blob: d3ef6566b0190340b21f94402a811f5a45d4f38d [file] [log] [blame]
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001/*
2 * linux/fs/ext3/inode.c
3 *
4 * Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995
5 * Remy Card (card@masi.ibp.fr)
6 * Laboratoire MASI - Institut Blaise Pascal
7 * Universite Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI)
8 *
9 * from
10 *
11 * linux/fs/minix/inode.c
12 *
13 * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
14 *
15 * Goal-directed block allocation by Stephen Tweedie
Dave Kleikampe9ad5622006-09-27 01:49:35 -070016 * (sct@redhat.com), 1993, 1998
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070017 * Big-endian to little-endian byte-swapping/bitmaps by
18 * David S. Miller (davem@caip.rutgers.edu), 1995
19 * 64-bit file support on 64-bit platforms by Jakub Jelinek
Dave Kleikampe9ad5622006-09-27 01:49:35 -070020 * (jj@sunsite.ms.mff.cuni.cz)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070021 *
22 * Assorted race fixes, rewrite of ext3_get_block() by Al Viro, 2000
23 */
24
25#include <linux/module.h>
26#include <linux/fs.h>
27#include <linux/time.h>
28#include <linux/ext3_jbd.h>
29#include <linux/jbd.h>
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070030#include <linux/highuid.h>
31#include <linux/pagemap.h>
32#include <linux/quotaops.h>
33#include <linux/string.h>
34#include <linux/buffer_head.h>
35#include <linux/writeback.h>
36#include <linux/mpage.h>
37#include <linux/uio.h>
Jens Axboecaa38fb2006-07-23 01:41:26 +020038#include <linux/bio.h>
Josef Bacik68c9d702008-10-03 17:32:43 -040039#include <linux/fiemap.h>
Duane Griffinb5ed3112008-12-19 20:47:14 +000040#include <linux/namei.h>
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070041#include "xattr.h"
42#include "acl.h"
43
44static int ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(struct inode *inode);
45
46/*
47 * Test whether an inode is a fast symlink.
48 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -080049static int ext3_inode_is_fast_symlink(struct inode *inode)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070050{
51 int ea_blocks = EXT3_I(inode)->i_file_acl ?
52 (inode->i_sb->s_blocksize >> 9) : 0;
53
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -080054 return (S_ISLNK(inode->i_mode) && inode->i_blocks - ea_blocks == 0);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070055}
56
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -080057/*
58 * The ext3 forget function must perform a revoke if we are freeing data
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070059 * which has been journaled. Metadata (eg. indirect blocks) must be
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -070060 * revoked in all cases.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070061 *
62 * "bh" may be NULL: a metadata block may have been freed from memory
63 * but there may still be a record of it in the journal, and that record
64 * still needs to be revoked.
65 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -080066int ext3_forget(handle_t *handle, int is_metadata, struct inode *inode,
Mingming Cao1c2bf372006-06-25 05:48:06 -070067 struct buffer_head *bh, ext3_fsblk_t blocknr)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070068{
69 int err;
70
71 might_sleep();
72
73 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "enter");
74
75 jbd_debug(4, "forgetting bh %p: is_metadata = %d, mode %o, "
76 "data mode %lx\n",
77 bh, is_metadata, inode->i_mode,
78 test_opt(inode->i_sb, DATA_FLAGS));
79
80 /* Never use the revoke function if we are doing full data
81 * journaling: there is no need to, and a V1 superblock won't
82 * support it. Otherwise, only skip the revoke on un-journaled
83 * data blocks. */
84
85 if (test_opt(inode->i_sb, DATA_FLAGS) == EXT3_MOUNT_JOURNAL_DATA ||
86 (!is_metadata && !ext3_should_journal_data(inode))) {
87 if (bh) {
88 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call journal_forget");
89 return ext3_journal_forget(handle, bh);
90 }
91 return 0;
92 }
93
94 /*
95 * data!=journal && (is_metadata || should_journal_data(inode))
96 */
97 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call ext3_journal_revoke");
98 err = ext3_journal_revoke(handle, blocknr, bh);
99 if (err)
Harvey Harrisone05b6b52008-04-28 02:16:15 -0700100 ext3_abort(inode->i_sb, __func__,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700101 "error %d when attempting revoke", err);
102 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "exit");
103 return err;
104}
105
106/*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800107 * Work out how many blocks we need to proceed with the next chunk of a
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700108 * truncate transaction.
109 */
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700110static unsigned long blocks_for_truncate(struct inode *inode)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700111{
112 unsigned long needed;
113
114 needed = inode->i_blocks >> (inode->i_sb->s_blocksize_bits - 9);
115
116 /* Give ourselves just enough room to cope with inodes in which
117 * i_blocks is corrupt: we've seen disk corruptions in the past
118 * which resulted in random data in an inode which looked enough
119 * like a regular file for ext3 to try to delete it. Things
120 * will go a bit crazy if that happens, but at least we should
121 * try not to panic the whole kernel. */
122 if (needed < 2)
123 needed = 2;
124
125 /* But we need to bound the transaction so we don't overflow the
126 * journal. */
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700127 if (needed > EXT3_MAX_TRANS_DATA)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700128 needed = EXT3_MAX_TRANS_DATA;
129
Jan Kara1f545872005-06-23 22:01:04 -0700130 return EXT3_DATA_TRANS_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb) + needed;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700131}
132
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700133/*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700134 * Truncate transactions can be complex and absolutely huge. So we need to
135 * be able to restart the transaction at a conventient checkpoint to make
136 * sure we don't overflow the journal.
137 *
138 * start_transaction gets us a new handle for a truncate transaction,
139 * and extend_transaction tries to extend the existing one a bit. If
140 * extend fails, we need to propagate the failure up and restart the
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700141 * transaction in the top-level truncate loop. --sct
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700142 */
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700143static handle_t *start_transaction(struct inode *inode)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700144{
145 handle_t *result;
146
147 result = ext3_journal_start(inode, blocks_for_truncate(inode));
148 if (!IS_ERR(result))
149 return result;
150
151 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, PTR_ERR(result));
152 return result;
153}
154
155/*
156 * Try to extend this transaction for the purposes of truncation.
157 *
158 * Returns 0 if we managed to create more room. If we can't create more
159 * room, and the transaction must be restarted we return 1.
160 */
161static int try_to_extend_transaction(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode)
162{
163 if (handle->h_buffer_credits > EXT3_RESERVE_TRANS_BLOCKS)
164 return 0;
165 if (!ext3_journal_extend(handle, blocks_for_truncate(inode)))
166 return 0;
167 return 1;
168}
169
170/*
171 * Restart the transaction associated with *handle. This does a commit,
172 * so before we call here everything must be consistently dirtied against
173 * this transaction.
174 */
175static int ext3_journal_test_restart(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode)
176{
177 jbd_debug(2, "restarting handle %p\n", handle);
178 return ext3_journal_restart(handle, blocks_for_truncate(inode));
179}
180
181/*
182 * Called at the last iput() if i_nlink is zero.
183 */
184void ext3_delete_inode (struct inode * inode)
185{
186 handle_t *handle;
187
Mark Fashehfef26652005-09-09 13:01:31 -0700188 truncate_inode_pages(&inode->i_data, 0);
189
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700190 if (is_bad_inode(inode))
191 goto no_delete;
192
193 handle = start_transaction(inode);
194 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800195 /*
196 * If we're going to skip the normal cleanup, we still need to
197 * make sure that the in-core orphan linked list is properly
198 * cleaned up.
199 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700200 ext3_orphan_del(NULL, inode);
201 goto no_delete;
202 }
203
204 if (IS_SYNC(inode))
205 handle->h_sync = 1;
206 inode->i_size = 0;
207 if (inode->i_blocks)
208 ext3_truncate(inode);
209 /*
210 * Kill off the orphan record which ext3_truncate created.
211 * AKPM: I think this can be inside the above `if'.
212 * Note that ext3_orphan_del() has to be able to cope with the
213 * deletion of a non-existent orphan - this is because we don't
214 * know if ext3_truncate() actually created an orphan record.
215 * (Well, we could do this if we need to, but heck - it works)
216 */
217 ext3_orphan_del(handle, inode);
218 EXT3_I(inode)->i_dtime = get_seconds();
219
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700220 /*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700221 * One subtle ordering requirement: if anything has gone wrong
222 * (transaction abort, IO errors, whatever), then we can still
223 * do these next steps (the fs will already have been marked as
224 * having errors), but we can't free the inode if the mark_dirty
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700225 * fails.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700226 */
227 if (ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode))
228 /* If that failed, just do the required in-core inode clear. */
229 clear_inode(inode);
230 else
231 ext3_free_inode(handle, inode);
232 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
233 return;
234no_delete:
235 clear_inode(inode); /* We must guarantee clearing of inode... */
236}
237
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700238typedef struct {
239 __le32 *p;
240 __le32 key;
241 struct buffer_head *bh;
242} Indirect;
243
244static inline void add_chain(Indirect *p, struct buffer_head *bh, __le32 *v)
245{
246 p->key = *(p->p = v);
247 p->bh = bh;
248}
249
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800250static int verify_chain(Indirect *from, Indirect *to)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700251{
252 while (from <= to && from->key == *from->p)
253 from++;
254 return (from > to);
255}
256
257/**
258 * ext3_block_to_path - parse the block number into array of offsets
259 * @inode: inode in question (we are only interested in its superblock)
260 * @i_block: block number to be parsed
261 * @offsets: array to store the offsets in
262 * @boundary: set this non-zero if the referred-to block is likely to be
263 * followed (on disk) by an indirect block.
264 *
265 * To store the locations of file's data ext3 uses a data structure common
266 * for UNIX filesystems - tree of pointers anchored in the inode, with
267 * data blocks at leaves and indirect blocks in intermediate nodes.
268 * This function translates the block number into path in that tree -
269 * return value is the path length and @offsets[n] is the offset of
270 * pointer to (n+1)th node in the nth one. If @block is out of range
271 * (negative or too large) warning is printed and zero returned.
272 *
273 * Note: function doesn't find node addresses, so no IO is needed. All
274 * we need to know is the capacity of indirect blocks (taken from the
275 * inode->i_sb).
276 */
277
278/*
279 * Portability note: the last comparison (check that we fit into triple
280 * indirect block) is spelled differently, because otherwise on an
281 * architecture with 32-bit longs and 8Kb pages we might get into trouble
282 * if our filesystem had 8Kb blocks. We might use long long, but that would
283 * kill us on x86. Oh, well, at least the sign propagation does not matter -
284 * i_block would have to be negative in the very beginning, so we would not
285 * get there at all.
286 */
287
288static int ext3_block_to_path(struct inode *inode,
289 long i_block, int offsets[4], int *boundary)
290{
291 int ptrs = EXT3_ADDR_PER_BLOCK(inode->i_sb);
292 int ptrs_bits = EXT3_ADDR_PER_BLOCK_BITS(inode->i_sb);
293 const long direct_blocks = EXT3_NDIR_BLOCKS,
294 indirect_blocks = ptrs,
295 double_blocks = (1 << (ptrs_bits * 2));
296 int n = 0;
297 int final = 0;
298
299 if (i_block < 0) {
300 ext3_warning (inode->i_sb, "ext3_block_to_path", "block < 0");
301 } else if (i_block < direct_blocks) {
302 offsets[n++] = i_block;
303 final = direct_blocks;
304 } else if ( (i_block -= direct_blocks) < indirect_blocks) {
305 offsets[n++] = EXT3_IND_BLOCK;
306 offsets[n++] = i_block;
307 final = ptrs;
308 } else if ((i_block -= indirect_blocks) < double_blocks) {
309 offsets[n++] = EXT3_DIND_BLOCK;
310 offsets[n++] = i_block >> ptrs_bits;
311 offsets[n++] = i_block & (ptrs - 1);
312 final = ptrs;
313 } else if (((i_block -= double_blocks) >> (ptrs_bits * 2)) < ptrs) {
314 offsets[n++] = EXT3_TIND_BLOCK;
315 offsets[n++] = i_block >> (ptrs_bits * 2);
316 offsets[n++] = (i_block >> ptrs_bits) & (ptrs - 1);
317 offsets[n++] = i_block & (ptrs - 1);
318 final = ptrs;
319 } else {
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800320 ext3_warning(inode->i_sb, "ext3_block_to_path", "block > big");
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700321 }
322 if (boundary)
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800323 *boundary = final - 1 - (i_block & (ptrs - 1));
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700324 return n;
325}
326
327/**
328 * ext3_get_branch - read the chain of indirect blocks leading to data
329 * @inode: inode in question
330 * @depth: depth of the chain (1 - direct pointer, etc.)
331 * @offsets: offsets of pointers in inode/indirect blocks
332 * @chain: place to store the result
333 * @err: here we store the error value
334 *
335 * Function fills the array of triples <key, p, bh> and returns %NULL
336 * if everything went OK or the pointer to the last filled triple
337 * (incomplete one) otherwise. Upon the return chain[i].key contains
338 * the number of (i+1)-th block in the chain (as it is stored in memory,
339 * i.e. little-endian 32-bit), chain[i].p contains the address of that
340 * number (it points into struct inode for i==0 and into the bh->b_data
341 * for i>0) and chain[i].bh points to the buffer_head of i-th indirect
342 * block for i>0 and NULL for i==0. In other words, it holds the block
343 * numbers of the chain, addresses they were taken from (and where we can
344 * verify that chain did not change) and buffer_heads hosting these
345 * numbers.
346 *
347 * Function stops when it stumbles upon zero pointer (absent block)
348 * (pointer to last triple returned, *@err == 0)
349 * or when it gets an IO error reading an indirect block
350 * (ditto, *@err == -EIO)
351 * or when it notices that chain had been changed while it was reading
352 * (ditto, *@err == -EAGAIN)
353 * or when it reads all @depth-1 indirect blocks successfully and finds
354 * the whole chain, all way to the data (returns %NULL, *err == 0).
355 */
356static Indirect *ext3_get_branch(struct inode *inode, int depth, int *offsets,
357 Indirect chain[4], int *err)
358{
359 struct super_block *sb = inode->i_sb;
360 Indirect *p = chain;
361 struct buffer_head *bh;
362
363 *err = 0;
364 /* i_data is not going away, no lock needed */
365 add_chain (chain, NULL, EXT3_I(inode)->i_data + *offsets);
366 if (!p->key)
367 goto no_block;
368 while (--depth) {
369 bh = sb_bread(sb, le32_to_cpu(p->key));
370 if (!bh)
371 goto failure;
372 /* Reader: pointers */
373 if (!verify_chain(chain, p))
374 goto changed;
375 add_chain(++p, bh, (__le32*)bh->b_data + *++offsets);
376 /* Reader: end */
377 if (!p->key)
378 goto no_block;
379 }
380 return NULL;
381
382changed:
383 brelse(bh);
384 *err = -EAGAIN;
385 goto no_block;
386failure:
387 *err = -EIO;
388no_block:
389 return p;
390}
391
392/**
393 * ext3_find_near - find a place for allocation with sufficient locality
394 * @inode: owner
395 * @ind: descriptor of indirect block.
396 *
Benoit Boissinot1cc8dcf52008-04-21 22:45:55 +0000397 * This function returns the preferred place for block allocation.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700398 * It is used when heuristic for sequential allocation fails.
399 * Rules are:
400 * + if there is a block to the left of our position - allocate near it.
401 * + if pointer will live in indirect block - allocate near that block.
402 * + if pointer will live in inode - allocate in the same
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700403 * cylinder group.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700404 *
405 * In the latter case we colour the starting block by the callers PID to
406 * prevent it from clashing with concurrent allocations for a different inode
407 * in the same block group. The PID is used here so that functionally related
408 * files will be close-by on-disk.
409 *
410 * Caller must make sure that @ind is valid and will stay that way.
411 */
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700412static ext3_fsblk_t ext3_find_near(struct inode *inode, Indirect *ind)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700413{
414 struct ext3_inode_info *ei = EXT3_I(inode);
415 __le32 *start = ind->bh ? (__le32*) ind->bh->b_data : ei->i_data;
416 __le32 *p;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700417 ext3_fsblk_t bg_start;
418 ext3_grpblk_t colour;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700419
420 /* Try to find previous block */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800421 for (p = ind->p - 1; p >= start; p--) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700422 if (*p)
423 return le32_to_cpu(*p);
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800424 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700425
426 /* No such thing, so let's try location of indirect block */
427 if (ind->bh)
428 return ind->bh->b_blocknr;
429
430 /*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800431 * It is going to be referred to from the inode itself? OK, just put it
432 * into the same cylinder group then.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700433 */
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700434 bg_start = ext3_group_first_block_no(inode->i_sb, ei->i_block_group);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700435 colour = (current->pid % 16) *
436 (EXT3_BLOCKS_PER_GROUP(inode->i_sb) / 16);
437 return bg_start + colour;
438}
439
440/**
Benoit Boissinot1cc8dcf52008-04-21 22:45:55 +0000441 * ext3_find_goal - find a preferred place for allocation.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700442 * @inode: owner
443 * @block: block we want
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700444 * @partial: pointer to the last triple within a chain
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700445 *
Benoit Boissinot1cc8dcf52008-04-21 22:45:55 +0000446 * Normally this function find the preferred place for block allocation,
Akinobu Mitafb01bfd2008-02-06 01:40:16 -0800447 * returns it.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700448 */
449
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700450static ext3_fsblk_t ext3_find_goal(struct inode *inode, long block,
Akinobu Mitafb01bfd2008-02-06 01:40:16 -0800451 Indirect *partial)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700452{
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800453 struct ext3_block_alloc_info *block_i;
454
455 block_i = EXT3_I(inode)->i_block_alloc_info;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700456
457 /*
458 * try the heuristic for sequential allocation,
459 * failing that at least try to get decent locality.
460 */
461 if (block_i && (block == block_i->last_alloc_logical_block + 1)
462 && (block_i->last_alloc_physical_block != 0)) {
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700463 return block_i->last_alloc_physical_block + 1;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700464 }
465
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700466 return ext3_find_near(inode, partial);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700467}
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800468
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800469/**
470 * ext3_blks_to_allocate: Look up the block map and count the number
471 * of direct blocks need to be allocated for the given branch.
472 *
Dave Kleikampe9ad5622006-09-27 01:49:35 -0700473 * @branch: chain of indirect blocks
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800474 * @k: number of blocks need for indirect blocks
475 * @blks: number of data blocks to be mapped.
476 * @blocks_to_boundary: the offset in the indirect block
477 *
478 * return the total number of blocks to be allocate, including the
479 * direct and indirect blocks.
480 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800481static int ext3_blks_to_allocate(Indirect *branch, int k, unsigned long blks,
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800482 int blocks_to_boundary)
483{
484 unsigned long count = 0;
485
486 /*
487 * Simple case, [t,d]Indirect block(s) has not allocated yet
488 * then it's clear blocks on that path have not allocated
489 */
490 if (k > 0) {
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800491 /* right now we don't handle cross boundary allocation */
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800492 if (blks < blocks_to_boundary + 1)
493 count += blks;
494 else
495 count += blocks_to_boundary + 1;
496 return count;
497 }
498
499 count++;
500 while (count < blks && count <= blocks_to_boundary &&
501 le32_to_cpu(*(branch[0].p + count)) == 0) {
502 count++;
503 }
504 return count;
505}
506
507/**
508 * ext3_alloc_blocks: multiple allocate blocks needed for a branch
509 * @indirect_blks: the number of blocks need to allocate for indirect
510 * blocks
511 *
512 * @new_blocks: on return it will store the new block numbers for
513 * the indirect blocks(if needed) and the first direct block,
514 * @blks: on return it will store the total number of allocated
515 * direct blocks
516 */
517static int ext3_alloc_blocks(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700518 ext3_fsblk_t goal, int indirect_blks, int blks,
519 ext3_fsblk_t new_blocks[4], int *err)
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800520{
521 int target, i;
522 unsigned long count = 0;
523 int index = 0;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700524 ext3_fsblk_t current_block = 0;
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800525 int ret = 0;
526
527 /*
528 * Here we try to allocate the requested multiple blocks at once,
529 * on a best-effort basis.
530 * To build a branch, we should allocate blocks for
531 * the indirect blocks(if not allocated yet), and at least
532 * the first direct block of this branch. That's the
533 * minimum number of blocks need to allocate(required)
534 */
535 target = blks + indirect_blks;
536
537 while (1) {
538 count = target;
539 /* allocating blocks for indirect blocks and direct blocks */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800540 current_block = ext3_new_blocks(handle,inode,goal,&count,err);
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800541 if (*err)
542 goto failed_out;
543
544 target -= count;
545 /* allocate blocks for indirect blocks */
546 while (index < indirect_blks && count) {
547 new_blocks[index++] = current_block++;
548 count--;
549 }
550
551 if (count > 0)
552 break;
553 }
554
555 /* save the new block number for the first direct block */
556 new_blocks[index] = current_block;
557
558 /* total number of blocks allocated for direct blocks */
559 ret = count;
560 *err = 0;
561 return ret;
562failed_out:
563 for (i = 0; i <index; i++)
564 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, new_blocks[i], 1);
565 return ret;
566}
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700567
568/**
569 * ext3_alloc_branch - allocate and set up a chain of blocks.
570 * @inode: owner
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800571 * @indirect_blks: number of allocated indirect blocks
572 * @blks: number of allocated direct blocks
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700573 * @offsets: offsets (in the blocks) to store the pointers to next.
574 * @branch: place to store the chain in.
575 *
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800576 * This function allocates blocks, zeroes out all but the last one,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700577 * links them into chain and (if we are synchronous) writes them to disk.
578 * In other words, it prepares a branch that can be spliced onto the
579 * inode. It stores the information about that chain in the branch[], in
580 * the same format as ext3_get_branch() would do. We are calling it after
581 * we had read the existing part of chain and partial points to the last
582 * triple of that (one with zero ->key). Upon the exit we have the same
Glauber de Oliveira Costa5b116872005-10-30 15:02:48 -0800583 * picture as after the successful ext3_get_block(), except that in one
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700584 * place chain is disconnected - *branch->p is still zero (we did not
585 * set the last link), but branch->key contains the number that should
586 * be placed into *branch->p to fill that gap.
587 *
588 * If allocation fails we free all blocks we've allocated (and forget
589 * their buffer_heads) and return the error value the from failed
590 * ext3_alloc_block() (normally -ENOSPC). Otherwise we set the chain
591 * as described above and return 0.
592 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700593static int ext3_alloc_branch(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700594 int indirect_blks, int *blks, ext3_fsblk_t goal,
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800595 int *offsets, Indirect *branch)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700596{
597 int blocksize = inode->i_sb->s_blocksize;
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800598 int i, n = 0;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700599 int err = 0;
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800600 struct buffer_head *bh;
601 int num;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700602 ext3_fsblk_t new_blocks[4];
603 ext3_fsblk_t current_block;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700604
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800605 num = ext3_alloc_blocks(handle, inode, goal, indirect_blks,
606 *blks, new_blocks, &err);
607 if (err)
608 return err;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700609
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800610 branch[0].key = cpu_to_le32(new_blocks[0]);
611 /*
612 * metadata blocks and data blocks are allocated.
613 */
614 for (n = 1; n <= indirect_blks; n++) {
615 /*
616 * Get buffer_head for parent block, zero it out
617 * and set the pointer to new one, then send
618 * parent to disk.
619 */
620 bh = sb_getblk(inode->i_sb, new_blocks[n-1]);
621 branch[n].bh = bh;
622 lock_buffer(bh);
623 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call get_create_access");
624 err = ext3_journal_get_create_access(handle, bh);
625 if (err) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700626 unlock_buffer(bh);
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800627 brelse(bh);
628 goto failed;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700629 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700630
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800631 memset(bh->b_data, 0, blocksize);
632 branch[n].p = (__le32 *) bh->b_data + offsets[n];
633 branch[n].key = cpu_to_le32(new_blocks[n]);
634 *branch[n].p = branch[n].key;
635 if ( n == indirect_blks) {
636 current_block = new_blocks[n];
637 /*
638 * End of chain, update the last new metablock of
639 * the chain to point to the new allocated
640 * data blocks numbers
641 */
642 for (i=1; i < num; i++)
643 *(branch[n].p + i) = cpu_to_le32(++current_block);
644 }
645 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "marking uptodate");
646 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
647 unlock_buffer(bh);
648
649 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
650 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
651 if (err)
652 goto failed;
653 }
654 *blks = num;
655 return err;
656failed:
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700657 /* Allocation failed, free what we already allocated */
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800658 for (i = 1; i <= n ; i++) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700659 BUFFER_TRACE(branch[i].bh, "call journal_forget");
660 ext3_journal_forget(handle, branch[i].bh);
661 }
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800662 for (i = 0; i <indirect_blks; i++)
663 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, new_blocks[i], 1);
664
665 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, new_blocks[i], num);
666
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700667 return err;
668}
669
670/**
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800671 * ext3_splice_branch - splice the allocated branch onto inode.
672 * @inode: owner
673 * @block: (logical) number of block we are adding
674 * @chain: chain of indirect blocks (with a missing link - see
675 * ext3_alloc_branch)
676 * @where: location of missing link
677 * @num: number of indirect blocks we are adding
678 * @blks: number of direct blocks we are adding
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700679 *
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800680 * This function fills the missing link and does all housekeeping needed in
681 * inode (->i_blocks, etc.). In case of success we end up with the full
682 * chain to new block and return 0.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700683 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800684static int ext3_splice_branch(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
685 long block, Indirect *where, int num, int blks)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700686{
687 int i;
688 int err = 0;
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800689 struct ext3_block_alloc_info *block_i;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700690 ext3_fsblk_t current_block;
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800691
692 block_i = EXT3_I(inode)->i_block_alloc_info;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700693 /*
694 * If we're splicing into a [td]indirect block (as opposed to the
695 * inode) then we need to get write access to the [td]indirect block
696 * before the splice.
697 */
698 if (where->bh) {
699 BUFFER_TRACE(where->bh, "get_write_access");
700 err = ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, where->bh);
701 if (err)
702 goto err_out;
703 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700704 /* That's it */
705
706 *where->p = where->key;
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800707
708 /*
709 * Update the host buffer_head or inode to point to more just allocated
710 * direct blocks blocks
711 */
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800712 if (num == 0 && blks > 1) {
Mingming Cao5dea5172006-05-03 19:55:12 -0700713 current_block = le32_to_cpu(where->key) + 1;
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800714 for (i = 1; i < blks; i++)
715 *(where->p + i ) = cpu_to_le32(current_block++);
716 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700717
718 /*
719 * update the most recently allocated logical & physical block
720 * in i_block_alloc_info, to assist find the proper goal block for next
721 * allocation
722 */
723 if (block_i) {
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800724 block_i->last_alloc_logical_block = block + blks - 1;
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800725 block_i->last_alloc_physical_block =
Mingming Cao5dea5172006-05-03 19:55:12 -0700726 le32_to_cpu(where[num].key) + blks - 1;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700727 }
728
729 /* We are done with atomic stuff, now do the rest of housekeeping */
730
731 inode->i_ctime = CURRENT_TIME_SEC;
732 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
733
734 /* had we spliced it onto indirect block? */
735 if (where->bh) {
736 /*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800737 * If we spliced it onto an indirect block, we haven't
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700738 * altered the inode. Note however that if it is being spliced
739 * onto an indirect block at the very end of the file (the
740 * file is growing) then we *will* alter the inode to reflect
741 * the new i_size. But that is not done here - it is done in
742 * generic_commit_write->__mark_inode_dirty->ext3_dirty_inode.
743 */
744 jbd_debug(5, "splicing indirect only\n");
745 BUFFER_TRACE(where->bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
746 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, where->bh);
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -0700747 if (err)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700748 goto err_out;
749 } else {
750 /*
751 * OK, we spliced it into the inode itself on a direct block.
752 * Inode was dirtied above.
753 */
754 jbd_debug(5, "splicing direct\n");
755 }
756 return err;
757
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700758err_out:
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800759 for (i = 1; i <= num; i++) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700760 BUFFER_TRACE(where[i].bh, "call journal_forget");
761 ext3_journal_forget(handle, where[i].bh);
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800762 ext3_free_blocks(handle,inode,le32_to_cpu(where[i-1].key),1);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700763 }
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800764 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, le32_to_cpu(where[num].key), blks);
765
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700766 return err;
767}
768
769/*
770 * Allocation strategy is simple: if we have to allocate something, we will
771 * have to go the whole way to leaf. So let's do it before attaching anything
772 * to tree, set linkage between the newborn blocks, write them if sync is
773 * required, recheck the path, free and repeat if check fails, otherwise
774 * set the last missing link (that will protect us from any truncate-generated
775 * removals - all blocks on the path are immune now) and possibly force the
776 * write on the parent block.
777 * That has a nice additional property: no special recovery from the failed
778 * allocations is needed - we simply release blocks and do not touch anything
779 * reachable from inode.
780 *
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800781 * `handle' can be NULL if create == 0.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700782 *
783 * The BKL may not be held on entry here. Be sure to take it early.
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800784 * return > 0, # of blocks mapped or allocated.
785 * return = 0, if plain lookup failed.
786 * return < 0, error case.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700787 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800788int ext3_get_blocks_handle(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
789 sector_t iblock, unsigned long maxblocks,
790 struct buffer_head *bh_result,
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800791 int create, int extend_disksize)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700792{
793 int err = -EIO;
794 int offsets[4];
795 Indirect chain[4];
796 Indirect *partial;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700797 ext3_fsblk_t goal;
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800798 int indirect_blks;
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800799 int blocks_to_boundary = 0;
800 int depth;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700801 struct ext3_inode_info *ei = EXT3_I(inode);
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800802 int count = 0;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700803 ext3_fsblk_t first_block = 0;
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800804
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700805
806 J_ASSERT(handle != NULL || create == 0);
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800807 depth = ext3_block_to_path(inode,iblock,offsets,&blocks_to_boundary);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700808
809 if (depth == 0)
810 goto out;
811
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700812 partial = ext3_get_branch(inode, depth, offsets, chain, &err);
813
814 /* Simplest case - block found, no allocation needed */
815 if (!partial) {
Mingming Cao5dea5172006-05-03 19:55:12 -0700816 first_block = le32_to_cpu(chain[depth - 1].key);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700817 clear_buffer_new(bh_result);
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800818 count++;
819 /*map more blocks*/
820 while (count < maxblocks && count <= blocks_to_boundary) {
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -0700821 ext3_fsblk_t blk;
Mingming Cao5dea5172006-05-03 19:55:12 -0700822
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800823 if (!verify_chain(chain, partial)) {
824 /*
825 * Indirect block might be removed by
826 * truncate while we were reading it.
827 * Handling of that case: forget what we've
828 * got now. Flag the err as EAGAIN, so it
829 * will reread.
830 */
831 err = -EAGAIN;
832 count = 0;
833 break;
834 }
Mingming Cao5dea5172006-05-03 19:55:12 -0700835 blk = le32_to_cpu(*(chain[depth-1].p + count));
836
837 if (blk == first_block + count)
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800838 count++;
839 else
840 break;
841 }
842 if (err != -EAGAIN)
843 goto got_it;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700844 }
845
846 /* Next simple case - plain lookup or failed read of indirect block */
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700847 if (!create || err == -EIO)
848 goto cleanup;
849
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -0800850 mutex_lock(&ei->truncate_mutex);
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700851
852 /*
853 * If the indirect block is missing while we are reading
854 * the chain(ext3_get_branch() returns -EAGAIN err), or
855 * if the chain has been changed after we grab the semaphore,
856 * (either because another process truncated this branch, or
857 * another get_block allocated this branch) re-grab the chain to see if
858 * the request block has been allocated or not.
859 *
860 * Since we already block the truncate/other get_block
861 * at this point, we will have the current copy of the chain when we
862 * splice the branch into the tree.
863 */
864 if (err == -EAGAIN || !verify_chain(chain, partial)) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700865 while (partial > chain) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700866 brelse(partial->bh);
867 partial--;
868 }
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700869 partial = ext3_get_branch(inode, depth, offsets, chain, &err);
870 if (!partial) {
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800871 count++;
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -0800872 mutex_unlock(&ei->truncate_mutex);
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700873 if (err)
874 goto cleanup;
875 clear_buffer_new(bh_result);
876 goto got_it;
877 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700878 }
879
880 /*
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700881 * Okay, we need to do block allocation. Lazily initialize the block
882 * allocation info here if necessary
883 */
884 if (S_ISREG(inode->i_mode) && (!ei->i_block_alloc_info))
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700885 ext3_init_block_alloc_info(inode);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700886
Akinobu Mitafb01bfd2008-02-06 01:40:16 -0800887 goal = ext3_find_goal(inode, iblock, partial);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700888
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800889 /* the number of blocks need to allocate for [d,t]indirect blocks */
890 indirect_blks = (chain + depth) - partial - 1;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700891
892 /*
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800893 * Next look up the indirect map to count the totoal number of
894 * direct blocks to allocate for this branch.
895 */
896 count = ext3_blks_to_allocate(partial, indirect_blks,
897 maxblocks, blocks_to_boundary);
898 /*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700899 * Block out ext3_truncate while we alter the tree
900 */
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800901 err = ext3_alloc_branch(handle, inode, indirect_blks, &count, goal,
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700902 offsets + (partial - chain), partial);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700903
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700904 /*
905 * The ext3_splice_branch call will free and forget any buffers
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700906 * on the new chain if there is a failure, but that risks using
907 * up transaction credits, especially for bitmaps where the
908 * credits cannot be returned. Can we handle this somehow? We
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700909 * may need to return -EAGAIN upwards in the worst case. --sct
910 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700911 if (!err)
Mingming Caob47b2472006-03-26 01:37:56 -0800912 err = ext3_splice_branch(handle, inode, iblock,
913 partial, indirect_blks, count);
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700914 /*
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -0800915 * i_disksize growing is protected by truncate_mutex. Don't forget to
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700916 * protect it if you're about to implement concurrent
917 * ext3_get_block() -bzzz
918 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700919 if (!err && extend_disksize && inode->i_size > ei->i_disksize)
920 ei->i_disksize = inode->i_size;
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -0800921 mutex_unlock(&ei->truncate_mutex);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700922 if (err)
923 goto cleanup;
924
925 set_buffer_new(bh_result);
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700926got_it:
927 map_bh(bh_result, inode->i_sb, le32_to_cpu(chain[depth-1].key));
Suparna Bhattacharya20acaa12006-09-16 12:15:58 -0700928 if (count > blocks_to_boundary)
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700929 set_buffer_boundary(bh_result);
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800930 err = count;
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700931 /* Clean up and exit */
932 partial = chain + depth - 1; /* the whole chain */
933cleanup:
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700934 while (partial > chain) {
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700935 BUFFER_TRACE(partial->bh, "call brelse");
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700936 brelse(partial->bh);
937 partial--;
938 }
Mingming Caofe55c452005-05-01 08:59:20 -0700939 BUFFER_TRACE(bh_result, "returned");
940out:
941 return err;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700942}
943
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800944/* Maximum number of blocks we map for direct IO at once. */
945#define DIO_MAX_BLOCKS 4096
946/*
947 * Number of credits we need for writing DIO_MAX_BLOCKS:
948 * We need sb + group descriptor + bitmap + inode -> 4
949 * For B blocks with A block pointers per block we need:
950 * 1 (triple ind.) + (B/A/A + 2) (doubly ind.) + (B/A + 2) (indirect).
951 * If we plug in 4096 for B and 256 for A (for 1KB block size), we get 25.
952 */
953#define DIO_CREDITS 25
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700954
Badari Pulavartyf91a2ad2006-03-26 01:38:04 -0800955static int ext3_get_block(struct inode *inode, sector_t iblock,
956 struct buffer_head *bh_result, int create)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700957{
Dmitriy Monakhov3e4fdaf2007-02-10 01:46:35 -0800958 handle_t *handle = ext3_journal_current_handle();
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800959 int ret = 0, started = 0;
Badari Pulavarty1d8fa7a2006-03-26 01:38:02 -0800960 unsigned max_blocks = bh_result->b_size >> inode->i_blkbits;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700961
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800962 if (create && !handle) { /* Direct IO write... */
963 if (max_blocks > DIO_MAX_BLOCKS)
964 max_blocks = DIO_MAX_BLOCKS;
965 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, DIO_CREDITS +
966 2 * EXT3_QUOTA_TRANS_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb));
967 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700968 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800969 goto out;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700970 }
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800971 started = 1;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700972 }
973
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800974 ret = ext3_get_blocks_handle(handle, inode, iblock,
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800975 max_blocks, bh_result, create, 0);
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800976 if (ret > 0) {
977 bh_result->b_size = (ret << inode->i_blkbits);
978 ret = 0;
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -0800979 }
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -0800980 if (started)
981 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
982out:
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700983 return ret;
984}
985
Josef Bacik68c9d702008-10-03 17:32:43 -0400986int ext3_fiemap(struct inode *inode, struct fiemap_extent_info *fieinfo,
987 u64 start, u64 len)
988{
989 return generic_block_fiemap(inode, fieinfo, start, len,
990 ext3_get_block);
991}
992
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700993/*
994 * `handle' can be NULL if create is zero
995 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -0800996struct buffer_head *ext3_getblk(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
997 long block, int create, int *errp)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700998{
999 struct buffer_head dummy;
1000 int fatal = 0, err;
1001
1002 J_ASSERT(handle != NULL || create == 0);
1003
1004 dummy.b_state = 0;
1005 dummy.b_blocknr = -1000;
1006 buffer_trace_init(&dummy.b_history);
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -08001007 err = ext3_get_blocks_handle(handle, inode, block, 1,
1008 &dummy, create, 1);
Badari Pulavarty3665d0e2006-09-08 09:48:21 -07001009 /*
1010 * ext3_get_blocks_handle() returns number of blocks
1011 * mapped. 0 in case of a HOLE.
1012 */
1013 if (err > 0) {
1014 if (err > 1)
1015 WARN_ON(1);
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -08001016 err = 0;
Mingming Cao89747d32006-03-26 01:37:55 -08001017 }
1018 *errp = err;
1019 if (!err && buffer_mapped(&dummy)) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001020 struct buffer_head *bh;
1021 bh = sb_getblk(inode->i_sb, dummy.b_blocknr);
Glauber de Oliveira Costa2973dfd2005-10-30 15:03:05 -08001022 if (!bh) {
1023 *errp = -EIO;
1024 goto err;
1025 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001026 if (buffer_new(&dummy)) {
1027 J_ASSERT(create != 0);
Stephen Hemmingerc80544d2007-10-18 03:07:05 -07001028 J_ASSERT(handle != NULL);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001029
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001030 /*
1031 * Now that we do not always journal data, we should
1032 * keep in mind whether this should always journal the
1033 * new buffer as metadata. For now, regular file
1034 * writes use ext3_get_block instead, so it's not a
1035 * problem.
1036 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001037 lock_buffer(bh);
1038 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call get_create_access");
1039 fatal = ext3_journal_get_create_access(handle, bh);
1040 if (!fatal && !buffer_uptodate(bh)) {
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001041 memset(bh->b_data,0,inode->i_sb->s_blocksize);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001042 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
1043 }
1044 unlock_buffer(bh);
1045 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
1046 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
1047 if (!fatal)
1048 fatal = err;
1049 } else {
1050 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "not a new buffer");
1051 }
1052 if (fatal) {
1053 *errp = fatal;
1054 brelse(bh);
1055 bh = NULL;
1056 }
1057 return bh;
1058 }
Glauber de Oliveira Costa2973dfd2005-10-30 15:03:05 -08001059err:
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001060 return NULL;
1061}
1062
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001063struct buffer_head *ext3_bread(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001064 int block, int create, int *err)
1065{
1066 struct buffer_head * bh;
1067
1068 bh = ext3_getblk(handle, inode, block, create, err);
1069 if (!bh)
1070 return bh;
1071 if (buffer_uptodate(bh))
1072 return bh;
Jens Axboecaa38fb2006-07-23 01:41:26 +02001073 ll_rw_block(READ_META, 1, &bh);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001074 wait_on_buffer(bh);
1075 if (buffer_uptodate(bh))
1076 return bh;
1077 put_bh(bh);
1078 *err = -EIO;
1079 return NULL;
1080}
1081
1082static int walk_page_buffers( handle_t *handle,
1083 struct buffer_head *head,
1084 unsigned from,
1085 unsigned to,
1086 int *partial,
1087 int (*fn)( handle_t *handle,
1088 struct buffer_head *bh))
1089{
1090 struct buffer_head *bh;
1091 unsigned block_start, block_end;
1092 unsigned blocksize = head->b_size;
1093 int err, ret = 0;
1094 struct buffer_head *next;
1095
1096 for ( bh = head, block_start = 0;
1097 ret == 0 && (bh != head || !block_start);
Dave Kleikampe9ad5622006-09-27 01:49:35 -07001098 block_start = block_end, bh = next)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001099 {
1100 next = bh->b_this_page;
1101 block_end = block_start + blocksize;
1102 if (block_end <= from || block_start >= to) {
1103 if (partial && !buffer_uptodate(bh))
1104 *partial = 1;
1105 continue;
1106 }
1107 err = (*fn)(handle, bh);
1108 if (!ret)
1109 ret = err;
1110 }
1111 return ret;
1112}
1113
1114/*
1115 * To preserve ordering, it is essential that the hole instantiation and
1116 * the data write be encapsulated in a single transaction. We cannot
1117 * close off a transaction and start a new one between the ext3_get_block()
1118 * and the commit_write(). So doing the journal_start at the start of
1119 * prepare_write() is the right place.
1120 *
1121 * Also, this function can nest inside ext3_writepage() ->
1122 * block_write_full_page(). In that case, we *know* that ext3_writepage()
1123 * has generated enough buffer credits to do the whole page. So we won't
1124 * block on the journal in that case, which is good, because the caller may
1125 * be PF_MEMALLOC.
1126 *
1127 * By accident, ext3 can be reentered when a transaction is open via
1128 * quota file writes. If we were to commit the transaction while thus
1129 * reentered, there can be a deadlock - we would be holding a quota
1130 * lock, and the commit would never complete if another thread had a
1131 * transaction open and was blocking on the quota lock - a ranking
1132 * violation.
1133 *
1134 * So what we do is to rely on the fact that journal_stop/journal_start
1135 * will _not_ run commit under these circumstances because handle->h_ref
1136 * is elevated. We'll still have enough credits for the tiny quotafile
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001137 * write.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001138 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001139static int do_journal_get_write_access(handle_t *handle,
1140 struct buffer_head *bh)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001141{
1142 if (!buffer_mapped(bh) || buffer_freed(bh))
1143 return 0;
1144 return ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, bh);
1145}
1146
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001147static int ext3_write_begin(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping,
1148 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned flags,
1149 struct page **pagep, void **fsdata)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001150{
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001151 struct inode *inode = mapping->host;
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001152 int ret;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001153 handle_t *handle;
1154 int retries = 0;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001155 struct page *page;
1156 pgoff_t index;
1157 unsigned from, to;
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001158 /* Reserve one block more for addition to orphan list in case
1159 * we allocate blocks but write fails for some reason */
1160 int needed_blocks = ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(inode) + 1;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001161
1162 index = pos >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT;
1163 from = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1);
1164 to = from + len;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001165
1166retry:
Nick Piggin54566b22009-01-04 12:00:53 -08001167 page = grab_cache_page_write_begin(mapping, index, flags);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001168 if (!page)
1169 return -ENOMEM;
1170 *pagep = page;
1171
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001172 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, needed_blocks);
Andrew Morton1aa9b4b2007-04-01 23:49:43 -07001173 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001174 unlock_page(page);
1175 page_cache_release(page);
Andrew Morton1aa9b4b2007-04-01 23:49:43 -07001176 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1177 goto out;
1178 }
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001179 ret = block_write_begin(file, mapping, pos, len, flags, pagep, fsdata,
1180 ext3_get_block);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001181 if (ret)
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001182 goto write_begin_failed;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001183
1184 if (ext3_should_journal_data(inode)) {
1185 ret = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_buffers(page),
1186 from, to, NULL, do_journal_get_write_access);
1187 }
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001188write_begin_failed:
1189 if (ret) {
Aneesh Kumar K.V5ec8b752008-10-18 20:28:00 -07001190 /*
1191 * block_write_begin may have instantiated a few blocks
1192 * outside i_size. Trim these off again. Don't need
1193 * i_size_read because we hold i_mutex.
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001194 *
1195 * Add inode to orphan list in case we crash before truncate
1196 * finishes.
Aneesh Kumar K.V5ec8b752008-10-18 20:28:00 -07001197 */
1198 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001199 ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
1200 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1201 unlock_page(page);
1202 page_cache_release(page);
1203 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
Aneesh Kumar K.V5ec8b752008-10-18 20:28:00 -07001204 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001205 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001206 if (ret == -ENOSPC && ext3_should_retry_alloc(inode->i_sb, &retries))
1207 goto retry;
Andrew Morton1aa9b4b2007-04-01 23:49:43 -07001208out:
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001209 return ret;
1210}
1211
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001212
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001213int ext3_journal_dirty_data(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001214{
1215 int err = journal_dirty_data(handle, bh);
1216 if (err)
Harvey Harrisone05b6b52008-04-28 02:16:15 -07001217 ext3_journal_abort_handle(__func__, __func__,
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001218 bh, handle, err);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001219 return err;
1220}
1221
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001222/* For ordered writepage and write_end functions */
1223static int journal_dirty_data_fn(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
1224{
1225 /*
1226 * Write could have mapped the buffer but it didn't copy the data in
1227 * yet. So avoid filing such buffer into a transaction.
1228 */
1229 if (buffer_mapped(bh) && buffer_uptodate(bh))
1230 return ext3_journal_dirty_data(handle, bh);
1231 return 0;
1232}
1233
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001234/* For write_end() in data=journal mode */
1235static int write_end_fn(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001236{
1237 if (!buffer_mapped(bh) || buffer_freed(bh))
1238 return 0;
1239 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
1240 return ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
1241}
1242
1243/*
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001244 * This is nasty and subtle: ext3_write_begin() could have allocated blocks
1245 * for the whole page but later we failed to copy the data in. Update inode
1246 * size according to what we managed to copy. The rest is going to be
1247 * truncated in write_end function.
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001248 */
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001249static void update_file_sizes(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, unsigned copied)
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001250{
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001251 /* What matters to us is i_disksize. We don't write i_size anywhere */
1252 if (pos + copied > inode->i_size)
1253 i_size_write(inode, pos + copied);
1254 if (pos + copied > EXT3_I(inode)->i_disksize) {
1255 EXT3_I(inode)->i_disksize = pos + copied;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001256 mark_inode_dirty(inode);
1257 }
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001258}
1259
1260/*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001261 * We need to pick up the new inode size which generic_commit_write gave us
1262 * `file' can be NULL - eg, when called from page_symlink().
1263 *
1264 * ext3 never places buffers on inode->i_mapping->private_list. metadata
1265 * buffers are managed internally.
1266 */
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001267static int ext3_ordered_write_end(struct file *file,
1268 struct address_space *mapping,
1269 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied,
1270 struct page *page, void *fsdata)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001271{
1272 handle_t *handle = ext3_journal_current_handle();
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001273 struct inode *inode = file->f_mapping->host;
1274 unsigned from, to;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001275 int ret = 0, ret2;
1276
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001277 copied = block_write_end(file, mapping, pos, len, copied, page, fsdata);
1278
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001279 from = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1);
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001280 to = from + copied;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001281 ret = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_buffers(page),
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001282 from, to, NULL, journal_dirty_data_fn);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001283
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001284 if (ret == 0)
1285 update_file_sizes(inode, pos, copied);
1286 /*
1287 * There may be allocated blocks outside of i_size because
1288 * we failed to copy some data. Prepare for truncate.
1289 */
1290 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1291 ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001292 ret2 = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1293 if (!ret)
1294 ret = ret2;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001295 unlock_page(page);
1296 page_cache_release(page);
1297
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001298 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1299 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001300 return ret ? ret : copied;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001301}
1302
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001303static int ext3_writeback_write_end(struct file *file,
1304 struct address_space *mapping,
1305 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied,
1306 struct page *page, void *fsdata)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001307{
1308 handle_t *handle = ext3_journal_current_handle();
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001309 struct inode *inode = file->f_mapping->host;
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001310 int ret;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001311
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001312 copied = block_write_end(file, mapping, pos, len, copied, page, fsdata);
1313 update_file_sizes(inode, pos, copied);
1314 /*
1315 * There may be allocated blocks outside of i_size because
1316 * we failed to copy some data. Prepare for truncate.
1317 */
1318 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1319 ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
1320 ret = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001321 unlock_page(page);
1322 page_cache_release(page);
1323
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001324 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1325 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001326 return ret ? ret : copied;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001327}
1328
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001329static int ext3_journalled_write_end(struct file *file,
1330 struct address_space *mapping,
1331 loff_t pos, unsigned len, unsigned copied,
1332 struct page *page, void *fsdata)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001333{
1334 handle_t *handle = ext3_journal_current_handle();
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001335 struct inode *inode = mapping->host;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001336 int ret = 0, ret2;
1337 int partial = 0;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001338 unsigned from, to;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001339
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001340 from = pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1);
1341 to = from + len;
1342
1343 if (copied < len) {
1344 if (!PageUptodate(page))
1345 copied = 0;
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001346 page_zero_new_buffers(page, from + copied, to);
1347 to = from + copied;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001348 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001349
1350 ret = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_buffers(page), from,
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001351 to, &partial, write_end_fn);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001352 if (!partial)
1353 SetPageUptodate(page);
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001354
1355 if (pos + copied > inode->i_size)
1356 i_size_write(inode, pos + copied);
1357 /*
1358 * There may be allocated blocks outside of i_size because
1359 * we failed to copy some data. Prepare for truncate.
1360 */
1361 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1362 ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001363 EXT3_I(inode)->i_state |= EXT3_STATE_JDATA;
1364 if (inode->i_size > EXT3_I(inode)->i_disksize) {
1365 EXT3_I(inode)->i_disksize = inode->i_size;
1366 ret2 = ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001367 if (!ret)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001368 ret = ret2;
1369 }
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001370
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001371 ret2 = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1372 if (!ret)
1373 ret = ret2;
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001374 unlock_page(page);
1375 page_cache_release(page);
1376
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001377 if (pos + len > inode->i_size)
1378 vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size);
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001379 return ret ? ret : copied;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001380}
1381
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001382/*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001383 * bmap() is special. It gets used by applications such as lilo and by
1384 * the swapper to find the on-disk block of a specific piece of data.
1385 *
1386 * Naturally, this is dangerous if the block concerned is still in the
1387 * journal. If somebody makes a swapfile on an ext3 data-journaling
1388 * filesystem and enables swap, then they may get a nasty shock when the
1389 * data getting swapped to that swapfile suddenly gets overwritten by
1390 * the original zero's written out previously to the journal and
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001391 * awaiting writeback in the kernel's buffer cache.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001392 *
1393 * So, if we see any bmap calls here on a modified, data-journaled file,
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001394 * take extra steps to flush any blocks which might be in the cache.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001395 */
1396static sector_t ext3_bmap(struct address_space *mapping, sector_t block)
1397{
1398 struct inode *inode = mapping->host;
1399 journal_t *journal;
1400 int err;
1401
1402 if (EXT3_I(inode)->i_state & EXT3_STATE_JDATA) {
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001403 /*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001404 * This is a REALLY heavyweight approach, but the use of
1405 * bmap on dirty files is expected to be extremely rare:
1406 * only if we run lilo or swapon on a freshly made file
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001407 * do we expect this to happen.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001408 *
1409 * (bmap requires CAP_SYS_RAWIO so this does not
1410 * represent an unprivileged user DOS attack --- we'd be
1411 * in trouble if mortal users could trigger this path at
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001412 * will.)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001413 *
1414 * NB. EXT3_STATE_JDATA is not set on files other than
1415 * regular files. If somebody wants to bmap a directory
1416 * or symlink and gets confused because the buffer
1417 * hasn't yet been flushed to disk, they deserve
1418 * everything they get.
1419 */
1420
1421 EXT3_I(inode)->i_state &= ~EXT3_STATE_JDATA;
1422 journal = EXT3_JOURNAL(inode);
1423 journal_lock_updates(journal);
1424 err = journal_flush(journal);
1425 journal_unlock_updates(journal);
1426
1427 if (err)
1428 return 0;
1429 }
1430
1431 return generic_block_bmap(mapping,block,ext3_get_block);
1432}
1433
1434static int bget_one(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
1435{
1436 get_bh(bh);
1437 return 0;
1438}
1439
1440static int bput_one(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
1441{
1442 put_bh(bh);
1443 return 0;
1444}
1445
Jan Kara9e80d402009-03-26 13:08:04 +01001446static int buffer_unmapped(handle_t *handle, struct buffer_head *bh)
1447{
1448 return !buffer_mapped(bh);
1449}
Jan Kara695f6ae2009-04-02 16:57:17 -07001450
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001451/*
1452 * Note that we always start a transaction even if we're not journalling
1453 * data. This is to preserve ordering: any hole instantiation within
1454 * __block_write_full_page -> ext3_get_block() should be journalled
1455 * along with the data so we don't crash and then get metadata which
1456 * refers to old data.
1457 *
1458 * In all journalling modes block_write_full_page() will start the I/O.
1459 *
1460 * Problem:
1461 *
1462 * ext3_writepage() -> kmalloc() -> __alloc_pages() -> page_launder() ->
1463 * ext3_writepage()
1464 *
1465 * Similar for:
1466 *
1467 * ext3_file_write() -> generic_file_write() -> __alloc_pages() -> ...
1468 *
1469 * Same applies to ext3_get_block(). We will deadlock on various things like
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -08001470 * lock_journal and i_truncate_mutex.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001471 *
1472 * Setting PF_MEMALLOC here doesn't work - too many internal memory
1473 * allocations fail.
1474 *
1475 * 16May01: If we're reentered then journal_current_handle() will be
1476 * non-zero. We simply *return*.
1477 *
1478 * 1 July 2001: @@@ FIXME:
1479 * In journalled data mode, a data buffer may be metadata against the
1480 * current transaction. But the same file is part of a shared mapping
1481 * and someone does a writepage() on it.
1482 *
1483 * We will move the buffer onto the async_data list, but *after* it has
1484 * been dirtied. So there's a small window where we have dirty data on
1485 * BJ_Metadata.
1486 *
1487 * Note that this only applies to the last partial page in the file. The
1488 * bit which block_write_full_page() uses prepare/commit for. (That's
1489 * broken code anyway: it's wrong for msync()).
1490 *
1491 * It's a rare case: affects the final partial page, for journalled data
1492 * where the file is subject to bith write() and writepage() in the same
1493 * transction. To fix it we'll need a custom block_write_full_page().
1494 * We'll probably need that anyway for journalling writepage() output.
1495 *
1496 * We don't honour synchronous mounts for writepage(). That would be
1497 * disastrous. Any write() or metadata operation will sync the fs for
1498 * us.
1499 *
1500 * AKPM2: if all the page's buffers are mapped to disk and !data=journal,
1501 * we don't need to open a transaction here.
1502 */
1503static int ext3_ordered_writepage(struct page *page,
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08001504 struct writeback_control *wbc)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001505{
1506 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host;
1507 struct buffer_head *page_bufs;
1508 handle_t *handle = NULL;
1509 int ret = 0;
1510 int err;
1511
1512 J_ASSERT(PageLocked(page));
1513
1514 /*
1515 * We give up here if we're reentered, because it might be for a
1516 * different filesystem.
1517 */
1518 if (ext3_journal_current_handle())
1519 goto out_fail;
1520
Jan Kara9e80d402009-03-26 13:08:04 +01001521 if (!page_has_buffers(page)) {
1522 create_empty_buffers(page, inode->i_sb->s_blocksize,
1523 (1 << BH_Dirty)|(1 << BH_Uptodate));
1524 } else if (!walk_page_buffers(NULL, page_buffers(page), 0, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, buffer_unmapped)) {
1525 /* Provide NULL instead of get_block so that we catch bugs if buffers weren't really mapped */
1526 return block_write_full_page(page, NULL, wbc);
1527 }
1528 page_bufs = page_buffers(page);
1529
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001530 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(inode));
1531
1532 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
1533 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1534 goto out_fail;
1535 }
1536
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001537 walk_page_buffers(handle, page_bufs, 0,
1538 PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, bget_one);
1539
1540 ret = block_write_full_page(page, ext3_get_block, wbc);
1541
1542 /*
1543 * The page can become unlocked at any point now, and
1544 * truncate can then come in and change things. So we
1545 * can't touch *page from now on. But *page_bufs is
1546 * safe due to elevated refcount.
1547 */
1548
1549 /*
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001550 * And attach them to the current transaction. But only if
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001551 * block_write_full_page() succeeded. Otherwise they are unmapped,
1552 * and generally junk.
1553 */
1554 if (ret == 0) {
1555 err = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_bufs, 0, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE,
1556 NULL, journal_dirty_data_fn);
1557 if (!ret)
1558 ret = err;
1559 }
1560 walk_page_buffers(handle, page_bufs, 0,
1561 PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, bput_one);
1562 err = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1563 if (!ret)
1564 ret = err;
1565 return ret;
1566
1567out_fail:
1568 redirty_page_for_writepage(wbc, page);
1569 unlock_page(page);
1570 return ret;
1571}
1572
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001573static int ext3_writeback_writepage(struct page *page,
1574 struct writeback_control *wbc)
1575{
1576 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host;
1577 handle_t *handle = NULL;
1578 int ret = 0;
1579 int err;
1580
1581 if (ext3_journal_current_handle())
1582 goto out_fail;
1583
1584 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(inode));
1585 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
1586 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1587 goto out_fail;
1588 }
1589
Badari Pulavarty0e31f512006-07-30 03:04:14 -07001590 if (test_opt(inode->i_sb, NOBH) && ext3_should_writeback_data(inode))
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001591 ret = nobh_writepage(page, ext3_get_block, wbc);
1592 else
1593 ret = block_write_full_page(page, ext3_get_block, wbc);
1594
1595 err = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1596 if (!ret)
1597 ret = err;
1598 return ret;
1599
1600out_fail:
1601 redirty_page_for_writepage(wbc, page);
1602 unlock_page(page);
1603 return ret;
1604}
1605
1606static int ext3_journalled_writepage(struct page *page,
1607 struct writeback_control *wbc)
1608{
1609 struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host;
1610 handle_t *handle = NULL;
1611 int ret = 0;
1612 int err;
1613
1614 if (ext3_journal_current_handle())
1615 goto no_write;
1616
1617 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(inode));
1618 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
1619 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1620 goto no_write;
1621 }
1622
1623 if (!page_has_buffers(page) || PageChecked(page)) {
1624 /*
1625 * It's mmapped pagecache. Add buffers and journal it. There
1626 * doesn't seem much point in redirtying the page here.
1627 */
1628 ClearPageChecked(page);
1629 ret = block_prepare_write(page, 0, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE,
1630 ext3_get_block);
Denis Lunevab4eb432005-11-13 16:07:17 -08001631 if (ret != 0) {
1632 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001633 goto out_unlock;
Denis Lunevab4eb432005-11-13 16:07:17 -08001634 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001635 ret = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_buffers(page), 0,
1636 PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, do_journal_get_write_access);
1637
1638 err = walk_page_buffers(handle, page_buffers(page), 0,
Nick Pigginf4fc66a2007-10-16 01:25:05 -07001639 PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, NULL, write_end_fn);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001640 if (ret == 0)
1641 ret = err;
1642 EXT3_I(inode)->i_state |= EXT3_STATE_JDATA;
1643 unlock_page(page);
1644 } else {
1645 /*
1646 * It may be a page full of checkpoint-mode buffers. We don't
1647 * really know unless we go poke around in the buffer_heads.
1648 * But block_write_full_page will do the right thing.
1649 */
1650 ret = block_write_full_page(page, ext3_get_block, wbc);
1651 }
1652 err = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1653 if (!ret)
1654 ret = err;
1655out:
1656 return ret;
1657
1658no_write:
1659 redirty_page_for_writepage(wbc, page);
1660out_unlock:
1661 unlock_page(page);
1662 goto out;
1663}
1664
1665static int ext3_readpage(struct file *file, struct page *page)
1666{
1667 return mpage_readpage(page, ext3_get_block);
1668}
1669
1670static int
1671ext3_readpages(struct file *file, struct address_space *mapping,
1672 struct list_head *pages, unsigned nr_pages)
1673{
1674 return mpage_readpages(mapping, pages, nr_pages, ext3_get_block);
1675}
1676
NeilBrown2ff28e22006-03-26 01:37:18 -08001677static void ext3_invalidatepage(struct page *page, unsigned long offset)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001678{
1679 journal_t *journal = EXT3_JOURNAL(page->mapping->host);
1680
1681 /*
1682 * If it's a full truncate we just forget about the pending dirtying
1683 */
1684 if (offset == 0)
1685 ClearPageChecked(page);
1686
NeilBrown2ff28e22006-03-26 01:37:18 -08001687 journal_invalidatepage(journal, page, offset);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001688}
1689
Al Viro27496a82005-10-21 03:20:48 -04001690static int ext3_releasepage(struct page *page, gfp_t wait)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001691{
1692 journal_t *journal = EXT3_JOURNAL(page->mapping->host);
1693
1694 WARN_ON(PageChecked(page));
1695 if (!page_has_buffers(page))
1696 return 0;
1697 return journal_try_to_free_buffers(journal, page, wait);
1698}
1699
1700/*
1701 * If the O_DIRECT write will extend the file then add this inode to the
1702 * orphan list. So recovery will truncate it back to the original size
1703 * if the machine crashes during the write.
1704 *
1705 * If the O_DIRECT write is intantiating holes inside i_size and the machine
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001706 * crashes then stale disk data _may_ be exposed inside the file. But current
1707 * VFS code falls back into buffered path in that case so we are safe.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001708 */
1709static ssize_t ext3_direct_IO(int rw, struct kiocb *iocb,
1710 const struct iovec *iov, loff_t offset,
1711 unsigned long nr_segs)
1712{
1713 struct file *file = iocb->ki_filp;
1714 struct inode *inode = file->f_mapping->host;
1715 struct ext3_inode_info *ei = EXT3_I(inode);
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001716 handle_t *handle;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001717 ssize_t ret;
1718 int orphan = 0;
1719 size_t count = iov_length(iov, nr_segs);
1720
1721 if (rw == WRITE) {
1722 loff_t final_size = offset + count;
1723
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001724 if (final_size > inode->i_size) {
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001725 /* Credits for sb + inode write */
1726 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 2);
1727 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
1728 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1729 goto out;
1730 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001731 ret = ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001732 if (ret) {
1733 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1734 goto out;
1735 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001736 orphan = 1;
1737 ei->i_disksize = inode->i_size;
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001738 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001739 }
1740 }
1741
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07001742 ret = blockdev_direct_IO(rw, iocb, inode, inode->i_sb->s_bdev, iov,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001743 offset, nr_segs,
Badari Pulavartyf91a2ad2006-03-26 01:38:04 -08001744 ext3_get_block, NULL);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001745
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001746 if (orphan) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001747 int err;
1748
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001749 /* Credits for sb + inode write */
1750 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 2);
1751 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
1752 /* This is really bad luck. We've written the data
1753 * but cannot extend i_size. Bail out and pretend
1754 * the write failed... */
1755 ret = PTR_ERR(handle);
1756 goto out;
1757 }
1758 if (inode->i_nlink)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001759 ext3_orphan_del(handle, inode);
Jan Karabd1939d2008-02-06 01:40:21 -08001760 if (ret > 0) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001761 loff_t end = offset + ret;
1762 if (end > inode->i_size) {
1763 ei->i_disksize = end;
1764 i_size_write(inode, end);
1765 /*
1766 * We're going to return a positive `ret'
1767 * here due to non-zero-length I/O, so there's
1768 * no way of reporting error returns from
1769 * ext3_mark_inode_dirty() to userspace. So
1770 * ignore it.
1771 */
1772 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
1773 }
1774 }
1775 err = ext3_journal_stop(handle);
1776 if (ret == 0)
1777 ret = err;
1778 }
1779out:
1780 return ret;
1781}
1782
1783/*
1784 * Pages can be marked dirty completely asynchronously from ext3's journalling
1785 * activity. By filemap_sync_pte(), try_to_unmap_one(), etc. We cannot do
1786 * much here because ->set_page_dirty is called under VFS locks. The page is
1787 * not necessarily locked.
1788 *
1789 * We cannot just dirty the page and leave attached buffers clean, because the
1790 * buffers' dirty state is "definitive". We cannot just set the buffers dirty
1791 * or jbddirty because all the journalling code will explode.
1792 *
1793 * So what we do is to mark the page "pending dirty" and next time writepage
1794 * is called, propagate that into the buffers appropriately.
1795 */
1796static int ext3_journalled_set_page_dirty(struct page *page)
1797{
1798 SetPageChecked(page);
1799 return __set_page_dirty_nobuffers(page);
1800}
1801
Christoph Hellwigf5e54d62006-06-28 04:26:44 -07001802static const struct address_space_operations ext3_ordered_aops = {
Hisashi Hifumi8ab22b92008-07-28 15:46:36 -07001803 .readpage = ext3_readpage,
1804 .readpages = ext3_readpages,
1805 .writepage = ext3_ordered_writepage,
1806 .sync_page = block_sync_page,
1807 .write_begin = ext3_write_begin,
1808 .write_end = ext3_ordered_write_end,
1809 .bmap = ext3_bmap,
1810 .invalidatepage = ext3_invalidatepage,
1811 .releasepage = ext3_releasepage,
1812 .direct_IO = ext3_direct_IO,
1813 .migratepage = buffer_migrate_page,
1814 .is_partially_uptodate = block_is_partially_uptodate,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001815};
1816
Christoph Hellwigf5e54d62006-06-28 04:26:44 -07001817static const struct address_space_operations ext3_writeback_aops = {
Hisashi Hifumi8ab22b92008-07-28 15:46:36 -07001818 .readpage = ext3_readpage,
1819 .readpages = ext3_readpages,
1820 .writepage = ext3_writeback_writepage,
1821 .sync_page = block_sync_page,
1822 .write_begin = ext3_write_begin,
1823 .write_end = ext3_writeback_write_end,
1824 .bmap = ext3_bmap,
1825 .invalidatepage = ext3_invalidatepage,
1826 .releasepage = ext3_releasepage,
1827 .direct_IO = ext3_direct_IO,
1828 .migratepage = buffer_migrate_page,
1829 .is_partially_uptodate = block_is_partially_uptodate,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001830};
1831
Christoph Hellwigf5e54d62006-06-28 04:26:44 -07001832static const struct address_space_operations ext3_journalled_aops = {
Hisashi Hifumi8ab22b92008-07-28 15:46:36 -07001833 .readpage = ext3_readpage,
1834 .readpages = ext3_readpages,
1835 .writepage = ext3_journalled_writepage,
1836 .sync_page = block_sync_page,
1837 .write_begin = ext3_write_begin,
1838 .write_end = ext3_journalled_write_end,
1839 .set_page_dirty = ext3_journalled_set_page_dirty,
1840 .bmap = ext3_bmap,
1841 .invalidatepage = ext3_invalidatepage,
1842 .releasepage = ext3_releasepage,
1843 .is_partially_uptodate = block_is_partially_uptodate,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001844};
1845
1846void ext3_set_aops(struct inode *inode)
1847{
1848 if (ext3_should_order_data(inode))
1849 inode->i_mapping->a_ops = &ext3_ordered_aops;
1850 else if (ext3_should_writeback_data(inode))
1851 inode->i_mapping->a_ops = &ext3_writeback_aops;
1852 else
1853 inode->i_mapping->a_ops = &ext3_journalled_aops;
1854}
1855
1856/*
1857 * ext3_block_truncate_page() zeroes out a mapping from file offset `from'
1858 * up to the end of the block which corresponds to `from'.
1859 * This required during truncate. We need to physically zero the tail end
1860 * of that block so it doesn't yield old data if the file is later grown.
1861 */
1862static int ext3_block_truncate_page(handle_t *handle, struct page *page,
1863 struct address_space *mapping, loff_t from)
1864{
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07001865 ext3_fsblk_t index = from >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001866 unsigned offset = from & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1);
1867 unsigned blocksize, iblock, length, pos;
1868 struct inode *inode = mapping->host;
1869 struct buffer_head *bh;
1870 int err = 0;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001871
1872 blocksize = inode->i_sb->s_blocksize;
1873 length = blocksize - (offset & (blocksize - 1));
1874 iblock = index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_sb->s_blocksize_bits);
1875
1876 /*
1877 * For "nobh" option, we can only work if we don't need to
1878 * read-in the page - otherwise we create buffers to do the IO.
1879 */
Badari Pulavartycd6ef842006-03-11 03:27:14 -08001880 if (!page_has_buffers(page) && test_opt(inode->i_sb, NOBH) &&
1881 ext3_should_writeback_data(inode) && PageUptodate(page)) {
Christoph Lametereebd2aa2008-02-04 22:28:29 -08001882 zero_user(page, offset, length);
Badari Pulavartycd6ef842006-03-11 03:27:14 -08001883 set_page_dirty(page);
1884 goto unlock;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001885 }
1886
1887 if (!page_has_buffers(page))
1888 create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0);
1889
1890 /* Find the buffer that contains "offset" */
1891 bh = page_buffers(page);
1892 pos = blocksize;
1893 while (offset >= pos) {
1894 bh = bh->b_this_page;
1895 iblock++;
1896 pos += blocksize;
1897 }
1898
1899 err = 0;
1900 if (buffer_freed(bh)) {
1901 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "freed: skip");
1902 goto unlock;
1903 }
1904
1905 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) {
1906 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "unmapped");
1907 ext3_get_block(inode, iblock, bh, 0);
1908 /* unmapped? It's a hole - nothing to do */
1909 if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) {
1910 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "still unmapped");
1911 goto unlock;
1912 }
1913 }
1914
1915 /* Ok, it's mapped. Make sure it's up-to-date */
1916 if (PageUptodate(page))
1917 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
1918
1919 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) {
1920 err = -EIO;
1921 ll_rw_block(READ, 1, &bh);
1922 wait_on_buffer(bh);
1923 /* Uhhuh. Read error. Complain and punt. */
1924 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh))
1925 goto unlock;
1926 }
1927
1928 if (ext3_should_journal_data(inode)) {
1929 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "get write access");
1930 err = ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, bh);
1931 if (err)
1932 goto unlock;
1933 }
1934
Christoph Lametereebd2aa2008-02-04 22:28:29 -08001935 zero_user(page, offset, length);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001936 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "zeroed end of block");
1937
1938 err = 0;
1939 if (ext3_should_journal_data(inode)) {
1940 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
1941 } else {
1942 if (ext3_should_order_data(inode))
1943 err = ext3_journal_dirty_data(handle, bh);
1944 mark_buffer_dirty(bh);
1945 }
1946
1947unlock:
1948 unlock_page(page);
1949 page_cache_release(page);
1950 return err;
1951}
1952
1953/*
1954 * Probably it should be a library function... search for first non-zero word
1955 * or memcmp with zero_page, whatever is better for particular architecture.
1956 * Linus?
1957 */
1958static inline int all_zeroes(__le32 *p, __le32 *q)
1959{
1960 while (p < q)
1961 if (*p++)
1962 return 0;
1963 return 1;
1964}
1965
1966/**
1967 * ext3_find_shared - find the indirect blocks for partial truncation.
1968 * @inode: inode in question
1969 * @depth: depth of the affected branch
1970 * @offsets: offsets of pointers in that branch (see ext3_block_to_path)
1971 * @chain: place to store the pointers to partial indirect blocks
1972 * @top: place to the (detached) top of branch
1973 *
1974 * This is a helper function used by ext3_truncate().
1975 *
1976 * When we do truncate() we may have to clean the ends of several
1977 * indirect blocks but leave the blocks themselves alive. Block is
1978 * partially truncated if some data below the new i_size is refered
1979 * from it (and it is on the path to the first completely truncated
1980 * data block, indeed). We have to free the top of that path along
1981 * with everything to the right of the path. Since no allocation
1982 * past the truncation point is possible until ext3_truncate()
1983 * finishes, we may safely do the latter, but top of branch may
1984 * require special attention - pageout below the truncation point
1985 * might try to populate it.
1986 *
1987 * We atomically detach the top of branch from the tree, store the
1988 * block number of its root in *@top, pointers to buffer_heads of
1989 * partially truncated blocks - in @chain[].bh and pointers to
1990 * their last elements that should not be removed - in
1991 * @chain[].p. Return value is the pointer to last filled element
1992 * of @chain.
1993 *
1994 * The work left to caller to do the actual freeing of subtrees:
1995 * a) free the subtree starting from *@top
1996 * b) free the subtrees whose roots are stored in
1997 * (@chain[i].p+1 .. end of @chain[i].bh->b_data)
1998 * c) free the subtrees growing from the inode past the @chain[0].
1999 * (no partially truncated stuff there). */
2000
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002001static Indirect *ext3_find_shared(struct inode *inode, int depth,
2002 int offsets[4], Indirect chain[4], __le32 *top)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002003{
2004 Indirect *partial, *p;
2005 int k, err;
2006
2007 *top = 0;
2008 /* Make k index the deepest non-null offest + 1 */
2009 for (k = depth; k > 1 && !offsets[k-1]; k--)
2010 ;
2011 partial = ext3_get_branch(inode, k, offsets, chain, &err);
2012 /* Writer: pointers */
2013 if (!partial)
2014 partial = chain + k-1;
2015 /*
2016 * If the branch acquired continuation since we've looked at it -
2017 * fine, it should all survive and (new) top doesn't belong to us.
2018 */
2019 if (!partial->key && *partial->p)
2020 /* Writer: end */
2021 goto no_top;
2022 for (p=partial; p>chain && all_zeroes((__le32*)p->bh->b_data,p->p); p--)
2023 ;
2024 /*
2025 * OK, we've found the last block that must survive. The rest of our
2026 * branch should be detached before unlocking. However, if that rest
2027 * of branch is all ours and does not grow immediately from the inode
2028 * it's easier to cheat and just decrement partial->p.
2029 */
2030 if (p == chain + k - 1 && p > chain) {
2031 p->p--;
2032 } else {
2033 *top = *p->p;
2034 /* Nope, don't do this in ext3. Must leave the tree intact */
2035#if 0
2036 *p->p = 0;
2037#endif
2038 }
2039 /* Writer: end */
2040
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002041 while(partial > p) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002042 brelse(partial->bh);
2043 partial--;
2044 }
2045no_top:
2046 return partial;
2047}
2048
2049/*
2050 * Zero a number of block pointers in either an inode or an indirect block.
2051 * If we restart the transaction we must again get write access to the
2052 * indirect block for further modification.
2053 *
2054 * We release `count' blocks on disk, but (last - first) may be greater
2055 * than `count' because there can be holes in there.
2056 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002057static void ext3_clear_blocks(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002058 struct buffer_head *bh, ext3_fsblk_t block_to_free,
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002059 unsigned long count, __le32 *first, __le32 *last)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002060{
2061 __le32 *p;
2062 if (try_to_extend_transaction(handle, inode)) {
2063 if (bh) {
2064 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
2065 ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
2066 }
2067 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
2068 ext3_journal_test_restart(handle, inode);
2069 if (bh) {
2070 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "retaking write access");
2071 ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, bh);
2072 }
2073 }
2074
2075 /*
2076 * Any buffers which are on the journal will be in memory. We find
2077 * them on the hash table so journal_revoke() will run journal_forget()
2078 * on them. We've already detached each block from the file, so
2079 * bforget() in journal_forget() should be safe.
2080 *
2081 * AKPM: turn on bforget in journal_forget()!!!
2082 */
2083 for (p = first; p < last; p++) {
2084 u32 nr = le32_to_cpu(*p);
2085 if (nr) {
2086 struct buffer_head *bh;
2087
2088 *p = 0;
2089 bh = sb_find_get_block(inode->i_sb, nr);
2090 ext3_forget(handle, 0, inode, bh, nr);
2091 }
2092 }
2093
2094 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, block_to_free, count);
2095}
2096
2097/**
2098 * ext3_free_data - free a list of data blocks
2099 * @handle: handle for this transaction
2100 * @inode: inode we are dealing with
2101 * @this_bh: indirect buffer_head which contains *@first and *@last
2102 * @first: array of block numbers
2103 * @last: points immediately past the end of array
2104 *
2105 * We are freeing all blocks refered from that array (numbers are stored as
2106 * little-endian 32-bit) and updating @inode->i_blocks appropriately.
2107 *
2108 * We accumulate contiguous runs of blocks to free. Conveniently, if these
2109 * blocks are contiguous then releasing them at one time will only affect one
2110 * or two bitmap blocks (+ group descriptor(s) and superblock) and we won't
2111 * actually use a lot of journal space.
2112 *
2113 * @this_bh will be %NULL if @first and @last point into the inode's direct
2114 * block pointers.
2115 */
2116static void ext3_free_data(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
2117 struct buffer_head *this_bh,
2118 __le32 *first, __le32 *last)
2119{
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002120 ext3_fsblk_t block_to_free = 0; /* Starting block # of a run */
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07002121 unsigned long count = 0; /* Number of blocks in the run */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002122 __le32 *block_to_free_p = NULL; /* Pointer into inode/ind
2123 corresponding to
2124 block_to_free */
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002125 ext3_fsblk_t nr; /* Current block # */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002126 __le32 *p; /* Pointer into inode/ind
2127 for current block */
2128 int err;
2129
2130 if (this_bh) { /* For indirect block */
2131 BUFFER_TRACE(this_bh, "get_write_access");
2132 err = ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, this_bh);
2133 /* Important: if we can't update the indirect pointers
2134 * to the blocks, we can't free them. */
2135 if (err)
2136 return;
2137 }
2138
2139 for (p = first; p < last; p++) {
2140 nr = le32_to_cpu(*p);
2141 if (nr) {
2142 /* accumulate blocks to free if they're contiguous */
2143 if (count == 0) {
2144 block_to_free = nr;
2145 block_to_free_p = p;
2146 count = 1;
2147 } else if (nr == block_to_free + count) {
2148 count++;
2149 } else {
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07002150 ext3_clear_blocks(handle, inode, this_bh,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002151 block_to_free,
2152 count, block_to_free_p, p);
2153 block_to_free = nr;
2154 block_to_free_p = p;
2155 count = 1;
2156 }
2157 }
2158 }
2159
2160 if (count > 0)
2161 ext3_clear_blocks(handle, inode, this_bh, block_to_free,
2162 count, block_to_free_p, p);
2163
2164 if (this_bh) {
2165 BUFFER_TRACE(this_bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
Duane Griffin3ccc3162008-07-25 01:46:26 -07002166
2167 /*
2168 * The buffer head should have an attached journal head at this
2169 * point. However, if the data is corrupted and an indirect
2170 * block pointed to itself, it would have been detached when
2171 * the block was cleared. Check for this instead of OOPSing.
2172 */
2173 if (bh2jh(this_bh))
2174 ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, this_bh);
2175 else
2176 ext3_error(inode->i_sb, "ext3_free_data",
2177 "circular indirect block detected, "
2178 "inode=%lu, block=%llu",
2179 inode->i_ino,
2180 (unsigned long long)this_bh->b_blocknr);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002181 }
2182}
2183
2184/**
2185 * ext3_free_branches - free an array of branches
2186 * @handle: JBD handle for this transaction
2187 * @inode: inode we are dealing with
2188 * @parent_bh: the buffer_head which contains *@first and *@last
2189 * @first: array of block numbers
2190 * @last: pointer immediately past the end of array
2191 * @depth: depth of the branches to free
2192 *
2193 * We are freeing all blocks refered from these branches (numbers are
2194 * stored as little-endian 32-bit) and updating @inode->i_blocks
2195 * appropriately.
2196 */
2197static void ext3_free_branches(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
2198 struct buffer_head *parent_bh,
2199 __le32 *first, __le32 *last, int depth)
2200{
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002201 ext3_fsblk_t nr;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002202 __le32 *p;
2203
2204 if (is_handle_aborted(handle))
2205 return;
2206
2207 if (depth--) {
2208 struct buffer_head *bh;
2209 int addr_per_block = EXT3_ADDR_PER_BLOCK(inode->i_sb);
2210 p = last;
2211 while (--p >= first) {
2212 nr = le32_to_cpu(*p);
2213 if (!nr)
2214 continue; /* A hole */
2215
2216 /* Go read the buffer for the next level down */
2217 bh = sb_bread(inode->i_sb, nr);
2218
2219 /*
2220 * A read failure? Report error and clear slot
2221 * (should be rare).
2222 */
2223 if (!bh) {
2224 ext3_error(inode->i_sb, "ext3_free_branches",
Eric Sandeeneee194e2006-09-27 01:49:30 -07002225 "Read failure, inode=%lu, block="E3FSBLK,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002226 inode->i_ino, nr);
2227 continue;
2228 }
2229
2230 /* This zaps the entire block. Bottom up. */
2231 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "free child branches");
2232 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, bh,
2233 (__le32*)bh->b_data,
2234 (__le32*)bh->b_data + addr_per_block,
2235 depth);
2236
2237 /*
2238 * We've probably journalled the indirect block several
2239 * times during the truncate. But it's no longer
2240 * needed and we now drop it from the transaction via
2241 * journal_revoke().
2242 *
2243 * That's easy if it's exclusively part of this
2244 * transaction. But if it's part of the committing
2245 * transaction then journal_forget() will simply
2246 * brelse() it. That means that if the underlying
2247 * block is reallocated in ext3_get_block(),
2248 * unmap_underlying_metadata() will find this block
2249 * and will try to get rid of it. damn, damn.
2250 *
2251 * If this block has already been committed to the
2252 * journal, a revoke record will be written. And
2253 * revoke records must be emitted *before* clearing
2254 * this block's bit in the bitmaps.
2255 */
2256 ext3_forget(handle, 1, inode, bh, bh->b_blocknr);
2257
2258 /*
2259 * Everything below this this pointer has been
2260 * released. Now let this top-of-subtree go.
2261 *
2262 * We want the freeing of this indirect block to be
2263 * atomic in the journal with the updating of the
2264 * bitmap block which owns it. So make some room in
2265 * the journal.
2266 *
2267 * We zero the parent pointer *after* freeing its
2268 * pointee in the bitmaps, so if extend_transaction()
2269 * for some reason fails to put the bitmap changes and
2270 * the release into the same transaction, recovery
2271 * will merely complain about releasing a free block,
2272 * rather than leaking blocks.
2273 */
2274 if (is_handle_aborted(handle))
2275 return;
2276 if (try_to_extend_transaction(handle, inode)) {
2277 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
2278 ext3_journal_test_restart(handle, inode);
2279 }
2280
2281 ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, nr, 1);
2282
2283 if (parent_bh) {
2284 /*
2285 * The block which we have just freed is
2286 * pointed to by an indirect block: journal it
2287 */
2288 BUFFER_TRACE(parent_bh, "get_write_access");
2289 if (!ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle,
2290 parent_bh)){
2291 *p = 0;
2292 BUFFER_TRACE(parent_bh,
2293 "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07002294 ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002295 parent_bh);
2296 }
2297 }
2298 }
2299 } else {
2300 /* We have reached the bottom of the tree. */
2301 BUFFER_TRACE(parent_bh, "free data blocks");
2302 ext3_free_data(handle, inode, parent_bh, first, last);
2303 }
2304}
2305
Duane Griffinae76dd92008-07-25 01:46:23 -07002306int ext3_can_truncate(struct inode *inode)
2307{
2308 if (IS_APPEND(inode) || IS_IMMUTABLE(inode))
2309 return 0;
2310 if (S_ISREG(inode->i_mode))
2311 return 1;
2312 if (S_ISDIR(inode->i_mode))
2313 return 1;
2314 if (S_ISLNK(inode->i_mode))
2315 return !ext3_inode_is_fast_symlink(inode);
2316 return 0;
2317}
2318
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002319/*
2320 * ext3_truncate()
2321 *
2322 * We block out ext3_get_block() block instantiations across the entire
2323 * transaction, and VFS/VM ensures that ext3_truncate() cannot run
2324 * simultaneously on behalf of the same inode.
2325 *
2326 * As we work through the truncate and commmit bits of it to the journal there
2327 * is one core, guiding principle: the file's tree must always be consistent on
2328 * disk. We must be able to restart the truncate after a crash.
2329 *
2330 * The file's tree may be transiently inconsistent in memory (although it
2331 * probably isn't), but whenever we close off and commit a journal transaction,
2332 * the contents of (the filesystem + the journal) must be consistent and
2333 * restartable. It's pretty simple, really: bottom up, right to left (although
2334 * left-to-right works OK too).
2335 *
2336 * Note that at recovery time, journal replay occurs *before* the restart of
2337 * truncate against the orphan inode list.
2338 *
2339 * The committed inode has the new, desired i_size (which is the same as
2340 * i_disksize in this case). After a crash, ext3_orphan_cleanup() will see
2341 * that this inode's truncate did not complete and it will again call
2342 * ext3_truncate() to have another go. So there will be instantiated blocks
2343 * to the right of the truncation point in a crashed ext3 filesystem. But
2344 * that's fine - as long as they are linked from the inode, the post-crash
2345 * ext3_truncate() run will find them and release them.
2346 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002347void ext3_truncate(struct inode *inode)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002348{
2349 handle_t *handle;
2350 struct ext3_inode_info *ei = EXT3_I(inode);
2351 __le32 *i_data = ei->i_data;
2352 int addr_per_block = EXT3_ADDR_PER_BLOCK(inode->i_sb);
2353 struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping;
2354 int offsets[4];
2355 Indirect chain[4];
2356 Indirect *partial;
2357 __le32 nr = 0;
2358 int n;
2359 long last_block;
2360 unsigned blocksize = inode->i_sb->s_blocksize;
2361 struct page *page;
2362
Duane Griffinae76dd92008-07-25 01:46:23 -07002363 if (!ext3_can_truncate(inode))
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002364 return;
2365
2366 /*
2367 * We have to lock the EOF page here, because lock_page() nests
2368 * outside journal_start().
2369 */
2370 if ((inode->i_size & (blocksize - 1)) == 0) {
2371 /* Block boundary? Nothing to do */
2372 page = NULL;
2373 } else {
2374 page = grab_cache_page(mapping,
2375 inode->i_size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT);
2376 if (!page)
2377 return;
2378 }
2379
2380 handle = start_transaction(inode);
2381 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
2382 if (page) {
2383 clear_highpage(page);
2384 flush_dcache_page(page);
2385 unlock_page(page);
2386 page_cache_release(page);
2387 }
2388 return; /* AKPM: return what? */
2389 }
2390
2391 last_block = (inode->i_size + blocksize-1)
2392 >> EXT3_BLOCK_SIZE_BITS(inode->i_sb);
2393
2394 if (page)
2395 ext3_block_truncate_page(handle, page, mapping, inode->i_size);
2396
2397 n = ext3_block_to_path(inode, last_block, offsets, NULL);
2398 if (n == 0)
2399 goto out_stop; /* error */
2400
2401 /*
2402 * OK. This truncate is going to happen. We add the inode to the
2403 * orphan list, so that if this truncate spans multiple transactions,
2404 * and we crash, we will resume the truncate when the filesystem
2405 * recovers. It also marks the inode dirty, to catch the new size.
2406 *
2407 * Implication: the file must always be in a sane, consistent
2408 * truncatable state while each transaction commits.
2409 */
2410 if (ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode))
2411 goto out_stop;
2412
2413 /*
2414 * The orphan list entry will now protect us from any crash which
2415 * occurs before the truncate completes, so it is now safe to propagate
2416 * the new, shorter inode size (held for now in i_size) into the
2417 * on-disk inode. We do this via i_disksize, which is the value which
2418 * ext3 *really* writes onto the disk inode.
2419 */
2420 ei->i_disksize = inode->i_size;
2421
2422 /*
2423 * From here we block out all ext3_get_block() callers who want to
2424 * modify the block allocation tree.
2425 */
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -08002426 mutex_lock(&ei->truncate_mutex);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002427
2428 if (n == 1) { /* direct blocks */
2429 ext3_free_data(handle, inode, NULL, i_data+offsets[0],
2430 i_data + EXT3_NDIR_BLOCKS);
2431 goto do_indirects;
2432 }
2433
2434 partial = ext3_find_shared(inode, n, offsets, chain, &nr);
2435 /* Kill the top of shared branch (not detached) */
2436 if (nr) {
2437 if (partial == chain) {
2438 /* Shared branch grows from the inode */
2439 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, NULL,
2440 &nr, &nr+1, (chain+n-1) - partial);
2441 *partial->p = 0;
2442 /*
2443 * We mark the inode dirty prior to restart,
2444 * and prior to stop. No need for it here.
2445 */
2446 } else {
2447 /* Shared branch grows from an indirect block */
2448 BUFFER_TRACE(partial->bh, "get_write_access");
2449 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, partial->bh,
2450 partial->p,
2451 partial->p+1, (chain+n-1) - partial);
2452 }
2453 }
2454 /* Clear the ends of indirect blocks on the shared branch */
2455 while (partial > chain) {
2456 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, partial->bh, partial->p + 1,
2457 (__le32*)partial->bh->b_data+addr_per_block,
2458 (chain+n-1) - partial);
2459 BUFFER_TRACE(partial->bh, "call brelse");
2460 brelse (partial->bh);
2461 partial--;
2462 }
2463do_indirects:
2464 /* Kill the remaining (whole) subtrees */
2465 switch (offsets[0]) {
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002466 default:
2467 nr = i_data[EXT3_IND_BLOCK];
2468 if (nr) {
2469 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, NULL, &nr, &nr+1, 1);
2470 i_data[EXT3_IND_BLOCK] = 0;
2471 }
2472 case EXT3_IND_BLOCK:
2473 nr = i_data[EXT3_DIND_BLOCK];
2474 if (nr) {
2475 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, NULL, &nr, &nr+1, 2);
2476 i_data[EXT3_DIND_BLOCK] = 0;
2477 }
2478 case EXT3_DIND_BLOCK:
2479 nr = i_data[EXT3_TIND_BLOCK];
2480 if (nr) {
2481 ext3_free_branches(handle, inode, NULL, &nr, &nr+1, 3);
2482 i_data[EXT3_TIND_BLOCK] = 0;
2483 }
2484 case EXT3_TIND_BLOCK:
2485 ;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002486 }
2487
2488 ext3_discard_reservation(inode);
2489
Arjan van de Ven97461512006-03-23 03:00:42 -08002490 mutex_unlock(&ei->truncate_mutex);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002491 inode->i_mtime = inode->i_ctime = CURRENT_TIME_SEC;
2492 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
2493
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08002494 /*
2495 * In a multi-transaction truncate, we only make the final transaction
2496 * synchronous
2497 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002498 if (IS_SYNC(inode))
2499 handle->h_sync = 1;
2500out_stop:
2501 /*
2502 * If this was a simple ftruncate(), and the file will remain alive
2503 * then we need to clear up the orphan record which we created above.
2504 * However, if this was a real unlink then we were called by
2505 * ext3_delete_inode(), and we allow that function to clean up the
2506 * orphan info for us.
2507 */
2508 if (inode->i_nlink)
2509 ext3_orphan_del(handle, inode);
2510
2511 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
2512}
2513
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002514static ext3_fsblk_t ext3_get_inode_block(struct super_block *sb,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002515 unsigned long ino, struct ext3_iloc *iloc)
2516{
Akinobu Mitae0e369a2008-04-28 02:16:08 -07002517 unsigned long block_group;
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002518 unsigned long offset;
2519 ext3_fsblk_t block;
Akinobu Mitae0e369a2008-04-28 02:16:08 -07002520 struct ext3_group_desc *gdp;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002521
Neil Brown2ccb48e2006-07-30 03:03:01 -07002522 if (!ext3_valid_inum(sb, ino)) {
2523 /*
2524 * This error is already checked for in namei.c unless we are
2525 * looking at an NFS filehandle, in which case no error
2526 * report is needed
2527 */
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002528 return 0;
2529 }
Neil Brown2ccb48e2006-07-30 03:03:01 -07002530
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002531 block_group = (ino - 1) / EXT3_INODES_PER_GROUP(sb);
Akinobu Mitae0e369a2008-04-28 02:16:08 -07002532 gdp = ext3_get_group_desc(sb, block_group, NULL);
2533 if (!gdp)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002534 return 0;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002535 /*
2536 * Figure out the offset within the block group inode table
2537 */
2538 offset = ((ino - 1) % EXT3_INODES_PER_GROUP(sb)) *
2539 EXT3_INODE_SIZE(sb);
Akinobu Mitae0e369a2008-04-28 02:16:08 -07002540 block = le32_to_cpu(gdp->bg_inode_table) +
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002541 (offset >> EXT3_BLOCK_SIZE_BITS(sb));
2542
2543 iloc->block_group = block_group;
2544 iloc->offset = offset & (EXT3_BLOCK_SIZE(sb) - 1);
2545 return block;
2546}
2547
2548/*
2549 * ext3_get_inode_loc returns with an extra refcount against the inode's
2550 * underlying buffer_head on success. If 'in_mem' is true, we have all
2551 * data in memory that is needed to recreate the on-disk version of this
2552 * inode.
2553 */
2554static int __ext3_get_inode_loc(struct inode *inode,
2555 struct ext3_iloc *iloc, int in_mem)
2556{
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002557 ext3_fsblk_t block;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002558 struct buffer_head *bh;
2559
2560 block = ext3_get_inode_block(inode->i_sb, inode->i_ino, iloc);
2561 if (!block)
2562 return -EIO;
2563
2564 bh = sb_getblk(inode->i_sb, block);
2565 if (!bh) {
2566 ext3_error (inode->i_sb, "ext3_get_inode_loc",
2567 "unable to read inode block - "
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002568 "inode=%lu, block="E3FSBLK,
2569 inode->i_ino, block);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002570 return -EIO;
2571 }
2572 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) {
2573 lock_buffer(bh);
Hidehiro Kawai95450f52008-07-25 01:46:24 -07002574
2575 /*
2576 * If the buffer has the write error flag, we have failed
2577 * to write out another inode in the same block. In this
2578 * case, we don't have to read the block because we may
2579 * read the old inode data successfully.
2580 */
2581 if (buffer_write_io_error(bh) && !buffer_uptodate(bh))
2582 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
2583
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002584 if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) {
2585 /* someone brought it uptodate while we waited */
2586 unlock_buffer(bh);
2587 goto has_buffer;
2588 }
2589
2590 /*
2591 * If we have all information of the inode in memory and this
2592 * is the only valid inode in the block, we need not read the
2593 * block.
2594 */
2595 if (in_mem) {
2596 struct buffer_head *bitmap_bh;
2597 struct ext3_group_desc *desc;
2598 int inodes_per_buffer;
2599 int inode_offset, i;
2600 int block_group;
2601 int start;
2602
2603 block_group = (inode->i_ino - 1) /
2604 EXT3_INODES_PER_GROUP(inode->i_sb);
2605 inodes_per_buffer = bh->b_size /
2606 EXT3_INODE_SIZE(inode->i_sb);
2607 inode_offset = ((inode->i_ino - 1) %
2608 EXT3_INODES_PER_GROUP(inode->i_sb));
2609 start = inode_offset & ~(inodes_per_buffer - 1);
2610
2611 /* Is the inode bitmap in cache? */
2612 desc = ext3_get_group_desc(inode->i_sb,
2613 block_group, NULL);
2614 if (!desc)
2615 goto make_io;
2616
2617 bitmap_bh = sb_getblk(inode->i_sb,
2618 le32_to_cpu(desc->bg_inode_bitmap));
2619 if (!bitmap_bh)
2620 goto make_io;
2621
2622 /*
2623 * If the inode bitmap isn't in cache then the
2624 * optimisation may end up performing two reads instead
2625 * of one, so skip it.
2626 */
2627 if (!buffer_uptodate(bitmap_bh)) {
2628 brelse(bitmap_bh);
2629 goto make_io;
2630 }
2631 for (i = start; i < start + inodes_per_buffer; i++) {
2632 if (i == inode_offset)
2633 continue;
2634 if (ext3_test_bit(i, bitmap_bh->b_data))
2635 break;
2636 }
2637 brelse(bitmap_bh);
2638 if (i == start + inodes_per_buffer) {
2639 /* all other inodes are free, so skip I/O */
2640 memset(bh->b_data, 0, bh->b_size);
2641 set_buffer_uptodate(bh);
2642 unlock_buffer(bh);
2643 goto has_buffer;
2644 }
2645 }
2646
2647make_io:
2648 /*
2649 * There are other valid inodes in the buffer, this inode
2650 * has in-inode xattrs, or we don't have this inode in memory.
2651 * Read the block from disk.
2652 */
2653 get_bh(bh);
2654 bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync;
Jens Axboecaa38fb2006-07-23 01:41:26 +02002655 submit_bh(READ_META, bh);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002656 wait_on_buffer(bh);
2657 if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) {
2658 ext3_error(inode->i_sb, "ext3_get_inode_loc",
2659 "unable to read inode block - "
Mingming Cao43d23f92006-06-25 05:48:07 -07002660 "inode=%lu, block="E3FSBLK,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002661 inode->i_ino, block);
2662 brelse(bh);
2663 return -EIO;
2664 }
2665 }
2666has_buffer:
2667 iloc->bh = bh;
2668 return 0;
2669}
2670
2671int ext3_get_inode_loc(struct inode *inode, struct ext3_iloc *iloc)
2672{
2673 /* We have all inode data except xattrs in memory here. */
2674 return __ext3_get_inode_loc(inode, iloc,
2675 !(EXT3_I(inode)->i_state & EXT3_STATE_XATTR));
2676}
2677
2678void ext3_set_inode_flags(struct inode *inode)
2679{
2680 unsigned int flags = EXT3_I(inode)->i_flags;
2681
2682 inode->i_flags &= ~(S_SYNC|S_APPEND|S_IMMUTABLE|S_NOATIME|S_DIRSYNC);
2683 if (flags & EXT3_SYNC_FL)
2684 inode->i_flags |= S_SYNC;
2685 if (flags & EXT3_APPEND_FL)
2686 inode->i_flags |= S_APPEND;
2687 if (flags & EXT3_IMMUTABLE_FL)
2688 inode->i_flags |= S_IMMUTABLE;
2689 if (flags & EXT3_NOATIME_FL)
2690 inode->i_flags |= S_NOATIME;
2691 if (flags & EXT3_DIRSYNC_FL)
2692 inode->i_flags |= S_DIRSYNC;
2693}
2694
Jan Kara28be5ab2007-05-08 00:30:33 -07002695/* Propagate flags from i_flags to EXT3_I(inode)->i_flags */
2696void ext3_get_inode_flags(struct ext3_inode_info *ei)
2697{
2698 unsigned int flags = ei->vfs_inode.i_flags;
2699
2700 ei->i_flags &= ~(EXT3_SYNC_FL|EXT3_APPEND_FL|
2701 EXT3_IMMUTABLE_FL|EXT3_NOATIME_FL|EXT3_DIRSYNC_FL);
2702 if (flags & S_SYNC)
2703 ei->i_flags |= EXT3_SYNC_FL;
2704 if (flags & S_APPEND)
2705 ei->i_flags |= EXT3_APPEND_FL;
2706 if (flags & S_IMMUTABLE)
2707 ei->i_flags |= EXT3_IMMUTABLE_FL;
2708 if (flags & S_NOATIME)
2709 ei->i_flags |= EXT3_NOATIME_FL;
2710 if (flags & S_DIRSYNC)
2711 ei->i_flags |= EXT3_DIRSYNC_FL;
2712}
2713
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002714struct inode *ext3_iget(struct super_block *sb, unsigned long ino)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002715{
2716 struct ext3_iloc iloc;
2717 struct ext3_inode *raw_inode;
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002718 struct ext3_inode_info *ei;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002719 struct buffer_head *bh;
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002720 struct inode *inode;
2721 long ret;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002722 int block;
2723
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002724 inode = iget_locked(sb, ino);
2725 if (!inode)
2726 return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
2727 if (!(inode->i_state & I_NEW))
2728 return inode;
2729
2730 ei = EXT3_I(inode);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002731#ifdef CONFIG_EXT3_FS_POSIX_ACL
2732 ei->i_acl = EXT3_ACL_NOT_CACHED;
2733 ei->i_default_acl = EXT3_ACL_NOT_CACHED;
2734#endif
2735 ei->i_block_alloc_info = NULL;
2736
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002737 ret = __ext3_get_inode_loc(inode, &iloc, 0);
2738 if (ret < 0)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002739 goto bad_inode;
2740 bh = iloc.bh;
2741 raw_inode = ext3_raw_inode(&iloc);
2742 inode->i_mode = le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_mode);
2743 inode->i_uid = (uid_t)le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_uid_low);
2744 inode->i_gid = (gid_t)le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_gid_low);
2745 if(!(test_opt (inode->i_sb, NO_UID32))) {
2746 inode->i_uid |= le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_uid_high) << 16;
2747 inode->i_gid |= le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_gid_high) << 16;
2748 }
2749 inode->i_nlink = le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_links_count);
2750 inode->i_size = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_size);
Markus Rechberger4d7bf112007-05-08 00:23:39 -07002751 inode->i_atime.tv_sec = (signed)le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_atime);
2752 inode->i_ctime.tv_sec = (signed)le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_ctime);
2753 inode->i_mtime.tv_sec = (signed)le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_mtime);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002754 inode->i_atime.tv_nsec = inode->i_ctime.tv_nsec = inode->i_mtime.tv_nsec = 0;
2755
2756 ei->i_state = 0;
2757 ei->i_dir_start_lookup = 0;
2758 ei->i_dtime = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_dtime);
2759 /* We now have enough fields to check if the inode was active or not.
2760 * This is needed because nfsd might try to access dead inodes
2761 * the test is that same one that e2fsck uses
2762 * NeilBrown 1999oct15
2763 */
2764 if (inode->i_nlink == 0) {
2765 if (inode->i_mode == 0 ||
2766 !(EXT3_SB(inode->i_sb)->s_mount_state & EXT3_ORPHAN_FS)) {
2767 /* this inode is deleted */
2768 brelse (bh);
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002769 ret = -ESTALE;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002770 goto bad_inode;
2771 }
2772 /* The only unlinked inodes we let through here have
2773 * valid i_mode and are being read by the orphan
2774 * recovery code: that's fine, we're about to complete
2775 * the process of deleting those. */
2776 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002777 inode->i_blocks = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_blocks);
2778 ei->i_flags = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_flags);
2779#ifdef EXT3_FRAGMENTS
2780 ei->i_faddr = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_faddr);
2781 ei->i_frag_no = raw_inode->i_frag;
2782 ei->i_frag_size = raw_inode->i_fsize;
2783#endif
2784 ei->i_file_acl = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_file_acl);
2785 if (!S_ISREG(inode->i_mode)) {
2786 ei->i_dir_acl = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_dir_acl);
2787 } else {
2788 inode->i_size |=
2789 ((__u64)le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_size_high)) << 32;
2790 }
2791 ei->i_disksize = inode->i_size;
2792 inode->i_generation = le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_generation);
2793 ei->i_block_group = iloc.block_group;
2794 /*
2795 * NOTE! The in-memory inode i_data array is in little-endian order
2796 * even on big-endian machines: we do NOT byteswap the block numbers!
2797 */
2798 for (block = 0; block < EXT3_N_BLOCKS; block++)
2799 ei->i_data[block] = raw_inode->i_block[block];
2800 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ei->i_orphan);
2801
2802 if (inode->i_ino >= EXT3_FIRST_INO(inode->i_sb) + 1 &&
2803 EXT3_INODE_SIZE(inode->i_sb) > EXT3_GOOD_OLD_INODE_SIZE) {
2804 /*
2805 * When mke2fs creates big inodes it does not zero out
2806 * the unused bytes above EXT3_GOOD_OLD_INODE_SIZE,
2807 * so ignore those first few inodes.
2808 */
2809 ei->i_extra_isize = le16_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_extra_isize);
2810 if (EXT3_GOOD_OLD_INODE_SIZE + ei->i_extra_isize >
Kirill Korotaeve4a10a32007-06-23 17:16:48 -07002811 EXT3_INODE_SIZE(inode->i_sb)) {
2812 brelse (bh);
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002813 ret = -EIO;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002814 goto bad_inode;
Kirill Korotaeve4a10a32007-06-23 17:16:48 -07002815 }
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002816 if (ei->i_extra_isize == 0) {
2817 /* The extra space is currently unused. Use it. */
2818 ei->i_extra_isize = sizeof(struct ext3_inode) -
2819 EXT3_GOOD_OLD_INODE_SIZE;
2820 } else {
2821 __le32 *magic = (void *)raw_inode +
2822 EXT3_GOOD_OLD_INODE_SIZE +
2823 ei->i_extra_isize;
2824 if (*magic == cpu_to_le32(EXT3_XATTR_MAGIC))
2825 ei->i_state |= EXT3_STATE_XATTR;
2826 }
2827 } else
2828 ei->i_extra_isize = 0;
2829
2830 if (S_ISREG(inode->i_mode)) {
2831 inode->i_op = &ext3_file_inode_operations;
2832 inode->i_fop = &ext3_file_operations;
2833 ext3_set_aops(inode);
2834 } else if (S_ISDIR(inode->i_mode)) {
2835 inode->i_op = &ext3_dir_inode_operations;
2836 inode->i_fop = &ext3_dir_operations;
2837 } else if (S_ISLNK(inode->i_mode)) {
Duane Griffinb5ed3112008-12-19 20:47:14 +00002838 if (ext3_inode_is_fast_symlink(inode)) {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002839 inode->i_op = &ext3_fast_symlink_inode_operations;
Duane Griffinb5ed3112008-12-19 20:47:14 +00002840 nd_terminate_link(ei->i_data, inode->i_size,
2841 sizeof(ei->i_data) - 1);
2842 } else {
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002843 inode->i_op = &ext3_symlink_inode_operations;
2844 ext3_set_aops(inode);
2845 }
2846 } else {
2847 inode->i_op = &ext3_special_inode_operations;
2848 if (raw_inode->i_block[0])
2849 init_special_inode(inode, inode->i_mode,
2850 old_decode_dev(le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_block[0])));
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07002851 else
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002852 init_special_inode(inode, inode->i_mode,
2853 new_decode_dev(le32_to_cpu(raw_inode->i_block[1])));
2854 }
2855 brelse (iloc.bh);
2856 ext3_set_inode_flags(inode);
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002857 unlock_new_inode(inode);
2858 return inode;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002859
2860bad_inode:
David Howells473043d2008-02-07 00:15:36 -08002861 iget_failed(inode);
2862 return ERR_PTR(ret);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002863}
2864
2865/*
2866 * Post the struct inode info into an on-disk inode location in the
2867 * buffer-cache. This gobbles the caller's reference to the
2868 * buffer_head in the inode location struct.
2869 *
2870 * The caller must have write access to iloc->bh.
2871 */
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07002872static int ext3_do_update_inode(handle_t *handle,
2873 struct inode *inode,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002874 struct ext3_iloc *iloc)
2875{
2876 struct ext3_inode *raw_inode = ext3_raw_inode(iloc);
2877 struct ext3_inode_info *ei = EXT3_I(inode);
2878 struct buffer_head *bh = iloc->bh;
2879 int err = 0, rc, block;
2880
2881 /* For fields not not tracking in the in-memory inode,
2882 * initialise them to zero for new inodes. */
2883 if (ei->i_state & EXT3_STATE_NEW)
2884 memset(raw_inode, 0, EXT3_SB(inode->i_sb)->s_inode_size);
2885
Jan Kara28be5ab2007-05-08 00:30:33 -07002886 ext3_get_inode_flags(ei);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002887 raw_inode->i_mode = cpu_to_le16(inode->i_mode);
2888 if(!(test_opt(inode->i_sb, NO_UID32))) {
2889 raw_inode->i_uid_low = cpu_to_le16(low_16_bits(inode->i_uid));
2890 raw_inode->i_gid_low = cpu_to_le16(low_16_bits(inode->i_gid));
2891/*
2892 * Fix up interoperability with old kernels. Otherwise, old inodes get
2893 * re-used with the upper 16 bits of the uid/gid intact
2894 */
2895 if(!ei->i_dtime) {
2896 raw_inode->i_uid_high =
2897 cpu_to_le16(high_16_bits(inode->i_uid));
2898 raw_inode->i_gid_high =
2899 cpu_to_le16(high_16_bits(inode->i_gid));
2900 } else {
2901 raw_inode->i_uid_high = 0;
2902 raw_inode->i_gid_high = 0;
2903 }
2904 } else {
2905 raw_inode->i_uid_low =
2906 cpu_to_le16(fs_high2lowuid(inode->i_uid));
2907 raw_inode->i_gid_low =
2908 cpu_to_le16(fs_high2lowgid(inode->i_gid));
2909 raw_inode->i_uid_high = 0;
2910 raw_inode->i_gid_high = 0;
2911 }
2912 raw_inode->i_links_count = cpu_to_le16(inode->i_nlink);
2913 raw_inode->i_size = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_disksize);
2914 raw_inode->i_atime = cpu_to_le32(inode->i_atime.tv_sec);
2915 raw_inode->i_ctime = cpu_to_le32(inode->i_ctime.tv_sec);
2916 raw_inode->i_mtime = cpu_to_le32(inode->i_mtime.tv_sec);
2917 raw_inode->i_blocks = cpu_to_le32(inode->i_blocks);
2918 raw_inode->i_dtime = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_dtime);
2919 raw_inode->i_flags = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_flags);
2920#ifdef EXT3_FRAGMENTS
2921 raw_inode->i_faddr = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_faddr);
2922 raw_inode->i_frag = ei->i_frag_no;
2923 raw_inode->i_fsize = ei->i_frag_size;
2924#endif
2925 raw_inode->i_file_acl = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_file_acl);
2926 if (!S_ISREG(inode->i_mode)) {
2927 raw_inode->i_dir_acl = cpu_to_le32(ei->i_dir_acl);
2928 } else {
2929 raw_inode->i_size_high =
2930 cpu_to_le32(ei->i_disksize >> 32);
2931 if (ei->i_disksize > 0x7fffffffULL) {
2932 struct super_block *sb = inode->i_sb;
2933 if (!EXT3_HAS_RO_COMPAT_FEATURE(sb,
2934 EXT3_FEATURE_RO_COMPAT_LARGE_FILE) ||
2935 EXT3_SB(sb)->s_es->s_rev_level ==
2936 cpu_to_le32(EXT3_GOOD_OLD_REV)) {
2937 /* If this is the first large file
2938 * created, add a flag to the superblock.
2939 */
2940 err = ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle,
2941 EXT3_SB(sb)->s_sbh);
2942 if (err)
2943 goto out_brelse;
2944 ext3_update_dynamic_rev(sb);
2945 EXT3_SET_RO_COMPAT_FEATURE(sb,
2946 EXT3_FEATURE_RO_COMPAT_LARGE_FILE);
2947 sb->s_dirt = 1;
2948 handle->h_sync = 1;
2949 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle,
2950 EXT3_SB(sb)->s_sbh);
2951 }
2952 }
2953 }
2954 raw_inode->i_generation = cpu_to_le32(inode->i_generation);
2955 if (S_ISCHR(inode->i_mode) || S_ISBLK(inode->i_mode)) {
2956 if (old_valid_dev(inode->i_rdev)) {
2957 raw_inode->i_block[0] =
2958 cpu_to_le32(old_encode_dev(inode->i_rdev));
2959 raw_inode->i_block[1] = 0;
2960 } else {
2961 raw_inode->i_block[0] = 0;
2962 raw_inode->i_block[1] =
2963 cpu_to_le32(new_encode_dev(inode->i_rdev));
2964 raw_inode->i_block[2] = 0;
2965 }
2966 } else for (block = 0; block < EXT3_N_BLOCKS; block++)
2967 raw_inode->i_block[block] = ei->i_data[block];
2968
Andreas Gruenbacherff87b372005-07-07 17:57:00 -07002969 if (ei->i_extra_isize)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07002970 raw_inode->i_extra_isize = cpu_to_le16(ei->i_extra_isize);
2971
2972 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call ext3_journal_dirty_metadata");
2973 rc = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle, bh);
2974 if (!err)
2975 err = rc;
2976 ei->i_state &= ~EXT3_STATE_NEW;
2977
2978out_brelse:
2979 brelse (bh);
2980 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, err);
2981 return err;
2982}
2983
2984/*
2985 * ext3_write_inode()
2986 *
2987 * We are called from a few places:
2988 *
2989 * - Within generic_file_write() for O_SYNC files.
2990 * Here, there will be no transaction running. We wait for any running
2991 * trasnaction to commit.
2992 *
2993 * - Within sys_sync(), kupdate and such.
2994 * We wait on commit, if tol to.
2995 *
2996 * - Within prune_icache() (PF_MEMALLOC == true)
2997 * Here we simply return. We can't afford to block kswapd on the
2998 * journal commit.
2999 *
3000 * In all cases it is actually safe for us to return without doing anything,
3001 * because the inode has been copied into a raw inode buffer in
3002 * ext3_mark_inode_dirty(). This is a correctness thing for O_SYNC and for
3003 * knfsd.
3004 *
3005 * Note that we are absolutely dependent upon all inode dirtiers doing the
3006 * right thing: they *must* call mark_inode_dirty() after dirtying info in
3007 * which we are interested.
3008 *
3009 * It would be a bug for them to not do this. The code:
3010 *
3011 * mark_inode_dirty(inode)
3012 * stuff();
3013 * inode->i_size = expr;
3014 *
3015 * is in error because a kswapd-driven write_inode() could occur while
3016 * `stuff()' is running, and the new i_size will be lost. Plus the inode
3017 * will no longer be on the superblock's dirty inode list.
3018 */
3019int ext3_write_inode(struct inode *inode, int wait)
3020{
3021 if (current->flags & PF_MEMALLOC)
3022 return 0;
3023
3024 if (ext3_journal_current_handle()) {
Jose R. Santos9ad163a2007-10-18 23:39:23 -07003025 jbd_debug(1, "called recursively, non-PF_MEMALLOC!\n");
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003026 dump_stack();
3027 return -EIO;
3028 }
3029
3030 if (!wait)
3031 return 0;
3032
3033 return ext3_force_commit(inode->i_sb);
3034}
3035
3036/*
3037 * ext3_setattr()
3038 *
3039 * Called from notify_change.
3040 *
3041 * We want to trap VFS attempts to truncate the file as soon as
3042 * possible. In particular, we want to make sure that when the VFS
3043 * shrinks i_size, we put the inode on the orphan list and modify
3044 * i_disksize immediately, so that during the subsequent flushing of
3045 * dirty pages and freeing of disk blocks, we can guarantee that any
3046 * commit will leave the blocks being flushed in an unused state on
3047 * disk. (On recovery, the inode will get truncated and the blocks will
3048 * be freed, so we have a strong guarantee that no future commit will
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003049 * leave these blocks visible to the user.)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003050 *
3051 * Called with inode->sem down.
3052 */
3053int ext3_setattr(struct dentry *dentry, struct iattr *attr)
3054{
3055 struct inode *inode = dentry->d_inode;
3056 int error, rc = 0;
3057 const unsigned int ia_valid = attr->ia_valid;
3058
3059 error = inode_change_ok(inode, attr);
3060 if (error)
3061 return error;
3062
3063 if ((ia_valid & ATTR_UID && attr->ia_uid != inode->i_uid) ||
3064 (ia_valid & ATTR_GID && attr->ia_gid != inode->i_gid)) {
3065 handle_t *handle;
3066
3067 /* (user+group)*(old+new) structure, inode write (sb,
3068 * inode block, ? - but truncate inode update has it) */
Jan Kara1f545872005-06-23 22:01:04 -07003069 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 2*(EXT3_QUOTA_INIT_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb)+
3070 EXT3_QUOTA_DEL_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb))+3);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003071 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
3072 error = PTR_ERR(handle);
3073 goto err_out;
3074 }
Jan Kara81a05222009-01-26 16:58:01 +01003075 error = vfs_dq_transfer(inode, attr) ? -EDQUOT : 0;
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003076 if (error) {
3077 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
3078 return error;
3079 }
3080 /* Update corresponding info in inode so that everything is in
3081 * one transaction */
3082 if (attr->ia_valid & ATTR_UID)
3083 inode->i_uid = attr->ia_uid;
3084 if (attr->ia_valid & ATTR_GID)
3085 inode->i_gid = attr->ia_gid;
3086 error = ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
3087 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
3088 }
3089
3090 if (S_ISREG(inode->i_mode) &&
3091 attr->ia_valid & ATTR_SIZE && attr->ia_size < inode->i_size) {
3092 handle_t *handle;
3093
3094 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 3);
3095 if (IS_ERR(handle)) {
3096 error = PTR_ERR(handle);
3097 goto err_out;
3098 }
3099
3100 error = ext3_orphan_add(handle, inode);
3101 EXT3_I(inode)->i_disksize = attr->ia_size;
3102 rc = ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
3103 if (!error)
3104 error = rc;
3105 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
3106 }
3107
3108 rc = inode_setattr(inode, attr);
3109
3110 /* If inode_setattr's call to ext3_truncate failed to get a
3111 * transaction handle at all, we need to clean up the in-core
3112 * orphan list manually. */
3113 if (inode->i_nlink)
3114 ext3_orphan_del(NULL, inode);
3115
3116 if (!rc && (ia_valid & ATTR_MODE))
3117 rc = ext3_acl_chmod(inode);
3118
3119err_out:
3120 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, error);
3121 if (!error)
3122 error = rc;
3123 return error;
3124}
3125
3126
3127/*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08003128 * How many blocks doth make a writepage()?
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003129 *
3130 * With N blocks per page, it may be:
3131 * N data blocks
3132 * 2 indirect block
3133 * 2 dindirect
3134 * 1 tindirect
3135 * N+5 bitmap blocks (from the above)
3136 * N+5 group descriptor summary blocks
3137 * 1 inode block
3138 * 1 superblock.
3139 * 2 * EXT3_SINGLEDATA_TRANS_BLOCKS for the quote files
3140 *
3141 * 3 * (N + 5) + 2 + 2 * EXT3_SINGLEDATA_TRANS_BLOCKS
3142 *
3143 * With ordered or writeback data it's the same, less the N data blocks.
3144 *
3145 * If the inode's direct blocks can hold an integral number of pages then a
3146 * page cannot straddle two indirect blocks, and we can only touch one indirect
3147 * and dindirect block, and the "5" above becomes "3".
3148 *
3149 * This still overestimates under most circumstances. If we were to pass the
3150 * start and end offsets in here as well we could do block_to_path() on each
3151 * block and work out the exact number of indirects which are touched. Pah.
3152 */
3153
3154static int ext3_writepage_trans_blocks(struct inode *inode)
3155{
3156 int bpp = ext3_journal_blocks_per_page(inode);
3157 int indirects = (EXT3_NDIR_BLOCKS % bpp) ? 5 : 3;
3158 int ret;
3159
3160 if (ext3_should_journal_data(inode))
3161 ret = 3 * (bpp + indirects) + 2;
3162 else
3163 ret = 2 * (bpp + indirects) + 2;
3164
3165#ifdef CONFIG_QUOTA
Jan Kara81a05222009-01-26 16:58:01 +01003166 /* We know that structure was already allocated during vfs_dq_init so
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003167 * we will be updating only the data blocks + inodes */
Jan Kara1f545872005-06-23 22:01:04 -07003168 ret += 2*EXT3_QUOTA_TRANS_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003169#endif
3170
3171 return ret;
3172}
3173
3174/*
3175 * The caller must have previously called ext3_reserve_inode_write().
3176 * Give this, we know that the caller already has write access to iloc->bh.
3177 */
3178int ext3_mark_iloc_dirty(handle_t *handle,
3179 struct inode *inode, struct ext3_iloc *iloc)
3180{
3181 int err = 0;
3182
3183 /* the do_update_inode consumes one bh->b_count */
3184 get_bh(iloc->bh);
3185
3186 /* ext3_do_update_inode() does journal_dirty_metadata */
3187 err = ext3_do_update_inode(handle, inode, iloc);
3188 put_bh(iloc->bh);
3189 return err;
3190}
3191
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003192/*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003193 * On success, We end up with an outstanding reference count against
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003194 * iloc->bh. This _must_ be cleaned up later.
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003195 */
3196
3197int
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003198ext3_reserve_inode_write(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003199 struct ext3_iloc *iloc)
3200{
3201 int err = 0;
3202 if (handle) {
3203 err = ext3_get_inode_loc(inode, iloc);
3204 if (!err) {
3205 BUFFER_TRACE(iloc->bh, "get_write_access");
3206 err = ext3_journal_get_write_access(handle, iloc->bh);
3207 if (err) {
3208 brelse(iloc->bh);
3209 iloc->bh = NULL;
3210 }
3211 }
3212 }
3213 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, err);
3214 return err;
3215}
3216
3217/*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08003218 * What we do here is to mark the in-core inode as clean with respect to inode
3219 * dirtiness (it may still be data-dirty).
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003220 * This means that the in-core inode may be reaped by prune_icache
3221 * without having to perform any I/O. This is a very good thing,
3222 * because *any* task may call prune_icache - even ones which
3223 * have a transaction open against a different journal.
3224 *
3225 * Is this cheating? Not really. Sure, we haven't written the
3226 * inode out, but prune_icache isn't a user-visible syncing function.
3227 * Whenever the user wants stuff synced (sys_sync, sys_msync, sys_fsync)
3228 * we start and wait on commits.
3229 *
3230 * Is this efficient/effective? Well, we're being nice to the system
3231 * by cleaning up our inodes proactively so they can be reaped
3232 * without I/O. But we are potentially leaving up to five seconds'
3233 * worth of inodes floating about which prune_icache wants us to
3234 * write out. One way to fix that would be to get prune_icache()
3235 * to do a write_super() to free up some memory. It has the desired
3236 * effect.
3237 */
3238int ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode)
3239{
3240 struct ext3_iloc iloc;
3241 int err;
3242
3243 might_sleep();
3244 err = ext3_reserve_inode_write(handle, inode, &iloc);
3245 if (!err)
3246 err = ext3_mark_iloc_dirty(handle, inode, &iloc);
3247 return err;
3248}
3249
3250/*
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08003251 * ext3_dirty_inode() is called from __mark_inode_dirty()
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003252 *
3253 * We're really interested in the case where a file is being extended.
3254 * i_size has been changed by generic_commit_write() and we thus need
3255 * to include the updated inode in the current transaction.
3256 *
Jan Kara81a05222009-01-26 16:58:01 +01003257 * Also, vfs_dq_alloc_space() will always dirty the inode when blocks
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003258 * are allocated to the file.
3259 *
3260 * If the inode is marked synchronous, we don't honour that here - doing
3261 * so would cause a commit on atime updates, which we don't bother doing.
3262 * We handle synchronous inodes at the highest possible level.
3263 */
3264void ext3_dirty_inode(struct inode *inode)
3265{
3266 handle_t *current_handle = ext3_journal_current_handle();
3267 handle_t *handle;
3268
3269 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 2);
3270 if (IS_ERR(handle))
3271 goto out;
3272 if (current_handle &&
3273 current_handle->h_transaction != handle->h_transaction) {
3274 /* This task has a transaction open against a different fs */
3275 printk(KERN_EMERG "%s: transactions do not match!\n",
Harvey Harrisone05b6b52008-04-28 02:16:15 -07003276 __func__);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003277 } else {
3278 jbd_debug(5, "marking dirty. outer handle=%p\n",
3279 current_handle);
3280 ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
3281 }
3282 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
3283out:
3284 return;
3285}
3286
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08003287#if 0
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003288/*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003289 * Bind an inode's backing buffer_head into this transaction, to prevent
3290 * it from being flushed to disk early. Unlike
3291 * ext3_reserve_inode_write, this leaves behind no bh reference and
3292 * returns no iloc structure, so the caller needs to repeat the iloc
3293 * lookup to mark the inode dirty later.
3294 */
Andrew Mortond6859bf2006-03-26 01:38:03 -08003295static int ext3_pin_inode(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003296{
3297 struct ext3_iloc iloc;
3298
3299 int err = 0;
3300 if (handle) {
3301 err = ext3_get_inode_loc(inode, &iloc);
3302 if (!err) {
3303 BUFFER_TRACE(iloc.bh, "get_write_access");
3304 err = journal_get_write_access(handle, iloc.bh);
3305 if (!err)
Mingming Caoae6ddcc2006-09-27 01:49:27 -07003306 err = ext3_journal_dirty_metadata(handle,
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003307 iloc.bh);
3308 brelse(iloc.bh);
3309 }
3310 }
3311 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, err);
3312 return err;
3313}
3314#endif
3315
3316int ext3_change_inode_journal_flag(struct inode *inode, int val)
3317{
3318 journal_t *journal;
3319 handle_t *handle;
3320 int err;
3321
3322 /*
3323 * We have to be very careful here: changing a data block's
3324 * journaling status dynamically is dangerous. If we write a
3325 * data block to the journal, change the status and then delete
3326 * that block, we risk forgetting to revoke the old log record
3327 * from the journal and so a subsequent replay can corrupt data.
3328 * So, first we make sure that the journal is empty and that
3329 * nobody is changing anything.
3330 */
3331
3332 journal = EXT3_JOURNAL(inode);
Dave Hansene3a68e32007-07-15 23:41:14 -07003333 if (is_journal_aborted(journal))
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07003334 return -EROFS;
3335
3336 journal_lock_updates(journal);
3337 journal_flush(journal);
3338
3339 /*
3340 * OK, there are no updates running now, and all cached data is
3341 * synced to disk. We are now in a completely consistent state
3342 * which doesn't have anything in the journal, and we know that
3343 * no filesystem updates are running, so it is safe to modify
3344 * the inode's in-core data-journaling state flag now.
3345 */
3346
3347 if (val)
3348 EXT3_I(inode)->i_flags |= EXT3_JOURNAL_DATA_FL;
3349 else
3350 EXT3_I(inode)->i_flags &= ~EXT3_JOURNAL_DATA_FL;
3351 ext3_set_aops(inode);
3352
3353 journal_unlock_updates(journal);
3354
3355 /* Finally we can mark the inode as dirty. */
3356
3357 handle = ext3_journal_start(inode, 1);
3358 if (IS_ERR(handle))
3359 return PTR_ERR(handle);
3360
3361 err = ext3_mark_inode_dirty(handle, inode);
3362 handle->h_sync = 1;
3363 ext3_journal_stop(handle);
3364 ext3_std_error(inode->i_sb, err);
3365
3366 return err;
3367}