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Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +00001/*
2 * Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat, Inc.
3 *
4 * This file is released under the GPL.
5 */
6#ifndef _LINUX_DM_BTREE_H
7#define _LINUX_DM_BTREE_H
8
9#include "dm-block-manager.h"
10
11struct dm_transaction_manager;
12
13/*----------------------------------------------------------------*/
14
15/*
16 * Annotations used to check on-disk metadata is handled as little-endian.
17 */
18#ifdef __CHECKER__
19# define __dm_written_to_disk(x) __releases(x)
20# define __dm_reads_from_disk(x) __acquires(x)
21# define __dm_bless_for_disk(x) __acquire(x)
22# define __dm_unbless_for_disk(x) __release(x)
23#else
24# define __dm_written_to_disk(x)
25# define __dm_reads_from_disk(x)
26# define __dm_bless_for_disk(x)
27# define __dm_unbless_for_disk(x)
28#endif
29
30/*----------------------------------------------------------------*/
31
32/*
33 * Manipulates hierarchical B+ trees with 64-bit keys and arbitrary-sized
34 * values.
35 */
36
37/*
Masanari Iida83f0d772012-10-30 00:18:08 +090038 * Information about the values stored within the btree.
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +000039 */
40struct dm_btree_value_type {
41 void *context;
42
43 /*
44 * The size in bytes of each value.
45 */
46 uint32_t size;
47
48 /*
49 * Any of these methods can be safely set to NULL if you do not
50 * need the corresponding feature.
51 */
52
53 /*
54 * The btree is making a duplicate of the value, for instance
55 * because previously-shared btree nodes have now diverged.
56 * @value argument is the new copy that the copy function may modify.
57 * (Probably it just wants to increment a reference count
58 * somewhere.) This method is _not_ called for insertion of a new
59 * value: It is assumed the ref count is already 1.
60 */
Mike Snitzer018cede2013-03-01 22:45:47 +000061 void (*inc)(void *context, const void *value);
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +000062
63 /*
64 * This value is being deleted. The btree takes care of freeing
65 * the memory pointed to by @value. Often the del function just
66 * needs to decrement a reference count somewhere.
67 */
Mike Snitzer018cede2013-03-01 22:45:47 +000068 void (*dec)(void *context, const void *value);
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +000069
70 /*
71 * A test for equality between two values. When a value is
72 * overwritten with a new one, the old one has the dec method
73 * called _unless_ the new and old value are deemed equal.
74 */
Mike Snitzer018cede2013-03-01 22:45:47 +000075 int (*equal)(void *context, const void *value1, const void *value2);
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +000076};
77
78/*
79 * The shape and contents of a btree.
80 */
81struct dm_btree_info {
82 struct dm_transaction_manager *tm;
83
84 /*
85 * Number of nested btrees. (Not the depth of a single tree.)
86 */
87 unsigned levels;
88 struct dm_btree_value_type value_type;
89};
90
91/*
92 * Set up an empty tree. O(1).
93 */
94int dm_btree_empty(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t *root);
95
96/*
97 * Delete a tree. O(n) - this is the slow one! It can also block, so
98 * please don't call it on an IO path.
99 */
100int dm_btree_del(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root);
101
102/*
103 * All the lookup functions return -ENODATA if the key cannot be found.
104 */
105
106/*
107 * Tries to find a key that matches exactly. O(ln(n))
108 */
109int dm_btree_lookup(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
110 uint64_t *keys, void *value_le);
111
112/*
Joe Thornber993ceab2015-12-02 12:24:39 +0000113 * Tries to find the first key where the bottom level key is >= to that
114 * given. Useful for skipping empty sections of the btree.
115 */
116int dm_btree_lookup_next(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
117 uint64_t *keys, uint64_t *rkey, void *value_le);
118
119/*
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +0000120 * Insertion (or overwrite an existing value). O(ln(n))
121 */
122int dm_btree_insert(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
123 uint64_t *keys, void *value, dm_block_t *new_root)
124 __dm_written_to_disk(value);
125
126/*
127 * A variant of insert that indicates whether it actually inserted or just
128 * overwrote. Useful if you're keeping track of the number of entries in a
129 * tree.
130 */
131int dm_btree_insert_notify(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
132 uint64_t *keys, void *value, dm_block_t *new_root,
133 int *inserted)
134 __dm_written_to_disk(value);
135
136/*
137 * Remove a key if present. This doesn't remove empty sub trees. Normally
138 * subtrees represent a separate entity, like a snapshot map, so this is
139 * correct behaviour. O(ln(n)).
140 */
141int dm_btree_remove(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
142 uint64_t *keys, dm_block_t *new_root);
143
144/*
Joe Thornber993ceab2015-12-02 12:24:39 +0000145 * Removes a _contiguous_ run of values starting from 'keys' and not
146 * reaching keys2 (where keys2 is keys with the final key replaced with
147 * 'end_key'). 'end_key' is the one-past-the-end value. 'keys' may be
148 * altered.
Joe Thornber4ec331c2015-04-13 09:41:44 +0100149 */
150int dm_btree_remove_leaves(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
151 uint64_t *keys, uint64_t end_key,
152 dm_block_t *new_root, unsigned *nr_removed);
153
154/*
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +0000155 * Returns < 0 on failure. Otherwise the number of key entries that have
156 * been filled out. Remember trees can have zero entries, and as such have
Joe Thornberf164e692013-12-20 15:41:11 +0000157 * no lowest key.
158 */
159int dm_btree_find_lowest_key(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
160 uint64_t *result_keys);
161
162/*
163 * Returns < 0 on failure. Otherwise the number of key entries that have
164 * been filled out. Remember trees can have zero entries, and as such have
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +0000165 * no highest key.
166 */
167int dm_btree_find_highest_key(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
168 uint64_t *result_keys);
169
Joe Thornber4e7f1f92013-03-01 22:45:50 +0000170/*
171 * Iterate through the a btree, calling fn() on each entry.
172 * It only works for single level trees and is internally recursive, so
173 * monitor stack usage carefully.
174 */
175int dm_btree_walk(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
176 int (*fn)(void *context, uint64_t *keys, void *leaf),
177 void *context);
178
Joe Thornber7d111c82016-09-15 10:49:24 -0400179
180/*----------------------------------------------------------------*/
181
182/*
183 * Cursor API. This does not follow the rolling lock convention. Since we
184 * know the order that values are required we can issue prefetches to speed
185 * up iteration. Use on a single level btree only.
186 */
187#define DM_BTREE_CURSOR_MAX_DEPTH 16
188
189struct cursor_node {
190 struct dm_block *b;
191 unsigned index;
192};
193
194struct dm_btree_cursor {
195 struct dm_btree_info *info;
196 dm_block_t root;
197
198 bool prefetch_leaves;
199 unsigned depth;
200 struct cursor_node nodes[DM_BTREE_CURSOR_MAX_DEPTH];
201};
202
203/*
204 * Creates a fresh cursor. If prefetch_leaves is set then it is assumed
205 * the btree contains block indexes that will be prefetched. The cursor is
206 * quite large, so you probably don't want to put it on the stack.
207 */
208int dm_btree_cursor_begin(struct dm_btree_info *info, dm_block_t root,
209 bool prefetch_leaves, struct dm_btree_cursor *c);
210void dm_btree_cursor_end(struct dm_btree_cursor *c);
211int dm_btree_cursor_next(struct dm_btree_cursor *c);
212int dm_btree_cursor_get_value(struct dm_btree_cursor *c, uint64_t *key, void *value_le);
213
Joe Thornber3241b1d2011-10-31 20:19:11 +0000214#endif /* _LINUX_DM_BTREE_H */