * this transaction can be checkpointed. [j_list_lock] 416 */ 417 struct journal_head *t_checkpoint_list; 418 419 /* 420 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers submitted for IO while 421 * checkpointing. [j_list_lock] 422 */ 423 struct journal_head *t_checkpoint_io_list; 424 425 /* 426 * Doubly-linked circular list of temporary buffers currently undergoing 427 * IO in the log [j_list_lock] 428 */ 429 struct journal_head *t_iobuf_list; 430 431 /* 432 * Doubly-linked circular list of metadata buffers being shadowed by log 433 * IO. The IO buffers on the iobuf list and the shadow buffers on this 434 * list match each other one for one at all times. [j_list_lock] 435 */ 436 struct journal_head *t_shadow_list; 437 438 /* 439 * Doubly-linked circular list of control buffers being written to the 440 * log. [j_list_lock] 441 */ 442 struct journal_head *t_log_list; 443 444 /* 445 * Protects info related to handles 446 */ 447 spinlock_t t_handle_lock; 448 449 /* 450 * Number of outstanding updates running on this transaction 451 * [t_handle_lock] 452 */ 453 int t_updates; 454 455 /* 456 * Number of buffers reserved for use by all handles in this transaction 457 * handle but not yet modified. [t_handle_lock] 458 */ 459 int t_outstanding_credits; 460 461 /* 462 * Forward and backward links for the circular list of all transactions 463 * awaiting checkpoint. [j_list_lock] 464 */ 465 transaction_t *t_cpnext, *t_cpprev; 466 467 /* 468 * When will the transaction expire (become due for commit), in jiffies? 469 * [no locking] 470 */ 471 unsigned long t_expires; 472 473 /* 474 * When this transaction started, in nanoseconds [no locking] 475 */ 476 ktime_t t_start_time; 477 478 /* 479 * How many handles used this transaction? [t_handle_lock] 480 */ 481 int t_handle_count; 482}; 483 484/** 485 * struct journal_s - this is the concrete type associated with journal_t. 486 * @j_flags: General journaling state flags 487 * @j_errno: Is there an outstanding uncleared error on the journal (from a 488 * prior abort)? 489 * @j_sb_buffer: First part of superblock buffer 490 * @j_superblock: Second part of superblock buffer 491 * @j_format_version: Version of the superblock format 492 * @j_state_lock: Protect the various scalars in the journal 493 * @j_barrier_count: Number of processes waiting to create a barrier lock 494 * @j_running_transaction: The current running transaction.. 495 * @j_committing_transaction: the transaction we are pushing to disk 496 * @j_checkpoint_transactions: a linked circular list of all transactions 497 * waiting for checkpointing 498 * @j_wait_transaction_locked: Wait queue for waiting for a locked transaction 499 * to start committing, or for a barrier lock to be released 500 * @j_wait_logspace: Wait queue for waiting for checkpointing to complete 501 * @j_wait_done_commit: Wait queue for waiting for commit to complete 502 * @j_wait_checkpoint: Wait queue to trigger checkpointing 503 * @j_wait_commit: Wait queue to trigger commit 504 * @j_wait_updates: Wait queue to wait for updates to complete 505 * @j_checkpoint_mutex: Mutex for locking against concurrent checkpoints 506 * @j_head: Journal head - identifies the first unused block in the journal 507 * @j_tail: Journal tail - identifies the oldest still-used block in the 508 * journal. 509 * @j_free: Journal free - how many free blocks are there in the journal? 510 * @j_first: The block number of the first usable block 511 * @j_last: The block number one beyond the last usable block 512 * @j_dev: Device where we store the journal 513 * @j_blocksize: blocksize for the location where we store the journal. 514 * @j_blk_offset: starting block offset for into the device where we store the 515 * journal 516 * @j_fs_dev: Device which holds the client fs. For internal journal this will 517 * be equal to j_dev 518 * @j_maxlen: Total maximum capacity of the journal region on disk. 519 * @j_list_lock: Protects the buffer lists and internal buffer state. 520 * @j_inode: Optional inode where we store the journal. If present, all journal 521 * block numbers are mapped into this inode via bmap(). 522 * @j_tail_sequence: Sequence number of the oldest transaction in the log 523 * @j_transaction_sequence: Sequence number of the next transaction to grant 524 * @j_commit_sequence: Sequence number of the most recently committed 525 * transaction 526 * @j_commit_request: Sequence number of the most recent transaction wanting 527 * commit 528 * @j_commit_waited: Sequence number of the most recent transaction someone 529 * is waiting for to commit. 530 * @j_uuid: Uuid of client object. 531 * @j_task: Pointer to the current commit thread for this journal 532 * @j_max_transaction_buffers: Maximum number of metadata buffers to allow in a 533 * single compound commit transaction 534 * @j_commit_interval: What is the maximum transaction lifetime before we begin 535 * a commit? 536 * @j_commit_timer: The timer used to wakeup the commit thread 537 * @j_revoke_lock: Protect the revoke table 538 * @j_revoke: The revoke table - maintains the list of revoked blocks in the 539 * current transaction. 540 * @j_revoke_table: alternate revoke tables for j_revoke 541 * @j_wbuf: array of buffer_heads for journal_commit_transaction 542 * @j_wbufsize: maximum number of buffer_heads allowed in j_wbuf, the 543 * number that will fit in j_blocksize 544 * @j_last_sync_writer: most recent pid which did a synchronous write 545 * @j_average_commit_time: the average amount of time in nanoseconds it 546 * takes to commit a transaction to the disk. 547 * @j_private: An opaque pointer to fs-private information. 548 */ 549 550struct journal_s 551{ 552 /* General journaling state flags [j_state_lock] */ 553 unsigned long j_flags; 554 555 /* 556 * Is there an outstanding uncleared error on the journal (from a prior 557 * abort)? [j_state_lock] 558 */ 559 int j_errno; 560 561 /* The superblock buffer */ 562 struct buffer_head *j_sb_buffer; 563 journal_superblock_t *j_superblock; 564 565 /* Version of the superblock format */ 566 int j_format_version; 567 568 /* 569 * Protect the various scalars in the journal 570 */ 571 spinlock_t j_state_lock; 572 573 /* 574 * Number of processes waiting to create a barrier lock [j_state_lock] 575 */ 576 int j_barrier_count; 577 578 /* 579 * Transactions: The current running transaction... 580 * [j_state_lock] [caller holding open handle] 581 */ 582 transaction_t *j_running_transaction; 583 584 /* 585 * the transaction we are pushing to disk 586 * [j_state_lock] [caller holding open handle] 587 */ 588 transaction_t *j_committing_transaction; 589 590 /* 591 * ... and a linked circular list of all transactions waiting for 592 * checkpointing. [j_list_lock] 593 */ 594 transaction_t *j_checkpoint_transactions; 595 596 /* 597 * Wait queue for waiting for a locked transaction to start committing, 598 * or for a barrier lock to be released 599 */ 600 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_transaction_locked; 601 602 /* Wait queue for waiting for checkpointing to complete */ 603 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_logspace; 604 605 /* Wait queue for waiting for commit to complete */ 606 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_done_commit; 607 608 /* Wait queue to trigger checkpointing */ 609 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_checkpoint; 610 611 /* Wait queue to trigger commit */ 612 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_commit; 613 614 /* Wait queue to wait for updates to complete */ 615 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_updates; 616 617 /* Semaphore for locking against concurrent checkpoints */ 618 struct mutex j_checkpoint_mutex; 619 620 /* 621 * Journal head: identifies the first unused block in the journal. 622 * [j_state_lock] 623 */ 624 unsigned int j_head; 625 626 /* 627 * Journal tail: identifies the oldest still-used block in the journal. 628 * [j_state_lock] 629 */ 630 unsigned int j_tail; 631 632 /* 633 * Journal free: how many free blocks are there in the journal? 634 * [j_state_lock] 635 */ 636 unsigned int j_free; 637 638 /* 639 * Journal start and end: the block numbers of the first usable block 640 * and one beyond the last usable block in the journal. [j_state_lock] 641 */ 642 unsigned int j_first; 643 unsigned int j_last; 644 645 /* 646 * Device, blocksize and starting block offset for the location where we 647 * store the journal. 648 */ 649 struct block_device *j_dev; 650 int j_blocksize; 651 unsigned int j_blk_offset; 652 653 /* 654 * Device which holds the client fs. For internal journal this will be 655 * equal to j_dev. 656 */ 657 struct block_device *j_fs_dev; 658 659 /* Total maximum capacity of the journal region on disk. */ 660 unsigned int j_maxlen; 661 662 /* 663 * Protects the buffer lists and internal buffer state. 664 */ 665 spinlock_t j_list_lock; 666 667 /* Optional inode where we store the journal. If present, all */ 668 /* journal block numbers are mapped into this inode via */ 669 /* bmap(). */ 670 struct inode *j_inode; 671 672 /* 673 * Sequence number of the oldest transaction in the log [j_state_lock] 674 */ 675 tid_t j_tail_sequence; 676 677 /* 678 * Sequence number of the next transaction to grant [j_state_lock] 679 */ 680 tid_t j_transaction_sequence; 681 682 /* 683 * Sequence number of the most recently committed transaction 684 * [j_state_lock]. 685 */ 686 tid_t j_commit_sequence; 687 688 /* 689 * Sequence number of the most recent transaction wanting commit 690 * [j_state_lock] 691 */ 692 tid_t j_commit_request; 693 694 /* 695 * Sequence number of the most recent transaction someone is waiting 696 * for to commit. 697 * [j_state_lock] 698 */ 699 tid_t j_commit_waited; 700 701 /* 702 * Journal uuid: identifies the object (filesystem, LVM volume etc) 703 * backed by this journal. This will eventually be replaced by an array 704 * of uuids, allowing us to index multiple devices within a single 705 * journal and to perform atomic updates across them. 706 */ 707 __u8 j_uuid[16]; 708 709 /* Pointer to the current commit thread for this journal */ 710 struct task_struct *j_task; 711 712 /* 713 * Maximum number of metadata buffers to allow in a single compound 714 * commit transaction 715 */ 716 int j_max_transaction_buffers; 717 718 /* 719 * What is the maximum transaction lifetime before we begin a commit? 720 */ 721 unsigned long j_commit_interval; 722 723 /* The timer used to wakeup the commit thread: */ 724 struct timer_list j_commit_timer; 725 726 /* 727 * The revoke table: maintains the list of revoked blocks in the 728 * current transaction. [j_revoke_lock] 729 */ 730 spinlock_t j_revoke_lock; 731 struct jbd_revoke_table_s *j_revoke; 732 struct jbd_revoke_table_s *j_revoke_table[2]; 733 734 /* 735 * array of bhs for journal_commit_transaction 736 */ 737 struct buffer_head **j_wbuf; 738 int j_wbufsize; 739 740 /* 741 * this is the pid of the last person to run a synchronous operation 742 * through the journal. 743 */ 744 pid_t j_last_sync_writer; 745 746 /* 747 * the average amount of time in nanoseconds it takes to commit a 748 * transaction to the disk. [j_state_lock] 749 */ 750 u64 j_average_commit_time; 751 752 /* 753 * An opaque pointer to fs-private information. ext3 puts its 754 * superblock pointer here 755 */ 756 void *j_private; 757}; 758 759/* 760 * Journal flag definitions 761 */ 762#define JFS_UNMOUNT 0x001 /* Journal thread is being destroyed */ 763#define JFS_ABORT 0x002 /* Journaling has been aborted for errors. */ 764#define JFS_ACK_ERR 0x004 /* The errno in the sb has been acked */ 765#define JFS_FLUSHED 0x008 /* The journal superblock has been flushed */ 766#define JFS_LOADED 0x010 /* The journal superblock has been loaded */ 767#define JFS_BARRIER 0x020 /* Use IDE barriers */ 768#define JFS_ABORT_ON_SYNCDATA_ERR 0x040 /* Abort the journal on file 769 * data write error in ordered 770 * mode */ 771 772/* 773 * Function declarations for the journaling transaction and buffer 774 * management 775 */ 776 777/* Filing buffers */ 778extern void journal_unfile_buffer(journal_t *, struct journal_head *); 779extern void __journal_unfile_buffer(struct journal_head *); 780extern void __journal_refile_buffer(struct journal_head *); 781extern void journal_refile_buffer(journal_t *, struct journal_head *); 782extern void __journal_file_buffer(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *, int); 783extern void __journal_free_buffer(struct journal_head *bh); 784extern void journal_file_buffer(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *, int); 785extern void __journal_clean_data_list(transaction_t *transaction); 786 787/* Log buffer allocation */ 788extern struct journal_head * journal_get_descriptor_buffer(journal_t *); 789int journal_next_log_block(journal_t *, unsigned int *); 790 791/* Commit management */ 792extern void journal_commit_transaction(journal_t *); 793 794/* Checkpoint list management */ 795int __journal_clean_checkpoint_list(journal_t *journal); 796int __journal_remove_checkpoint(struct journal_head *); 797void __journal_insert_checkpoint(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *); 798 799/* Buffer IO */ 800extern int 801journal_write_metadata_buffer(transaction_t *transaction, 802 struct journal_head *jh_in, 803 struct journal_head **jh_out, 804 unsigned int blocknr); 805 806/* Transaction locking */ 807extern void __wait_on_journal (journal_t *); 808 809/* 810 * Journal locking. 811 * 812 * We need to lock the journal during transaction state changes so that nobody 813 * ever tries to take a handle on the running transaction while we are in the 814 * middle of moving it to the commit phase. j_state_lock does this. 815 * 816 * Note that the locking is completely interrupt unsafe. We never touch 817 * journal structures from interrupts. 818 */ 819 820static inline handle_t *journal_current_handle(void) 821{ 822 return current->journal_info; 823} 824 825/* The journaling code user interface: 826 * 827 * Create and destroy handles 828 * Register buffer modifications against the current transaction. 829 */ 830 831extern handle_t *journal_start(journal_t *, int nblocks); 832extern int journal_restart (handle_t *, int nblocks); 833extern int journal_extend (handle_t *, int nblocks); 834extern int journal_get_write_access(handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 835extern int journal_get_create_access (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 836extern int journal_get_undo_access(handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 837extern int journal_dirty_data (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 838extern int journal_dirty_metadata (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 839extern void journal_release_buffer (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 840extern int journal_forget (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *); 841extern void journal_sync_buffer (struct buffer_head *); 842extern void journal_invalidatepage(journal_t *, 843 struct page *, unsigned long); 844extern int journal_try_to_free_buffers(journal_t *, struct page *, gfp_t); 845extern int journal_stop(handle_t *); 846extern int journal_flush (journal_t *); 847extern void journal_lock_updates (journal_t *); 848extern void journal_unlock_updates (journal_t *); 849 850extern journal_t * journal_init_dev(struct block_device *bdev, 851 struct block_device *fs_dev, 852 int start, int len, int bsize); 853extern journal_t * journal_init_inode (struct inode *); 854extern int journal_update_format (journal_t *); 855extern int journal_check_used_features 856 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long); 857extern int journal_check_available_features 858 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long); 859extern int journal_set_features 860 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long); 861extern int journal_create (journal_t *); 862extern int journal_load (journal_t *journal); 863extern int journal_destroy (journal_t *); 864extern int journal_recover (journal_t *journal); 865extern int journal_wipe (journal_t *, int); 866extern int journal_skip_recovery (journal_t *); 867extern void journal_update_sb_log_tail (journal_t *, tid_t, unsigned int, 868 int); 869extern void journal_abort (journal_t *, int); 870extern int journal_errno (journal_t *); 871extern void journal_ack_err (journal_t *); 872extern int journal_clear_err (journal_t *); 873extern int journal_bmap(journal_t *, unsigned int, unsigned int *); 874extern int journal_force_commit(journal_t *); 875 876/* 877 * journal_head management 878 */ 879struct journal_head *journal_add_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh); 880struct journal_head *journal_grab_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh); 881void journal_put_journal_head(struct journal_head *jh); 882 883/* 884 * handle management 885 */ 886extern struct kmem_cache *jbd_handle_cache; 887 888static inline handle_t *jbd_alloc_handle(gfp_t gfp_flags) 889{ 890 return kmem_cache_alloc(jbd_handle_cache, gfp_flags); 891} 892 893static inline void jbd_free_handle(handle_t *handle) 894{ 895 kmem_cache_free(jbd_handle_cache, handle); 896} 897 898/* Primary revoke support */ 899#define JOURNAL_REVOKE_DEFAULT_HASH 256 900extern int journal_init_revoke(journal_t *, int); 901extern void journal_destroy_revoke_caches(void); 902extern int journal_init_revoke_caches(void); 903 904extern void journal_destroy_revoke(journal_t *); 905extern int journal_revoke (handle_t *, 906 unsigned int, struct buffer_head *); 907extern int journal_cancel_revoke(handle_t *, struct journal_head *); 908extern void journal_write_revoke_records(journal_t *, 909 transaction_t *, int); 910 911/* Recovery revoke support */ 912extern int journal_set_revoke(journal_t *, unsigned int, tid_t); 913extern int journal_test_revoke(journal_t *, unsigned int, tid_t); 914extern void journal_clear_revoke(journal_t *); 915extern void journal_switch_revoke_table(journal_t *journal); 916extern void journal_clear_buffer_revoked_flags(journal_t *journal); 917 918/* 919 * The log thread user interface: 920 * 921 * Request space in the current transaction, and force transaction commit 922 * transitions on demand. 923 */ 924 925int __log_space_left(journal_t *); /* Called with journal locked */ 926int log_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid); 927int __log_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid); 928int journal_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t *tid); 929int journal_force_commit_nested(journal_t *journal); 930int log_wait_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid); 931int log_do_checkpoint(journal_t *journal); 932int journal_trans_will_send_data_barrier(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid); 933 934void __log_wait_for_space(journal_t *journal); 935extern void __journal_drop_transaction(journal_t *, transaction_t *); 936extern int cleanup_journal_tail(journal_t *); 937 938/* Debugging code only: */ 939 940#define jbd_ENOSYS() \ 941do { \ 942 printk (KERN_ERR "JBD unimplemented function %s\n", __func__); \ 943 current->state = TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE; \ 944 schedule(); \ 945} while (1) 946 947/* 948 * is_journal_abort 949 * 950 * Simple test wrapper function to test the JFS_ABORT state flag. This 951 * bit, when set, indicates that we have had a fatal error somewhere, 952 * either inside the journaling layer or indicated to us by the client 953 * (eg. ext3), and that we and should not commit any further 954 * transactions. 955 */ 956 957static inline int is_journal_aborted(journal_t *journal) 958{ 959 return journal->j_flags & JFS_ABORT; 960} 961 962static inline int is_handle_aborted(handle_t *handle) 963{ 964 if (handle->h_aborted) 965 return 1; 966 return is_journal_aborted(handle->h_transaction->t_journal); 967} 968 969static inline void journal_abort_handle(handle_t *handle) 970{ 971 handle->h_aborted = 1; 972} 973 974#endif /* __KERNEL__ */ 975 976/* Comparison functions for transaction IDs: perform comparisons using 977 * modulo arithmetic so that they work over sequence number wraps. */ 978 979static inline int tid_gt(tid_t x, tid_t y) 980{ 981 int difference = (x - y); 982 return (difference > 0); 983} 984 985static inline int tid_geq(tid_t x, tid_t y) 986{ 987 int difference = (x - y); 988 return (difference >= 0); 989} 990 991extern int journal_blocks_per_page(struct inode *inode); 992 993/* 994 * Return the minimum number of blocks which must be free in the journal 995 * before a new transaction may be started. Must be called under j_state_lock. 996 */ 997static inline int jbd_space_needed(journal_t *journal) 998{ 999 int nblocks = journal->j_max_transaction_buffers; 1000 if (journal->j_committing_transaction) 1001 nblocks += journal->j_committing_transaction-> 1002 t_outstanding_credits; 1003 return nblocks; 1004} 1005 1006/* 1007 * Definitions which augment the buffer_head layer 1008 */ 1009 1010/* journaling buffer types */ 1011#define BJ_None 0 /* Not journaled */ 1012#define BJ_SyncData 1 /* Normal data: flush before commit */ 1013#define BJ_Metadata 2 /* Normal journaled metadata */ 1014#define BJ_Forget 3 /* Buffer superseded by this transaction */ 1015#define BJ_IO 4 /* Buffer is for temporary IO use */ 1016#define BJ_Shadow 5 /* Buffer contents being shadowed to the log */ 1017#define BJ_LogCtl 6 /* Buffer contains log descriptors */ 1018#define BJ_Reserved 7 /* Buffer is reserved for access by journal */ 1019#define BJ_Locked 8 /* Locked for I/O during commit */ 1020#define BJ_Types 9 1021 1022extern int jbd_blocks_per_page(struct inode *inode); 1023 1024#ifdef __KERNEL__ 1025 1026#define buffer_trace_init(bh) do {} while (0) 1027#define print_buffer_fields(bh) do {} while (0) 1028#define print_buffer_trace(bh) do {} while (0) 1029#define BUFFER_TRACE(bh, info) do {} while (0) 1030#define BUFFER_TRACE2(bh, bh2, info) do {} while (0) 1031#define JBUFFER_TRACE(jh, info) do {} while (0) 1032 1033#endif /* __KERNEL__ */ 1034 1035#endif /* _LINUX_JBD_H */