Commit Graph

42529 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Torvalds 9576c2f293 File locking related changes for v4.4 (pile #1)
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Merge tag 'locks-v4.4-1' of git://git.samba.org/jlayton/linux

Pull file locking updates from Jeff Layton:
 "The largest series of changes is from Ben who offered up a set to add
  a new helper function for setting locks based on the type set in
  fl_flags.  Dmitry also send in a fix for a potential race that he
  found with KTSAN"

* tag 'locks-v4.4-1' of git://git.samba.org/jlayton/linux:
  locks: cleanup posix_lock_inode_wait and flock_lock_inode_wait
  Move locks API users to locks_lock_inode_wait()
  locks: introduce locks_lock_inode_wait()
  locks: Use more file_inode and fix a comment
  fs: fix data races on inode->i_flctx
  locks: change tracepoint for generic_add_lease
2015-11-05 10:31:29 -08:00
Filipe Manana 3b2ba7b31d Btrfs: fix sleeping inside atomic context in qgroup rescan worker
We are holding a btree path with spinning locks and then we attempt to
clone an extent buffer, which calls kmem_cache_alloc() and this function
can sleep, causing the following trace to be reported on a debug kernel:

[107118.218536] BUG: sleeping function called from invalid context at mm/slab.c:2871
[107118.224110] in_atomic(): 1, irqs_disabled(): 0, pid: 19148, name: kworker/u32:3
[107118.226120] INFO: lockdep is turned off.
[107118.226843] Preemption disabled at:[<ffffffffa05ffa22>] btrfs_clear_lock_blocking_rw+0x96/0xea [btrfs]

[107118.229175] CPU: 3 PID: 19148 Comm: kworker/u32:3 Tainted: G        W       4.3.0-rc5-btrfs-next-17+ #1
[107118.231326] Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.8.1-0-g4adadbd-20150316_085822-nilsson.home.kraxel.org 04/01/2014
[107118.233687] Workqueue: btrfs-qgroup-rescan btrfs_qgroup_rescan_helper [btrfs]
[107118.236835]  0000000000000000 ffff880424bf3b78 ffffffff812566f4 0000000000000000
[107118.238369]  ffff880424bf3ba0 ffffffff81070664 ffffffff817f1cd5 0000000000000b37
[107118.239769]  0000000000000000 ffff880424bf3bc8 ffffffff8107070a 0000000000008850
[107118.241244] Call Trace:
[107118.241729]  [<ffffffff812566f4>] dump_stack+0x4e/0x79
[107118.242602]  [<ffffffff81070664>] ___might_sleep+0x23a/0x241
[107118.243586]  [<ffffffff8107070a>] __might_sleep+0x9f/0xa6
[107118.244532]  [<ffffffff8115af70>] cache_alloc_debugcheck_before+0x25/0x36
[107118.245939]  [<ffffffff8115d52b>] kmem_cache_alloc+0x50/0x215
[107118.246930]  [<ffffffffa05e627e>] __alloc_extent_buffer+0x2a/0x11f [btrfs]
[107118.248121]  [<ffffffffa05ecb1a>] btrfs_clone_extent_buffer+0x3d/0xdd [btrfs]
[107118.249451]  [<ffffffffa06239ea>] btrfs_qgroup_rescan_worker+0x16d/0x434 [btrfs]
[107118.250755]  [<ffffffff81087481>] ? arch_local_irq_save+0x9/0xc
[107118.251754]  [<ffffffffa05f7952>] normal_work_helper+0x14c/0x32a [btrfs]
[107118.252899]  [<ffffffffa05f7952>] ? normal_work_helper+0x14c/0x32a [btrfs]
[107118.254195]  [<ffffffffa05f7c82>] btrfs_qgroup_rescan_helper+0x12/0x14 [btrfs]
[107118.255436]  [<ffffffff81063b23>] process_one_work+0x24a/0x4ac
[107118.263690]  [<ffffffff81064285>] worker_thread+0x206/0x2c2
[107118.264888]  [<ffffffff8106407f>] ? rescuer_thread+0x2cb/0x2cb
[107118.267413]  [<ffffffff8106904d>] kthread+0xef/0xf7
[107118.268417]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24
[107118.269505]  [<ffffffff8147d10f>] ret_from_fork+0x3f/0x70
[107118.270491]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24

So just use blocking locks for our path to solve this.
This fixes the patch titled:
  "btrfs: qgroup: Don't copy extent buffer to do qgroup rescan"

Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
2015-11-05 11:02:22 +00:00
Filipe Manana 190631f1c8 Btrfs: fix race waiting for qgroup rescan worker
We were initializing the completion (fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion)
object after releasing the qgroup rescan lock, which gives a small time
window for a rescan waiter to not actually wait for the rescan worker
to finish. Example:

         CPU 1                                                     CPU 2

 fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion->done is 0

 btrfs_qgroup_rescan_worker()
   complete_all(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion)
     sets fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion->done
     to UINT_MAX / 2

 ... do some other stuff ....

 qgroup_rescan_init()
   mutex_lock(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_lock)
   set flag BTRFS_QGROUP_STATUS_FLAG_RESCAN
     in fs_info->qgroup_flags
   mutex_unlock(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_lock)

                                                       btrfs_qgroup_wait_for_completion()
                                                         mutex_lock(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_lock)
                                                         sees flag BTRFS_QGROUP_STATUS_FLAG_RESCAN
                                                           in fs_info->qgroup_flags
                                                         mutex_unlock(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_lock)

                                                         wait_for_completion_interruptible(
                                                           &fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion)

                                                           fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion->done
                                                           is > 0 so it returns immediately

  init_completion(&fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion)
    sets fs_info->qgroup_rescan_completion->done to 0

So fix this by initializing the completion object while holding the mutex
fs_info->qgroup_rescan_lock.

Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
2015-11-05 10:32:21 +00:00
Justin Maggard 7343dd61fd btrfs: qgroup: exit the rescan worker during umount
I was hitting a consistent NULL pointer dereference during shutdown that
showed the trace running through end_workqueue_bio().  I traced it back to
the endio_meta_workers workqueue being poked after it had already been
destroyed.

Eventually I found that the root cause was a qgroup rescan that was still
in progress while we were stopping all the btrfs workers.

Currently we explicitly pause balance and scrub operations in
close_ctree(), but we do nothing to stop the qgroup rescan.  We should
probably be doing the same for qgroup rescan, but that's a much larger
change.  This small change is good enough to allow me to unmount without
crashing.

Signed-off-by: Justin Maggard <jmaggard@netgear.com>
Reviewed-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
2015-11-05 10:32:20 +00:00
Filipe Manana 9c9464cc92 Btrfs: fix extent accounting for partial direct IO writes
When doing a write using direct IO we can end up not doing the whole write
operation using the direct IO path, in that case we fallback to a buffered
write to do the remaining IO. This happens for example if the range we are
writing to contains a compressed extent.
When we do a partial write and fallback to buffered IO, due to the
existence of a compressed extent for example, we end up not adjusting the
outstanding extents counter of our inode which ends up getting decremented
twice, once by the DIO ordered extent for the partial write and once again
by btrfs_direct_IO(), resulting in an arithmetic underflow at
extent-tree.c:drop_outstanding_extent(). For example if we have:

  extents        [ prealloc extent ] [ compressed extent ]
  offsets        A        B          C       D           E

and at the moment our inode's outstanding extents counter is 0, if we do a
direct IO write against the range [B, D[ (which has a length smaller than
128Mb), we end up bumping our inode's outstanding extents counter to 1, we
create a DIO ordered extent for the range [B, C[ and then fallback to a
buffered write for the range [C, D[. The direct IO handler
(inode.c:btrfs_direct_IO()) decrements the outstanding extents counter by
1, leaving it with a value of 0, through a call to
btrfs_delalloc_release_space() and then shortly after the DIO ordered
extent finishes and calls btrfs_delalloc_release_metadata() which ends
up to attempt to decrement the inode's outstanding extents counter by 1,
resulting in an assertion failure at drop_outstanding_extent() because
the operation would result in an arithmetic underflow (0 - 1). This
produces the following trace:

  [125471.336838] BTRFS: assertion failed: BTRFS_I(inode)->outstanding_extents >= num_extents, file: fs/btrfs/extent-tree.c, line: 5526
  [125471.338844] ------------[ cut here ]------------
  [125471.340745] kernel BUG at fs/btrfs/ctree.h:4173!
  [125471.340745] invalid opcode: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP DEBUG_PAGEALLOC
  [125471.340745] Modules linked in: btrfs f2fs xfs libcrc32c dm_flakey dm_mod crc32c_generic xor raid6_pq nfsd auth_rpcgss oid_registry nfs_acl nfs lockd grace fscache sunrpc loop fuse parport_pc acpi_cpufreq psmouse i2c_piix4 parport pcspkr serio_raw microcode processor evdev i2c_core button ext4 crc16 jbd2 mbcache sd_mod sg sr_mod cdrom ata_generic virtio_scsi ata_piix virtio_pci virtio_ring floppy libata virtio e1000 scsi_mod [last unloaded: btrfs]
  [125471.340745] CPU: 10 PID: 23649 Comm: kworker/u32:1 Tainted: G        W       4.3.0-rc5-btrfs-next-17+ #1
  [125471.340745] Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.8.1-0-g4adadbd-20150316_085822-nilsson.home.kraxel.org 04/01/2014
  [125471.340745] Workqueue: btrfs-endio-write btrfs_endio_write_helper [btrfs]
  [125471.340745] task: ffff8804244fcf80 ti: ffff88040a118000 task.ti: ffff88040a118000
  [125471.340745] RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa0550da1>]  [<ffffffffa0550da1>] assfail.constprop.46+0x1e/0x20 [btrfs]
  [125471.340745] RSP: 0018:ffff88040a11bc78  EFLAGS: 00010296
  [125471.340745] RAX: 0000000000000075 RBX: 0000000000005000 RCX: 0000000000000000
  [125471.340745] RDX: ffffffff81098f93 RSI: ffffffff8147c619 RDI: 00000000ffffffff
  [125471.340745] RBP: ffff88040a11bc78 R08: 0000000000000001 R09: 0000000000000000
  [125471.340745] R10: ffff88040a11bc08 R11: ffffffff81651000 R12: ffff8803efb4a000
  [125471.340745] R13: ffff8803efb4a000 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: ffff8802f8e33c88
  [125471.340745] FS:  0000000000000000(0000) GS:ffff88043dd40000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
  [125471.340745] CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 000000008005003b
  [125471.340745] CR2: 00007fae7ca86095 CR3: 0000000001a0b000 CR4: 00000000000006e0
  [125471.340745] Stack:
  [125471.340745]  ffff88040a11bc88 ffffffffa04ca0cd ffff88040a11bcc8 ffffffffa04ceeb1
  [125471.340745]  ffff8802f8e33940 ffff8802c93eadb0 ffff8802f8e0bf50 ffff8803efb4a000
  [125471.340745]  0000000000000000 ffff8802f8e33c88 ffff88040a11bd38 ffffffffa04eccfa
  [125471.340745] Call Trace:
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa04ca0cd>] drop_outstanding_extent+0x3d/0x6d [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa04ceeb1>] btrfs_delalloc_release_metadata+0x51/0xdd [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa04eccfa>] btrfs_finish_ordered_io+0x420/0x4eb [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa04ecdda>] finish_ordered_fn+0x15/0x17 [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa050e6e8>] normal_work_helper+0x14c/0x32a [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffffa050e9c8>] btrfs_endio_write_helper+0x12/0x14 [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff81063b23>] process_one_work+0x24a/0x4ac
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff81064285>] worker_thread+0x206/0x2c2
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff8106407f>] ? rescuer_thread+0x2cb/0x2cb
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff8106407f>] ? rescuer_thread+0x2cb/0x2cb
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff8106904d>] kthread+0xef/0xf7
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff8147d10f>] ret_from_fork+0x3f/0x70
  [125471.340745]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24
  [125471.340745] Code: a5 55 a0 48 89 e5 e8 42 50 bc e0 0f 0b 55 89 f1 48 c7 c2 f0 a8 55 a0 48 89 fe 31 c0 48 c7 c7 14 aa 55 a0 48 89 e5 e8 22 50 bc e0 <0f> 0b 0f 1f 44 00 00 55 31 c9 ba 18 00 00 00 48 89 e5 41 56 41
  [125471.340745] RIP  [<ffffffffa0550da1>] assfail.constprop.46+0x1e/0x20 [btrfs]
  [125471.340745]  RSP <ffff88040a11bc78>
  [125471.539620] ---[ end trace 144259f7838b4aa4 ]---

So fix this by ensuring we adjust the outstanding extents counter when we
do the fallback just like we do for the case where the whole write can be
done through the direct IO path.

We were also adjusting the outstanding extents counter by a constant value
of 1, which is incorrect because we were ignorning that we account extents
in BTRFS_MAX_EXTENT_SIZE units, o fix that as well.

The following test case for fstests reproduces this issue:

  seq=`basename $0`
  seqres=$RESULT_DIR/$seq
  echo "QA output created by $seq"
  tmp=/tmp/$$
  status=1	# failure is the default!
  trap "_cleanup; exit \$status" 0 1 2 3 15

  _cleanup()
  {
      rm -f $tmp.*
  }

  # get standard environment, filters and checks
  . ./common/rc
  . ./common/filter

  # real QA test starts here
  _need_to_be_root
  _supported_fs btrfs
  _supported_os Linux
  _require_scratch
  _require_xfs_io_command "falloc"

  rm -f $seqres.full

  _scratch_mkfs >>$seqres.full 2>&1
  _scratch_mount "-o compress"

  # Create a compressed extent covering the range [700K, 800K[.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -f -s -c "pwrite -S 0xaa -b 100K 700K 100K" \
      $SCRATCH_MNT/foo | _filter_xfs_io

  # Create prealloc extent covering the range [600K, 700K[.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "falloc 600K 100K" $SCRATCH_MNT/foo

  # Write 80K of data to the range [640K, 720K[ using direct IO. This
  # range covers both the prealloc extent and the compressed extent.
  # Because there's a compressed extent in the range we are writing to,
  # the DIO write code path ends up only writing the first 60k of data,
  # which goes to the prealloc extent, and then falls back to buffered IO
  # for writing the remaining 20K of data - because that remaining data
  # maps to a file range containing a compressed extent.
  # When falling back to buffered IO, we used to trigger an assertion when
  # releasing reserved space due to bad accounting of the inode's
  # outstanding extents counter, which was set to 1 but we ended up
  # decrementing it by 1 twice, once through the ordered extent for the
  # 60K of data we wrote using direct IO, and once through the main direct
  # IO handler (inode.cbtrfs_direct_IO()) because the direct IO write
  # wrote less than 80K of data (60K).
  $XFS_IO_PROG -d -c "pwrite -S 0xbb -b 80K 640K 80K" \
      $SCRATCH_MNT/foo | _filter_xfs_io

  # Now similar test as above but for very large write operations. This
  # triggers special cases for an inode's outstanding extents accounting,
  # as internally btrfs logically splits extents into 128Mb units.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -f -s \
      -c "pwrite -S 0xaa -b 128M 258M 128M" \
      -c "falloc 0 258M" \
      $SCRATCH_MNT/bar | _filter_xfs_io
  $XFS_IO_PROG -d -c "pwrite -S 0xbb -b 256M 3M 256M" $SCRATCH_MNT/bar \
      | _filter_xfs_io

  # Now verify the file contents are correct and that they are the same
  # even after unmounting and mounting the fs again (or evicting the page
  # cache).
  #
  # For file foo, all bytes in the range [0, 640K[ must have a value of
  # 0x00, all bytes in the range [640K, 720K[ must have a value of 0xbb
  # and all bytes in the range [720K, 800K[ must have a value of 0xaa.
  #
  # For file bar, all bytes in the range [0, 3M[ must havea value of 0x00,
  # all bytes in the range [3M, 259M[ must have a value of 0xbb and all
  # bytes in the range [259M, 386M[ must have a value of 0xaa.
  #
  echo "File digests before remounting the file system:"
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/foo | _filter_scratch
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/bar | _filter_scratch
  _scratch_remount
  echo "File digests after remounting the file system:"
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/foo | _filter_scratch
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/bar | _filter_scratch

  status=0
  exit

Fixes: e1cbbfa5f5 ("Btrfs: fix outstanding_extents accounting in DIO")
Fixes: 3e05bde8c3 ("Btrfs: only adjust outstanding_extents when we do a short write")
Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
2015-11-05 10:32:19 +00:00
Linus Torvalds e880e87488 driver core update for 4.4-rc1
Here's the "big" driver core updates for 4.4-rc1.  Primarily a bunch of
 debugfs updates, with a smattering of minor driver core fixes and
 updates as well.
 
 All have been in linux-next for a long time.
 
 Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
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Merge tag 'driver-core-4.4-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/driver-core

Pull driver core updates from Greg KH:
 "Here's the "big" driver core updates for 4.4-rc1.  Primarily a bunch
  of debugfs updates, with a smattering of minor driver core fixes and
  updates as well.

  All have been in linux-next for a long time"

* tag 'driver-core-4.4-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/driver-core:
  debugfs: Add debugfs_create_ulong()
  of: to support binding numa node to specified device in devicetree
  debugfs: Add read-only/write-only bool file ops
  debugfs: Add read-only/write-only size_t file ops
  debugfs: Add read-only/write-only x64 file ops
  debugfs: Consolidate file mode checks in debugfs_create_*()
  Revert "mm: Check if section present during memory block (un)registering"
  driver-core: platform: Provide helpers for multi-driver modules
  mm: Check if section present during memory block (un)registering
  devres: fix a for loop bounds check
  CMA: fix CONFIG_CMA_SIZE_MBYTES overflow in 64bit
  base/platform: assert that dev_pm_domain callbacks are called unconditionally
  sysfs: correctly handle short reads on PREALLOC attrs.
  base: soc: siplify ida usage
  kobject: move EXPORT_SYMBOL() macros next to corresponding definitions
  kobject: explain what kobject's sd field is
  debugfs: document that debugfs_remove*() accepts NULL and error values
  debugfs: Pass bool pointer to debugfs_create_bool()
  ACPI / EC: Fix broken 64bit big-endian users of 'global_lock'
2015-11-04 21:50:37 -08:00
Linus Torvalds 527d1529e3 Merge branch 'for-4.4/integrity' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block
Pull block integrity updates from Jens Axboe:
 ""This is the joint work of Dan and Martin, cleaning up and improving
  the support for block data integrity"

* 'for-4.4/integrity' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block:
  block, libnvdimm, nvme: provide a built-in blk_integrity nop profile
  block: blk_flush_integrity() for bio-based drivers
  block: move blk_integrity to request_queue
  block: generic request_queue reference counting
  nvme: suspend i/o during runtime blk_integrity_unregister
  md: suspend i/o during runtime blk_integrity_unregister
  md, dm, scsi, nvme, libnvdimm: drop blk_integrity_unregister() at shutdown
  block: Inline blk_integrity in struct gendisk
  block: Export integrity data interval size in sysfs
  block: Reduce the size of struct blk_integrity
  block: Consolidate static integrity profile properties
  block: Move integrity kobject to struct gendisk
2015-11-04 20:51:48 -08:00
Linus Torvalds d9734e0d1c Merge branch 'for-4.4/core' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block
Pull core block updates from Jens Axboe:
 "This is the core block pull request for 4.4.  I've got a few more
  topic branches this time around, some of them will layer on top of the
  core+drivers changes and will come in a separate round.  So not a huge
  chunk of changes in this round.

  This pull request contains:

   - Enable blk-mq page allocation tracking with kmemleak, from Catalin.

   - Unused prototype removal in blk-mq from Christoph.

   - Cleanup of the q->blk_trace exchange, using cmpxchg instead of two
     xchg()'s, from Davidlohr.

   - A plug flush fix from Jeff.

   - Also from Jeff, a fix that means we don't have to update shared tag
     sets at init time unless we do a state change.  This cuts down boot
     times on thousands of devices a lot with scsi/blk-mq.

   - blk-mq waitqueue barrier fix from Kosuke.

   - Various fixes from Ming:

        - Fixes for segment merging and splitting, and checks, for
          the old core and blk-mq.

        - Potential blk-mq speedup by marking ctx pending at the end
          of a plug insertion batch in blk-mq.

        - direct-io no page dirty on kernel direct reads.

   - A WRITE_SYNC fix for mpage from Roman"

* 'for-4.4/core' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block:
  blk-mq: avoid excessive boot delays with large lun counts
  blktrace: re-write setting q->blk_trace
  blk-mq: mark ctx as pending at batch in flush plug path
  blk-mq: fix for trace_block_plug()
  block: check bio_mergeable() early before merging
  blk-mq: check bio_mergeable() early before merging
  block: avoid to merge splitted bio
  block: setup bi_phys_segments after splitting
  block: fix plug list flushing for nomerge queues
  blk-mq: remove unused blk_mq_clone_flush_request prototype
  blk-mq: fix waitqueue_active without memory barrier in block/blk-mq-tag.c
  fs: direct-io: don't dirtying pages for ITER_BVEC/ITER_KVEC direct read
  fs/mpage.c: forgotten WRITE_SYNC in case of data integrity write
  block: kmemleak: Track the page allocations for struct request
2015-11-04 20:28:10 -08:00
Daniel Borkmann d227c3ae4e tracefs: Fix refcount imbalance in start_creating()
In tracefs' start_creating(), we pin the file system to safely access
its root. When we failed to create a file, we unpin the file system via
failed_creating() to release the mount count and eventually the reference
of the singleton vfsmount.

However, when we run into an error during lookup_one_len() when still
in start_creating(), we only release the parent's mutex but not so the
reference on the mount.

F.e., in securityfs_create_file(), after doing simple_pin_fs() when
lookup_one_len() fails there, we infact do simple_release_fs(). This
seems necessary here as well.

Same issue seen in debugfs due to 190afd81e4 ("debugfs: split the
beginning and the end of __create_file() off"), which seemed to got
carried over into tracefs, too. Noticed during code review.

Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/68efa86101b778cf7517ed7c6ad573bd69f60ec6.1446672850.git.daniel@iogearbox.net

Fixes: 4282d60689 ("tracefs: Add new tracefs file system")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 4.1+
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
2015-11-04 22:13:45 -05:00
Linus Torvalds e627078a0c Merge branch 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/s390/linux
Pull s390 updates from Martin Schwidefsky:
 "There is only one new feature in this pull for the 4.4 merge window,
  most of it is small enhancements, cleanup and bug fixes:

   - Add the s390 backend for the software dirty bit tracking.  This
     adds two new pgtable functions pte_clear_soft_dirty and
     pmd_clear_soft_dirty which is why there is a hit to
     arch/x86/include/asm/pgtable.h in this pull request.

   - A series of cleanup patches for the AP bus, this includes the
     removal of the support for two outdated crypto cards (PCICC and
     PCICA).

   - The irq handling / signaling on buffer full in the runtime
     instrumentation code is dropped.

   - Some micro optimizations: remove unnecessary memory barriers for a
     couple of functions: [smb_]rmb, [smb_]wmb, atomics, bitops, and for
     spin_unlock.  Use the builtin bswap if available and make
     test_and_set_bit_lock more cache friendly.

   - Statistics and a tracepoint for the diagnose calls to the
     hypervisor.

   - The CPU measurement facility support to sample KVM guests is
     improved.

   - The vector instructions are now always enabled for user space
     processes if the hardware has the vector facility.  This simplifies
     the FPU handling code.  The fpu-internal.h header is split into fpu
     internals, api and types just like x86.

   - Cleanup and improvements for the common I/O layer.

   - Rework udelay to solve a problem with kprobe.  udelay has busy loop
     semantics but still uses an idle processor state for the wait"

* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/s390/linux: (66 commits)
  s390: remove runtime instrumentation interrupts
  s390/cio: de-duplicate subchannel validation
  s390/css: unneeded initialization in for_each_subchannel
  s390/Kconfig: use builtin bswap
  s390/dasd: fix disconnected device with valid path mask
  s390/dasd: fix invalid PAV assignment after suspend/resume
  s390/dasd: fix double free in dasd_eckd_read_conf
  s390/kernel: fix ptrace peek/poke for floating point registers
  s390/cio: move ccw_device_stlck functions
  s390/cio: move ccw_device_call_handler
  s390/topology: reduce per_cpu() invocations
  s390/nmi: reduce size of percpu variable
  s390/nmi: fix terminology
  s390/nmi: remove casts
  s390/nmi: remove pointless error strings
  s390: don't store registers on disabled wait anymore
  s390: get rid of __set_psw_mask()
  s390/fpu: split fpu-internal.h into fpu internals, api, and type headers
  s390/dasd: fix list_del corruption after lcu changes
  s390/spinlock: remove unneeded serializations at unlock
  ...
2015-11-04 11:31:31 -08:00
Bob Peterson c36b97e943 GFS2: Protect freeing directory hash table with i_lock spin_lock
This patch changes function gfs2_dir_hash_inval so it uses the
i_lock spin_lock to protect the in-core hash table, i_hash_cache.
This will prevent double-frees due to a race between gfs2_evict_inode
and inode invalidation.

Signed-off-by: Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
2015-11-04 12:05:42 -06:00
Linus Torvalds 2814228699 Merge branch 'core-rcu-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip
Pull RCU changes from Ingo Molnar:
 "The main changes in this cycle were:

   - Improvements to expedited grace periods (Paul E McKenney)

   - Performance improvements to and locktorture tests for percpu-rwsem
     (Oleg Nesterov, Paul E McKenney)

   - Torture-test changes (Paul E McKenney, Davidlohr Bueso)

   - Documentation updates (Paul E McKenney)

   - Miscellaneous fixes (Paul E McKenney, Boqun Feng, Oleg Nesterov,
     Patrick Marlier)"

* 'core-rcu-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip: (54 commits)
  fs/writeback, rcu: Don't use list_entry_rcu() for pointer offsetting in bdi_split_work_to_wbs()
  rcu: Better hotplug handling for synchronize_sched_expedited()
  rcu: Enable stall warnings for synchronize_rcu_expedited()
  rcu: Add tasks to expedited stall-warning messages
  rcu: Add online/offline info to expedited stall warning message
  rcu: Consolidate expedited CPU selection
  rcu: Prepare for consolidating expedited CPU selection
  cpu: Remove try_get_online_cpus()
  rcu: Stop excluding CPU hotplug in synchronize_sched_expedited()
  rcu: Stop silencing lockdep false positive for expedited grace periods
  rcu: Switch synchronize_sched_expedited() to IPI
  locktorture: Fix module unwind when bad torture_type specified
  torture: Forgive non-plural arguments
  rcutorture: Fix unused-function warning for torturing_tasks()
  rcutorture: Fix module unwind when bad torture_type specified
  rcu_sync: Cleanup the CONFIG_PROVE_RCU checks
  locking/percpu-rwsem: Clean up the lockdep annotations in percpu_down_read()
  locking/percpu-rwsem: Fix the comments outdated by rcu_sync
  locking/percpu-rwsem: Make use of the rcu_sync infrastructure
  locking/percpu-rwsem: Make percpu_free_rwsem() after kzalloc() safe
  ...
2015-11-03 15:40:38 -08:00
Linus Torvalds 7eeef2abe8 Merge branch 'core-debug-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip
Pull wchan kernel address hiding from Ingo Molnar:
 "This fixes a wchan related information leak in /proc/PID/stat.

  There's a bit of an ABI twist to it: instead of setting the wchan
  field to 0 (which is our usual technique) we set it conditionally to a
  0/1 flag to keep ABI compatibility with older procps versions that
  only fetches /proc/PID/wchan (symbolic names) if the absolute wchan
  address is nonzero"

* 'core-debug-for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
  fs/proc, core/debug: Don't expose absolute kernel addresses via wchan
2015-11-03 15:04:04 -08:00
Andreas Gruenbacher 1ca843a2d2 nfs: Fix GETATTR bitmap verification
When decoding GETATTR replies, the client checks the attribute bitmap
for which attributes the server has sent.  It misses bits at the word
boundaries, though; fix that.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-11-03 12:33:04 -05:00
Andreas Gruenbacher 8fbcf23743 nfs: Remove unused xdr page offsets in getacl/setacl arguments
The arguments passed around for getacl and setacl xdr encoding, struct
nfs_setaclargs and struct nfs_getaclargs, both contain an array of
pages, an offset into the first page, and the length of the page data.
The offset is unused as it is always zero; remove it.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-11-03 12:33:01 -05:00
Yaowei Bai 118c916356 fs/nfs: remove unnecessary new_valid_dev check
As new_valid_dev always returns 1, so !new_valid_dev check is not
needed, remove it.

Signed-off-by: Yaowei Bai <bywxiaobai@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-11-03 12:31:34 -05:00
Eric Ren a6b1533e9a dlm: make posix locks interruptible
Replace wait_event_killable with wait_event_interruptible
so that a program waiting for a posix lock can be
interrupted by a signal.  With the killable version,
a program was not interruptible by a signal if it
had a signal handler set for it, overriding the default
action of terminating the process.

Signed-off-by: Eric Ren <zren@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: David Teigland <teigland@redhat.com>
2015-11-03 10:38:22 -06:00
Steve French 592fafe644 Add resilienthandles mount parm
Since many servers (Windows clients, and non-clustered servers) do not
support persistent handles but do support resilient handles, allow
the user to specify a mount option "resilienthandles" in order
to get more reliable connections and less chance of data loss
(at least when SMB2.1 or later).  Default resilient handle
timeout (120 seconds to recent Windows server) is used.

Reviewed-by: Pavel Shilovsky <pshilovsky@samba.org>
Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
2015-11-03 10:10:36 -06:00
Filipe Manana 2959a32a85 Btrfs: fix hole punching when using the no-holes feature
When we are using the no-holes feature, if we punch a hole into a file
range that already contains a hole which overlaps the range we are passing
to fallocate(), we end up removing the extent map that represents the
existing hole without adding a new one. This happens because with the
no-holes feature we do not have explicit extent items to represent holes
and therefore the call to __btrfs_drop_extents(), made from
btrfs_punch_hole(), returns an end offset to the variable drop_end that
is smaller than the end of the range passed to fallocate(), while it
drops all existing extent maps in that range.
Normally having a missing extent map is not a problem, for example for
a readpages() operation we just end up building the extent map by
looking at the fs/subvol tree for a matching extent item (or a lack of
one for implicit holes). However for an fsync that uses the fast path,
which needs to look at the list of modified extent maps, this means
the fsync will not record information about the complete hole we had
before the fallocate() call into the log tree, resulting in a file with
content/layout that does not match what we had neither before nor after
the hole punch operation.

The following test case for fstests reproduces the issue. It fails without
this change because we get a file with a different digest after the fsync
log replay and also with a different extent/hole layout.

  seq=`basename $0`
  seqres=$RESULT_DIR/$seq
  echo "QA output created by $seq"
  tmp=/tmp/$$
  status=1	# failure is the default!
  trap "_cleanup; exit \$status" 0 1 2 3 15

  _cleanup()
  {
     _cleanup_flakey
     rm -f $tmp.*
  }

  # get standard environment, filters and checks
  . ./common/rc
  . ./common/filter
  . ./common/punch
  . ./common/dmflakey

  # real QA test starts here
  _need_to_be_root
  _supported_fs generic
  _supported_os Linux
  _require_scratch
  _require_xfs_io_command "fpunch"
  _require_xfs_io_command "fiemap"
  _require_dm_target flakey
  _require_metadata_journaling $SCRATCH_DEV

  # This test was motivated by an issue found in btrfs when the btrfs
  # no-holes feature is enabled (introduced in kernel 3.14). So enable
  # the feature if the fs being tested is btrfs.
  if [ $FSTYP == "btrfs" ]; then
      _require_btrfs_fs_feature "no_holes"
      _require_btrfs_mkfs_feature "no-holes"
      MKFS_OPTIONS="$MKFS_OPTIONS -O no-holes"
  fi

  rm -f $seqres.full

  _scratch_mkfs >>$seqres.full 2>&1
  _init_flakey
  _mount_flakey

  # Create out test file with some data and then fsync it.
  # We do the fsync only to make sure the last fsync we do in this test
  # triggers the fast code path of btrfs' fsync implementation, a
  # condition necessary to trigger the bug btrfs had.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -f -c "pwrite -S 0xaa 0K 128K" \
                  -c "fsync"                  \
                  $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar | _filter_xfs_io

  # Now punch a hole against the range [96K, 128K[.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fpunch 96K 32K" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar

  # Punch another hole against a range that overlaps the previous range
  # and ends beyond eof.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fpunch 64K 128K" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar

  # Punch another hole against a range that overlaps the first range
  # ([96K, 128K[) and ends at eof.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fpunch 32K 96K" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar

  # Fsync our file. We want to verify that, after a power failure and
  # mounting the filesystem again, the file content reflects all the hole
  # punch operations.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fsync" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar

  echo "File digest before power failure:"
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar | _filter_scratch

  echo "Fiemap before power failure:"
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fiemap -v" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar | _filter_fiemap

  # Silently drop all writes and umount to simulate a crash/power failure.
  _load_flakey_table $FLAKEY_DROP_WRITES
  _unmount_flakey

  # Allow writes again, mount to trigger log replay and validate file
  # contents.
  _load_flakey_table $FLAKEY_ALLOW_WRITES
  _mount_flakey

  echo "File digest after log replay:"
  # Must match the same digest we got before the power failure.
  md5sum $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar | _filter_scratch

  echo "Fiemap after log replay:"
  # Must match the same extent listing we got before the power failure.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "fiemap -v" $SCRATCH_MNT/foobar | _filter_fiemap

  _unmount_flakey

  status=0
  exit

Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-11-03 07:44:20 -08:00
chandan 13a0db5a53 Btrfs: find_free_extent: Do not erroneously skip LOOP_CACHING_WAIT state
When executing generic/001 in a loop on a ppc64 machine (with both sectorsize
and nodesize set to 64k), the following call trace is observed,

WARNING: at /root/repos/linux/fs/btrfs/locking.c:253
Modules linked in:
CPU: 2 PID: 8353 Comm: umount Not tainted 4.3.0-rc5-13676-ga5e681d #54
task: c0000000f2b1f560 ti: c0000000f6008000 task.ti: c0000000f6008000
NIP: c000000000520c88 LR: c0000000004a3b34 CTR: 0000000000000000
REGS: c0000000f600a820 TRAP: 0700   Not tainted  (4.3.0-rc5-13676-ga5e681d)
MSR: 8000000102029032 <SF,VEC,EE,ME,IR,DR,RI>  CR: 24444884  XER: 00000000
CFAR: c0000000004a3b30 SOFTE: 1
GPR00: c0000000004a3b34 c0000000f600aaa0 c00000000108ac00 c0000000f5a808c0
GPR04: 0000000000000000 c0000000f600ae60 0000000000000000 0000000000000005
GPR08: 00000000000020a1 0000000000000001 c0000000f2b1f560 0000000000000030
GPR12: 0000000084842882 c00000000fdc0900 c0000000f600ae60 c0000000f070b800
GPR16: 0000000000000000 c0000000f3c8a000 0000000000000000 0000000000000049
GPR20: 0000000000000001 0000000000000001 c0000000f5aa01f8 0000000000000000
GPR24: 0f83e0f83e0f83e1 c0000000f5a808c0 c0000000f3c8d000 c000000000000000
GPR28: c0000000f600ae74 0000000000000001 c0000000f3c8d000 c0000000f5a808c0
NIP [c000000000520c88] .btrfs_tree_lock+0x48/0x2a0
LR [c0000000004a3b34] .btrfs_lock_root_node+0x44/0x80
Call Trace:
[c0000000f600aaa0] [c0000000f600ab80] 0xc0000000f600ab80 (unreliable)
[c0000000f600ab80] [c0000000004a3b34] .btrfs_lock_root_node+0x44/0x80
[c0000000f600ac00] [c0000000004a99dc] .btrfs_search_slot+0xa8c/0xc00
[c0000000f600ad40] [c0000000004ab878] .btrfs_insert_empty_items+0x98/0x120
[c0000000f600adf0] [c00000000050da44] .btrfs_finish_chunk_alloc+0x1d4/0x620
[c0000000f600af20] [c0000000004be854] .btrfs_create_pending_block_groups+0x1d4/0x2c0
[c0000000f600b020] [c0000000004bf188] .do_chunk_alloc+0x3c8/0x420
[c0000000f600b100] [c0000000004c27cc] .find_free_extent+0xbfc/0x1030
[c0000000f600b260] [c0000000004c2ce8] .btrfs_reserve_extent+0xe8/0x250
[c0000000f600b330] [c0000000004c2f90] .btrfs_alloc_tree_block+0x140/0x590
[c0000000f600b440] [c0000000004a47b4] .__btrfs_cow_block+0x124/0x780
[c0000000f600b530] [c0000000004a4fc0] .btrfs_cow_block+0xf0/0x250
[c0000000f600b5e0] [c0000000004a917c] .btrfs_search_slot+0x22c/0xc00
[c0000000f600b720] [c00000000050aa40] .btrfs_remove_chunk+0x1b0/0x9f0
[c0000000f600b850] [c0000000004c4e04] .btrfs_delete_unused_bgs+0x434/0x570
[c0000000f600b950] [c0000000004d3cb8] .close_ctree+0x2e8/0x3b0
[c0000000f600ba20] [c00000000049d178] .btrfs_put_super+0x18/0x30
[c0000000f600ba90] [c000000000243cd4] .generic_shutdown_super+0xa4/0x1a0
[c0000000f600bb10] [c0000000002441d8] .kill_anon_super+0x18/0x30
[c0000000f600bb90] [c00000000049c898] .btrfs_kill_super+0x18/0xc0
[c0000000f600bc10] [c0000000002444f8] .deactivate_locked_super+0x98/0xe0
[c0000000f600bc90] [c000000000269f94] .cleanup_mnt+0x54/0xa0
[c0000000f600bd10] [c0000000000bd744] .task_work_run+0xc4/0x100
[c0000000f600bdb0] [c000000000016334] .do_notify_resume+0x74/0x80
[c0000000f600be30] [c0000000000098b8] .ret_from_except_lite+0x64/0x68
Instruction dump:
fba1ffe8 fbc1fff0 fbe1fff8 7c791b78 f8010010 f821ff21 e94d0290 81030040
812a04e8 7d094a78 7d290034 5529d97e <0b090000> 3b400000 3be30050 3bc3004c

The above call trace is seen even on x86_64; albeit very rarely and that too
with nodesize set to 64k and with nospace_cache mount option being used.

The reason for the above call trace is,
btrfs_remove_chunk
  check_system_chunk
    Allocate chunk if required
  For each physical stripe on underlying device,
    btrfs_free_dev_extent
      ...
      Take lock on Device tree's root node
      btrfs_cow_block("dev tree's root node");
        btrfs_reserve_extent
          find_free_extent
	    index = BTRFS_RAID_DUP;
	    have_caching_bg = false;

            When in LOOP_CACHING_NOWAIT state, Assume we find a block group
	    which is being cached; Hence have_caching_bg is set to true

            When repeating the search for the next RAID index, we set
	    have_caching_bg to false.

Hence right after completing the LOOP_CACHING_NOWAIT state, we incorrectly
skip LOOP_CACHING_WAIT state and move to LOOP_ALLOC_CHUNK state where we
allocate a chunk and try to add entries corresponding to the chunk's physical
stripe into the device tree. When doing so the task deadlocks itself waiting
for the blocking lock on the root node of the device tree.

This commit fixes the issue by introducing a new local variable to help
indicate as to whether a block group of any RAID type is being cached.

Signed-off-by: Chandan Rajendra <chandan@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-11-03 07:44:20 -08:00
Qu Wenruo 485290a734 btrfs: Fix a data space underflow warning
Even with quota disabled, generic/127 will trigger a kernel warning by
underflow data space info.

The bug is caused by buffered write, which in case of short copy, the
start parameter for btrfs_delalloc_release_space() is wrong, and
round_up/down() in btrfs_delalloc_release() extents the range to page
aligned, decreasing one more page than expected.

This patch will fix it by passing correct start.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-11-03 07:44:20 -08:00
Steve French b56eae4df9 [SMB3] Send durable handle v2 contexts when use of persistent handles required
Version 2 of the patch. Thanks to Dan Carpenter and the smatch
tool for finding a problem in the first version of this patch.

CC: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Shilovsky <pshilovsky@samba.org>
Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
2015-11-03 09:26:27 -06:00
Steve French f16dfa7cd1 [SMB3] Display persistenthandles in /proc/mounts for SMB3 shares if enabled
Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Shilovsky <pshilovsky@samba.org>
2015-11-03 09:17:31 -06:00
Steve French b618f001a2 [SMB3] Enable checking for continuous availability and persistent handle support
Validate "persistenthandles" and "nopersistenthandles" mount options against
the support the server claims in negotiate and tree connect SMB3 responses.

Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Shilovsky <pshilovsky@samba.org>
2015-11-03 09:15:03 -06:00
Steve French b2a3077414 [SMB3] Add parsing for new mount option controlling persistent handles
"nopersistenthandles" and "persistenthandles" mount options added.
The former will not request persistent handles on open even when
SMB3 negotiated and Continuous Availability share.  The latter
will request persistent handles (as long as server notes the
capability in protocol negotiation) even if share is not Continuous
Availability share.

Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
Reviewed-by: Pavel Shilovsky <pshilovsky@samba.org>
2015-11-03 09:03:18 -06:00
Dave Chinner 264e89ad34 Merge branch 'xfs-dax-updates' into for-next 2015-11-03 13:28:41 +11:00
Dave Chinner 2da5c4b05a Merge branch 'xfs-misc-fixes-for-4.4-2' into for-next 2015-11-03 13:27:58 +11:00
Dave Chinner fc0561cefc xfs: optimise away log forces on timestamp updates for fdatasync
xfs: timestamp updates cause excessive fdatasync log traffic

Sage Weil reported that a ceph test workload was writing to the
log on every fdatasync during an overwrite workload. Event tracing
showed that the only metadata modification being made was the
timestamp updates during the write(2) syscall, but fdatasync(2)
is supposed to ignore them. The key observation was that the
transactions in the log all looked like this:

INODE: #regs: 4   ino: 0x8b  flags: 0x45   dsize: 32

And contained a flags field of 0x45 or 0x85, and had data and
attribute forks following the inode core. This means that the
timestamp updates were triggering dirty relogging of previously
logged parts of the inode that hadn't yet been flushed back to
disk.

There are two parts to this problem. The first is that XFS relogs
dirty regions in subsequent transactions, so it carries around the
fields that have been dirtied since the last time the inode was
written back to disk, not since the last time the inode was forced
into the log.

The second part is that on v5 filesystems, the inode change count
update during inode dirtying also sets the XFS_ILOG_CORE flag, so
on v5 filesystems this makes a timestamp update dirty the entire
inode.

As a result when fdatasync is run, it looks at the dirty fields in
the inode, and sees more than just the timestamp flag, even though
the only metadata change since the last fdatasync was just the
timestamps. Hence we force the log on every subsequent fdatasync
even though it is not needed.

To fix this, add a new field to the inode log item that tracks
changes since the last time fsync/fdatasync forced the log to flush
the changes to the journal. This flag is updated when we dirty the
inode, but we do it before updating the change count so it does not
carry the "core dirty" flag from timestamp updates. The fields are
zeroed when the inode is marked clean (due to writeback/freeing) or
when an fsync/datasync forces the log. Hence if we only dirty the
timestamps on the inode between fsync/fdatasync calls, the fdatasync
will not trigger another log force.

Over 100 runs of the test program:

Ext4 baseline:
	runtime: 1.63s +/- 0.24s
	avg lat: 1.59ms +/- 0.24ms
	iops: ~2000

XFS, vanilla kernel:
        runtime: 2.45s +/- 0.18s
	avg lat: 2.39ms +/- 0.18ms
	log forces: ~400/s
	iops: ~1000

XFS, patched kernel:
        runtime: 1.49s +/- 0.26s
	avg lat: 1.46ms +/- 0.25ms
	log forces: ~30/s
	iops: ~1500

Reported-by: Sage Weil <sage@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 13:14:59 +11:00
Darrick J. Wong af3b63822e xfs: don't leak uuid table on rmmod
Don't leak the UUID table when the module is unloaded.
(Found with kmemleak.)

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 13:06:34 +11:00
Andreas Gruenbacher 47e1bf6405 xfs: invalidate cached acl if set via ioctl
Setting or removing the "SGI_ACL_[FILE|DEFAULT]" attributes via the
XFS_IOC_ATTRMULTI_BY_HANDLE ioctl completely bypasses the POSIX ACL
infrastructure, like setting the "trusted.SGI_ACL_[FILE|DEFAULT]" xattrs
did until commit 6caa1056.  Similar to that commit, invalidate cached
acls when setting/removing them via the ioctl as well.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:56:17 +11:00
Andreas Gruenbacher 09cb22d2a5 xfs: Plug memory leak in xfs_attrmulti_attr_set
When setting attributes via XFS_IOC_ATTRMULTI_BY_HANDLE, the user-space
buffer is copied into a new kernel-space buffer via memdup_user; that
buffer then isn't freed.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:53:54 +11:00
Andreas Gruenbacher 86a21c7974 xfs: Validate the length of on-disk ACLs
In xfs_acl_from_disk, instead of trusting that xfs_acl.acl_cnt is correct,
make sure that the length of the attributes is correct as well.  Also, turn
the aclp parameter into a const pointer.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:41:59 +11:00
Brian Foster 67d8e04e34 xfs: invalidate cached acl if set directly via xattr
ACLs are stored as extended attributes of the inode to which they apply.
XFS converts the standard "system.posix_acl_[access|default]" attribute
names used to control ACLs to "trusted.SGI_ACL_[FILE|DEFAULT]" as stored
on-disk. These xattrs are directly exposed in on-disk format via
getxattr/setxattr, without any ACL aware code in the path to perform
validation, etc. This is partly historical and supports backup/restore
applications such as xfsdump to back up and restore the binary blob that
represents ACLs as-is.

Andreas reports that the ACLs observed via the getfacl interface is not
consistent when ACLs are set directly via the setxattr path. This occurs
because the ACLs are cached in-core against the inode and the xattr path
has no knowledge that the operation relates to ACLs.

Update the xattr set codepath to trap writes of the special XFS ACL
attributes and invalidate the associated cached ACL when this occurs.
This ensures that the correct ACLs are used on a subsequent operation
through the actual ACL interface.

Note that this does not update or add support for setting the ACL xattrs
directly beyond the restore use case that requires a correctly formatted
binary blob and to restore a consistent i_mode at the same time. It is
still possible for a root user to set an invalid or inconsistent (with
i_mode) ACL blob on-disk and potentially cause corruption.

[ With fixes from Andreas Gruenbacher. ]

Reported-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:40:59 +11:00
Dave Chinner 13ad4fe3e0 xfs: xfs_filemap_pmd_fault treats read faults as write faults
The code initially committed didn't have the same checks for write
faults as the dax_pmd_fault code and hence treats all faults as
write faults. We can get read faults through this path because they
is no pmd_mkwrite path for write faults similar to the normal page
fault path. Hence we need to ensure that we only do c/mtime updates
on write faults, and freeze protection is unnecessary for read
faults.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:37:02 +11:00
Dave Chinner 3af4928585 xfs: add ->pfn_mkwrite support for DAX
->pfn_mkwrite support is needed so that when a page with allocated
backing store takes a write fault we can check that the fault has
not raced with a truncate and is pointing to a region beyond the
current end of file.

This also allows us to update the timestamp on the inode, too, which
fixes a generic/080 failure.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:37:02 +11:00
Dave Chinner 01a155e6cf xfs: DAX does not use IO completion callbacks
For DAX, we are now doing block zeroing during allocation. This
means we no longer need a special DAX fault IO completion callback
to do unwritten extent conversion. Because mmap never extends the
file size (it SEGVs the process) we don't need a callback to update
the file size, either. Hence we can remove the completion callbacks
from the __dax_fault and __dax_mkwrite calls.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:37:02 +11:00
Dave Chinner 1ca191576f xfs: Don't use unwritten extents for DAX
DAX has a page fault serialisation problem with block allocation.
Because it allows concurrent page faults and does not have a page
lock to serialise faults to the same page, it can get two concurrent
faults to the page that race.

When two read faults race, this isn't a huge problem as the data
underlying the page is not changing and so "detect and drop" works
just fine. The issues are to do with write faults.

When two write faults occur, we serialise block allocation in
get_blocks() so only one faul will allocate the extent. It will,
however, be marked as an unwritten extent, and that is where the
problem lies - the DAX fault code cannot differentiate between a
block that was just allocated and a block that was preallocated and
needs zeroing. The result is that both write faults end up zeroing
the block and attempting to convert it back to written.

The problem is that the first fault can zero and convert before the
second fault starts zeroing, resulting in the zeroing for the second
fault overwriting the data that the first fault wrote with zeros.
The second fault then attempts to convert the unwritten extent,
which is then a no-op because it's already written. Data loss occurs
as a result of this race.

Because there is no sane locking construct in the page fault code
that we can use for serialisation across the page faults, we need to
ensure block allocation and zeroing occurs atomically in the
filesystem. This means we can still take concurrent page faults and
the only time they will serialise is in the filesystem
mapping/allocation callback. The page fault code will always see
written, initialised extents, so we will be able to remove the
unwritten extent handling from the DAX code when all filesystems are
converted.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:37:00 +11:00
Dave Chinner 3fbbbea34b xfs: introduce BMAPI_ZERO for allocating zeroed extents
To enable DAX to do atomic allocation of zeroed extents, we need to
drive the block zeroing deep into the allocator. Because
xfs_bmapi_write() can return merged extents on allocation that were
only partially allocated (i.e. requested range spans allocated and
hole regions, allocation into the hole was contiguous), we cannot
zero the extent returned from xfs_bmapi_write() as that can
overwrite existing data with zeros.

Hence we have to drive the extent zeroing into the allocation code,
prior to where we merge the extents into the BMBT and return the
resultant map. This means we need to propagate this need down to
the xfs_alloc_vextent() and issue the block zeroing at this point.

While this functionality is being introduced for DAX, there is no
reason why it is specific to DAX - we can per-zero blocks during the
allocation transaction on any type of device. It's just slow (and
usually slower than unwritten allocation and conversion) on
traditional block devices so doesn't tend to get used. We can,
however, hook hardware zeroing optimisations via sb_issue_zeroout()
to this operation, so it may be useful in future and hence the
"allocate zeroed blocks" API needs to be implementation neutral.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:27:22 +11:00
Dave Chinner 3e12dbbdbd xfs: fix inode size update overflow in xfs_map_direct()
Both direct IO and DAX pass an offset and count into get_blocks that
will overflow a s64 variable when an IO goes into the last supported
block in a file (i.e. at offset 2^63 - 1FSB bytes). This can be seen
from the tracing:

xfs_get_blocks_alloc: [...] offset 0x7ffffffffffff000 count 4096
xfs_gbmap_direct:     [...] offset 0x7ffffffffffff000 count 4096
xfs_gbmap_direct_none:[...] offset 0x7ffffffffffff000 count 4096

0x7ffffffffffff000 + 4096 = 0x8000000000000000, and hence that
overflows the s64 offset and we fail to detect the need for a
filesize update and an ioend is not allocated.

This is *mostly* avoided for direct IO because such extending IOs
occur with full block allocation, and so the "IS_UNWRITTEN()" check
still evaluates as true and we get an ioend that way. However, doing
single sector extending IOs to this last block will expose the fact
that file size updates will not occur after the first allocating
direct IO as the overflow will then be exposed.

There is one further complexity: the DAX page fault path also
exposes the same issue in block allocation. However, page faults
cannot extend the file size, so in this case we want to allocate the
block but do not want to allocate an ioend to enable file size
update at IO completion. Hence we now need to distinguish between
the direct IO patch allocation and dax fault path allocation to
avoid leaking ioend structures.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-03 12:27:22 +11:00
Ilya Dryomov 79dbd1baa6 libceph: msg signing callouts don't need con argument
We can use msg->con instead - at the point we sign an outgoing message
or check the signature on the incoming one, msg->con is always set.  We
wouldn't know how to sign a message without an associated session (i.e.
msg->con == NULL) and being able to sign a message using an explicitly
provided authorizer is of no use.

Signed-off-by: Ilya Dryomov <idryomov@gmail.com>
2015-11-02 23:37:45 +01:00
Yan, Zheng 68cd5b4b76 ceph: make fsync() wait unsafe requests that created/modified inode
If we get a unsafe reply for request that created/modified inode,
add the unsafe request to a list in the newly created/modified
inode. So we can make fsync() wait these unsafe requests.

Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:48 +01:00
Yan, Zheng 4c06ace81a ceph: add request to i_unsafe_dirops when getting unsafe reply
Previously we add request to i_unsafe_dirops when registering
request. So ceph_fsync() also waits for imcomplete requests.
This is unnecessary, ceph_fsync() only needs to wait unsafe
requests.

Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:48 +01:00
Yan, Zheng 5e804ac482 ceph: don't invalidate page cache when inode is no longer used
ceph_check_caps() invalidate page cache when inode is not used
by any open file. This behaviour is not friendly for workload
that repeatly read files.

Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:48 +01:00
Zhu, Caifeng b5b98989dc ceph: combine as many iovec as possile into one OSD request
Both ceph_sync_direct_write and ceph_sync_read iterate iovec elements
one by one, send one OSD request for each iovec. This is sub-optimal,
We can combine serveral iovec into one page vector, and send an OSD
request for the whole page vector.

Signed-off-by: Zhu, Caifeng <zhucaifeng@unissoft-nj.com>
Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:47 +01:00
Arnd Bergmann 777d738a5e ceph: fix message length computation
create_request_message() computes the maximum length of a message,
but uses the wrong type for the time stamp: sizeof(struct timespec)
may be 8 or 16 depending on the architecture, while sizeof(struct
ceph_timespec) is always 8, and that is what gets put into the
message.

Found while auditing the uses of timespec for y2038 problems.

Fixes: b8e69066d8 ("ceph: include time stamp in every MDS request")
Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:47 +01:00
Geliang Tang 1291fb950f ceph: fix a comment typo
Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Yan, Zheng <zyan@redhat.com>
2015-11-02 23:36:47 +01:00
Trond Myklebust ac3c860c75 NFS: NFSoRDMA Client Side Changes
In addition to a variety of bugfixes, these patches are mostly geared at
 enabling both swap and backchannel support to the NFS over RDMA client.
 
 Signed-off-by: Anna Schumake <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
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Merge tag 'nfs-rdma-4.4-2' of git://git.linux-nfs.org/projects/anna/nfs-rdma

NFS: NFSoRDMA Client Side Changes

In addition to a variety of bugfixes, these patches are mostly geared at
enabling both swap and backchannel support to the NFS over RDMA client.

Signed-off-by: Anna Schumake <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-11-02 17:09:24 -05:00
Geliang Tang 306e5c2a3c pstore: fix code comment to match code
Fix code comment about kmsg_dump register so it matches the code.

Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
2015-11-02 13:41:52 -08:00
Chuck Lever 76566773a1 NFS: Enable client side NFSv4.1 backchannel to use other transports
Forechannel transports get their own "bc_up" method to create an
endpoint for the backchannel service.

Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com>
[Anna Schumaker: Add forward declaration of struct net to xprt.h]
Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-11-02 16:29:13 -05:00
Trond Myklebust 260074cd84 pNFS/flexfiles: Add support for FF_FLAGS_NO_IO_THRU_MDS
For loosely coupled pNFS/flexfiles systems, there is often no advantage
at all in going through the MDS for I/O, since the MDS is subject to
the same limitations as all other clients when talking to DSes. If a
DS is unresponsive, I/O through the MDS will fail.

For such systems, the only scalable solution is to have the pNFS clients
retry doing pNFS, and so the protocol now provides a flag that allows
the pNFS server to signal this.

If LAYOUTGET returns FF_FLAGS_NO_IO_THRU_MDS, then we should assume that
the MDS wants the client to retry using these devices, even if they were
previously marked as being unavailable. To do so, we add a helper,
ff_layout_mark_devices_valid() that will be called from layoutget.

Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-11-02 13:50:37 -05:00
Trond Myklebust 135444126a pNFS/flexfiles: When mirrored, retry failed reads by switching mirrors
If the pNFS/flexfiles file is mirrored, and a read to one mirror fails,
then we should bump the mirror index, so that we retry to a different
mirror. Once we've iterated through all mirrors and all failed, we can
return the layout and issue a new LAYOUTGET.

Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-11-02 13:50:35 -05:00
Jiri Kosina 24ba16bb3d xfs: clear PF_NOFREEZE for xfsaild kthread
Since xfsaild has been converted to kthread in 0030807c, it calls
try_to_freeze() during every AIL push iteration. It however doesn't set
itself as freezable, and therefore this try_to_freeze() will never do
anything.

Before (hopefully eventually) kthread freezing gets converted to fileystem
freezing, we'd rather mark xfsaild freezable (as it can generate I/O
during suspend).

Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-11-02 13:46:58 +11:00
Linus Torvalds a5ad88ce8c mm: get rid of 'vmalloc_info' from /proc/meminfo
It turns out that at least some versions of glibc end up reading
/proc/meminfo at every single startup, because glibc wants to know the
amount of memory the machine has.  And while that's arguably insane,
it's just how things are.

And it turns out that it's not all that expensive most of the time, but
the vmalloc information statistics (amount of virtual memory used in the
vmalloc space, and the biggest remaining chunk) can be rather expensive
to compute.

The 'get_vmalloc_info()' function actually showed up on my profiles as
4% of the CPU usage of "make test" in the git source repository, because
the git tests are lots of very short-lived shell-scripts etc.

It turns out that apparently this same silly vmalloc info gathering
shows up on the facebook servers too, according to Dave Jones.  So it's
not just "make test" for git.

We had two patches to just cache the information (one by me, one by
Ingo) to mitigate this issue, but the whole vmalloc information of of
rather dubious value to begin with, and people who *actually* want to
know what the situation is wrt the vmalloc area should just look at the
much more complete /proc/vmallocinfo instead.

In fact, according to my testing - and perhaps more importantly,
according to that big search engine in the sky: Google - there is
nothing out there that actually cares about those two expensive fields:
VmallocUsed and VmallocChunk.

So let's try to just remove them entirely.  Actually, this just removes
the computation and reports the numbers as zero for now, just to try to
be minimally intrusive.

If this breaks anything, we'll obviously have to re-introduce the code
to compute this all and add the caching patches on top.  But if given
the option, I'd really prefer to just remove this bad idea entirely
rather than add even more code to work around our historical mistake
that likely nobody really cares about.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2015-11-01 17:09:15 -08:00
Linus Torvalds 2e00266297 Merge branch 'fs-file-descriptor-optimization'
Merge file descriptor allocation speedup.

Eric Dumazet has a test-case for a fairly common network deamon load
pattern: openign and closing a lot of sockets that each have very little
work done on them.  It turns out that in that case, the cost of just
finding the correct file descriptor number can be a dominating factor.

We've long had a trivial optimization for allocating file descriptors
sequentially, but that optimization ends up being not very effective
when other file descriptors are being closed concurrently, and the fd
patterns are not some simple FIFO pattern.  In such cases we ended up
spending a lot of time just scanning the bitmap of open file descriptors
in order to find the next file descriptor number to open.

This trivial patch-series mitigates that by simply introducing a
second-level bitmap of which words in the first bitmap are already fully
allocated.  That cuts down the cost of scanning by an order of magnitude
in some pathological (but realistic) cases.

The second patch is an even more trivial patch to avoid unnecessarily
dirtying the cacheline for the close-on-exec bit array that normally
ends up being all empty.

* fs-file-descriptor-optimization:
  vfs: conditionally clear close-on-exec flag
  vfs: Fix pathological performance case for __alloc_fd()
2015-11-01 16:43:24 -08:00
Steve French ca9e7a1c85 Allow duplicate extents in SMB3 not just SMB3.1.1
Enable duplicate extents (cp --reflink) ioctl for SMB3.0 not just
SMB3.1.1 since have verified that this works to Windows 2016
(REFS) and additional testing done at recent plugfest with
SMB3.0 not just SMB3.1.1  This will also make it easier
for Samba.

Signed-off-by: Steve French <steve.french@primarydata.com>
Reviewed-by: David Disseldorp <ddiss@suse.de>
2015-10-31 22:44:24 -05:00
Linus Torvalds fc90888d07 vfs: conditionally clear close-on-exec flag
We clear the close-on-exec flag when opening and closing files, and the
bit was almost always already clear before.  Avoid dirtying the
cacheline if the clearning isn't necessary.  That avoids unnecessary
cacheline dirtying and bouncing in multi-socket environments.

Eric Dumazet has a file descriptor benchmark that goes 4% faster from
this on his two-socket machine.  It's probably partly superlinear
improvement due to getting slightly less spinlock contention on the
file_lock spinlock due to less work in the critical section.

Tested-by: Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2015-10-31 16:14:51 -07:00
Linus Torvalds f3f86e33dc vfs: Fix pathological performance case for __alloc_fd()
Al Viro points out that:
> >     * [Linux-specific aside] our __alloc_fd() can degrade quite badly
> > with some use patterns.  The cacheline pingpong in the bitmap is probably
> > inevitable, unless we accept considerably heavier memory footprint,
> > but we also have a case when alloc_fd() takes O(n) and it's _not_ hard
> > to trigger - close(3);open(...); will have the next open() after that
> > scanning the entire in-use bitmap.

And Eric Dumazet has a somewhat realistic multithreaded microbenchmark
that opens and closes a lot of sockets with minimal work per socket.

This patch largely fixes it.  We keep a 2nd-level bitmap of the open
file bitmaps, showing which words are already full.  So then we can
traverse that second-level bitmap to efficiently skip already allocated
file descriptors.

On his benchmark, this improves performance by up to an order of
magnitude, by avoiding the excessive open file bitmap scanning.

Tested-and-acked-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2015-10-31 16:12:10 -07:00
Linus Torvalds 4bb0fb57f3 Merge branch 'overlayfs-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszeredi/vfs
Pull overlayfs bug fixes from Miklos Szeredi:
 "This contains fixes for bugs that appeared in earlier kernels (all are
  marked for -stable)"

* 'overlayfs-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszeredi/vfs:
  ovl: free lower_mnt array in ovl_put_super
  ovl: free stack of paths in ovl_fill_super
  ovl: fix open in stacked overlay
  ovl: fix dentry reference leak
  ovl: use O_LARGEFILE in ovl_copy_up()
2015-10-31 14:49:19 -07:00
Yaowei Bai be69e1c19f fs/ext4: remove unnecessary new_valid_dev check
As new_valid_dev always returns 1, so !new_valid_dev check is not
needed, remove it.

Signed-off-by: Yaowei Bai <bywxiaobai@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-29 14:18:13 -04:00
Andreas Gruenbacher f3dd164912 gfs2: Remove gl_spin define
Commit e66cf161 replaced the gl_spin spinlock in struct gfs2_glock with a
gl_lockref lockref and defined gl_spin as gl_lockref.lock (the spinlock in
gl_lockref).  Remove that define to make the references to gl_lockref.lock more
obvious.

Signed-off-by: Andreas Gruenbacher <andreas.gruenbacher@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Bob Peterson <rpeterso@redhat.com>
2015-10-29 12:57:48 -05:00
Tejun Heo b33e18f61b fs/writeback, rcu: Don't use list_entry_rcu() for pointer offsetting in bdi_split_work_to_wbs()
bdi_split_work_to_wbs() uses list_for_each_entry_rcu_continue()
to walk @bdi->wb_list.  To set up the initial iteration
condition, it uses list_entry_rcu() to calculate the entry
pointer corresponding to the list head; however, this isn't an
actual RCU dereference and using list_entry_rcu() for it ended
up breaking a proposed list_entry_rcu() change because it was
feeding an non-lvalue pointer into the macro.

Don't use the RCU variant for simple pointer offsetting.  Use
list_entry() instead.

Reported-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
Cc: Darren Hart <dvhart@linux.intel.com>
Cc: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Cc: Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com>
Cc: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Cc: Frederic Weisbecker <fweisbec@gmail.com>
Cc: Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org>
Cc: Lai Jiangshan <jiangshanlai@gmail.com>
Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Cc: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com>
Cc: Patrick Marlier <patrick.marlier@gmail.com>
Cc: Paul McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Cc: pranith kumar <bobby.prani@gmail.com>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20151027051939.GA19355@mtj.duckdns.org
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
2015-10-28 13:17:30 +01:00
Dirk Steinmetz f2ca379642 namei: permit linking with CAP_FOWNER in userns
Attempting to hardlink to an unsafe file (e.g. a setuid binary) from
within an unprivileged user namespace fails, even if CAP_FOWNER is held
within the namespace. This may cause various failures, such as a gentoo
installation within a lxc container failing to build and install specific
packages.

This change permits hardlinking of files owned by mapped uids, if
CAP_FOWNER is held for that namespace. Furthermore, it improves consistency
by using the existing inode_owner_or_capable(), which is aware of
namespaced capabilities as of 23adbe12ef ("fs,userns: Change
inode_capable to capable_wrt_inode_uidgid").

Signed-off-by: Dirk Steinmetz <public@rsjtdrjgfuzkfg.com>

This is hitting us in Ubuntu during some dpkg upgrades in containers.
When upgrading a file dpkg creates a hard link to the old file to back
it up before overwriting it. When packages upgrade suid files owned by a
non-root user the link isn't permitted, and the package upgrade fails.
This patch fixes our problem.

Tested-by: Seth Forshee <seth.forshee@canonical.com>
Signed-off-by: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xmission.com>
2015-10-27 16:12:35 -05:00
Qu Wenruo 90ce321da8 btrfs: qgroup: Fix a rebase bug which will cause qgroup double free
When rebasing my patchset, I forgot to pick up a cleanup patch to remove
old hotfix in 4.2 release.

Witouth the cleanup, it will screw up new qgroup reserve framework and
always cause minus reserved number.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:44:39 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 5846a3c268 btrfs: qgroup: Fix a race in delayed_ref which leads to abort trans
Between btrfs_allocerved_file_extent() and
btrfs_add_delayed_qgroup_reserve(), there is a window that delayed_refs
are run and delayed ref head maybe freed before
btrfs_add_delayed_qgroup_reserve().

This will cause btrfs_dad_delayed_qgroup_reserve() to return -ENOENT,
and cause transaction to be aborted.

This patch will record qgroup reserve space info into delayed_ref_head
at btrfs_add_delayed_ref(), to eliminate the race window.

Reported-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:44:39 -07:00
Jiri Kosina 6962491321 btrfs: clear PF_NOFREEZE in cleaner_kthread()
cleaner_kthread() kthread calls try_to_freeze() at the beginning of every
cleanup attempt. This operation can't ever succeed though, as the kthread
hasn't marked itself as freezable.

Before (hopefully eventually) kthread freezing gets converted to fileystem
freezing, we'd rather mark cleaner_kthread() freezable (as my
understanding is that it can generate filesystem I/O during suspend).

Signed-off-by: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:42:30 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 0a0e8b8938 btrfs: qgroup: Don't copy extent buffer to do qgroup rescan
Ancient qgroup code call memcpy() on a extent buffer and use it for leaf
iteration.

As extent buffer contains lock, pointers to pages, it's never sane to do
such copy.

The following bug may be caused by this insane operation:
[92098.841309] general protection fault: 0000 [#1] SMP
[92098.841338] Modules linked in: ...
[92098.841814] CPU: 1 PID: 24655 Comm: kworker/u4:12 Not tainted
4.3.0-rc1 #1
[92098.841868] Workqueue: btrfs-qgroup-rescan btrfs_qgroup_rescan_helper
[btrfs]
[92098.842261] Call Trace:
[92098.842277]  [<ffffffffc035a5d8>] ? read_extent_buffer+0xb8/0x110
[btrfs]
[92098.842304]  [<ffffffffc0396d00>] ? btrfs_find_all_roots+0x60/0x70
[btrfs]
[92098.842329]  [<ffffffffc039af3d>]
btrfs_qgroup_rescan_worker+0x28d/0x5a0 [btrfs]

Where btrfs_qgroup_rescan_worker+0x28d is btrfs_disk_key_to_cpu(),
called in reading key from the copied extent_buffer.

This patch will use btrfs_clone_extent_buffer() to a better copy of
extent buffer to deal such case.

Reported-by: Stephane Lesimple <stephane_btrfs@lesimple.fr>
Suggested-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Reviewed-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:42:30 -07:00
David Sterba b66d62ba1e btrfs: add balance filters limits, stripes and usage to supported mask
Enable the extended 'limit' syntax (a range), the new 'stripes' and
extended 'usage' syntax (a range) filters in the filters mask. The patch
comes separate and not within the series that introduced the new filters
because the patch adding the mask was merged in a late rc. The
integration branch was based on an older rc and could not merge the
patch due to the missing changes.

Prerequisities:
* btrfs: check unsupported filters in balance arguments
* btrfs: extend balance filter limit to take minimum and maximum
* btrfs: add balance filter for stripes
* btrfs: extend balance filter usage to take minimum and maximum

Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:30 -07:00
David Sterba bc3094673f btrfs: extend balance filter usage to take minimum and maximum
Similar to the 'limit' filter, we can enhance the 'usage' filter to
accept a range. The change is backward compatible, the range is applied
only in connection with the BTRFS_BALANCE_ARGS_USAGE_RANGE flag.

We don't have a usecase yet, the current syntax has been sufficient. The
enhancement should provide parity with other range-like filters.

Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:30 -07:00
Gabríel Arthúr Pétursson dee32d0ac3 btrfs: add balance filter for stripes
Balance block groups which have the given number of stripes, defined by
a range min..max. This is useful to selectively rebalance only chunks
that do not span enough devices, applies to RAID0/10/5/6.

Signed-off-by: Gabríel Arthúr Pétursson <gabriel@system.is>
[ renamed bargs members, added to the UAPI, wrote the changelog ]
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:29 -07:00
David Sterba 12907fc798 btrfs: extend balance filter limit to take minimum and maximum
The 'limit' filter is underdesigned, it should have been a range for
[min,max], with some relaxed semantics when one of the bounds is
missing. Besides that, using a full u64 for a single value is a waste of
bytes.

Let's fix both by extending the use of the u64 bytes for the [min,max]
range. This can be done in a backward compatible way, the range will be
interpreted only if the appropriate flag is set
(BTRFS_BALANCE_ARGS_LIMIT_RANGE).

Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:28 -07:00
Chris Mason 2849a85422 btrfs: fix use after free iterating extrefs
The code for btrfs inode-resolve has never worked properly for
files with enough hard links to trigger extrefs.  It was trying to
get the leaf out of a path after freeing the path:

	btrfs_release_path(path);
	leaf = path->nodes[0];
	item_size = btrfs_item_size_nr(leaf, slot);

The fix here is to use the extent buffer we cloned just a little higher
up to avoid deadlocks caused by using the leaf in the path.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # v3.7+
cc: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.de>
Reviewed-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Reviewed-by: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:28 -07:00
David Sterba 849ef9286f btrfs: check unsupported filters in balance arguments
We don't verify that all the balance filter arguments supplemented by
the flags are actually known to the kernel. Thus we let it silently pass
and do nothing.

At the moment this means only the 'limit' filter, but we're going to add
a few more soon so it's better to have that fixed. Also in older stable
kernels so that it works with newer userspace tools.

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # 3.16+
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-26 19:38:26 -07:00
Rich Felker 4ac3131110 fs/binfmt_elf_fdpic.c: fix brk area overlap with stack on NOMMU
On NOMMU archs, the FDPIC ELF loader sets up the usable brk range to
overlap with all but the last PAGE_SIZE bytes of the stack. This leads
to catastrophic memory reuse/corruption if brk is used. Fix by setting
the brk area to zero size to disable its use.

Signed-off-by: Rich Felker <dalias@libc.org>
Acked-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Ungerer <gerg@uclinux.org>
2015-10-26 09:02:32 +10:00
Filipe Manana b06c4bf5c8 Btrfs: fix regression running delayed references when using qgroups
In the kernel 4.2 merge window we had a big changes to the implementation
of delayed references and qgroups which made the no_quota field of delayed
references not used anymore. More specifically the no_quota field is not
used anymore as of:

  commit 0ed4792af0 ("btrfs: qgroup: Switch to new extent-oriented qgroup mechanism.")

Leaving the no_quota field actually prevents delayed references from
getting merged, which in turn cause the following BUG_ON(), at
fs/btrfs/extent-tree.c, to be hit when qgroups are enabled:

  static int run_delayed_tree_ref(...)
  {
     (...)
     BUG_ON(node->ref_mod != 1);
     (...)
  }

This happens on a scenario like the following:

  1) Ref1 bytenr X, action = BTRFS_ADD_DELAYED_REF, no_quota = 1, added.

  2) Ref2 bytenr X, action = BTRFS_DROP_DELAYED_REF, no_quota = 0, added.
     It's not merged with Ref1 because Ref1->no_quota != Ref2->no_quota.

  3) Ref3 bytenr X, action = BTRFS_ADD_DELAYED_REF, no_quota = 1, added.
     It's not merged with the reference at the tail of the list of refs
     for bytenr X because the reference at the tail, Ref2 is incompatible
     due to Ref2->no_quota != Ref3->no_quota.

  4) Ref4 bytenr X, action = BTRFS_DROP_DELAYED_REF, no_quota = 0, added.
     It's not merged with the reference at the tail of the list of refs
     for bytenr X because the reference at the tail, Ref3 is incompatible
     due to Ref3->no_quota != Ref4->no_quota.

  5) We run delayed references, trigger merging of delayed references,
     through __btrfs_run_delayed_refs() -> btrfs_merge_delayed_refs().

  6) Ref1 and Ref3 are merged as Ref1->no_quota = Ref3->no_quota and
     all other conditions are satisfied too. So Ref1 gets a ref_mod
     value of 2.

  7) Ref2 and Ref4 are merged as Ref2->no_quota = Ref4->no_quota and
     all other conditions are satisfied too. So Ref2 gets a ref_mod
     value of 2.

  8) Ref1 and Ref2 aren't merged, because they have different values
     for their no_quota field.

  9) Delayed reference Ref1 is picked for running (select_delayed_ref()
     always prefers references with an action == BTRFS_ADD_DELAYED_REF).
     So run_delayed_tree_ref() is called for Ref1 which triggers the
     BUG_ON because Ref1->red_mod != 1 (equals 2).

So fix this by removing the no_quota field, as it's not used anymore as
of commit 0ed4792af0 ("btrfs: qgroup: Switch to new extent-oriented
qgroup mechanism.").

The use of no_quota was also buggy in at least two places:

1) At delayed-refs.c:btrfs_add_delayed_tree_ref() - we were setting
   no_quota to 0 instead of 1 when the following condition was true:
   is_fstree(ref_root) || !fs_info->quota_enabled

2) At extent-tree.c:__btrfs_inc_extent_ref() - we were attempting to
   reset a node's no_quota when the condition "!is_fstree(root_objectid)
   || !root->fs_info->quota_enabled" was true but we did it only in
   an unused local stack variable, that is, we never reset the no_quota
   value in the node itself.

This fixes the remainder of problems several people have been having when
running delayed references, mostly while a balance is running in parallel,
on a 4.2+ kernel.

Very special thanks to Stéphane Lesimple for helping debugging this issue
and testing this fix on his multi terabyte filesystem (which took more
than one day to balance alone, plus fsck, etc).

Also, this fixes deadlock issue when using the clone ioctl with qgroups
enabled, as reported by Elias Probst in the mailing list. The deadlock
happens because after calling btrfs_insert_empty_item we have our path
holding a write lock on a leaf of the fs/subvol tree and then before
releasing the path we called check_ref() which did backref walking, when
qgroups are enabled, and tried to read lock the same leaf. The trace for
this case is the following:

  INFO: task systemd-nspawn:6095 blocked for more than 120 seconds.
  (...)
  Call Trace:
    [<ffffffff86999201>] schedule+0x74/0x83
    [<ffffffff863ef64c>] btrfs_tree_read_lock+0xc0/0xea
    [<ffffffff86137ed7>] ? wait_woken+0x74/0x74
    [<ffffffff8639f0a7>] btrfs_search_old_slot+0x51a/0x810
    [<ffffffff863a129b>] btrfs_next_old_leaf+0xdf/0x3ce
    [<ffffffff86413a00>] ? ulist_add_merge+0x1b/0x127
    [<ffffffff86411688>] __resolve_indirect_refs+0x62a/0x667
    [<ffffffff863ef546>] ? btrfs_clear_lock_blocking_rw+0x78/0xbe
    [<ffffffff864122d3>] find_parent_nodes+0xaf3/0xfc6
    [<ffffffff86412838>] __btrfs_find_all_roots+0x92/0xf0
    [<ffffffff864128f2>] btrfs_find_all_roots+0x45/0x65
    [<ffffffff8639a75b>] ? btrfs_get_tree_mod_seq+0x2b/0x88
    [<ffffffff863e852e>] check_ref+0x64/0xc4
    [<ffffffff863e9e01>] btrfs_clone+0x66e/0xb5d
    [<ffffffff863ea77f>] btrfs_ioctl_clone+0x48f/0x5bb
    [<ffffffff86048a68>] ? native_sched_clock+0x28/0x77
    [<ffffffff863ed9b0>] btrfs_ioctl+0xabc/0x25cb
  (...)

The problem goes away by eleminating check_ref(), which no longer is
needed as its purpose was to get a value for the no_quota field of
a delayed reference (this patch removes the no_quota field as mentioned
earlier).

Reported-by: Stéphane Lesimple <stephane_btrfs@lesimple.fr>
Tested-by: Stéphane Lesimple <stephane_btrfs@lesimple.fr>
Reported-by: Elias Probst <mail@eliasprobst.eu>
Reported-by: Peter Becker <floyd.net@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Malte Schröder <malte@tnxip.de>
Reported-by: Derek Dongray <derek@valedon.co.uk>
Reported-by: Erkki Seppala <flux-btrfs@inside.org>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org  # 4.2+
Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Reviewed-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
2015-10-25 19:53:26 +00:00
Filipe Manana 2c3cf7d5f6 Btrfs: fix regression when running delayed references
In the kernel 4.2 merge window we had a refactoring/rework of the delayed
references implementation in order to fix certain problems with qgroups.
However that rework introduced one more regression that leads to the
following trace when running delayed references for metadata:

[35908.064664] kernel BUG at fs/btrfs/extent-tree.c:1832!
[35908.065201] invalid opcode: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP DEBUG_PAGEALLOC
[35908.065201] Modules linked in: dm_flakey dm_mod btrfs crc32c_generic xor raid6_pq nfsd auth_rpcgss oid_registry nfs_acl nfs lockd grace fscache sunrpc loop fuse parport_pc psmouse i2
[35908.065201] CPU: 14 PID: 15014 Comm: kworker/u32:9 Tainted: G        W       4.3.0-rc5-btrfs-next-17+ #1
[35908.065201] Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS rel-1.8.1-0-g4adadbd-20150316_085822-nilsson.home.kraxel.org 04/01/2014
[35908.065201] Workqueue: btrfs-extent-refs btrfs_extent_refs_helper [btrfs]
[35908.065201] task: ffff880114b7d780 ti: ffff88010c4c8000 task.ti: ffff88010c4c8000
[35908.065201] RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa04928b5>]  [<ffffffffa04928b5>] insert_inline_extent_backref+0x52/0xb1 [btrfs]
[35908.065201] RSP: 0018:ffff88010c4cbb08  EFLAGS: 00010293
[35908.065201] RAX: 0000000000000000 RBX: ffff88008a661000 RCX: 0000000000000000
[35908.065201] RDX: ffffffffa04dd58f RSI: 0000000000000001 RDI: 0000000000000000
[35908.065201] RBP: ffff88010c4cbb40 R08: 0000000000001000 R09: ffff88010c4cb9f8
[35908.065201] R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 000000000000002c R12: 0000000000000000
[35908.065201] R13: ffff88020a74c578 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
[35908.065201] FS:  0000000000000000(0000) GS:ffff88023edc0000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
[35908.065201] CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 000000008005003b
[35908.065201] CR2: 00000000015e8708 CR3: 0000000102185000 CR4: 00000000000006e0
[35908.065201] Stack:
[35908.065201]  ffff88010c4cbb18 0000000000000f37 ffff88020a74c578 ffff88015a408000
[35908.065201]  ffff880154a44000 0000000000000000 0000000000000005 ffff88010c4cbbd8
[35908.065201]  ffffffffa0492b9a 0000000000000005 0000000000000000 0000000000000000
[35908.065201] Call Trace:
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa0492b9a>] __btrfs_inc_extent_ref+0x8b/0x208 [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa0497117>] ? __btrfs_run_delayed_refs+0x4d4/0xd33 [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa049773d>] __btrfs_run_delayed_refs+0xafa/0xd33 [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa04a976a>] ? join_transaction.isra.10+0x25/0x41f [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa04a97ed>] ? join_transaction.isra.10+0xa8/0x41f [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa049914d>] btrfs_run_delayed_refs+0x75/0x1dd [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa04992f1>] delayed_ref_async_start+0x3c/0x7b [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa04d4b4f>] normal_work_helper+0x14c/0x32a [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffffa04d4e93>] btrfs_extent_refs_helper+0x12/0x14 [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff81063b23>] process_one_work+0x24a/0x4ac
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff81064285>] worker_thread+0x206/0x2c2
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff8106407f>] ? rescuer_thread+0x2cb/0x2cb
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff8106407f>] ? rescuer_thread+0x2cb/0x2cb
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff8106904d>] kthread+0xef/0xf7
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff8147d10f>] ret_from_fork+0x3f/0x70
[35908.065201]  [<ffffffff81068f5e>] ? kthread_parkme+0x24/0x24
[35908.065201] Code: 6a 01 41 56 41 54 ff 75 10 41 51 4d 89 c1 49 89 c8 48 8d 4d d0 e8 f6 f1 ff ff 48 83 c4 28 85 c0 75 2c 49 81 fc ff 00 00 00 77 02 <0f> 0b 4c 8b 45 30 8b 4d 28 45 31
[35908.065201] RIP  [<ffffffffa04928b5>] insert_inline_extent_backref+0x52/0xb1 [btrfs]
[35908.065201]  RSP <ffff88010c4cbb08>
[35908.310885] ---[ end trace fe4299baf0666457 ]---

This happens because the new delayed references code no longer merges
delayed references that have different sequence values. The following
steps are an example sequence leading to this issue:

1) Transaction N starts, fs_info->tree_mod_seq has value 0;

2) Extent buffer (btree node) A is allocated, delayed reference Ref1 for
   bytenr A is created, with a value of 1 and a seq value of 0;

3) fs_info->tree_mod_seq is incremented to 1;

4) Extent buffer A is deleted through btrfs_del_items(), which calls
   btrfs_del_leaf(), which in turn calls btrfs_free_tree_block(). The
   later returns the metadata extent associated to extent buffer A to
   the free space cache (the range is not pinned), because the extent
   buffer was created in the current transaction (N) and writeback never
   happened for the extent buffer (flag BTRFS_HEADER_FLAG_WRITTEN not set
   in the extent buffer).
   This creates the delayed reference Ref2 for bytenr A, with a value
   of -1 and a seq value of 1;

5) Delayed reference Ref2 is not merged with Ref1 when we create it,
   because they have different sequence numbers (decided at
   add_delayed_ref_tail_merge());

6) fs_info->tree_mod_seq is incremented to 2;

7) Some task attempts to allocate a new extent buffer (done at
   extent-tree.c:find_free_extent()), but due to heavy fragmentation
   and running low on metadata space the clustered allocation fails
   and we fall back to unclustered allocation, which finds the
   extent at offset A, so a new extent buffer at offset A is allocated.
   This creates delayed reference Ref3 for bytenr A, with a value of 1
   and a seq value of 2;

8) Ref3 is not merged neither with Ref2 nor Ref1, again because they
   all have different seq values;

9) We start running the delayed references (__btrfs_run_delayed_refs());

10) The delayed Ref1 is the first one being applied, which ends up
    creating an inline extent backref in the extent tree;

10) Next the delayed reference Ref3 is selected for execution, and not
    Ref2, because select_delayed_ref() always gives a preference for
    positive references (that have an action of BTRFS_ADD_DELAYED_REF);

11) When running Ref3 we encounter alreay the inline extent backref
    in the extent tree at insert_inline_extent_backref(), which makes
    us hit the following BUG_ON:

        BUG_ON(owner < BTRFS_FIRST_FREE_OBJECTID);

    This is always true because owner corresponds to the level of the
    extent buffer/btree node in the btree.

For the scenario described above we hit the BUG_ON because we never merge
references that have different seq values.

We used to do the merging before the 4.2 kernel, more specifically, before
the commmits:

  c6fc245499 ("btrfs: delayed-ref: Use list to replace the ref_root in ref_head.")
  c43d160fcd ("btrfs: delayed-ref: Cleanup the unneeded functions.")

This issue became more exposed after the following change that was added
to 4.2 as well:

  cffc3374e5 ("Btrfs: fix order by which delayed references are run")

Which in turn fixed another regression by the two commits previously
mentioned.

So fix this by bringing back the delayed reference merge code, with the
proper adaptations so that it operates against the new data structure
(linked list vs old red black tree implementation).

This issue was hit running fstest btrfs/063 in a loop. Several people have
reported this issue in the mailing list when running on kernels 4.2+.

Very special thanks to Stéphane Lesimple for helping debugging this issue
and testing this fix on his multi terabyte filesystem (which took more
than one day to balance alone, plus fsck, etc).

Fixes: c6fc245499 ("btrfs: delayed-ref: Use list to replace the ref_root in ref_head.")
Reported-by: Peter Becker <floyd.net@gmail.com>
Reported-by: Stéphane Lesimple <stephane_btrfs@lesimple.fr>
Tested-by: Stéphane Lesimple <stephane_btrfs@lesimple.fr>
Reported-by: Malte Schröder <malte@tnxip.de>
Reported-by: Derek Dongray <derek@valedon.co.uk>
Reported-by: Erkki Seppala <flux-btrfs@inside.org>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org  # 4.2+
Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
Reviewed-by: Liu Bo <bo.li.liu@oracle.com>
2015-10-25 19:52:23 +00:00
Linus Torvalds ea1ee5ff1b Merge branch 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block
Pull block layer fixes from Jens Axboe:
 "A final set of fixes for 4.3.

  It is (again) bigger than I would have liked, but it's all been
  through the testing mill and has been carefully reviewed by multiple
  parties.  Each fix is either a regression fix for this cycle, or is
  marked stable.  You can scold me at KS.  The pull request contains:

   - Three simple fixes for NVMe, fixing regressions since 4.3.  From
     Arnd, Christoph, and Keith.

   - A single xen-blkfront fix from Cathy, fixing a NULL dereference if
     an error is returned through the staste change callback.

   - Fixup for some bad/sloppy code in nbd that got introduced earlier
     in this cycle.  From Markus Pargmann.

   - A blk-mq tagset use-after-free fix from Junichi.

   - A backing device lifetime fix from Tejun, fixing a crash.

   - And finally, a set of regression/stable fixes for cgroup writeback
     from Tejun"

* 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.dk/linux-block:
  writeback: remove broken rbtree_postorder_for_each_entry_safe() usage in cgwb_bdi_destroy()
  NVMe: Fix memory leak on retried commands
  block: don't release bdi while request_queue has live references
  nvme: use an integer value to Linux errno values
  blk-mq: fix use-after-free in blk_mq_free_tag_set()
  nvme: fix 32-bit build warning
  writeback: fix incorrect calculation of available memory for memcg domains
  writeback: memcg dirty_throttle_control should be initialized with wb->memcg_completions
  writeback: bdi_writeback iteration must not skip dying ones
  writeback: fix bdi_writeback iteration in wakeup_dirtytime_writeback()
  writeback: laptop_mode_timer_fn() needs rcu_read_lock() around bdi_writeback iteration
  nbd: Add locking for tasks
  xen-blkfront: check for null drvdata in blkback_changed (XenbusStateClosing)
2015-10-24 07:20:57 +09:00
Linus Torvalds 37902bc190 Merge branch 'for-linus-4.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
 "I have two more small fixes this week:

  Qu's fix avoids unneeded COW during fallocate, and Christian found a
  memory leak in the error handling of an earlier fix"

* 'for-linus-4.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
  btrfs: fix possible leak in btrfs_ioctl_balance()
  btrfs: Avoid truncate tailing page if fallocate range doesn't exceed inode size
2015-10-24 07:17:58 +09:00
Jean Delvare c57d3e7a93 i2c-dev: Fix typo in ioctl name reference
The ioctl is named I2C_RDWR for "I2C read/write". But references to it
were misspelled "rdrw". Fix them.

Signed-off-by: Jean Delvare <jdelvare@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
2015-10-23 23:26:43 +02:00
Jeff Layton 9767feb2c6 nfsd: ensure that seqid morphing operations are atomic wrt to copies
Bruce points out that the increment of the seqid in stateids is not
serialized in any way, so it's possible for racing calls to bump it
twice and end up sending the same stateid. While we don't have any
reports of this problem it _is_ theoretically possible, and could lead
to spurious state recovery by the client.

In the current code, update_stateid is always followed by a memcpy of
that stateid, so we can combine the two operations. For better
atomicity, we add a spinlock to the nfs4_stid and hold that when bumping
the seqid and copying the stateid.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:33 -04:00
Jeff Layton cc8a55320b nfsd: serialize layout stateid morphing operations
In order to allow the client to make a sane determination of what
happened with racing LAYOUTGET/LAYOUTRETURN/CB_LAYOUTRECALL calls, we
must ensure that the seqids return accurately represent the order of
operations. The simplest way to do that is to ensure that operations on
a single stateid are serialized.

This patch adds a mutex to the layout stateid, and locks it when
checking the layout stateid's seqid. The mutex is held over the entire
operation and released after the seqid is bumped.

Note that in the case of CB_LAYOUTRECALL we must move the increment of
the seqid and setting into a new cb "prepare" operation. The lease
infrastructure will call the lm_break callback with a spinlock held, so
and we can't take the mutex in that codepath.

Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:32 -04:00
J. Bruce Fields 4eaea13425 nfsd: improve client_has_state to check for unused openowners
At least in the v4.0 case openowners can hang around for a while after
last close, but they shouldn't really block (for example), a new mount
with a different principal.

Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:31 -04:00
J. Bruce Fields 2b63482185 nfsd: fix clid_inuse on mount with security change
In bakeathon testing Solaris client was getting CLID_INUSE error when
doing a krb5 mount soon after an auth_sys mount, or vice versa.

That's not really necessary since in this case the old client doesn't
have any state any more:

	http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7530#page-103

	"when the server gets a SETCLIENTID for a client ID that
	currently has no state, or it has state but the lease has
	expired, rather than returning NFS4ERR_CLID_INUSE, the server
	MUST allow the SETCLIENTID and confirm the new client ID if
	followed by the appropriate SETCLIENTID_CONFIRM."

This doesn't fix the problem completely since our client_has_state()
check counts openowners left around to handle close replays, which we
should probably just remove in this case.

Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:30 -04:00
Jeff Layton 825213e59e nfsd: move include of state.h from trace.c to trace.h
Any file which includes trace.h will need to include state.h, even if
they aren't using any state tracepoints. Ensure that we include any
headers that might be needed in trace.h instead of relying on the
*.c files to have the right ones.

Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:29 -04:00
Andrey Ryabinin 0d0f4aab4e lockd: get rid of reference-counted NSM RPC clients
Currently we have reference-counted per-net NSM RPC client
which created on the first monitor request and destroyed
after the last unmonitor request. It's needed because
RPC client need to know 'utsname()->nodename', but utsname()
might be NULL when nsm_unmonitor() called.

So instead of holding the rpc client we could just save nodename
in struct nlm_host and pass it to the rpc_create().
Thus ther is no need in keeping rpc client until last
unmonitor request. We could create separate RPC clients
for each monitor/unmonitor requests.

Signed-off-by: Andrey Ryabinin <aryabinin@virtuozzo.com>
Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
2015-10-23 15:57:27 -04:00
Joseph Qi b67de018b3 ocfs2/dlm: unlock lockres spinlock before dlm_lockres_put
dlm_lockres_put will call dlm_lockres_release if it is the last
reference, and then it may call dlm_print_one_lock_resource and
take lockres spinlock.

So unlock lockres spinlock before dlm_lockres_put to avoid deadlock.

Signed-off-by: Joseph Qi <joseph.qi@huawei.com>
Cc: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.de>
Cc: Joel Becker <jlbec@evilplan.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2015-10-23 17:55:10 +09:00
Benjamin Coddington 616fb38fa7 locks: cleanup posix_lock_inode_wait and flock_lock_inode_wait
All callers use locks_lock_inode_wait() instead.

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Coddington <bcodding@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
2015-10-22 14:57:42 -04:00
Benjamin Coddington 4f6563677a Move locks API users to locks_lock_inode_wait()
Instead of having users check for FL_POSIX or FL_FLOCK to call the correct
locks API function, use the check within locks_lock_inode_wait().  This
allows for some later cleanup.

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Coddington <bcodding@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
2015-10-22 14:57:36 -04:00
Benjamin Coddington e55c34a66f locks: introduce locks_lock_inode_wait()
Users of the locks API commonly call either posix_lock_file_wait() or
flock_lock_file_wait() depending upon the lock type.  Add a new function
locks_lock_inode_wait() which will check and call the correct function for
the type of lock passed in.

Signed-off-by: Benjamin Coddington <bcodding@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jeff.layton@primarydata.com>
2015-10-22 14:57:20 -04:00
Geliang Tang 7e26e9ff0a pstore: Fix return type of pstore_is_mounted()
This patch changes return type of pstore_is_mounted from int to bool.

Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Acked-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
2015-10-22 10:57:33 -07:00
Chao Yu beaa57dd98 f2fs: fix to skip shrinking extent nodes
In f2fs_shrink_extent_tree we should stop shrink flow if we have already
shrunk enough nodes in extent cache.

Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao2.yu@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-22 09:39:35 -07:00
Chao Yu a6be014e1d f2fs: fix error path of ->symlink
Now, in ->symlink of f2fs, we kept the fixed invoking order between
f2fs_add_link and page_symlink since we should init node info firstly
in f2fs_add_link, then such node info can be used in page_symlink.

But we didn't fix to release meta info which was done before page_symlink
in our error path, so this will leave us corrupt symlink entry in its
parent's dentry page. Fix this issue by adding f2fs_unlink in the error
path for removing such linking.

Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao2.yu@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-22 09:39:24 -07:00
Chao Yu 7fee740697 f2fs: fix to clear GCed flag for atomic written page
Atomic write page can be GCed, after committing this kind of page, we should
clear the GCed flag for it.

Signed-off-by: Chao Yu <chao2.yu@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-22 09:37:13 -07:00
Geliang Tang ee1d267423 pstore: add pstore unregister
pstore doesn't support unregistering yet. It was marked as TODO.
This patch adds some code to fix it:
 1) Add functions to unregister kmsg/console/ftrace/pmsg.
 2) Add a function to free compression buffer.
 3) Unmap the memory and free it.
 4) Add a function to unregister pstore filesystem.

Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Acked-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
[Removed __exit annotation from ramoops_remove(). Reported by Arnd Bergmann]
Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
2015-10-22 08:59:18 -07:00
Jaegeuk Kim 2b246fb0f6 f2fs: don't need to submit bio on error case
If commit_atomic_write is failed, we don't need to submit any bio.

Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-21 19:05:53 -07:00
Jaegeuk Kim d7b8b384b0 f2fs: fix leakage of inmemory atomic pages
If we got failure during commit_atomic_write, abort_volatile_write will be
called, but will not drop the inmemory pages due to no FI_ATOMIC_FILE.
Actually, there is no reason to check the flag in abort_volatile_write.

Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-21 19:04:17 -07:00
Chris Mason a9e6d15356 Merge branch 'allocator-fixes' into for-linus-4.4
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 19:00:38 -07:00
Josef Bacik 0584f718ed Btrfs: don't do extra bitmap search in one bit case
When we make ctl->unit allocations from a bitmap there is no point in searching
for the next 0 in the bitmap.  If we've found a bit we're done and can just exit
the loop.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:41 -07:00
Josef Bacik cef4048370 Btrfs: keep track of largest extent in bitmaps
We can waste a lot of time searching through bitmaps when we are heavily
fragmented trying to find large contiguous areas that don't exist in the bitmap.
So keep track of the max extent size when we do a full search of a bitmap so
that next time around we can just skip the expensive searching if our max size
is less than what we are looking for.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:40 -07:00
Josef Bacik c759c4e161 Btrfs: don't keep trying to build clusters if we are fragmented
If we are extremely fragmented then we won't be able to create a free_cluster.
So if this happens set last_ptr->fragmented so that all future allcations will
give up trying to create a cluster.  When we unpin extents we will unset
->fragmented if we free up a sufficient amount of space in a block group.
Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:39 -07:00
Josef Bacik a5e681d9bd Btrfs: cut down on loops through the allocator
We try really really hard to make allocations, but sometimes it is just not
going to happen, especially when free space is extremely fragmented.  So add a
few short cuts through the looping states.  For example if we couldn't allocate
a chunk, just go straight to the NO_EMPTY_SIZE loop.  If there are no uncached
block groups and we've done a full search, go straight to the ALLOC_CHUNK stage.
And finally if we already have empty_size and empty_cluster set to 0 go ahead
and return -ENOSPC.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:37 -07:00
Josef Bacik 2968b1f48b Btrfs: don't continue setting up space cache when enospc
If we hit ENOSPC when setting up a space cache don't bother setting up any of
the other space cache's in this transaction, it'll just induce unnecessary
latency.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:36 -07:00
Josef Bacik 4f4db2174d Btrfs: keep track of max_extent_size per space_info
When we are heavily fragmented we can induce a lot of latency trying to make an
allocation happen that is simply not going to happen.  Thankfully we keep track
of our max_extent_size when going through the allocator, so if we get to the
point where we are exiting find_free_extent with ENOSPC then set our
space_info->max_extent_size so we can keep future allocations from having to pay
this cost.  We reset the max_extent_size whenever we release pinned bytes back
into this space info so we can redo all the work.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:55:19 -07:00
Josef Bacik 36af4e0737 Btrfs: don't loop in allocator for space cache
The space cache needs to have contiguous allocations, and the allocator tries to
make allocations by reducing the amount of bytes requested and re-searching.
But this just makes us waste time when we are very fragmented, so if we can't
find our space just exit, don't bother trying to search again.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:46 -07:00
Josef Bacik 3204d33cda Btrfs: add a flags field to btrfs_transaction
I want to set some per transaction flags, so instead of adding yet another int
lets just convert the current two int indicators to flags and add a flags field
for future use.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:45 -07:00
Josef Bacik 0b670dc44c Btrfs: fix prealloc under heavy fragmentation conditions
If we are heavily fragmented we will continually try to prealloc the largest
extent size we can every time we call btrfs_reserve_extent.  This can be very
expensive when we are heavily fragmented, burning lots of CPU cycles and loops
through the allocator.  So instead notice when we get a smaller chunk from the
allocator than what we specified and use this as the new maximum size we try to
allocate.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:44 -07:00
Josef Bacik d0bd456074 Btrfs: add fragment=* debug mount option
In tracking down these weird bitmap problems it was helpful to artificially
create an extremely fragmented file system.  These mount options let us either
fragment data or metadata or both.  With these options I could reproduce all
sorts of weird latencies and hangs that occur under extreme fragmentation and
get them fixed.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:43 -07:00
Josef Bacik d9ee522ba3 Btrfs: fix qgroup sanity tests
With my changes to allow us to find old roots when resolving indirect refs I
introduced a regression to the sanity tests.  Since we don't really care to go
down into the fs roots we just need to have the old behavior of returning ENOENT
for dummy roots for the sanity tests.  In the future if we want to get fancy we
can populate the test fs trees with the references as well.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:41 -07:00
Josef Bacik 161c3549b4 Btrfs: change how we wait for pending ordered extents
We have a mechanism to make sure we don't lose updates for ordered extents that
were logged in the transaction that is currently running.  We add the ordered
extent to a transaction list and then the transaction waits on all the ordered
extents in that list.  However are substantially large file systems this list
can be extremely large, and can give us soft lockups, since the ordered extents
don't remove themselves from the list when they do complete.

To fix this we simply add a counter to the transaction that is incremented any
time we have a logged extent that needs to be completed in the current
transaction.  Then when the ordered extent finally completes it decrements the
per transaction counter and wakes up the transaction if we are the last ones.
This will eliminate the softlockup.  Thanks,

Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <jbacik@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:51:40 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 56fa9d0762 btrfs: qgroup: Check if qgroup reserved space leaked
Add check at btrfs_destroy_inode() time to detect qgroup reserved space
leak.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:10 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 51773bec7e btrfs: qgroup: Avoid calling btrfs_free_reserved_data_space in clear_bit_hook
In clear_bit_hook, qgroup reserved data is already handled quite well,
either released by finish_ordered_io or invalidatepage.

So calling btrfs_qgroup_free_data() here is completely meaningless, and
since btrfs_qgroup_free_data() will lock io_tree, so it can't be called
with io_tree lock hold.

This patch will add a new function
btrfs_free_reserved_data_space_noquota() for clear_bit_hook() to cease
the lockdep warning.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:09 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 14524a846e btrfs: fallocate: Add support to accurate qgroup reserve
Now fallocate will do accurate qgroup reserve space check, unlike old
method, which will always reserve the whole length of the range.

With this patch, fallocate will:
1) Iterate the desired range and mark in data rsv map
   Only range which is going to be allocated will be recorded in data
   rsv map and reserve the space.
   For already allocated range (normal/prealloc extent) they will be
   skipped.
   Also, record the marked range into a new list for later use.

2) If 1) succeeded, do real file extent allocate.
   And at file extent allocation time, corresponding range will be
   removed from the range in data rsv map.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:09 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 81fb6f77a0 btrfs: qgroup: Add new trace point for qgroup data reserve
Now each qgroup reserve for data will has its ftrace event for better
debugging.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:08 -07:00
Qu Wenruo b9d0b38928 btrfs: Add handler for invalidate page
For btrfs_invalidatepage() and its variant evict_inode_truncate_page(),
there will be pages don't reach disk.
In that case, their reserved space won't be release nor freed by
finish_ordered_io() nor delayed_ref handler.

So we must free their qgroup reserved space, or we will leaking reserved
space again.

So this will patch will call btrfs_qgroup_free_data() for
invalidatepage() and its variant evict_inode_truncate_page().

And due to the nature of new btrfs_qgroup_reserve/free_data() reserved
space will only be reserved or freed once, so for pages which are
already flushed to disk, their reserved space will be released and freed
by delayed_ref handler.

Double free won't be a problem.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:07 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 94ed938aba btrfs: qgroup: Add handler for NOCOW and inline
For NOCOW and inline case, there will be no delayed_ref created for
them, so we should free their reserved data space at proper
time(finish_ordered_io for NOCOW and cow_file_inline for inline).

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:07 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 7cf5b97650 btrfs: qgroup: Cleanup old inaccurate facilities
Cleanup the old facilities which use old btrfs_qgroup_reserve() function
call, replace them with the newer version, and remove the "__" prefix in
them.

Also, make btrfs_qgroup_reserve/free() functions private, as they are
now only used inside qgroup codes.

Now, the whole btrfs qgroup is swithed to use the new reserve facilities.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:06 -07:00
Qu Wenruo df480633b8 btrfs: extent-tree: Switch to new delalloc space reserve and release
Use new __btrfs_delalloc_reserve_space() and
__btrfs_delalloc_release_space() to reserve and release space for
delalloc.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:05 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 1ada3a62b5 btrfs: extent-tree: Add new version of btrfs_delalloc_reserve/release_space
Add new version of btrfs_delalloc_reserve_space() and
btrfs_delalloc_release_space() functions, which supports accurate qgroup
reserve.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:05 -07:00
Qu Wenruo d9d8b2a51a btrfs: extent-tree: Switch to new check_data_free_space and free_reserved_data_space
Use new reserve/free for buffered write and inode cache.

For buffered write case, as nodatacow write won't increase quota account,
so unlike old behavior which does reserve before check nocow, now we
check nocow first and then only reserve data if we can't do nocow write.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:04 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 4ceff0792d btrfs: extent-tree: Add new version of btrfs_check_data_free_space and btrfs_free_reserved_data_space.
Add new functions __btrfs_check_data_free_space() and
__btrfs_free_reserved_data_space() to work with new accurate qgroup
reserved space framework.

The new function will replace old btrfs_check_data_free_space() and
btrfs_free_reserved_data_space() respectively, but until all the change
is done, let's just use the new name.

Also, export internal use function btrfs_alloc_data_chunk_ondemand(), as
now qgroup reserve requires precious bytes, some operation can't get the
accurate number in advance(like fallocate).
But data space info check and data chunk allocate doesn't need to be
that accurate, and can be called at the beginning.

So export it for later operations.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:41:03 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 7174109c65 btrfs: qgroup: Use new metadata reservation.
As we have the new metadata reservation functions, use them to replace
the old btrfs_qgroup_reserve() call for metadata.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:40:40 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 55eeaf0578 btrfs: qgroup: Introduce new functions to reserve/free metadata
Introduce new functions btrfs_qgroup_reserve/free_meta() to reserve/free
metadata reserved space.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:47 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 297d750b9f btrfs: delayed_ref: release and free qgroup reserved at proper timing
Qgroup reserved space needs to be released from inode dirty map and get
freed at different timing:

1) Release when the metadata is written into tree
After corresponding metadata is written into tree, any newer write will
be COWed(don't include NOCOW case yet).
So we must release its range from inode dirty range map, or we will
forget to reserve needed range, causing accounting exceeding the limit.

2) Free reserved bytes when delayed ref is run
When delayed refs are run, qgroup accounting will follow soon and turn
the reserved bytes into rfer/excl numbers.
As run_delayed_refs and qgroup accounting are all done at
commit_transaction() time, we are safe to free reserved space in
run_delayed_ref time().

With these timing to release/free reserved space, we should be able to
resolve the long existing qgroup reserve space leak problem.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:47 -07:00
Qu Wenruo f64d5ca868 btrfs: delayed_ref: Add new function to record reserved space into delayed ref
Add new function btrfs_add_delayed_qgroup_reserve() function to record
how much space is reserved for that extent.

As btrfs only accounts qgroup at run_delayed_refs() time, so newly
allocated extent should keep the reserved space until then.

So add needed function with related members to do it.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:46 -07:00
Qu Wenruo f695fdcef8 btrfs: qgroup: Introduce functions to release/free qgroup reserve data
space

Introduce functions btrfs_qgroup_release/free_data() to release/free
reserved data range.

Release means, just remove the data range from io_tree, but doesn't
free the reserved space.
This is for normal buffered write case, when data is written into disc
and its metadata is added into tree, its reserved space should still be
kept until commit_trans().
So in that case, we only release dirty range, but keep the reserved
space recorded some other place until commit_tran().

Free means not only remove data range, but also free reserved space.
This is used for case for cleanup and invalidate page.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:46 -07:00
Qu Wenruo 5247255370 btrfs: qgroup: Introduce btrfs_qgroup_reserve_data function
Introduce a new function, btrfs_qgroup_reserve_data(), which will use
io_tree to accurate qgroup reserve, to avoid reserved space leaking.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:45 -07:00
Qu Wenruo fefdc55702 btrfs: extent_io: Introduce new function clear_record_extent_bits()
Introduce new function clear_record_extent_bits(), which will clear bits
for given range and record the details about which ranges are cleared
and how many bytes in total it changes.

This provides the basis for later qgroup reserve codes.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:44 -07:00
Qu Wenruo d38ed27f04 btrfs: extent_io: Introduce new function set_record_extent_bits
Introduce new function set_record_extent_bits(), which will not only set
given bits, but also record how many bytes are changed, and detailed
range info.

This is quite important for later qgroup reserve framework.
The number of bytes will be used to do qgroup reserve, and detailed
range info will be used to cleanup for EQUOT case.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:44 -07:00
Qu Wenruo ac46777213 btrfs: extent_io: Introduce needed structure for recoding set/clear bits
Add a new structure, extent_change_set, to record how many bytes are
changed in one set/clear_extent_bits() operation, with detailed changed
ranges info.

This provides the needed facilities for later qgroup reserve framework.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:37:43 -07:00
Chris Mason a408365c62 Merge branch 'integration-4.4' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/fdmanana/linux into for-linus-4.4 2015-10-21 18:23:59 -07:00
Chris Mason a0d58e48db Merge branch 'cleanups/for-4.4' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kdave/linux into for-linus-4.4 2015-10-21 18:21:40 -07:00
Christian Engelmayer 0f89abf56a btrfs: fix possible leak in btrfs_ioctl_balance()
Commit 8eb934591f ("btrfs: check unsupported filters in balance
arguments") adds a jump to exit label out_bargs in case the argument
check fails. At this point in addition to the bargs memory, the
memory for struct btrfs_balance_control has already been allocated.
Ownership of bctl is passed to btrfs_balance() in the good case,
thus the memory is not freed due to the introduced jump. Make sure
that the memory gets freed in any case as necessary. Detected by
Coverity CID 1328378.

Signed-off-by: Christian Engelmayer <cengelma@gmx.at>
Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-21 18:10:02 -07:00
Jaegeuk Kim f96999c35f f2fs: refactor __find_rev_next_{zero}_bit
This patch refactors __find_rev_next_{zero}_bit which was disabled previously
due to bugs.

Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-21 15:26:00 -07:00
Trond Myklebust a85240d254 Merge branch 'bugfixes'
* bugfixes:
  NFSv4.1/pnfs: Retry through MDS when getting bad length of data
  nfs/blocklayout: Fix bad using of page offset in bl_read_pagelist
  NFS: Return directly if encode_sessionid fail
  NFS: Fix bad checking of max taglen in callback request
  NFS: Fix bad defines of callback response maxsize
  NFS: Use NFS4_MAX_SESSIONID_LEN directly for decode/encode sessionid
  NFS: Remove unneeded NFS_DEBUG checking before define NFSDBG_FACILITY
  NFS: Remove the left function defines in callback.h
  NFS: Remove the left global variable nfs_callback_tcpport
  NFS: Get rid of the unneeded addr stored in callback arguments
  nfsroot: make nfsroot to accept the 1024 bytes long directory name
2015-10-21 16:07:21 -05:00
Kinglong Mee f8417b481c NFSv4.1/pnfs: Retry through MDS when getting bad length of data
If non rpc-based layout driver return bad length of data, nfs retries
by calling rpc_restart_call_prepare() that cause an NULL reference panic.

This patch lets nfs retry through MDS for non rpc-based layout driver
return bad length of data.

[13034.883329] BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at           (null)
[13034.884902] IP: [<ffffffffa00db372>] rpc_restart_call_prepare+0x62/0x90 [sunrpc]
[13034.886558] PGD 0
[13034.888126] Oops: 0000 [#1] KASAN
[13034.889710] Modules linked in: blocklayoutdriver(OE) nfsv4(OE) nfs(OE) fscache(E) nfsd(OE) xfs libcrc32c coretemp btrfs crct10dif_pclmul crc32_pclmul crc32c_intel ghash_clmulni_intel ppdev vmw_balloon auth_rpcgss shpchp nfs_acl lockd vmw_vmci parport_pc xor raid6_pq grace parport sunrpc i2c_piix4 vmwgfx drm_kms_helper ttm drm mptspi e1000 serio_raw scsi_transport_spi mptscsih mptbase ata_generic pata_acpi [last unloaded: fscache]
[13034.898260] CPU: 0 PID: 10112 Comm: kworker/0:1 Tainted: G           OE   4.3.0-rc5+ #279
[13034.899932] Hardware name: VMware, Inc. VMware Virtual Platform/440BX Desktop Reference Platform, BIOS 6.00 07/02/2015
[13034.903342] Workqueue: events bl_read_cleanup [blocklayoutdriver]
[13034.905059] task: ffff88006a9148c0 ti: ffff880035e90000 task.ti: ffff880035e90000
[13034.906827] RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa00db372>]  [<ffffffffa00db372>] rpc_restart_call_prepare+0x62/0x90 [sunrpc]
[13034.910522] RSP: 0018:ffff880035e97b58  EFLAGS: 00010282
[13034.912378] RAX: fffffbfff04a5a94 RBX: ffff880068fe4858 RCX: 0000000000000003
[13034.914339] RDX: dffffc0000000000 RSI: 0000000000000003 RDI: 0000000000000282
[13034.916236] RBP: ffff880035e97b68 R08: 0000000000000001 R09: 0000000000000001
[13034.918229] R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000001 R12: 0000000000000000
[13034.920007] R13: ffff880068fe4858 R14: ffff880068fe4a60 R15: 0000000000001000
[13034.921845] FS:  0000000000000000(0000) GS:ffffffff82247000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
[13034.923645] CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033
[13034.925525] CR2: 0000000000000000 CR3: 00000000063dd000 CR4: 00000000001406f0
[13034.932808] Stack:
[13034.934813]  ffff880068fe4780 0000000000001000 ffff880035e97ba8 ffffffffa08800d2
[13034.936675]  ffffffffa088029d ffff880068fe4780 ffff880068fe4858 ffffffffa089c0a0
[13034.938593]  ffff880068fe47e0 ffff88005d59faf0 ffff880035e97be0 ffffffffa087e08f
[13034.940454] Call Trace:
[13034.942388]  [<ffffffffa08800d2>] nfs_readpage_result+0x112/0x200 [nfs]
[13034.944317]  [<ffffffffa088029d>] ? nfs_readpage_done+0xdd/0x160 [nfs]
[13034.946267]  [<ffffffffa087e08f>] nfs_pgio_result+0x9f/0x120 [nfs]
[13034.948166]  [<ffffffffa09266cc>] pnfs_ld_read_done+0x7c/0x1e0 [nfsv4]
[13034.950247]  [<ffffffffa03b07ee>] bl_read_cleanup+0x2e/0x60 [blocklayoutdriver]
[13034.952156]  [<ffffffff810ebf62>] process_one_work+0x412/0x870
[13034.954102]  [<ffffffff810ebe84>] ? process_one_work+0x334/0x870
[13034.955949]  [<ffffffff810ebb50>] ? queue_delayed_work_on+0x40/0x40
[13034.957985]  [<ffffffff810ec441>] worker_thread+0x81/0x6a0
[13034.959817]  [<ffffffff810ec3c0>] ? process_one_work+0x870/0x870
[13034.961785]  [<ffffffff810f43bd>] kthread+0x17d/0x1a0
[13034.963544]  [<ffffffff810f4240>] ? kthread_create_on_node+0x330/0x330
[13034.965479]  [<ffffffff81100428>] ? finish_task_switch+0x88/0x220
[13034.967223]  [<ffffffff810f4240>] ? kthread_create_on_node+0x330/0x330
[13034.968929]  [<ffffffff81b6ae5f>] ret_from_fork+0x3f/0x70
[13034.970534]  [<ffffffff810f4240>] ? kthread_create_on_node+0x330/0x330
[13034.972176] Code: c7 43 50 40 84 0d a0 e8 3d fe 1c e1 48 8d 7b 58 c7 83 e4 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 e8 ca fe 1c e1 4c 8b 63 58 4c 89 e7 e8 be fe 1c e1 <49> 83 3c 24 00 74 12 48 c7 43 50 f0 a2 0e a0 b8 01 00 00 00 5b
[13034.977148] RIP  [<ffffffffa00db372>] rpc_restart_call_prepare+0x62/0x90 [sunrpc]
[13034.978780]  RSP <ffff880035e97b58>
[13034.980399] CR2: 0000000000000000

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:55:47 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 15ae2c7bdc nfs/blocklayout: Fix bad using of page offset in bl_read_pagelist
Blocklayout uses file offset for the read-back page's offset of first writing,
it's definitely wrong, it writes data to bad address of page that cause userspace
application segment fault. It must be the page base stored in header->args.pgbase.

Also, the pg_offset has no influence with isect and extent length.

Note: The offset of the non-first page is always zero.

Ps: A test program will segment fault at read() as,
#define _GNU_SOURCE

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>

int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
        char buf[2049];
        char *filename = NULL;
        int fd = -1;

        if (argc < 2) {
                printf("Usage: %s filename\n", argv[0]);
                return 0;
        }

        filename = argv[1];
        fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY | O_DIRECT);
        if (fd < 0) {
                printf("Open %s fail: %m\n", filename);
                return 1;
        }

        lseek(fd, 2048, SEEK_SET);
        if (read(fd, buf, sizeof(buf) - 1) != (sizeof(buf) - 1))
                printf("Read 4096 bityes data from %s fail: %m\n", filename);
out:
        close(fd);
        return 0;
}

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:55:47 -05:00
Kinglong Mee e0a63c0bfc NFS: Return directly if encode_sessionid fail
encode_sessionid() may return error, nfs needs process the return value.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:23 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 403889c039 NFS: Fix bad checking of max taglen in callback request
The taglen should be checked with CB_OP_TAGLEN_MAXSZ directly.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:23 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 45724e8a5b NFS: Fix bad defines of callback response maxsize
As CB_OP_TAGLEN_MAXSZ, all XXX_MAXSZ should be defined as bit.
Each operation should not cantains CB_OP_TAGLEN_MAXSZ.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:23 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 590184a6ce NFS: Use NFS4_MAX_SESSIONID_LEN directly for decode/encode sessionid
It's no need to define a temporary variables for NFS4_MAX_SESSIONID_LEN.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:23 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 39de493e88 NFS: Remove unneeded NFS_DEBUG checking before define NFSDBG_FACILITY
It's not needed to checking NFS_DEBUG before define NFSDBG_FACILITY, remove it.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:23 -05:00
Kinglong Mee f765bf762b NFS: Remove the left function defines in callback.h
Commit 778be232a2 "NFS do not find client in NFSv4 pg_authenticate" has remove
the define and using of nfs4_set_callback_sessionid(), and
commit 36281caa83 "NFSv4: Further clean-ups of delegation stateid validation"
has update the checking of stateid, and move the code to nfs4proc.c.

This patch remove those function defines left in callback.h

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:22 -05:00
Kinglong Mee 8c163d8e5a NFS: Remove the left global variable nfs_callback_tcpport
Commit bbe0a3aa4e "NFS: make nfs_callback_tcpport per network context" has
make nfs_callback_tcpport per network, but left the global nfs_callback_tcpport,
remove it.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:22 -05:00
Kinglong Mee d4e2ce0961 NFS: Get rid of the unneeded addr stored in callback arguments
Commit c36fca52f5 "NFS refactor nfs_find_client and reference client
across callback processing" has store clp in cb_process_state
which is set in cb_sequence.

So that, it's unneeded to store address pointer in any callback arguments.

Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <kinglongmee@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:22 -05:00
Li RongQing c646619355 nfsroot: make nfsroot to accept the 1024 bytes long directory name
although NFS_MAXPATHLEN is defined to 1024, nfs client hopes to accept
a 1024 byte path, but nfs_root_parms is limited to 256, and the nfs path
will truncated when a user inputs nfs path from kernel cmdline

enlarge nfs_root_parms to 1024, to make it accept the 1024 bytes long
directory name, since nfs_root_parms is defined as _initdata, it will
be released after system bootup

Signed-off-by: Li RongQing <roy.qing.li@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@primarydata.com>
2015-10-21 15:49:19 -05:00
Martin K. Petersen 25520d55cd block: Inline blk_integrity in struct gendisk
Up until now the_integrity profile has been dynamically allocated and
attached to struct gendisk after the disk has been made active.

This causes problems because NVMe devices need to register the profile
prior to the partition table being read due to a mandatory metadata
buffer requirement. In addition, DM goes through hoops to deal with
preallocating, but not initializing integrity profiles.

Since the integrity profile is small (4 bytes + a pointer), Christoph
suggested moving it to struct gendisk proper. This requires several
changes:

 - Moving the blk_integrity definition to genhd.h.

 - Inlining blk_integrity in struct gendisk.

 - Removing the dynamic allocation code.

 - Adding helper functions which allow gendisk to set up and tear down
   the integrity sysfs dir when a disk is added/deleted.

 - Adding a blk_integrity_revalidate() callback for updating the stable
   pages bdi setting.

 - The calls that depend on whether a device has an integrity profile or
   not now key off of the bi->profile pointer.

 - Simplifying the integrity support routines in DM (Mike Snitzer).

Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
Reported-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagig@mellanox.com>
Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
Cc: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@fb.com>
2015-10-21 14:42:42 -06:00
Trond Myklebust 51e0164ebe Merge branch 'nfsclone'
* nfsclone:
  nfs: add missing linux/types.h
  NFS: Fix an 'unused variable' complaint when #ifndef CONFIG_NFS_V4_2
  nfs42: add NFS_IOC_CLONE_RANGE ioctl
  nfs42: respect clone_blksize
  nfs: get clone_blksize when probing fsinfo
  nfs42: add NFS_IOC_CLONE ioctl
  nfs42: add CLONE proc functions
  nfs42: add CLONE xdr functions
2015-10-21 15:42:20 -05:00
Luis de Bethencourt ddd664f447 btrfs: reada: Fix returned errno code
reada is using -1 instead of the -ENOMEM defined macro to specify that
a buffer allocation failed. Since the error number is propagated, the
caller will get a -EPERM which is the wrong error condition.

Also, updating the caller to return the exact value from
reada_add_block.

Smatch tool warning:
reada_add_block() warn: returning -1 instead of -ENOMEM is sloppy

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Luis de Bethencourt <luisbg@osg.samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:29:50 +02:00
Luis de Bethencourt 0b8d8ce029 btrfs: check-integrity: Fix returned errno codes
check-integrity is using -1 instead of the -ENOMEM defined macro to
specify that a buffer allocation failed. Since the error number is
propagated, the caller will get a -EPERM which is the wrong error
condition.

Also, the smatch tool complains with the following warnings:
btrfsic_process_superblock() warn: returning -1 instead of -ENOMEM is sloppy
btrfsic_read_block() warn: returning -1 instead of -ENOMEM is sloppy

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Luis de Bethencourt <luisbg@osg.samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:29:44 +02:00
Byongho Lee d91876496b btrfs: compress: put variables defined per compress type in struct to make cache friendly
Below variables are defined per compress type.
 - struct list_head comp_idle_workspace[BTRFS_COMPRESS_TYPES]
 - spinlock_t comp_workspace_lock[BTRFS_COMPRESS_TYPES]
 - int comp_num_workspace[BTRFS_COMPRESS_TYPES]
 - atomic_t comp_alloc_workspace[BTRFS_COMPRESS_TYPES]
 - wait_queue_head_t comp_workspace_wait[BTRFS_COMPRESS_TYPES]

BTW, while accessing one compress type of these variables, the next or
before address is other compress types of it.
So this patch puts these variables in a struct to make cache friendly.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Byongho Lee <bhlee.kernel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Byongho Lee 619ed39242 btrfs: cleanup iterating over prop_handlers array
This patch eliminates the last item of prop_handlers array which is used
to check end of array and instead uses ARRAY_SIZE macro.
Though this is a very tiny optimization, using ARRAY_SIZE macro is a
good practice to iterate array.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Byongho Lee <bhlee.kernel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Geliang Tang 8cd1e73111 btrfs: fix a comment typo
Just fix a typo in the code comment.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise 6e4d6fa12c btrfs: declare rsv_count as unsigned int instead of int
rsv_count ultimately gets passed to start_transaction() which
now takes an unsigned int as its num_items parameter.
The value of rsv_count should always be positive so declare it
as being unsigned.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise 5aed1dd8b4 btrfs: change num_items type from u64 to unsigned int
The value of num_items that start_transaction() ultimately
always takes is a small one, so a 64 bit integer is overkill.

Also change num_items for btrfs_start_transaction() and
btrfs_start_transaction_lflush() as well.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise bdcd3c97d1 btrfs: cleanup btrfs_balance profile validity checks
Improve readability by generalizing the profile validity checks.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Shan Hai bb78915203 btrfs/file.c: remove an unsed varialbe first_index
The commit b37392ea86 ("Btrfs: cleanup unnecessary parameter
and variant of prepare_pages()") makes it redundant.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Shan Hai <haishan.bai@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Zhao Lei 9c170b2644 btrfs: use btrfs_raid_array in btrfs_reduce_alloc_profile
btrfs_raid_array[] holds attributes of all raid types.

Use btrfs_raid_array[].devs_min is best way for request
in btrfs_reduce_alloc_profile(), instead of use complex
condition of each raid types.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhao Lei <zhaolei@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Zhao Lei 8789f4fe60 btrfs: use btrfs_raid_array for btrfs_get_num_tolerated_disk_barrier_failures()
btrfs_raid_array[] is used to define all raid attributes, use it
to get tolerated_failures in btrfs_get_num_tolerated_disk_barrier_failures(),
instead of complex condition in function.

It can make code simple and auto-support other possible raid-type in
future.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhao Lei <zhaolei@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Zhao Lei af90204750 btrfs: Move btrfs_raid_array to public
This array is used to record attributes of each raid type,
make it public, and many functions will benifit with this array.

For example, num_tolerated_disk_barrier_failures(), we can
avoid complex conditions in this function, and get raid attribute
simply by accessing above array.

It can also make code logic simple, reduce duplication code, and
increase maintainability.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhao Lei <zhaolei@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise e9cf439f0d btrfs: use a single if() statement for one outcome in get_block_rsv()
Rather than have three separate if() statements for the same outcome
we should just OR them together in the same if() statement.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise a099d0fdb3 btrfs: memset cur_trans->delayed_refs to zero
Use memset() to null out the btrfs_delayed_ref_root of
btrfs_transaction instead of setting all the members to 0 by hand.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Byongho Lee 568b1c9cca btrfs: remove unnecessary list_del
We can safely iterate whole list items, without using list_del macro.
So remove the list_del call.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Byongho Lee <bhlee.kernel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Byongho Lee d7641a49a5 btrfs: replace unnecessary list_for_each_entry_safe to list_for_each_entry
There is no removing list element while iterating over list.
So, replace list_for_each_entry_safe to list_for_each_entry.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Byongho Lee <bhlee.kernel@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise f2f767e734 btrfs: trimming some start_transaction() code away
Just call kmem_cache_zalloc() instead of calling kmem_cache_alloc().
We're just initializing most fields to 0, false and NULL later on
_anyway_, so to make the code mode readable and potentially gain
a bit of performance (completely untested claim), we should fill our
btrfs_trans_handle with zeros on allocation then just initialize
those five remaining fields (not counting the list_heads) as normal.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise 0412e58c6d btrfs: Fixed declaration of old_len
old_len is used to store the return value of btrfs_item_size_nr().
The return value of btrfs_item_size_nr() is of type u32.
To improve code correctness and avoid mixing signed and unsigned
integers I've changed old_len to be of type u32 as well.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Alexandru Moise ce0eac2a1d btrfs: Fixed dsize and last_off declarations
The return values of btrfs_item_offset_nr and btrfs_item_size_nr are of
type u32. To avoid mixing signed and unsigned integers we should also
declare dsize and last_off to be of type u32.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Moise <00moses.alexander00@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:48 +02:00
Chandan Rajendra 0d51e28a11 Btrfs: btrfs_submit_bio_hook: Use btrfs_wq_endio_type values instead of integer constants
btrfs_submit_bio_hook() uses integer constants instead of values from "enum
btrfs_wq_endio_type". Fix this.

Reviewed-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Rajendra <chandan@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
2015-10-21 18:28:47 +02:00
Geliang Tang 1873041152 pstore: add a helper function pstore_register_kmsg
Add a new wrapper function pstore_register_kmsg to keep the
consistency with other similar pstore_register_* functions.

Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
2015-10-21 09:27:10 -07:00
Geliang Tang 549b39a9e7 pstore: add vmalloc error check
If vmalloc fails, make write_pmsg return -ENOMEM.

Signed-off-by: Geliang Tang <geliangtang@163.com>
Acked-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@intel.com>
2015-10-21 09:27:10 -07:00
David Howells 146aa8b145 KEYS: Merge the type-specific data with the payload data
Merge the type-specific data with the payload data into one four-word chunk
as it seems pointless to keep them separate.

Use user_key_payload() for accessing the payloads of overloaded
user-defined keys.

Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
cc: linux-cifs@vger.kernel.org
cc: ecryptfs@vger.kernel.org
cc: linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org
cc: linux-f2fs-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
cc: linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org
cc: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org
cc: linux-ima-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
2015-10-21 15:18:36 +01:00
Qu Wenruo 0f6925fa29 btrfs: Avoid truncate tailing page if fallocate range doesn't exceed inode size
Current code will always truncate tailing page if its alloc_start is
smaller than inode size.

For example, the file extent layout is like:
0	4K	8K	16K	32K
|<-----Extent A---------------->|
|<--Inode size: 18K---------->|

But if calling fallocate even for range [0,4K), it will cause btrfs to
re-truncate the range [16,32K), causing COW and a new extent.

0	4K	8K	16K	32K
|///////|	<- Fallocate call range
|<-----Extent A-------->|<--B-->|

The cause is quite easy, just a careless btrfs_truncate_inode() in a
else branch without extra judgment.
Fix it by add judgment on whether the fallocate range is beyond isize.

Signed-off-by: Qu Wenruo <quwenruo@cn.fujitsu.com>
Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <clm@fb.com>
2015-10-20 19:07:29 -07:00
Jaegeuk Kim 67f8cf3cee f2fs: support fiemap for inline_data
There is a FIEMAP_EXTENT_INLINE_DATA, pointed out by Marc.

Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <chao2.yu@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-20 11:33:21 -07:00
Jaegeuk Kim 1d373a0ef7 f2fs: flush dirty data for bmap
Users expect bmap will give allocated block addresses.
Let's play likewise ext4.

Reviewed-by: Chao Yu <chao2.yu@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Jaegeuk Kim <jaegeuk@kernel.org>
2015-10-20 11:33:11 -07:00
Ross Zwisler 5726b27b09 ext2: Add locking for DAX faults
Add locking to ensure that DAX faults are isolated from ext2 operations
that modify the data blocks allocation for an inode.  This is intended to
be analogous to the work being done in XFS by Dave Chinner:

http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-fsdevel/msg90260.html

Compared with XFS the ext2 case is greatly simplified by the fact that ext2
already allocates and zeros new blocks before they are returned as part of
ext2_get_block(), so DAX doesn't need to worry about getting unmapped or
unwritten buffer heads.

This means that the only work we need to do in ext2 is to isolate the DAX
faults from inode block allocation changes.  I believe this just means that
we need to isolate the DAX faults from truncate operations.

The newly introduced dax_sem is intended to replicate the protection
offered by i_mmaplock in XFS.  In addition to truncate the i_mmaplock also
protects XFS operations like hole punching, fallocate down, extent
manipulation IOCTLS like xfs_ioc_space() and extent swapping.  Truncate is
the only one of these operations supported by ext2.

Signed-off-by: Ross Zwisler <ross.zwisler@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.com>
2015-10-19 14:40:54 +02:00
John Stultz 16175039e6 ext4: fix abs() usage in ext4_mb_check_group_pa
The ext4_fsblk_t type is a long long, which should not be used
with abs(), as is done in ext4_mb_check_group_pa().

This patch modifies ext4_mb_check_group_pa() to use abs64()
instead.

Signed-off-by: John Stultz <john.stultz@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-19 00:01:05 -04:00
Dmitry Monakhov 1e381f60da ext4: do not allow journal_opts for fs w/o journal
It is appeared that we can pass journal related mount options and such options
be shown in /proc/mounts

Example:
#mkfs.ext4 -F /dev/vdb
#tune2fs -O ^has_journal /dev/vdb
#mount /dev/vdb /mnt/  -ocommit=20,journal_async_commit
#cat /proc/mounts  | grep /mnt
 /dev/vdb /mnt ext4 rw,relatime,journal_checksum,journal_async_commit,commit=20,data=ordered 0 0

But options:"journal_checksum,journal_async_commit,commit=20,data=ordered" has
nothing with reality because there is no journal at all.

This patch disallow following options for journalless configurations:
 - journal_checksum
 - journal_async_commit
 - commit=%ld
 - data={writeback,ordered,journal}

Signed-off-by: Dmitry Monakhov <dmonakhov@openvz.org>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Dilger <adilger@dilger.ca>
2015-10-18 23:50:26 -04:00
Dmitry Monakhov c93cf2d757 ext4: explicit mount options parsing cleanup
Currently MOPT_EXPLICIT treated as EXPLICIT_DELALLOC which may be changed
in future. Let's fix it now.

Signed-off-by: Dmitry Monakhov <dmonakhov@openvz.org>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-18 23:35:32 -04:00
Jarkko Sakkinen 37c1c04cca sysfs: added __compat_only_sysfs_link_entry_to_kobj()
Added a new function __compat_only_sysfs_link_group_to_kobj() that adds
a symlink from attribute or group to a kobject. This needed for
maintaining backwards compatibility with PPI attributes in the TPM
driver.

Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko.sakkinen@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Peter Huewe <peterhuewe@gmx.de>
2015-10-19 01:01:19 +02:00
Dave Chinner fcd8a399a9 Merge branch 'xfs-stats-fixes' into for-next 2015-10-19 09:03:30 +11:00
Dan Carpenter f9d460b341 xfs: fix an error code in xfs_fs_fill_super()
If alloc_percpu() fails, we accidentally return PTR_ERR(NULL), which
means success, but we intended to return -ENOMEM.

Fixes: 225e463558 ('xfs: per-filesystem stats in sysfs')
Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Bill O'Donnell <billodo@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-10-19 08:42:47 +11:00
Dave Chinner 985ef4dcf9 xfs: stats are no longer dependent on CONFIG_PROC_FS
So we need to fix the makefile to understand this, otherwise build
errors with CONFIG_PROC_FS=n occur.

Reported-and-tested-by: Jim Davis <jim.epost@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
2015-10-19 08:42:46 +11:00
Daeho Jeong 4327ba52af ext4, jbd2: ensure entering into panic after recording an error in superblock
If a EXT4 filesystem utilizes JBD2 journaling and an error occurs, the
journaling will be aborted first and the error number will be recorded
into JBD2 superblock and, finally, the system will enter into the
panic state in "errors=panic" option.  But, in the rare case, this
sequence is little twisted like the below figure and it will happen
that the system enters into panic state, which means the system reset
in mobile environment, before completion of recording an error in the
journal superblock. In this case, e2fsck cannot recognize that the
filesystem failure occurred in the previous run and the corruption
wouldn't be fixed.

Task A                        Task B
ext4_handle_error()
-> jbd2_journal_abort()
  -> __journal_abort_soft()
    -> __jbd2_journal_abort_hard()
    | -> journal->j_flags |= JBD2_ABORT;
    |
    |                         __ext4_abort()
    |                         -> jbd2_journal_abort()
    |                         | -> __journal_abort_soft()
    |                         |   -> if (journal->j_flags & JBD2_ABORT)
    |                         |           return;
    |                         -> panic()
    |
    -> jbd2_journal_update_sb_errno()

Tested-by: Hobin Woo <hobin.woo@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Daeho Jeong <daeho.jeong@samsung.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
2015-10-18 17:02:56 -04:00
Viresh Kumar c23fe83138 debugfs: Add debugfs_create_ulong()
Add debugfs_create_ulong() for the users of type 'unsigned long'. These
will be 32 bits long on a 32 bit machine and 64 bits long on a 64 bit
machine.

Signed-off-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-10-18 10:14:39 -07:00
Stephen Boyd 6713e8fb54 debugfs: Add read-only/write-only bool file ops
There aren't any read-only or write-only bool file ops, but there
is a caller of debugfs_create_bool() that calls it with mode
equal to 0400. This leads to the possibility of userspace
modifying the file, so let's use the newly created
debugfs_create_mode() helper here to fix this.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-10-17 22:09:03 -07:00
Stephen Boyd 6db6652abc debugfs: Add read-only/write-only size_t file ops
There aren't any read-only or write-only size_t file ops, but there
is a caller of debugfs_create_size_t() that calls it with mode
equal to 0400. This leads to the possibility of userspace
modifying the file, so let's use the newly created
debugfs_create_mode() helper here to fix this.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-10-17 22:09:03 -07:00
Stephen Boyd 82b7d4fb4e debugfs: Add read-only/write-only x64 file ops
There aren't any read-only or write-only x64 file ops, but there
is a caller of debugfs_create_x64() that calls it with mode equal
to S_IRUGO. This leads to the possibility of userspace modifying
the file, so let's use the newly created debugfs_create_mode()
helper here to fix this.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-10-17 22:09:03 -07:00
Stephen Boyd b97f679954 debugfs: Consolidate file mode checks in debugfs_create_*()
The code that creates debugfs file with different file ops based
on the file mode is duplicated in each debugfs_create_*() API.
Consolidate that code into debugfs_create_mode(), that takes
three file ops structures so that we don't have to keep
copy/pasting that logic.

Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org>
Reviewed-by: Viresh Kumar <viresh.kumar@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2015-10-17 22:09:03 -07:00
Andy Leiserson 904dad4742 [PATCH] fix calculation of meta_bg descriptor backups
"group" is the group where the backup will be placed, and is
initialized to zero in the declaration. This meant that backups for
meta_bg descriptors were erroneously written to the backup block group
descriptors in groups 1 and (desc_per_block-1).

Reproduction information:
  mke2fs -Fq -t ext4 -b 1024 -O ^resize_inode /tmp/foo.img 16G
  truncate -s 24G /tmp/foo.img
  losetup /dev/loop0 /tmp/foo.img
  mount /dev/loop0 /mnt
  resize2fs /dev/loop0
  umount /dev/loop0
  dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/loop0 bs=1024 count=2
  e2fsck -fy /dev/loop0
  losetup -d /dev/loop0

Signed-off-by: Andy Leiserson <andy@leiserson.org>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
2015-10-18 00:36:29 -04:00
Lukas Czerner 6934da9238 ext4: fix potential use after free in __ext4_journal_stop
There is a use-after-free possibility in __ext4_journal_stop() in the
case that we free the handle in the first jbd2_journal_stop() because
we're referencing handle->h_err afterwards. This was introduced in
9705acd63b and it is wrong. Fix it by
storing the handle->h_err value beforehand and avoid referencing
potentially freed handle.

Fixes: 9705acd63b
Signed-off-by: Lukas Czerner <lczerner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Andreas Dilger <adilger@dilger.ca>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
2015-10-17 22:57:06 -04:00
Jan Kara 33d14975e5 jbd2: fix checkpoint list cleanup
Unlike comments and expectation of callers journal_clean_one_cp_list()
returned 1 not only if it freed the transaction but also if it freed
some buffers in the transaction. That could make
__jbd2_journal_clean_checkpoint_list() skip processing
t_checkpoint_io_list and continue with processing the next transaction.
This is mostly a cosmetic issue since the only result is we can
sometimes free less memory than we could. But it's still worth fixing.
Fix journal_clean_one_cp_list() to return 1 only if the transaction was
really freed.

Fixes: 50849db32a
Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
2015-10-17 22:35:09 -04:00
Daeho Jeong 9c02ac9798 ext4: fix xfstest generic/269 double revoked buffer bug with bigalloc
When you repeatly execute xfstest generic/269 with bigalloc_1k option
enabled using the below command:

"./kvm-xfstests -c bigalloc_1k -m nodelalloc -C 1000 generic/269"

you can easily see the below bug message.

"JBD2 unexpected failure: jbd2_journal_revoke: !buffer_revoked(bh);"

This means that an already revoked buffer is erroneously revoked again
and it is caused by doing revoke for the buffer at the wrong position
in ext4_free_blocks(). We need to re-position the buffer revoke
procedure for an unspecified buffer after checking the cluster boundary
for bigalloc option. If not, some part of the cluster can be doubly
revoked.

Signed-off-by: Daeho Jeong <daeho.jeong@samsung.com>
2015-10-17 22:28:21 -04:00
Darrick J. Wong 9008a58e5d ext4: make the bitmap read routines return real error codes
Make the bitmap reaading routines return real error codes (EIO,
EFSCORRUPTED, EFSBADCRC) which can then be reflected back to
userspace for more precise diagnosis work.

In particular, this means that mballoc no longer claims that we're out
of memory if the block bitmaps become corrupt.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-17 21:33:24 -04:00
Darrick J. Wong 56316a0d28 jbd2: clean up feature test macros with predicate functions
Create separate predicate functions to test/set/clear feature flags,
thereby replacing the wordy old macros.  Furthermore, clean out the
places where we open-coded feature tests.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-17 16:18:45 -04:00
Darrick J. Wong e2b911c535 ext4: clean up feature test macros with predicate functions
Create separate predicate functions to test/set/clear feature flags,
thereby replacing the wordy old macros.  Furthermore, clean out the
places where we open-coded feature tests.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
2015-10-17 16:18:43 -04:00
Darrick J. Wong 6a797d2737 ext4: call out CRC and corruption errors with specific error codes
Instead of overloading EIO for CRC errors and corrupt structures,
return the same error codes that XFS returns for the same issues.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-17 16:16:04 -04:00
Darrick J. Wong 8c81bd8f58 ext4: store checksum seed in superblock
Allow the filesystem to store the metadata checksum seed in the
superblock and add an incompat feature to say that we're using it.
This enables tune2fs to change the UUID on a mounted metadata_csum
FS without having to (racy!) rewrite all disk metadata.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-17 16:16:02 -04:00
Theodore Ts'o 8b4953e13f ext4: reserve code points for the project quota feature
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
2015-10-17 16:15:18 -04:00
Filipe Manana 0305cd5f7f Btrfs: fix truncation of compressed and inlined extents
When truncating a file to a smaller size which consists of an inline
extent that is compressed, we did not discard (or made unusable) the
data between the new file size and the old file size, wasting metadata
space and allowing for the truncated data to be leaked and the data
corruption/loss mentioned below.
We were also not correctly decrementing the number of bytes used by the
inode, we were setting it to zero, giving a wrong report for callers of
the stat(2) syscall. The fsck tool also reported an error about a mismatch
between the nbytes of the file versus the real space used by the file.

Now because we weren't discarding the truncated region of the file, it
was possible for a caller of the clone ioctl to actually read the data
that was truncated, allowing for a security breach without requiring root
access to the system, using only standard filesystem operations. The
scenario is the following:

   1) User A creates a file which consists of an inline and compressed
      extent with a size of 2000 bytes - the file is not accessible to
      any other users (no read, write or execution permission for anyone
      else);

   2) The user truncates the file to a size of 1000 bytes;

   3) User A makes the file world readable;

   4) User B creates a file consisting of an inline extent of 2000 bytes;

   5) User B issues a clone operation from user A's file into its own
      file (using a length argument of 0, clone the whole range);

   6) User B now gets to see the 1000 bytes that user A truncated from
      its file before it made its file world readbale. User B also lost
      the bytes in the range [1000, 2000[ bytes from its own file, but
      that might be ok if his/her intention was reading stale data from
      user A that was never supposed to be public.

Note that this contrasts with the case where we truncate a file from 2000
bytes to 1000 bytes and then truncate it back from 1000 to 2000 bytes. In
this case reading any byte from the range [1000, 2000[ will return a value
of 0x00, instead of the original data.

This problem exists since the clone ioctl was added and happens both with
and without my recent data loss and file corruption fixes for the clone
ioctl (patch "Btrfs: fix file corruption and data loss after cloning
inline extents").

So fix this by truncating the compressed inline extents as we do for the
non-compressed case, which involves decompressing, if the data isn't already
in the page cache, compressing the truncated version of the extent, writing
the compressed content into the inline extent and then truncate it.

The following test case for fstests reproduces the problem. In order for
the test to pass both this fix and my previous fix for the clone ioctl
that forbids cloning a smaller inline extent into a larger one,
which is titled "Btrfs: fix file corruption and data loss after cloning
inline extents", are needed. Without that other fix the test fails in a
different way that does not leak the truncated data, instead part of
destination file gets replaced with zeroes (because the destination file
has a larger inline extent than the source).

  seq=`basename $0`
  seqres=$RESULT_DIR/$seq
  echo "QA output created by $seq"
  tmp=/tmp/$$
  status=1	# failure is the default!
  trap "_cleanup; exit \$status" 0 1 2 3 15

  _cleanup()
  {
      rm -f $tmp.*
  }

  # get standard environment, filters and checks
  . ./common/rc
  . ./common/filter

  # real QA test starts here
  _need_to_be_root
  _supported_fs btrfs
  _supported_os Linux
  _require_scratch
  _require_cloner

  rm -f $seqres.full

  _scratch_mkfs >>$seqres.full 2>&1
  _scratch_mount "-o compress"

  # Create our test files. File foo is going to be the source of a clone operation
  # and consists of a single inline extent with an uncompressed size of 512 bytes,
  # while file bar consists of a single inline extent with an uncompressed size of
  # 256 bytes. For our test's purpose, it's important that file bar has an inline
  # extent with a size smaller than foo's inline extent.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -f -c "pwrite -S 0xa1 0 128"   \
          -c "pwrite -S 0x2a 128 384" \
          $SCRATCH_MNT/foo | _filter_xfs_io
  $XFS_IO_PROG -f -c "pwrite -S 0xbb 0 256" $SCRATCH_MNT/bar | _filter_xfs_io

  # Now durably persist all metadata and data. We do this to make sure that we get
  # on disk an inline extent with a size of 512 bytes for file foo.
  sync

  # Now truncate our file foo to a smaller size. Because it consists of a
  # compressed and inline extent, btrfs did not shrink the inline extent to the
  # new size (if the extent was not compressed, btrfs would shrink it to 128
  # bytes), it only updates the inode's i_size to 128 bytes.
  $XFS_IO_PROG -c "truncate 128" $SCRATCH_MNT/foo

  # Now clone foo's inline extent into bar.
  # This clone operation should fail with errno EOPNOTSUPP because the source
  # file consists only of an inline extent and the file's size is smaller than
  # the inline extent of the destination (128 bytes < 256 bytes). However the
  # clone ioctl was not prepared to deal with a file that has a size smaller
  # than the size of its inline extent (something that happens only for compressed
  # inline extents), resulting in copying the full inline extent from the source
  # file into the destination file.
  #
  # Note that btrfs' clone operation for inline extents consists of removing the
  # inline extent from the destination inode and copy the inline extent from the
  # source inode into the destination inode, meaning that if the destination
  # inode's inline extent is larger (N bytes) than the source inode's inline
  # extent (M bytes), some bytes (N - M bytes) will be lost from the destination
  # file. Btrfs could copy the source inline extent's data into the destination's
  # inline extent so that we would not lose any data, but that's currently not
  # done due to the complexity that would be needed to deal with such cases
  # (specially when one or both extents are compressed), returning EOPNOTSUPP, as
  # it's normally not a very common case to clone very small files (only case
  # where we get inline extents) and copying inline extents does not save any
  # space (unlike for normal, non-inlined extents).
  $CLONER_PROG -s 0 -d 0 -l 0 $SCRATCH_MNT/foo $SCRATCH_MNT/bar

  # Now because the above clone operation used to succeed, and due to foo's inline
  # extent not being shinked by the truncate operation, our file bar got the whole
  # inline extent copied from foo, making us lose the last 128 bytes from bar
  # which got replaced by the bytes in range [128, 256[ from foo before foo was
  # truncated - in other words, data loss from bar and being able to read old and
  # stale data from foo that should not be possible to read anymore through normal
  # filesystem operations. Contrast with the case where we truncate a file from a
  # size N to a smaller size M, truncate it back to size N and then read the range
  # [M, N[, we should always get the value 0x00 for all the bytes in that range.

  # We expected the clone operation to fail with errno EOPNOTSUPP and therefore
  # not modify our file's bar data/metadata. So its content should be 256 bytes
  # long with all bytes having the value 0xbb.
  #
  # Without the btrfs bug fix, the clone operation succeeded and resulted in
  # leaking truncated data from foo, the bytes that belonged to its range
  # [128, 256[, and losing data from bar in that same range. So reading the
  # file gave us the following content:
  #
  # 0000000 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1 a1
  # *
  # 0000200 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a 2a
  # *
  # 0000400
  echo "File bar's content after the clone operation:"
  od -t x1 $SCRATCH_MNT/bar

  # Also because the foo's inline extent was not shrunk by the truncate
  # operation, btrfs' fsck, which is run by the fstests framework everytime a
  # test completes, failed reporting the following error:
  #
  #  root 5 inode 257 errors 400, nbytes wrong

  status=0
  exit

Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Filipe Manana <fdmanana@suse.com>
2015-10-16 21:02:53 +01:00
Linus Torvalds 6aa8ca4df0 Merge branch 'for-linus-4.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs
Pull btrfs fixes from Chris Mason:
 "I have two more bug fixes for btrfs.

  My commit fixes a bug we hit last week at FB, a combination of lots of
  hard links and an admin command to resolve inode numbers.

  Dave is adding checks to make sure balance on current kernels ignores
  filters it doesn't understand.  The penalty for being wrong is just
  doing more work (not crashing etc), but it's a good fix"

* 'for-linus-4.3' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mason/linux-btrfs:
  btrfs: fix use after free iterating extrefs
  btrfs: check unsupported filters in balance arguments
2015-10-16 12:55:34 -07:00
Linus Torvalds 3d875182d7 Merge branch 'akpm' (patches from Andrew)
Merge misc fixes from Andrew Morton:
 "6 fixes"

* emailed patches from Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>:
  sh: add copy_user_page() alias for __copy_user()
  lib/Kconfig: ZLIB_DEFLATE must select BITREVERSE
  mm, dax: fix DAX deadlocks
  memcg: convert threshold to bytes
  builddeb: remove debian/files before build
  mm, fs: obey gfp_mapping for add_to_page_cache()
2015-10-16 11:42:37 -07:00
Ross Zwisler 0f90cc6609 mm, dax: fix DAX deadlocks
The following two locking commits in the DAX code:

commit 843172978b ("dax: fix race between simultaneous faults")
commit 46c043ede4 ("mm: take i_mmap_lock in unmap_mapping_range() for DAX")

introduced a number of deadlocks and other issues which need to be fixed
for the v4.3 kernel.  The list of issues in DAX after these commits
(some newly introduced by the commits, some preexisting) can be found
here:

  https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/9/25/602 (Subject: "Re: [PATCH] dax: fix deadlock in __dax_fault").

This undoes most of the changes introduced by those two commits,
essentially returning us to the DAX locking scheme that was used in
v4.2.

Signed-off-by: Ross Zwisler <ross.zwisler@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Alexander Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Cc: Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@intel.com>
Tested-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Cc: Jan Kara <jack@suse.com>
Cc: "Kirill A. Shutemov" <kirill.shutemov@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Matthew Wilcox <matthew.r.wilcox@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2015-10-16 11:42:28 -07:00