Steven Whitehouse | 9f1585c | 2008-06-26 08:25:57 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Glock internal locking rules |
| 2 | ------------------------------ |
| 3 | |
| 4 | This documents the basic principles of the glock state machine |
| 5 | internals. Each glock (struct gfs2_glock in fs/gfs2/incore.h) |
| 6 | has two main (internal) locks: |
| 7 | |
| 8 | 1. A spinlock (gl_spin) which protects the internal state such |
| 9 | as gl_state, gl_target and the list of holders (gl_holders) |
| 10 | 2. A non-blocking bit lock, GLF_LOCK, which is used to prevent other |
| 11 | threads from making calls to the DLM, etc. at the same time. If a |
| 12 | thread takes this lock, it must then call run_queue (usually via the |
| 13 | workqueue) when it releases it in order to ensure any pending tasks |
| 14 | are completed. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | The gl_holders list contains all the queued lock requests (not |
| 17 | just the holders) associated with the glock. If there are any |
| 18 | held locks, then they will be contiguous entries at the head |
| 19 | of the list. Locks are granted in strictly the order that they |
| 20 | are queued, except for those marked LM_FLAG_PRIORITY which are |
| 21 | used only during recovery, and even then only for journal locks. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | There are three lock states that users of the glock layer can request, |
| 24 | namely shared (SH), deferred (DF) and exclusive (EX). Those translate |
| 25 | to the following DLM lock modes: |
| 26 | |
| 27 | Glock mode | DLM lock mode |
| 28 | ------------------------------ |
| 29 | UN | IV/NL Unlocked (no DLM lock associated with glock) or NL |
| 30 | SH | PR (Protected read) |
| 31 | DF | CW (Concurrent write) |
| 32 | EX | EX (Exclusive) |
| 33 | |
| 34 | Thus DF is basically a shared mode which is incompatible with the "normal" |
| 35 | shared lock mode, SH. In GFS2 the DF mode is used exclusively for direct I/O |
| 36 | operations. The glocks are basically a lock plus some routines which deal |
| 37 | with cache management. The following rules apply for the cache: |
| 38 | |
| 39 | Glock mode | Cache data | Cache Metadata | Dirty Data | Dirty Metadata |
| 40 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 41 | UN | No | No | No | No |
| 42 | SH | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| 43 | DF | No | Yes | No | No |
| 44 | EX | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 45 | |
| 46 | These rules are implemented using the various glock operations which |
| 47 | are defined for each type of glock. Not all types of glocks use |
| 48 | all the modes. Only inode glocks use the DF mode for example. |
| 49 | |
| 50 | Table of glock operations and per type constants: |
| 51 | |
| 52 | Field | Purpose |
| 53 | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 54 | go_xmote_th | Called before remote state change (e.g. to sync dirty data) |
| 55 | go_xmote_bh | Called after remote state change (e.g. to refill cache) |
| 56 | go_inval | Called if remote state change requires invalidating the cache |
| 57 | go_demote_ok | Returns boolean value of whether its ok to demote a glock |
| 58 | | (e.g. checks timeout, and that there is no cached data) |
| 59 | go_lock | Called for the first local holder of a lock |
| 60 | go_unlock | Called on the final local unlock of a lock |
| 61 | go_dump | Called to print content of object for debugfs file, or on |
| 62 | | error to dump glock to the log. |
Steven Whitehouse | e9ccb73 | 2009-05-19 10:23:23 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 63 | go_type | The type of the glock, LM_TYPE_..... |
Steven Whitehouse | 9f1585c | 2008-06-26 08:25:57 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 64 | go_min_hold_time | The minimum hold time |
| 65 | |
| 66 | The minimum hold time for each lock is the time after a remote lock |
| 67 | grant for which we ignore remote demote requests. This is in order to |
| 68 | prevent a situation where locks are being bounced around the cluster |
| 69 | from node to node with none of the nodes making any progress. This |
| 70 | tends to show up most with shared mmaped files which are being written |
| 71 | to by multiple nodes. By delaying the demotion in response to a |
| 72 | remote callback, that gives the userspace program time to make |
| 73 | some progress before the pages are unmapped. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | There is a plan to try and remove the go_lock and go_unlock callbacks |
| 76 | if possible, in order to try and speed up the fast path though the locking. |
| 77 | Also, eventually we hope to make the glock "EX" mode locally shared |
| 78 | such that any local locking will be done with the i_mutex as required |
| 79 | rather than via the glock. |
| 80 | |
| 81 | Locking rules for glock operations: |
| 82 | |
| 83 | Operation | GLF_LOCK bit lock held | gl_spin spinlock held |
| 84 | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 85 | go_xmote_th | Yes | No |
| 86 | go_xmote_bh | Yes | No |
| 87 | go_inval | Yes | No |
| 88 | go_demote_ok | Sometimes | Yes |
| 89 | go_lock | Yes | No |
| 90 | go_unlock | Yes | No |
| 91 | go_dump | Sometimes | Yes |
| 92 | |
| 93 | N.B. Operations must not drop either the bit lock or the spinlock |
| 94 | if its held on entry. go_dump and do_demote_ok must never block. |
| 95 | Note that go_dump will only be called if the glock's state |
| 96 | indicates that it is caching uptodate data. |
| 97 | |
| 98 | Glock locking order within GFS2: |
| 99 | |
| 100 | 1. i_mutex (if required) |
| 101 | 2. Rename glock (for rename only) |
| 102 | 3. Inode glock(s) |
| 103 | (Parents before children, inodes at "same level" with same parent in |
| 104 | lock number order) |
| 105 | 4. Rgrp glock(s) (for (de)allocation operations) |
| 106 | 5. Transaction glock (via gfs2_trans_begin) for non-read operations |
| 107 | 6. Page lock (always last, very important!) |
| 108 | |
| 109 | There are two glocks per inode. One deals with access to the inode |
| 110 | itself (locking order as above), and the other, known as the iopen |
| 111 | glock is used in conjunction with the i_nlink field in the inode to |
| 112 | determine the lifetime of the inode in question. Locking of inodes |
| 113 | is on a per-inode basis. Locking of rgrps is on a per rgrp basis. |
| 114 | |