kernel-hacking-2024-linux-s.../fs/bcachefs/extents.c

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* Copyright (C) 2010 Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@gmail.com>
*
* Code for managing the extent btree and dynamically updating the writeback
* dirty sector count.
*/
#include "bcachefs.h"
#include "bkey_methods.h"
#include "btree_cache.h"
#include "btree_gc.h"
#include "btree_io.h"
#include "btree_iter.h"
#include "buckets.h"
#include "checksum.h"
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
#include "compress.h"
#include "debug.h"
#include "disk_groups.h"
#include "error.h"
#include "extents.h"
#include "inode.h"
#include "journal.h"
#include "replicas.h"
#include "super.h"
#include "super-io.h"
#include "trace.h"
#include "util.h"
static unsigned bch2_crc_field_size_max[] = {
[BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32] = CRC32_SIZE_MAX,
[BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64] = CRC64_SIZE_MAX,
[BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128] = CRC128_SIZE_MAX,
};
static void bch2_extent_crc_pack(union bch_extent_crc *,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked,
enum bch_extent_entry_type);
struct bch_dev_io_failures *bch2_dev_io_failures(struct bch_io_failures *f,
unsigned dev)
{
struct bch_dev_io_failures *i;
for (i = f->devs; i < f->devs + f->nr; i++)
if (i->dev == dev)
return i;
return NULL;
}
void bch2_mark_io_failure(struct bch_io_failures *failed,
struct extent_ptr_decoded *p)
{
struct bch_dev_io_failures *f = bch2_dev_io_failures(failed, p->ptr.dev);
if (!f) {
BUG_ON(failed->nr >= ARRAY_SIZE(failed->devs));
f = &failed->devs[failed->nr++];
f->dev = p->ptr.dev;
f->idx = p->idx;
f->nr_failed = 1;
f->nr_retries = 0;
} else if (p->idx != f->idx) {
f->idx = p->idx;
f->nr_failed = 1;
f->nr_retries = 0;
} else {
f->nr_failed++;
}
}
static inline u64 dev_latency(struct bch_fs *c, unsigned dev)
{
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, dev);
return ca ? atomic64_read(&ca->cur_latency[READ]) : S64_MAX;
}
/*
* returns true if p1 is better than p2:
*/
static inline bool ptr_better(struct bch_fs *c,
const struct extent_ptr_decoded p1,
const struct extent_ptr_decoded p2)
{
if (likely(!p1.idx && !p2.idx)) {
u64 l1 = dev_latency(c, p1.ptr.dev);
u64 l2 = dev_latency(c, p2.ptr.dev);
/* Pick at random, biased in favor of the faster device: */
return bch2_rand_range(l1 + l2) > l1;
}
if (bch2_force_reconstruct_read)
return p1.idx > p2.idx;
return p1.idx < p2.idx;
}
/*
* This picks a non-stale pointer, preferably from a device other than @avoid.
* Avoid can be NULL, meaning pick any. If there are no non-stale pointers to
* other devices, it will still pick a pointer from avoid.
*/
int bch2_bkey_pick_read_device(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
struct bch_io_failures *failed,
struct extent_ptr_decoded *pick)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
struct bch_dev_io_failures *f;
int ret = 0;
if (k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_error)
return -BCH_ERR_key_type_error;
rcu_read_lock();
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry) {
/*
* Unwritten extent: no need to actually read, treat it as a
* hole and return 0s:
*/
if (p.ptr.unwritten) {
ret = 0;
break;
}
/*
* If there are any dirty pointers it's an error if we can't
* read:
*/
if (!ret && !p.ptr.cached)
ret = -BCH_ERR_no_device_to_read_from;
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, p.ptr.dev);
if (p.ptr.cached && (!ca || dev_ptr_stale_rcu(ca, &p.ptr)))
continue;
f = failed ? bch2_dev_io_failures(failed, p.ptr.dev) : NULL;
if (f)
p.idx = f->nr_failed < f->nr_retries
? f->idx
: f->idx + 1;
if (!p.idx && (!ca || !bch2_dev_is_readable(ca)))
p.idx++;
if (!p.idx && p.has_ec && bch2_force_reconstruct_read)
p.idx++;
if (p.idx > (unsigned) p.has_ec)
continue;
if (ret > 0 && !ptr_better(c, p, *pick))
continue;
*pick = p;
ret = 1;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
return ret;
}
/* KEY_TYPE_btree_ptr: */
int bch2_btree_ptr_validate(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
enum bch_validate_flags flags)
{
int ret = 0;
bkey_fsck_err_on(bkey_val_u64s(k.k) > BCH_REPLICAS_MAX,
c, btree_ptr_val_too_big,
"value too big (%zu > %u)", bkey_val_u64s(k.k), BCH_REPLICAS_MAX);
ret = bch2_bkey_ptrs_validate(c, k, flags);
fsck_err:
return ret;
}
void bch2_btree_ptr_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_fs *c,
struct bkey_s_c k)
{
bch2_bkey_ptrs_to_text(out, c, k);
}
int bch2_btree_ptr_v2_validate(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
enum bch_validate_flags flags)
{
struct bkey_s_c_btree_ptr_v2 bp = bkey_s_c_to_btree_ptr_v2(k);
int ret = 0;
bkey_fsck_err_on(bkey_val_u64s(k.k) > BKEY_BTREE_PTR_VAL_U64s_MAX,
c, btree_ptr_v2_val_too_big,
"value too big (%zu > %zu)",
bkey_val_u64s(k.k), BKEY_BTREE_PTR_VAL_U64s_MAX);
bkey_fsck_err_on(bpos_ge(bp.v->min_key, bp.k->p),
c, btree_ptr_v2_min_key_bad,
"min_key > key");
if (flags & BCH_VALIDATE_write)
bkey_fsck_err_on(!bp.v->sectors_written,
c, btree_ptr_v2_written_0,
"sectors_written == 0");
ret = bch2_bkey_ptrs_validate(c, k, flags);
fsck_err:
return ret;
}
void bch2_btree_ptr_v2_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_fs *c,
struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_s_c_btree_ptr_v2 bp = bkey_s_c_to_btree_ptr_v2(k);
prt_printf(out, "seq %llx written %u min_key %s",
le64_to_cpu(bp.v->seq),
le16_to_cpu(bp.v->sectors_written),
BTREE_PTR_RANGE_UPDATED(bp.v) ? "R " : "");
bch2_bpos_to_text(out, bp.v->min_key);
prt_printf(out, " ");
bch2_bkey_ptrs_to_text(out, c, k);
}
void bch2_btree_ptr_v2_compat(enum btree_id btree_id, unsigned version,
unsigned big_endian, int write,
struct bkey_s k)
{
struct bkey_s_btree_ptr_v2 bp = bkey_s_to_btree_ptr_v2(k);
compat_bpos(0, btree_id, version, big_endian, write, &bp.v->min_key);
if (version < bcachefs_metadata_version_inode_btree_change &&
btree_id_is_extents(btree_id) &&
!bkey_eq(bp.v->min_key, POS_MIN))
bp.v->min_key = write
? bpos_nosnap_predecessor(bp.v->min_key)
: bpos_nosnap_successor(bp.v->min_key);
}
/* KEY_TYPE_extent: */
bool bch2_extent_merge(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s l, struct bkey_s_c r)
{
struct bkey_ptrs l_ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(l);
struct bkey_ptrs_c r_ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(r);
union bch_extent_entry *en_l;
const union bch_extent_entry *en_r;
struct extent_ptr_decoded lp, rp;
bool use_right_ptr;
en_l = l_ptrs.start;
en_r = r_ptrs.start;
while (en_l < l_ptrs.end && en_r < r_ptrs.end) {
if (extent_entry_type(en_l) != extent_entry_type(en_r))
return false;
en_l = extent_entry_next(en_l);
en_r = extent_entry_next(en_r);
}
if (en_l < l_ptrs.end || en_r < r_ptrs.end)
return false;
en_l = l_ptrs.start;
en_r = r_ptrs.start;
lp.crc = bch2_extent_crc_unpack(l.k, NULL);
rp.crc = bch2_extent_crc_unpack(r.k, NULL);
while (__bkey_ptr_next_decode(l.k, l_ptrs.end, lp, en_l) &&
__bkey_ptr_next_decode(r.k, r_ptrs.end, rp, en_r)) {
if (lp.ptr.offset + lp.crc.offset + lp.crc.live_size !=
rp.ptr.offset + rp.crc.offset ||
lp.ptr.dev != rp.ptr.dev ||
lp.ptr.gen != rp.ptr.gen ||
lp.ptr.unwritten != rp.ptr.unwritten ||
lp.has_ec != rp.has_ec)
return false;
/* Extents may not straddle buckets: */
rcu_read_lock();
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, lp.ptr.dev);
bool same_bucket = ca && PTR_BUCKET_NR(ca, &lp.ptr) == PTR_BUCKET_NR(ca, &rp.ptr);
rcu_read_unlock();
if (!same_bucket)
return false;
if (lp.has_ec != rp.has_ec ||
(lp.has_ec &&
(lp.ec.block != rp.ec.block ||
lp.ec.redundancy != rp.ec.redundancy ||
lp.ec.idx != rp.ec.idx)))
return false;
if (lp.crc.compression_type != rp.crc.compression_type ||
lp.crc.nonce != rp.crc.nonce)
return false;
if (lp.crc.offset + lp.crc.live_size + rp.crc.live_size <=
lp.crc.uncompressed_size) {
/* can use left extent's crc entry */
} else if (lp.crc.live_size <= rp.crc.offset) {
/* can use right extent's crc entry */
} else {
/* check if checksums can be merged: */
if (lp.crc.csum_type != rp.crc.csum_type ||
lp.crc.nonce != rp.crc.nonce ||
crc_is_compressed(lp.crc) ||
!bch2_checksum_mergeable(lp.crc.csum_type))
return false;
if (lp.crc.offset + lp.crc.live_size != lp.crc.compressed_size ||
rp.crc.offset)
return false;
if (lp.crc.csum_type &&
lp.crc.uncompressed_size +
rp.crc.uncompressed_size > (c->opts.encoded_extent_max >> 9))
return false;
}
en_l = extent_entry_next(en_l);
en_r = extent_entry_next(en_r);
}
en_l = l_ptrs.start;
en_r = r_ptrs.start;
while (en_l < l_ptrs.end && en_r < r_ptrs.end) {
if (extent_entry_is_crc(en_l)) {
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc_l = bch2_extent_crc_unpack(l.k, entry_to_crc(en_l));
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc_r = bch2_extent_crc_unpack(r.k, entry_to_crc(en_r));
if (crc_l.uncompressed_size + crc_r.uncompressed_size >
bch2_crc_field_size_max[extent_entry_type(en_l)])
return false;
}
en_l = extent_entry_next(en_l);
en_r = extent_entry_next(en_r);
}
use_right_ptr = false;
en_l = l_ptrs.start;
en_r = r_ptrs.start;
while (en_l < l_ptrs.end) {
if (extent_entry_type(en_l) == BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr &&
use_right_ptr)
en_l->ptr = en_r->ptr;
if (extent_entry_is_crc(en_l)) {
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc_l =
bch2_extent_crc_unpack(l.k, entry_to_crc(en_l));
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc_r =
bch2_extent_crc_unpack(r.k, entry_to_crc(en_r));
use_right_ptr = false;
if (crc_l.offset + crc_l.live_size + crc_r.live_size <=
crc_l.uncompressed_size) {
/* can use left extent's crc entry */
} else if (crc_l.live_size <= crc_r.offset) {
/* can use right extent's crc entry */
crc_r.offset -= crc_l.live_size;
bch2_extent_crc_pack(entry_to_crc(en_l), crc_r,
extent_entry_type(en_l));
use_right_ptr = true;
} else {
crc_l.csum = bch2_checksum_merge(crc_l.csum_type,
crc_l.csum,
crc_r.csum,
crc_r.uncompressed_size << 9);
crc_l.uncompressed_size += crc_r.uncompressed_size;
crc_l.compressed_size += crc_r.compressed_size;
bch2_extent_crc_pack(entry_to_crc(en_l), crc_l,
extent_entry_type(en_l));
}
}
en_l = extent_entry_next(en_l);
en_r = extent_entry_next(en_r);
}
bch2_key_resize(l.k, l.k->size + r.k->size);
return true;
}
/* KEY_TYPE_reservation: */
int bch2_reservation_validate(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
enum bch_validate_flags flags)
{
struct bkey_s_c_reservation r = bkey_s_c_to_reservation(k);
int ret = 0;
bkey_fsck_err_on(!r.v->nr_replicas || r.v->nr_replicas > BCH_REPLICAS_MAX,
c, reservation_key_nr_replicas_invalid,
"invalid nr_replicas (%u)", r.v->nr_replicas);
fsck_err:
return ret;
}
void bch2_reservation_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_fs *c,
struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_s_c_reservation r = bkey_s_c_to_reservation(k);
prt_printf(out, "generation %u replicas %u",
le32_to_cpu(r.v->generation),
r.v->nr_replicas);
}
bool bch2_reservation_merge(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s _l, struct bkey_s_c _r)
{
struct bkey_s_reservation l = bkey_s_to_reservation(_l);
struct bkey_s_c_reservation r = bkey_s_c_to_reservation(_r);
if (l.v->generation != r.v->generation ||
l.v->nr_replicas != r.v->nr_replicas)
return false;
bch2_key_resize(l.k, l.k->size + r.k->size);
return true;
}
/* Extent checksum entries: */
/* returns true if not equal */
static inline bool bch2_crc_unpacked_cmp(struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked l,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked r)
{
return (l.csum_type != r.csum_type ||
l.compression_type != r.compression_type ||
l.compressed_size != r.compressed_size ||
l.uncompressed_size != r.uncompressed_size ||
l.offset != r.offset ||
l.live_size != r.live_size ||
l.nonce != r.nonce ||
bch2_crc_cmp(l.csum, r.csum));
}
static inline bool can_narrow_crc(struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked u,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked n)
{
return !crc_is_compressed(u) &&
u.csum_type &&
u.uncompressed_size > u.live_size &&
bch2_csum_type_is_encryption(u.csum_type) ==
bch2_csum_type_is_encryption(n.csum_type);
}
bool bch2_can_narrow_extent_crcs(struct bkey_s_c k,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked n)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc;
const union bch_extent_entry *i;
if (!n.csum_type)
return false;
bkey_for_each_crc(k.k, ptrs, crc, i)
if (can_narrow_crc(crc, n))
return true;
return false;
}
/*
* We're writing another replica for this extent, so while we've got the data in
* memory we'll be computing a new checksum for the currently live data.
*
* If there are other replicas we aren't moving, and they are checksummed but
* not compressed, we can modify them to point to only the data that is
* currently live (so that readers won't have to bounce) while we've got the
* checksum we need:
*/
bool bch2_bkey_narrow_crcs(struct bkey_i *k, struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked n)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(bkey_i_to_s(k));
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked u;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
union bch_extent_entry *i;
bool ret = false;
/* Find a checksum entry that covers only live data: */
if (!n.csum_type) {
bkey_for_each_crc(&k->k, ptrs, u, i)
if (!crc_is_compressed(u) &&
u.csum_type &&
u.live_size == u.uncompressed_size) {
n = u;
goto found;
}
return false;
}
found:
BUG_ON(crc_is_compressed(n));
BUG_ON(n.offset);
BUG_ON(n.live_size != k->k.size);
restart_narrow_pointers:
ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(bkey_i_to_s(k));
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(&k->k, ptrs, p, i)
if (can_narrow_crc(p.crc, n)) {
bch2_bkey_drop_ptr_noerror(bkey_i_to_s(k), &i->ptr);
p.ptr.offset += p.crc.offset;
p.crc = n;
bch2_extent_ptr_decoded_append(k, &p);
ret = true;
goto restart_narrow_pointers;
}
return ret;
}
static void bch2_extent_crc_pack(union bch_extent_crc *dst,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked src,
enum bch_extent_entry_type type)
{
#define set_common_fields(_dst, _src) \
_dst.type = 1 << type; \
_dst.csum_type = _src.csum_type, \
_dst.compression_type = _src.compression_type, \
_dst._compressed_size = _src.compressed_size - 1, \
_dst._uncompressed_size = _src.uncompressed_size - 1, \
_dst.offset = _src.offset
switch (type) {
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32:
set_common_fields(dst->crc32, src);
dst->crc32.csum = (u32 __force) *((__le32 *) &src.csum.lo);
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64:
set_common_fields(dst->crc64, src);
dst->crc64.nonce = src.nonce;
dst->crc64.csum_lo = (u64 __force) src.csum.lo;
dst->crc64.csum_hi = (u64 __force) *((__le16 *) &src.csum.hi);
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128:
set_common_fields(dst->crc128, src);
dst->crc128.nonce = src.nonce;
dst->crc128.csum = src.csum;
break;
default:
BUG();
}
#undef set_common_fields
}
void bch2_extent_crc_append(struct bkey_i *k,
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked new)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(bkey_i_to_s(k));
union bch_extent_crc *crc = (void *) ptrs.end;
enum bch_extent_entry_type type;
if (bch_crc_bytes[new.csum_type] <= 4 &&
new.uncompressed_size <= CRC32_SIZE_MAX &&
new.nonce <= CRC32_NONCE_MAX)
type = BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32;
else if (bch_crc_bytes[new.csum_type] <= 10 &&
new.uncompressed_size <= CRC64_SIZE_MAX &&
new.nonce <= CRC64_NONCE_MAX)
type = BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64;
else if (bch_crc_bytes[new.csum_type] <= 16 &&
new.uncompressed_size <= CRC128_SIZE_MAX &&
new.nonce <= CRC128_NONCE_MAX)
type = BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128;
else
BUG();
bch2_extent_crc_pack(crc, new, type);
k->k.u64s += extent_entry_u64s(ptrs.end);
EBUG_ON(bkey_val_u64s(&k->k) > BKEY_EXTENT_VAL_U64s_MAX);
}
/* Generic code for keys with pointers: */
unsigned bch2_bkey_nr_ptrs(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
return bch2_bkey_devs(k).nr;
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_nr_ptrs_allocated(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
return k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_reservation
? bkey_s_c_to_reservation(k).v->nr_replicas
: bch2_bkey_dirty_devs(k).nr;
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_nr_ptrs_fully_allocated(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
unsigned ret = 0;
if (k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_reservation) {
ret = bkey_s_c_to_reservation(k).v->nr_replicas;
} else {
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
ret += !p.ptr.cached && !crc_is_compressed(p.crc);
}
return ret;
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_sectors_compressed(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
unsigned ret = 0;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
if (!p.ptr.cached && crc_is_compressed(p.crc))
ret += p.crc.compressed_size;
return ret;
}
bool bch2_bkey_is_incompressible(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc;
bkey_for_each_crc(k.k, ptrs, crc, entry)
if (crc.compression_type == BCH_COMPRESSION_TYPE_incompressible)
return true;
return false;
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_replicas(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p = { 0 };
unsigned replicas = 0;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry) {
if (p.ptr.cached)
continue;
if (p.has_ec)
replicas += p.ec.redundancy;
replicas++;
}
return replicas;
}
static inline unsigned __extent_ptr_durability(struct bch_dev *ca, struct extent_ptr_decoded *p)
{
bcachefs: Nocow support This adds support for nocow mode, where we do writes in-place when possible. Patch components: - New boolean filesystem and inode option, nocow: note that when nocow is enabled, data checksumming and compression are implicitly disabled - To prevent in-place writes from racing with data moves (data_update.c) or bucket reuse (i.e. a bucket being reused and re-allocated while a nocow write is in flight, we have a new locking mechanism. Buckets can be locked for either data update or data move, using a fixed size hash table of two_state_shared locks. We don't have any chaining, meaning updates and moves to different buckets that hash to the same lock will wait unnecessarily - we'll want to watch for this becoming an issue. - The allocator path also needs to check for in-place writes in flight to a given bucket before giving it out: thus we add another counter to bucket_alloc_state so we can track this. - Fsync now may need to issue cache flushes to block devices instead of flushing the journal. We add a device bitmask to bch_inode_info, ei_devs_need_flush, which tracks devices that need to have flushes issued - note that this will lead to unnecessary flushes when other codepaths have already issued flushes, we may want to replace this with a sequence number. - New nocow write path: look up extents, and if they're writable write to them - otherwise fall back to the normal COW write path. XXX: switch to sequence numbers instead of bitmask for devs needing journal flush XXX: ei_quota_lock being a mutex means bch2_nocow_write_done() needs to run in process context - see if we can improve this Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2022-11-02 21:12:00 +00:00
if (p->ptr.cached)
return 0;
return p->has_ec
? p->ec.redundancy + 1
: ca->mi.durability;
}
unsigned bch2_extent_ptr_desired_durability(struct bch_fs *c, struct extent_ptr_decoded *p)
{
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, p->ptr.dev);
return ca ? __extent_ptr_durability(ca, p) : 0;
}
unsigned bch2_extent_ptr_durability(struct bch_fs *c, struct extent_ptr_decoded *p)
{
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, p->ptr.dev);
if (!ca || ca->mi.state == BCH_MEMBER_STATE_failed)
return 0;
return __extent_ptr_durability(ca, p);
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_durability(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
unsigned durability = 0;
rcu_read_lock();
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
durability += bch2_extent_ptr_durability(c, &p);
rcu_read_unlock();
return durability;
}
static unsigned bch2_bkey_durability_safe(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
unsigned durability = 0;
rcu_read_lock();
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
if (p.ptr.dev < c->sb.nr_devices && c->devs[p.ptr.dev])
durability += bch2_extent_ptr_durability(c, &p);
rcu_read_unlock();
return durability;
}
void bch2_bkey_extent_entry_drop(struct bkey_i *k, union bch_extent_entry *entry)
{
union bch_extent_entry *end = bkey_val_end(bkey_i_to_s(k));
union bch_extent_entry *next = extent_entry_next(entry);
memmove_u64s(entry, next, (u64 *) end - (u64 *) next);
k->k.u64s -= extent_entry_u64s(entry);
}
void bch2_extent_ptr_decoded_append(struct bkey_i *k,
struct extent_ptr_decoded *p)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(bkey_i_to_s(k));
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc =
bch2_extent_crc_unpack(&k->k, NULL);
union bch_extent_entry *pos;
if (!bch2_crc_unpacked_cmp(crc, p->crc)) {
pos = ptrs.start;
goto found;
}
bkey_for_each_crc(&k->k, ptrs, crc, pos)
if (!bch2_crc_unpacked_cmp(crc, p->crc)) {
pos = extent_entry_next(pos);
goto found;
}
bch2_extent_crc_append(k, p->crc);
pos = bkey_val_end(bkey_i_to_s(k));
found:
p->ptr.type = 1 << BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr;
__extent_entry_insert(k, pos, to_entry(&p->ptr));
if (p->has_ec) {
p->ec.type = 1 << BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_stripe_ptr;
__extent_entry_insert(k, pos, to_entry(&p->ec));
}
}
static union bch_extent_entry *extent_entry_prev(struct bkey_ptrs ptrs,
union bch_extent_entry *entry)
{
union bch_extent_entry *i = ptrs.start;
if (i == entry)
return NULL;
while (extent_entry_next(i) != entry)
i = extent_entry_next(i);
return i;
}
/*
* Returns pointer to the next entry after the one being dropped:
*/
void bch2_bkey_drop_ptr_noerror(struct bkey_s k, struct bch_extent_ptr *ptr)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(k);
union bch_extent_entry *entry = to_entry(ptr), *next;
bool drop_crc = true;
if (k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_stripe) {
ptr->dev = BCH_SB_MEMBER_INVALID;
return;
}
EBUG_ON(ptr < &ptrs.start->ptr ||
ptr >= &ptrs.end->ptr);
EBUG_ON(ptr->type != 1 << BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr);
for (next = extent_entry_next(entry);
next != ptrs.end;
next = extent_entry_next(next)) {
if (extent_entry_is_crc(next)) {
break;
} else if (extent_entry_is_ptr(next)) {
drop_crc = false;
break;
}
}
extent_entry_drop(k, entry);
while ((entry = extent_entry_prev(ptrs, entry))) {
if (extent_entry_is_ptr(entry))
break;
if ((extent_entry_is_crc(entry) && drop_crc) ||
extent_entry_is_stripe_ptr(entry))
extent_entry_drop(k, entry);
}
}
void bch2_bkey_drop_ptr(struct bkey_s k, struct bch_extent_ptr *ptr)
{
if (k.k->type != KEY_TYPE_stripe) {
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k.s_c);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
if (p.ptr.dev == ptr->dev && p.has_ec) {
ptr->dev = BCH_SB_MEMBER_INVALID;
return;
}
}
bool have_dirty = bch2_bkey_dirty_devs(k.s_c).nr;
bch2_bkey_drop_ptr_noerror(k, ptr);
/*
* If we deleted all the dirty pointers and there's still cached
* pointers, we could set the cached pointers to dirty if they're not
* stale - but to do that correctly we'd need to grab an open_bucket
* reference so that we don't race with bucket reuse:
*/
if (have_dirty &&
!bch2_bkey_dirty_devs(k.s_c).nr) {
k.k->type = KEY_TYPE_error;
set_bkey_val_u64s(k.k, 0);
} else if (!bch2_bkey_nr_ptrs(k.s_c)) {
k.k->type = KEY_TYPE_deleted;
set_bkey_val_u64s(k.k, 0);
}
}
void bch2_bkey_drop_device(struct bkey_s k, unsigned dev)
{
bch2_bkey_drop_ptrs(k, ptr, ptr->dev == dev);
}
void bch2_bkey_drop_device_noerror(struct bkey_s k, unsigned dev)
{
bch2_bkey_drop_ptrs_noerror(k, ptr, ptr->dev == dev);
}
const struct bch_extent_ptr *bch2_bkey_has_device_c(struct bkey_s_c k, unsigned dev)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
bkey_for_each_ptr(ptrs, ptr)
if (ptr->dev == dev)
return ptr;
return NULL;
}
bool bch2_bkey_has_target(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k, unsigned target)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
struct bch_dev *ca;
bool ret = false;
rcu_read_lock();
bkey_for_each_ptr(ptrs, ptr)
if (bch2_dev_in_target(c, ptr->dev, target) &&
(ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, ptr->dev)) &&
(!ptr->cached ||
!dev_ptr_stale_rcu(ca, ptr))) {
ret = true;
break;
}
rcu_read_unlock();
return ret;
}
bool bch2_bkey_matches_ptr(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
struct bch_extent_ptr m, u64 offset)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
if (p.ptr.dev == m.dev &&
p.ptr.gen == m.gen &&
(s64) p.ptr.offset + p.crc.offset - bkey_start_offset(k.k) ==
(s64) m.offset - offset)
return true;
return false;
}
/*
* Returns true if two extents refer to the same data:
*/
bool bch2_extents_match(struct bkey_s_c k1, struct bkey_s_c k2)
{
bcachefs: Nocow support This adds support for nocow mode, where we do writes in-place when possible. Patch components: - New boolean filesystem and inode option, nocow: note that when nocow is enabled, data checksumming and compression are implicitly disabled - To prevent in-place writes from racing with data moves (data_update.c) or bucket reuse (i.e. a bucket being reused and re-allocated while a nocow write is in flight, we have a new locking mechanism. Buckets can be locked for either data update or data move, using a fixed size hash table of two_state_shared locks. We don't have any chaining, meaning updates and moves to different buckets that hash to the same lock will wait unnecessarily - we'll want to watch for this becoming an issue. - The allocator path also needs to check for in-place writes in flight to a given bucket before giving it out: thus we add another counter to bucket_alloc_state so we can track this. - Fsync now may need to issue cache flushes to block devices instead of flushing the journal. We add a device bitmask to bch_inode_info, ei_devs_need_flush, which tracks devices that need to have flushes issued - note that this will lead to unnecessary flushes when other codepaths have already issued flushes, we may want to replace this with a sequence number. - New nocow write path: look up extents, and if they're writable write to them - otherwise fall back to the normal COW write path. XXX: switch to sequence numbers instead of bitmask for devs needing journal flush XXX: ei_quota_lock being a mutex means bch2_nocow_write_done() needs to run in process context - see if we can improve this Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2022-11-02 21:12:00 +00:00
if (k1.k->type != k2.k->type)
return false;
bcachefs: Nocow support This adds support for nocow mode, where we do writes in-place when possible. Patch components: - New boolean filesystem and inode option, nocow: note that when nocow is enabled, data checksumming and compression are implicitly disabled - To prevent in-place writes from racing with data moves (data_update.c) or bucket reuse (i.e. a bucket being reused and re-allocated while a nocow write is in flight, we have a new locking mechanism. Buckets can be locked for either data update or data move, using a fixed size hash table of two_state_shared locks. We don't have any chaining, meaning updates and moves to different buckets that hash to the same lock will wait unnecessarily - we'll want to watch for this becoming an issue. - The allocator path also needs to check for in-place writes in flight to a given bucket before giving it out: thus we add another counter to bucket_alloc_state so we can track this. - Fsync now may need to issue cache flushes to block devices instead of flushing the journal. We add a device bitmask to bch_inode_info, ei_devs_need_flush, which tracks devices that need to have flushes issued - note that this will lead to unnecessary flushes when other codepaths have already issued flushes, we may want to replace this with a sequence number. - New nocow write path: look up extents, and if they're writable write to them - otherwise fall back to the normal COW write path. XXX: switch to sequence numbers instead of bitmask for devs needing journal flush XXX: ei_quota_lock being a mutex means bch2_nocow_write_done() needs to run in process context - see if we can improve this Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2022-11-02 21:12:00 +00:00
if (bkey_extent_is_direct_data(k1.k)) {
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs1 = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k1);
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs2 = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k2);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry1, *entry2;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p1, p2;
if (bkey_extent_is_unwritten(k1) != bkey_extent_is_unwritten(k2))
return false;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k1.k, ptrs1, p1, entry1)
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k2.k, ptrs2, p2, entry2)
if (p1.ptr.dev == p2.ptr.dev &&
p1.ptr.gen == p2.ptr.gen &&
bcachefs: Fix bch2_extents_match() false positive This was caught as a very rare nonce inconsistency, on systems with encryption and replication (and tiering, or some form of rebalance operation running): [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] about to insert invalid key in data update path [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] old: u64s 10 type extent 671283510:6392:U32_MAX len 16 ver 106595503: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:104 gen 7 ptr: 4:513244:48 gen 6 rebalance: target hdd compression zstd [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] k: u64s 10 type extent 671283510:6400:U32_MAX len 16 ver 106595508: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:112 gen 7 ptr: 4:513244:56 gen 6 rebalance: target hdd compression zstd [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] new: u64s 14 type extent 671283510:6392:U32_MAX len 8 ver 106595508: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:112 gen 7 cached ptr: 4:513244:56 gen 6 cached rebalance: target hdd compression zstd crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 8 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 1:10860085:32 gen 0 ptr: 0:17285918:408 gen 0 [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] bcachefs (cca5bc65-fe77-409d-a9fa-465a6e7f4eae): fatal error - emergency read only bch2_extents_match() was reporting true for extents that did not actually point to the same data. bch2_extent_match() iterates over pairs of pointers, looking for pointers that point to the same location on disk (with matching generation numbers). However one or both extents may have been trimmed (or merged) and they might not have the same disk offset: it corrects for this by subtracting the key offset and the checksum entry offset. However, this failed when an extent was immediately partially overwritten, and the new overwrite was allocated the next adjacent disk space. Normally, with compression off, this would never cause a bug, since the new extent would have to be immediately after the old extent for the pointer offsets to match, and the rebalance index update path is not looking for an extent outside the range of the extent it moved. However with compression enabled, extents take up less space on disk than they do in the btree index space - and spuriously matching after partial overwrite is possible. To fix this, add a secondary check, that strictly checks that the regions pointed to on disk overlap. https://github.com/koverstreet/bcachefs/issues/717 Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2024-08-26 23:11:00 +00:00
/*
* This checks that the two pointers point
* to the same region on disk - adjusting
* for the difference in where the extents
* start, since one may have been trimmed:
*/
(s64) p1.ptr.offset + p1.crc.offset - bkey_start_offset(k1.k) ==
bcachefs: Fix bch2_extents_match() false positive This was caught as a very rare nonce inconsistency, on systems with encryption and replication (and tiering, or some form of rebalance operation running): [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] about to insert invalid key in data update path [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] old: u64s 10 type extent 671283510:6392:U32_MAX len 16 ver 106595503: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:104 gen 7 ptr: 4:513244:48 gen 6 rebalance: target hdd compression zstd [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] k: u64s 10 type extent 671283510:6400:U32_MAX len 16 ver 106595508: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:112 gen 7 ptr: 4:513244:56 gen 6 rebalance: target hdd compression zstd [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] new: u64s 14 type extent 671283510:6392:U32_MAX len 8 ver 106595508: durability: 2 crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 0 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 3:355968:112 gen 7 cached ptr: 4:513244:56 gen 6 cached rebalance: target hdd compression zstd crc: c_size 8 size 16 offset 8 nonce 0 csum chacha20_poly1305_80 compress zstd ptr: 1:10860085:32 gen 0 ptr: 0:17285918:408 gen 0 [Wed Jul 17 13:30:03 2024] bcachefs (cca5bc65-fe77-409d-a9fa-465a6e7f4eae): fatal error - emergency read only bch2_extents_match() was reporting true for extents that did not actually point to the same data. bch2_extent_match() iterates over pairs of pointers, looking for pointers that point to the same location on disk (with matching generation numbers). However one or both extents may have been trimmed (or merged) and they might not have the same disk offset: it corrects for this by subtracting the key offset and the checksum entry offset. However, this failed when an extent was immediately partially overwritten, and the new overwrite was allocated the next adjacent disk space. Normally, with compression off, this would never cause a bug, since the new extent would have to be immediately after the old extent for the pointer offsets to match, and the rebalance index update path is not looking for an extent outside the range of the extent it moved. However with compression enabled, extents take up less space on disk than they do in the btree index space - and spuriously matching after partial overwrite is possible. To fix this, add a secondary check, that strictly checks that the regions pointed to on disk overlap. https://github.com/koverstreet/bcachefs/issues/717 Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2024-08-26 23:11:00 +00:00
(s64) p2.ptr.offset + p2.crc.offset - bkey_start_offset(k2.k) &&
/*
* This additionally checks that the
* extents overlap on disk, since the
* previous check may trigger spuriously
* when one extent is immediately partially
* overwritten with another extent (so that
* on disk they are adjacent) and
* compression is in use:
*/
((p1.ptr.offset >= p2.ptr.offset &&
p1.ptr.offset < p2.ptr.offset + p2.crc.compressed_size) ||
(p2.ptr.offset >= p1.ptr.offset &&
p2.ptr.offset < p1.ptr.offset + p1.crc.compressed_size)))
return true;
bcachefs: Nocow support This adds support for nocow mode, where we do writes in-place when possible. Patch components: - New boolean filesystem and inode option, nocow: note that when nocow is enabled, data checksumming and compression are implicitly disabled - To prevent in-place writes from racing with data moves (data_update.c) or bucket reuse (i.e. a bucket being reused and re-allocated while a nocow write is in flight, we have a new locking mechanism. Buckets can be locked for either data update or data move, using a fixed size hash table of two_state_shared locks. We don't have any chaining, meaning updates and moves to different buckets that hash to the same lock will wait unnecessarily - we'll want to watch for this becoming an issue. - The allocator path also needs to check for in-place writes in flight to a given bucket before giving it out: thus we add another counter to bucket_alloc_state so we can track this. - Fsync now may need to issue cache flushes to block devices instead of flushing the journal. We add a device bitmask to bch_inode_info, ei_devs_need_flush, which tracks devices that need to have flushes issued - note that this will lead to unnecessary flushes when other codepaths have already issued flushes, we may want to replace this with a sequence number. - New nocow write path: look up extents, and if they're writable write to them - otherwise fall back to the normal COW write path. XXX: switch to sequence numbers instead of bitmask for devs needing journal flush XXX: ei_quota_lock being a mutex means bch2_nocow_write_done() needs to run in process context - see if we can improve this Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2022-11-02 21:12:00 +00:00
return false;
} else {
/* KEY_TYPE_deleted, etc. */
return true;
}
}
struct bch_extent_ptr *
bch2_extent_has_ptr(struct bkey_s_c k1, struct extent_ptr_decoded p1, struct bkey_s k2)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs2 = bch2_bkey_ptrs(k2);
union bch_extent_entry *entry2;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p2;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k2.k, ptrs2, p2, entry2)
if (p1.ptr.dev == p2.ptr.dev &&
p1.ptr.gen == p2.ptr.gen &&
(s64) p1.ptr.offset + p1.crc.offset - bkey_start_offset(k1.k) ==
(s64) p2.ptr.offset + p2.crc.offset - bkey_start_offset(k2.k))
return &entry2->ptr;
return NULL;
}
void bch2_extent_ptr_set_cached(struct bkey_s k, struct bch_extent_ptr *ptr)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(k);
union bch_extent_entry *entry;
union bch_extent_entry *ec = NULL;
bkey_extent_entry_for_each(ptrs, entry) {
if (&entry->ptr == ptr) {
ptr->cached = true;
if (ec)
extent_entry_drop(k, ec);
return;
}
if (extent_entry_is_stripe_ptr(entry))
ec = entry;
else if (extent_entry_is_ptr(entry))
ec = NULL;
}
BUG();
}
/*
* bch_extent_normalize - clean up an extent, dropping stale pointers etc.
*
* Returns true if @k should be dropped entirely
*
* For existing keys, only called when btree nodes are being rewritten, not when
* they're merely being compacted/resorted in memory.
*/
bool bch2_extent_normalize(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s k)
{
struct bch_dev *ca;
rcu_read_lock();
bch2_bkey_drop_ptrs(k, ptr,
ptr->cached &&
(ca = bch2_dev_rcu(c, ptr->dev)) &&
dev_ptr_stale_rcu(ca, ptr) > 0);
rcu_read_unlock();
return bkey_deleted(k.k);
}
void bch2_extent_ptr_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_fs *c, const struct bch_extent_ptr *ptr)
{
out->atomic++;
rcu_read_lock();
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu_noerror(c, ptr->dev);
if (!ca) {
prt_printf(out, "ptr: %u:%llu gen %u%s", ptr->dev,
(u64) ptr->offset, ptr->gen,
ptr->cached ? " cached" : "");
} else {
u32 offset;
u64 b = sector_to_bucket_and_offset(ca, ptr->offset, &offset);
prt_printf(out, "ptr: %u:%llu:%u gen %u",
ptr->dev, b, offset, ptr->gen);
if (ca->mi.durability != 1)
prt_printf(out, " d=%u", ca->mi.durability);
if (ptr->cached)
prt_str(out, " cached");
if (ptr->unwritten)
prt_str(out, " unwritten");
int stale = dev_ptr_stale_rcu(ca, ptr);
if (stale > 0)
prt_printf(out, " stale");
else if (stale)
prt_printf(out, " invalid");
}
rcu_read_unlock();
--out->atomic;
}
void bch2_extent_crc_unpacked_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked *crc)
{
prt_printf(out, "crc: c_size %u size %u offset %u nonce %u csum ",
crc->compressed_size,
crc->uncompressed_size,
crc->offset, crc->nonce);
bch2_prt_csum_type(out, crc->csum_type);
prt_printf(out, " %0llx:%0llx ", crc->csum.hi, crc->csum.lo);
prt_str(out, " compress ");
bch2_prt_compression_type(out, crc->compression_type);
}
void bch2_bkey_ptrs_to_text(struct printbuf *out, struct bch_fs *c,
struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
bool first = true;
if (c)
prt_printf(out, "durability: %u ", bch2_bkey_durability_safe(c, k));
bkey_extent_entry_for_each(ptrs, entry) {
if (!first)
prt_printf(out, " ");
switch (__extent_entry_type(entry)) {
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr:
bch2_extent_ptr_to_text(out, c, entry_to_ptr(entry));
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32:
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64:
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128: {
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc =
bch2_extent_crc_unpack(k.k, entry_to_crc(entry));
bch2_extent_crc_unpacked_to_text(out, &crc);
break;
}
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_stripe_ptr: {
const struct bch_extent_stripe_ptr *ec = &entry->stripe_ptr;
prt_printf(out, "ec: idx %llu block %u",
(u64) ec->idx, ec->block);
break;
}
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance: {
const struct bch_extent_rebalance *r = &entry->rebalance;
prt_str(out, "rebalance: target ");
if (c)
bch2_target_to_text(out, c, r->target);
else
prt_printf(out, "%u", r->target);
prt_str(out, " compression ");
bch2_compression_opt_to_text(out, r->compression);
break;
}
default:
prt_printf(out, "(invalid extent entry %.16llx)", *((u64 *) entry));
return;
}
first = false;
}
}
static int extent_ptr_validate(struct bch_fs *c,
struct bkey_s_c k,
enum bch_validate_flags flags,
const struct bch_extent_ptr *ptr,
unsigned size_ondisk,
bool metadata)
{
int ret = 0;
/* bad pointers are repaired by check_fix_ptrs(): */
rcu_read_lock();
struct bch_dev *ca = bch2_dev_rcu_noerror(c, ptr->dev);
if (!ca) {
rcu_read_unlock();
return 0;
}
u32 bucket_offset;
u64 bucket = sector_to_bucket_and_offset(ca, ptr->offset, &bucket_offset);
unsigned first_bucket = ca->mi.first_bucket;
u64 nbuckets = ca->mi.nbuckets;
unsigned bucket_size = ca->mi.bucket_size;
rcu_read_unlock();
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
bkey_for_each_ptr(ptrs, ptr2)
bkey_fsck_err_on(ptr != ptr2 && ptr->dev == ptr2->dev,
c, ptr_to_duplicate_device,
"multiple pointers to same device (%u)", ptr->dev);
bkey_fsck_err_on(bucket >= nbuckets,
c, ptr_after_last_bucket,
"pointer past last bucket (%llu > %llu)", bucket, nbuckets);
bkey_fsck_err_on(bucket < first_bucket,
c, ptr_before_first_bucket,
"pointer before first bucket (%llu < %u)", bucket, first_bucket);
bkey_fsck_err_on(bucket_offset + size_ondisk > bucket_size,
c, ptr_spans_multiple_buckets,
"pointer spans multiple buckets (%u + %u > %u)",
bucket_offset, size_ondisk, bucket_size);
fsck_err:
return ret;
}
int bch2_bkey_ptrs_validate(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
enum bch_validate_flags flags)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct bch_extent_crc_unpacked crc;
unsigned size_ondisk = k.k->size;
unsigned nonce = UINT_MAX;
unsigned nr_ptrs = 0;
bool have_written = false, have_unwritten = false, have_ec = false, crc_since_last_ptr = false;
int ret = 0;
if (bkey_is_btree_ptr(k.k))
size_ondisk = btree_sectors(c);
bkey_extent_entry_for_each(ptrs, entry) {
bkey_fsck_err_on(__extent_entry_type(entry) >= BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_MAX,
c, extent_ptrs_invalid_entry,
"invalid extent entry type (got %u, max %u)",
__extent_entry_type(entry), BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_MAX);
bkey_fsck_err_on(bkey_is_btree_ptr(k.k) &&
!extent_entry_is_ptr(entry),
c, btree_ptr_has_non_ptr,
"has non ptr field");
switch (extent_entry_type(entry)) {
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr:
ret = extent_ptr_validate(c, k, flags, &entry->ptr, size_ondisk, false);
if (ret)
return ret;
bkey_fsck_err_on(entry->ptr.cached && have_ec,
c, ptr_cached_and_erasure_coded,
"cached, erasure coded ptr");
if (!entry->ptr.unwritten)
have_written = true;
else
have_unwritten = true;
have_ec = false;
crc_since_last_ptr = false;
nr_ptrs++;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32:
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64:
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128:
crc = bch2_extent_crc_unpack(k.k, entry_to_crc(entry));
bkey_fsck_err_on(crc.offset + crc.live_size > crc.uncompressed_size,
c, ptr_crc_uncompressed_size_too_small,
"checksum offset + key size > uncompressed size");
bkey_fsck_err_on(!bch2_checksum_type_valid(c, crc.csum_type),
c, ptr_crc_csum_type_unknown,
"invalid checksum type");
bkey_fsck_err_on(crc.compression_type >= BCH_COMPRESSION_TYPE_NR,
c, ptr_crc_compression_type_unknown,
"invalid compression type");
if (bch2_csum_type_is_encryption(crc.csum_type)) {
if (nonce == UINT_MAX)
nonce = crc.offset + crc.nonce;
else if (nonce != crc.offset + crc.nonce)
bkey_fsck_err(c, ptr_crc_nonce_mismatch,
"incorrect nonce");
}
bkey_fsck_err_on(crc_since_last_ptr,
c, ptr_crc_redundant,
"redundant crc entry");
crc_since_last_ptr = true;
bkey_fsck_err_on(crc_is_encoded(crc) &&
(crc.uncompressed_size > c->opts.encoded_extent_max >> 9) &&
(flags & (BCH_VALIDATE_write|BCH_VALIDATE_commit)),
c, ptr_crc_uncompressed_size_too_big,
"too large encoded extent");
size_ondisk = crc.compressed_size;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_stripe_ptr:
bkey_fsck_err_on(have_ec,
c, ptr_stripe_redundant,
"redundant stripe entry");
have_ec = true;
break;
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance: {
/*
* this shouldn't be a fsck error, for forward
* compatibility; the rebalance code should just refetch
* the compression opt if it's unknown
*/
#if 0
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
const struct bch_extent_rebalance *r = &entry->rebalance;
if (!bch2_compression_opt_valid(r->compression)) {
struct bch_compression_opt opt = __bch2_compression_decode(r->compression);
prt_printf(err, "invalid compression opt %u:%u",
opt.type, opt.level);
return -BCH_ERR_invalid_bkey;
}
#endif
break;
}
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
}
}
bkey_fsck_err_on(!nr_ptrs,
c, extent_ptrs_no_ptrs,
"no ptrs");
bkey_fsck_err_on(nr_ptrs > BCH_BKEY_PTRS_MAX,
c, extent_ptrs_too_many_ptrs,
"too many ptrs: %u > %u", nr_ptrs, BCH_BKEY_PTRS_MAX);
bkey_fsck_err_on(have_written && have_unwritten,
c, extent_ptrs_written_and_unwritten,
"extent with unwritten and written ptrs");
bkey_fsck_err_on(k.k->type != KEY_TYPE_extent && have_unwritten,
c, extent_ptrs_unwritten,
"has unwritten ptrs");
bkey_fsck_err_on(crc_since_last_ptr,
c, extent_ptrs_redundant_crc,
"redundant crc entry");
bkey_fsck_err_on(have_ec,
c, extent_ptrs_redundant_stripe,
"redundant stripe entry");
fsck_err:
return ret;
}
void bch2_ptr_swab(struct bkey_s k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(k);
union bch_extent_entry *entry;
u64 *d;
for (d = (u64 *) ptrs.start;
d != (u64 *) ptrs.end;
d++)
*d = swab64(*d);
for (entry = ptrs.start;
entry < ptrs.end;
entry = extent_entry_next(entry)) {
switch (extent_entry_type(entry)) {
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr:
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32:
entry->crc32.csum = swab32(entry->crc32.csum);
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64:
entry->crc64.csum_hi = swab16(entry->crc64.csum_hi);
entry->crc64.csum_lo = swab64(entry->crc64.csum_lo);
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128:
entry->crc128.csum.hi = (__force __le64)
swab64((__force u64) entry->crc128.csum.hi);
entry->crc128.csum.lo = (__force __le64)
swab64((__force u64) entry->crc128.csum.lo);
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_stripe_ptr:
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance:
break;
}
}
}
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
const struct bch_extent_rebalance *bch2_bkey_rebalance_opts(struct bkey_s_c k)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
bkey_extent_entry_for_each(ptrs, entry)
if (__extent_entry_type(entry) == BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance)
return &entry->rebalance;
return NULL;
}
unsigned bch2_bkey_ptrs_need_rebalance(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
unsigned target, unsigned compression)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
unsigned rewrite_ptrs = 0;
if (compression) {
unsigned compression_type = bch2_compression_opt_to_type(compression);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
unsigned i = 0;
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry) {
if (p.crc.compression_type == BCH_COMPRESSION_TYPE_incompressible ||
p.ptr.unwritten) {
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
rewrite_ptrs = 0;
goto incompressible;
}
if (!p.ptr.cached && p.crc.compression_type != compression_type)
rewrite_ptrs |= 1U << i;
i++;
}
}
incompressible:
if (target && bch2_target_accepts_data(c, BCH_DATA_user, target)) {
unsigned i = 0;
bkey_for_each_ptr(ptrs, ptr) {
if (!ptr->cached && !bch2_dev_in_target(c, ptr->dev, target))
rewrite_ptrs |= 1U << i;
i++;
}
}
return rewrite_ptrs;
}
bool bch2_bkey_needs_rebalance(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k)
{
const struct bch_extent_rebalance *r = bch2_bkey_rebalance_opts(k);
/*
* If it's an indirect extent, we don't delete the rebalance entry when
* done so that we know what options were applied - check if it still
* needs work done:
*/
if (r &&
k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_reflink_v &&
!bch2_bkey_ptrs_need_rebalance(c, k, r->target, r->compression))
r = NULL;
return r != NULL;
}
static u64 __bch2_bkey_sectors_need_rebalance(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k,
unsigned target, unsigned compression)
{
struct bkey_ptrs_c ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs_c(k);
const union bch_extent_entry *entry;
struct extent_ptr_decoded p;
u64 sectors = 0;
if (compression) {
unsigned compression_type = bch2_compression_opt_to_type(compression);
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry) {
if (p.crc.compression_type == BCH_COMPRESSION_TYPE_incompressible ||
p.ptr.unwritten) {
sectors = 0;
goto incompressible;
}
if (!p.ptr.cached && p.crc.compression_type != compression_type)
sectors += p.crc.compressed_size;
}
}
incompressible:
if (target && bch2_target_accepts_data(c, BCH_DATA_user, target)) {
bkey_for_each_ptr_decode(k.k, ptrs, p, entry)
if (!p.ptr.cached && !bch2_dev_in_target(c, p.ptr.dev, target))
sectors += p.crc.compressed_size;
}
return sectors;
}
u64 bch2_bkey_sectors_need_rebalance(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_s_c k)
{
const struct bch_extent_rebalance *r = bch2_bkey_rebalance_opts(k);
return r ? __bch2_bkey_sectors_need_rebalance(c, k, r->target, r->compression) : 0;
}
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
int bch2_bkey_set_needs_rebalance(struct bch_fs *c, struct bkey_i *_k,
struct bch_io_opts *opts)
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
{
struct bkey_s k = bkey_i_to_s(_k);
struct bch_extent_rebalance *r;
unsigned target = opts->background_target;
unsigned compression = background_compression(*opts);
bcachefs: rebalance_work This adds a new btree, rebalance_work, to eliminate scanning required for finding extents that need work done on them in the background - i.e. for the background_target and background_compression options. rebalance_work is a bitset btree, where a KEY_TYPE_set corresponds to an extent in the extents or reflink btree at the same pos. A new extent field is added, bch_extent_rebalance, which indicates that this extent has work that needs to be done in the background - and which options to use. This allows per-inode options to be propagated to indirect extents - at least in some circumstances. In this patch, changing IO options on a file will not propagate the new options to indirect extents pointed to by that file. Updating (setting/clearing) the rebalance_work btree is done by the extent trigger, which looks at the bch_extent_rebalance field. Scanning is still requrired after changing IO path options - either just for a given inode, or for the whole filesystem. We indicate that scanning is required by adding a KEY_TYPE_cookie key to the rebalance_work btree: the cookie counter is so that we can detect that scanning is still required when an option has been flipped mid-way through an existing scan. Future possible work: - Propagate options to indirect extents when being changed - Add other IO path options - nr_replicas, ec, to rebalance_work so they can be applied in the background when they change - Add a counter, for bcachefs fs usage output, showing the pending amount of rebalance work: we'll probably want to do this after the disk space accounting rewrite (moving it to a new btree) Signed-off-by: Kent Overstreet <kent.overstreet@linux.dev>
2023-10-20 17:33:14 +00:00
bool needs_rebalance;
if (!bkey_extent_is_direct_data(k.k))
return 0;
/* get existing rebalance entry: */
r = (struct bch_extent_rebalance *) bch2_bkey_rebalance_opts(k.s_c);
if (r) {
if (k.k->type == KEY_TYPE_reflink_v) {
/*
* indirect extents: existing options take precedence,
* so that we don't move extents back and forth if
* they're referenced by different inodes with different
* options:
*/
if (r->target)
target = r->target;
if (r->compression)
compression = r->compression;
}
r->target = target;
r->compression = compression;
}
needs_rebalance = bch2_bkey_ptrs_need_rebalance(c, k.s_c, target, compression);
if (needs_rebalance && !r) {
union bch_extent_entry *new = bkey_val_end(k);
new->rebalance.type = 1U << BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance;
new->rebalance.compression = compression;
new->rebalance.target = target;
new->rebalance.unused = 0;
k.k->u64s += extent_entry_u64s(new);
} else if (!needs_rebalance && r && k.k->type != KEY_TYPE_reflink_v) {
/*
* For indirect extents, don't delete the rebalance entry when
* we're finished so that we know we specifically moved it or
* compressed it to its current location/compression type
*/
extent_entry_drop(k, (union bch_extent_entry *) r);
}
return 0;
}
/* Generic extent code: */
int bch2_cut_front_s(struct bpos where, struct bkey_s k)
{
unsigned new_val_u64s = bkey_val_u64s(k.k);
int val_u64s_delta;
u64 sub;
if (bkey_le(where, bkey_start_pos(k.k)))
return 0;
EBUG_ON(bkey_gt(where, k.k->p));
sub = where.offset - bkey_start_offset(k.k);
k.k->size -= sub;
if (!k.k->size) {
k.k->type = KEY_TYPE_deleted;
new_val_u64s = 0;
}
switch (k.k->type) {
case KEY_TYPE_extent:
case KEY_TYPE_reflink_v: {
struct bkey_ptrs ptrs = bch2_bkey_ptrs(k);
union bch_extent_entry *entry;
bool seen_crc = false;
bkey_extent_entry_for_each(ptrs, entry) {
switch (extent_entry_type(entry)) {
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_ptr:
if (!seen_crc)
entry->ptr.offset += sub;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc32:
entry->crc32.offset += sub;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc64:
entry->crc64.offset += sub;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_crc128:
entry->crc128.offset += sub;
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_stripe_ptr:
break;
case BCH_EXTENT_ENTRY_rebalance:
break;
}
if (extent_entry_is_crc(entry))
seen_crc = true;
}
break;
}
case KEY_TYPE_reflink_p: {
struct bkey_s_reflink_p p = bkey_s_to_reflink_p(k);
le64_add_cpu(&p.v->idx, sub);
break;
}
case KEY_TYPE_inline_data:
case KEY_TYPE_indirect_inline_data: {
void *p = bkey_inline_data_p(k);
unsigned bytes = bkey_inline_data_bytes(k.k);
sub = min_t(u64, sub << 9, bytes);
memmove(p, p + sub, bytes - sub);
new_val_u64s -= sub >> 3;
break;
}
}
val_u64s_delta = bkey_val_u64s(k.k) - new_val_u64s;
BUG_ON(val_u64s_delta < 0);
set_bkey_val_u64s(k.k, new_val_u64s);
memset(bkey_val_end(k), 0, val_u64s_delta * sizeof(u64));
return -val_u64s_delta;
}
int bch2_cut_back_s(struct bpos where, struct bkey_s k)
{
unsigned new_val_u64s = bkey_val_u64s(k.k);
int val_u64s_delta;
u64 len = 0;
if (bkey_ge(where, k.k->p))
return 0;
EBUG_ON(bkey_lt(where, bkey_start_pos(k.k)));
len = where.offset - bkey_start_offset(k.k);
k.k->p.offset = where.offset;
k.k->size = len;
if (!len) {
k.k->type = KEY_TYPE_deleted;
new_val_u64s = 0;
}
switch (k.k->type) {
case KEY_TYPE_inline_data:
case KEY_TYPE_indirect_inline_data:
new_val_u64s = (bkey_inline_data_offset(k.k) +
min(bkey_inline_data_bytes(k.k), k.k->size << 9)) >> 3;
break;
}
val_u64s_delta = bkey_val_u64s(k.k) - new_val_u64s;
BUG_ON(val_u64s_delta < 0);
set_bkey_val_u64s(k.k, new_val_u64s);
memset(bkey_val_end(k), 0, val_u64s_delta * sizeof(u64));
return -val_u64s_delta;
}