blob: 558cb4c26ec9ee6c1d6f8daab784f8bc497fba84 [file] [log] [blame]
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001/*
2 * linux/include/linux/jbd.h
3 *
4 * Written by Stephen C. Tweedie <sct@redhat.com>
5 *
6 * Copyright 1998-2000 Red Hat, Inc --- All Rights Reserved
7 *
8 * This file is part of the Linux kernel and is made available under
9 * the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2, or at your
10 * option, any later version, incorporated herein by reference.
11 *
12 * Definitions for transaction data structures for the buffer cache
13 * filesystem journaling support.
14 */
15
16#ifndef _LINUX_JBD_H
17#define _LINUX_JBD_H
18
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070019/* Allow this file to be included directly into e2fsprogs */
20#ifndef __KERNEL__
21#include "jfs_compat.h"
22#define JFS_DEBUG
23#define jfs_debug jbd_debug
24#else
25
26#include <linux/buffer_head.h>
27#include <linux/journal-head.h>
28#include <linux/stddef.h>
Ingo Molnarfb1c8f92005-09-10 00:25:56 -070029#include <linux/bit_spinlock.h>
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070030#include <asm/semaphore.h>
31#endif
32
33#define journal_oom_retry 1
34
35/*
36 * Define JBD_PARANIOD_IOFAIL to cause a kernel BUG() if ext3 finds
37 * certain classes of error which can occur due to failed IOs. Under
38 * normal use we want ext3 to continue after such errors, because
39 * hardware _can_ fail, but for debugging purposes when running tests on
40 * known-good hardware we may want to trap these errors.
41 */
42#undef JBD_PARANOID_IOFAIL
43
44/*
45 * The default maximum commit age, in seconds.
46 */
47#define JBD_DEFAULT_MAX_COMMIT_AGE 5
48
49#ifdef CONFIG_JBD_DEBUG
50/*
51 * Define JBD_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING to enable more expensive internal
52 * consistency checks. By default we don't do this unless
53 * CONFIG_JBD_DEBUG is on.
54 */
55#define JBD_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING
56extern int journal_enable_debug;
57
58#define jbd_debug(n, f, a...) \
59 do { \
60 if ((n) <= journal_enable_debug) { \
61 printk (KERN_DEBUG "(%s, %d): %s: ", \
62 __FILE__, __LINE__, __FUNCTION__); \
63 printk (f, ## a); \
64 } \
65 } while (0)
66#else
67#define jbd_debug(f, a...) /**/
68#endif
69
Al Viro27496a82005-10-21 03:20:48 -040070extern void * __jbd_kmalloc (const char *where, size_t size, gfp_t flags, int retry);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -070071#define jbd_kmalloc(size, flags) \
72 __jbd_kmalloc(__FUNCTION__, (size), (flags), journal_oom_retry)
73#define jbd_rep_kmalloc(size, flags) \
74 __jbd_kmalloc(__FUNCTION__, (size), (flags), 1)
75
76#define JFS_MIN_JOURNAL_BLOCKS 1024
77
78#ifdef __KERNEL__
79
80/**
81 * typedef handle_t - The handle_t type represents a single atomic update being performed by some process.
82 *
83 * All filesystem modifications made by the process go
84 * through this handle. Recursive operations (such as quota operations)
85 * are gathered into a single update.
86 *
87 * The buffer credits field is used to account for journaled buffers
88 * being modified by the running process. To ensure that there is
89 * enough log space for all outstanding operations, we need to limit the
90 * number of outstanding buffers possible at any time. When the
91 * operation completes, any buffer credits not used are credited back to
92 * the transaction, so that at all times we know how many buffers the
93 * outstanding updates on a transaction might possibly touch.
94 *
95 * This is an opaque datatype.
96 **/
97typedef struct handle_s handle_t; /* Atomic operation type */
98
99
100/**
101 * typedef journal_t - The journal_t maintains all of the journaling state information for a single filesystem.
102 *
103 * journal_t is linked to from the fs superblock structure.
104 *
105 * We use the journal_t to keep track of all outstanding transaction
106 * activity on the filesystem, and to manage the state of the log
107 * writing process.
108 *
109 * This is an opaque datatype.
110 **/
111typedef struct journal_s journal_t; /* Journal control structure */
112#endif
113
114/*
115 * Internal structures used by the logging mechanism:
116 */
117
118#define JFS_MAGIC_NUMBER 0xc03b3998U /* The first 4 bytes of /dev/random! */
119
120/*
121 * On-disk structures
122 */
123
124/*
125 * Descriptor block types:
126 */
127
128#define JFS_DESCRIPTOR_BLOCK 1
129#define JFS_COMMIT_BLOCK 2
130#define JFS_SUPERBLOCK_V1 3
131#define JFS_SUPERBLOCK_V2 4
132#define JFS_REVOKE_BLOCK 5
133
134/*
135 * Standard header for all descriptor blocks:
136 */
137typedef struct journal_header_s
138{
139 __be32 h_magic;
140 __be32 h_blocktype;
141 __be32 h_sequence;
142} journal_header_t;
143
144
145/*
146 * The block tag: used to describe a single buffer in the journal
147 */
148typedef struct journal_block_tag_s
149{
150 __be32 t_blocknr; /* The on-disk block number */
151 __be32 t_flags; /* See below */
152} journal_block_tag_t;
153
154/*
155 * The revoke descriptor: used on disk to describe a series of blocks to
156 * be revoked from the log
157 */
158typedef struct journal_revoke_header_s
159{
160 journal_header_t r_header;
161 __be32 r_count; /* Count of bytes used in the block */
162} journal_revoke_header_t;
163
164
165/* Definitions for the journal tag flags word: */
166#define JFS_FLAG_ESCAPE 1 /* on-disk block is escaped */
167#define JFS_FLAG_SAME_UUID 2 /* block has same uuid as previous */
168#define JFS_FLAG_DELETED 4 /* block deleted by this transaction */
169#define JFS_FLAG_LAST_TAG 8 /* last tag in this descriptor block */
170
171
172/*
173 * The journal superblock. All fields are in big-endian byte order.
174 */
175typedef struct journal_superblock_s
176{
177/* 0x0000 */
178 journal_header_t s_header;
179
180/* 0x000C */
181 /* Static information describing the journal */
182 __be32 s_blocksize; /* journal device blocksize */
183 __be32 s_maxlen; /* total blocks in journal file */
184 __be32 s_first; /* first block of log information */
185
186/* 0x0018 */
187 /* Dynamic information describing the current state of the log */
188 __be32 s_sequence; /* first commit ID expected in log */
189 __be32 s_start; /* blocknr of start of log */
190
191/* 0x0020 */
192 /* Error value, as set by journal_abort(). */
193 __be32 s_errno;
194
195/* 0x0024 */
196 /* Remaining fields are only valid in a version-2 superblock */
197 __be32 s_feature_compat; /* compatible feature set */
198 __be32 s_feature_incompat; /* incompatible feature set */
199 __be32 s_feature_ro_compat; /* readonly-compatible feature set */
200/* 0x0030 */
201 __u8 s_uuid[16]; /* 128-bit uuid for journal */
202
203/* 0x0040 */
204 __be32 s_nr_users; /* Nr of filesystems sharing log */
205
206 __be32 s_dynsuper; /* Blocknr of dynamic superblock copy*/
207
208/* 0x0048 */
209 __be32 s_max_transaction; /* Limit of journal blocks per trans.*/
210 __be32 s_max_trans_data; /* Limit of data blocks per trans. */
211
212/* 0x0050 */
213 __u32 s_padding[44];
214
215/* 0x0100 */
216 __u8 s_users[16*48]; /* ids of all fs'es sharing the log */
217/* 0x0400 */
218} journal_superblock_t;
219
220#define JFS_HAS_COMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \
221 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \
222 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_compat & cpu_to_be32((mask))))
223#define JFS_HAS_RO_COMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \
224 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \
225 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_ro_compat & cpu_to_be32((mask))))
226#define JFS_HAS_INCOMPAT_FEATURE(j,mask) \
227 ((j)->j_format_version >= 2 && \
228 ((j)->j_superblock->s_feature_incompat & cpu_to_be32((mask))))
229
230#define JFS_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_REVOKE 0x00000001
231
232/* Features known to this kernel version: */
233#define JFS_KNOWN_COMPAT_FEATURES 0
234#define JFS_KNOWN_ROCOMPAT_FEATURES 0
235#define JFS_KNOWN_INCOMPAT_FEATURES JFS_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_REVOKE
236
237#ifdef __KERNEL__
238
239#include <linux/fs.h>
240#include <linux/sched.h>
241#include <asm/bug.h>
242
243#define JBD_ASSERTIONS
244#ifdef JBD_ASSERTIONS
245#define J_ASSERT(assert) \
246do { \
247 if (!(assert)) { \
248 printk (KERN_EMERG \
249 "Assertion failure in %s() at %s:%d: \"%s\"\n", \
250 __FUNCTION__, __FILE__, __LINE__, # assert); \
251 BUG(); \
252 } \
253} while (0)
254
255#if defined(CONFIG_BUFFER_DEBUG)
256void buffer_assertion_failure(struct buffer_head *bh);
257#define J_ASSERT_BH(bh, expr) \
258 do { \
259 if (!(expr)) \
260 buffer_assertion_failure(bh); \
261 J_ASSERT(expr); \
262 } while (0)
263#define J_ASSERT_JH(jh, expr) J_ASSERT_BH(jh2bh(jh), expr)
264#else
265#define J_ASSERT_BH(bh, expr) J_ASSERT(expr)
266#define J_ASSERT_JH(jh, expr) J_ASSERT(expr)
267#endif
268
269#else
270#define J_ASSERT(assert) do { } while (0)
271#endif /* JBD_ASSERTIONS */
272
273#if defined(JBD_PARANOID_IOFAIL)
274#define J_EXPECT(expr, why...) J_ASSERT(expr)
275#define J_EXPECT_BH(bh, expr, why...) J_ASSERT_BH(bh, expr)
276#define J_EXPECT_JH(jh, expr, why...) J_ASSERT_JH(jh, expr)
277#else
278#define __journal_expect(expr, why...) \
279 ({ \
280 int val = (expr); \
281 if (!val) { \
282 printk(KERN_ERR \
283 "EXT3-fs unexpected failure: %s;\n",# expr); \
284 printk(KERN_ERR why "\n"); \
285 } \
286 val; \
287 })
288#define J_EXPECT(expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why)
289#define J_EXPECT_BH(bh, expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why)
290#define J_EXPECT_JH(jh, expr, why...) __journal_expect(expr, ## why)
291#endif
292
293enum jbd_state_bits {
294 BH_JBD /* Has an attached ext3 journal_head */
295 = BH_PrivateStart,
296 BH_JWrite, /* Being written to log (@@@ DEBUGGING) */
297 BH_Freed, /* Has been freed (truncated) */
298 BH_Revoked, /* Has been revoked from the log */
299 BH_RevokeValid, /* Revoked flag is valid */
300 BH_JBDDirty, /* Is dirty but journaled */
301 BH_State, /* Pins most journal_head state */
302 BH_JournalHead, /* Pins bh->b_private and jh->b_bh */
303 BH_Unshadow, /* Dummy bit, for BJ_Shadow wakeup filtering */
304};
305
306BUFFER_FNS(JBD, jbd)
307BUFFER_FNS(JWrite, jwrite)
308BUFFER_FNS(JBDDirty, jbddirty)
309TAS_BUFFER_FNS(JBDDirty, jbddirty)
310BUFFER_FNS(Revoked, revoked)
311TAS_BUFFER_FNS(Revoked, revoked)
312BUFFER_FNS(RevokeValid, revokevalid)
313TAS_BUFFER_FNS(RevokeValid, revokevalid)
314BUFFER_FNS(Freed, freed)
315
316static inline struct buffer_head *jh2bh(struct journal_head *jh)
317{
318 return jh->b_bh;
319}
320
321static inline struct journal_head *bh2jh(struct buffer_head *bh)
322{
323 return bh->b_private;
324}
325
326static inline void jbd_lock_bh_state(struct buffer_head *bh)
327{
328 bit_spin_lock(BH_State, &bh->b_state);
329}
330
331static inline int jbd_trylock_bh_state(struct buffer_head *bh)
332{
333 return bit_spin_trylock(BH_State, &bh->b_state);
334}
335
336static inline int jbd_is_locked_bh_state(struct buffer_head *bh)
337{
338 return bit_spin_is_locked(BH_State, &bh->b_state);
339}
340
341static inline void jbd_unlock_bh_state(struct buffer_head *bh)
342{
343 bit_spin_unlock(BH_State, &bh->b_state);
344}
345
346static inline void jbd_lock_bh_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh)
347{
348 bit_spin_lock(BH_JournalHead, &bh->b_state);
349}
350
351static inline void jbd_unlock_bh_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh)
352{
353 bit_spin_unlock(BH_JournalHead, &bh->b_state);
354}
355
356struct jbd_revoke_table_s;
357
358/**
359 * struct handle_s - The handle_s type is the concrete type associated with
360 * handle_t.
361 * @h_transaction: Which compound transaction is this update a part of?
362 * @h_buffer_credits: Number of remaining buffers we are allowed to dirty.
363 * @h_ref: Reference count on this handle
364 * @h_err: Field for caller's use to track errors through large fs operations
365 * @h_sync: flag for sync-on-close
366 * @h_jdata: flag to force data journaling
367 * @h_aborted: flag indicating fatal error on handle
368 **/
369
370/* Docbook can't yet cope with the bit fields, but will leave the documentation
371 * in so it can be fixed later.
372 */
373
374struct handle_s
375{
376 /* Which compound transaction is this update a part of? */
377 transaction_t *h_transaction;
378
379 /* Number of remaining buffers we are allowed to dirty: */
380 int h_buffer_credits;
381
382 /* Reference count on this handle */
383 int h_ref;
384
385 /* Field for caller's use to track errors through large fs */
386 /* operations */
387 int h_err;
388
389 /* Flags [no locking] */
390 unsigned int h_sync: 1; /* sync-on-close */
391 unsigned int h_jdata: 1; /* force data journaling */
392 unsigned int h_aborted: 1; /* fatal error on handle */
393};
394
395
396/* The transaction_t type is the guts of the journaling mechanism. It
397 * tracks a compound transaction through its various states:
398 *
399 * RUNNING: accepting new updates
400 * LOCKED: Updates still running but we don't accept new ones
401 * RUNDOWN: Updates are tidying up but have finished requesting
402 * new buffers to modify (state not used for now)
403 * FLUSH: All updates complete, but we are still writing to disk
404 * COMMIT: All data on disk, writing commit record
405 * FINISHED: We still have to keep the transaction for checkpointing.
406 *
407 * The transaction keeps track of all of the buffers modified by a
408 * running transaction, and all of the buffers committed but not yet
409 * flushed to home for finished transactions.
410 */
411
412/*
413 * Lock ranking:
414 *
415 * j_list_lock
416 * ->jbd_lock_bh_journal_head() (This is "innermost")
417 *
418 * j_state_lock
419 * ->jbd_lock_bh_state()
420 *
421 * jbd_lock_bh_state()
422 * ->j_list_lock
423 *
424 * j_state_lock
425 * ->t_handle_lock
426 *
427 * j_state_lock
428 * ->j_list_lock (journal_unmap_buffer)
429 *
430 */
431
432struct transaction_s
433{
434 /* Pointer to the journal for this transaction. [no locking] */
435 journal_t *t_journal;
436
437 /* Sequence number for this transaction [no locking] */
438 tid_t t_tid;
439
440 /*
441 * Transaction's current state
442 * [no locking - only kjournald alters this]
443 * FIXME: needs barriers
444 * KLUDGE: [use j_state_lock]
445 */
446 enum {
447 T_RUNNING,
448 T_LOCKED,
449 T_RUNDOWN,
450 T_FLUSH,
451 T_COMMIT,
452 T_FINISHED
453 } t_state;
454
455 /*
456 * Where in the log does this transaction's commit start? [no locking]
457 */
458 unsigned long t_log_start;
459
460 /* Number of buffers on the t_buffers list [j_list_lock] */
461 int t_nr_buffers;
462
463 /*
464 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers reserved but not yet
465 * modified by this transaction [j_list_lock]
466 */
467 struct journal_head *t_reserved_list;
468
469 /*
470 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers under writeout during
471 * commit [j_list_lock]
472 */
473 struct journal_head *t_locked_list;
474
475 /*
476 * Doubly-linked circular list of all metadata buffers owned by this
477 * transaction [j_list_lock]
478 */
479 struct journal_head *t_buffers;
480
481 /*
482 * Doubly-linked circular list of all data buffers still to be
483 * flushed before this transaction can be committed [j_list_lock]
484 */
485 struct journal_head *t_sync_datalist;
486
487 /*
488 * Doubly-linked circular list of all forget buffers (superseded
489 * buffers which we can un-checkpoint once this transaction commits)
490 * [j_list_lock]
491 */
492 struct journal_head *t_forget;
493
494 /*
495 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers still to be flushed before
496 * this transaction can be checkpointed. [j_list_lock]
497 */
498 struct journal_head *t_checkpoint_list;
499
500 /*
Jan Karaf93ea412006-01-06 00:19:55 -0800501 * Doubly-linked circular list of all buffers submitted for IO while
502 * checkpointing. [j_list_lock]
503 */
504 struct journal_head *t_checkpoint_io_list;
505
506 /*
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700507 * Doubly-linked circular list of temporary buffers currently undergoing
508 * IO in the log [j_list_lock]
509 */
510 struct journal_head *t_iobuf_list;
511
512 /*
513 * Doubly-linked circular list of metadata buffers being shadowed by log
514 * IO. The IO buffers on the iobuf list and the shadow buffers on this
515 * list match each other one for one at all times. [j_list_lock]
516 */
517 struct journal_head *t_shadow_list;
518
519 /*
520 * Doubly-linked circular list of control buffers being written to the
521 * log. [j_list_lock]
522 */
523 struct journal_head *t_log_list;
524
525 /*
526 * Protects info related to handles
527 */
528 spinlock_t t_handle_lock;
529
530 /*
531 * Number of outstanding updates running on this transaction
532 * [t_handle_lock]
533 */
534 int t_updates;
535
536 /*
537 * Number of buffers reserved for use by all handles in this transaction
538 * handle but not yet modified. [t_handle_lock]
539 */
540 int t_outstanding_credits;
541
542 /*
543 * Forward and backward links for the circular list of all transactions
544 * awaiting checkpoint. [j_list_lock]
545 */
546 transaction_t *t_cpnext, *t_cpprev;
547
548 /*
549 * When will the transaction expire (become due for commit), in jiffies?
550 * [no locking]
551 */
552 unsigned long t_expires;
553
554 /*
555 * How many handles used this transaction? [t_handle_lock]
556 */
557 int t_handle_count;
558
559};
560
561/**
562 * struct journal_s - The journal_s type is the concrete type associated with
563 * journal_t.
564 * @j_flags: General journaling state flags
565 * @j_errno: Is there an outstanding uncleared error on the journal (from a
566 * prior abort)?
567 * @j_sb_buffer: First part of superblock buffer
568 * @j_superblock: Second part of superblock buffer
569 * @j_format_version: Version of the superblock format
570 * @j_state_lock: Protect the various scalars in the journal
571 * @j_barrier_count: Number of processes waiting to create a barrier lock
572 * @j_barrier: The barrier lock itself
573 * @j_running_transaction: The current running transaction..
574 * @j_committing_transaction: the transaction we are pushing to disk
575 * @j_checkpoint_transactions: a linked circular list of all transactions
576 * waiting for checkpointing
577 * @j_wait_transaction_locked: Wait queue for waiting for a locked transaction
578 * to start committing, or for a barrier lock to be released
579 * @j_wait_logspace: Wait queue for waiting for checkpointing to complete
580 * @j_wait_done_commit: Wait queue for waiting for commit to complete
581 * @j_wait_checkpoint: Wait queue to trigger checkpointing
582 * @j_wait_commit: Wait queue to trigger commit
583 * @j_wait_updates: Wait queue to wait for updates to complete
584 * @j_checkpoint_sem: Semaphore for locking against concurrent checkpoints
585 * @j_head: Journal head - identifies the first unused block in the journal
586 * @j_tail: Journal tail - identifies the oldest still-used block in the
587 * journal.
588 * @j_free: Journal free - how many free blocks are there in the journal?
589 * @j_first: The block number of the first usable block
590 * @j_last: The block number one beyond the last usable block
591 * @j_dev: Device where we store the journal
592 * @j_blocksize: blocksize for the location where we store the journal.
593 * @j_blk_offset: starting block offset for into the device where we store the
594 * journal
595 * @j_fs_dev: Device which holds the client fs. For internal journal this will
596 * be equal to j_dev
597 * @j_maxlen: Total maximum capacity of the journal region on disk.
598 * @j_list_lock: Protects the buffer lists and internal buffer state.
599 * @j_inode: Optional inode where we store the journal. If present, all journal
600 * block numbers are mapped into this inode via bmap().
601 * @j_tail_sequence: Sequence number of the oldest transaction in the log
602 * @j_transaction_sequence: Sequence number of the next transaction to grant
603 * @j_commit_sequence: Sequence number of the most recently committed
604 * transaction
605 * @j_commit_request: Sequence number of the most recent transaction wanting
606 * commit
607 * @j_uuid: Uuid of client object.
608 * @j_task: Pointer to the current commit thread for this journal
609 * @j_max_transaction_buffers: Maximum number of metadata buffers to allow in a
610 * single compound commit transaction
611 * @j_commit_interval: What is the maximum transaction lifetime before we begin
612 * a commit?
613 * @j_commit_timer: The timer used to wakeup the commit thread
614 * @j_revoke_lock: Protect the revoke table
615 * @j_revoke: The revoke table - maintains the list of revoked blocks in the
616 * current transaction.
617 * @j_revoke_table: alternate revoke tables for j_revoke
Randy Dunlap6c8bec62005-11-07 01:01:04 -0800618 * @j_wbuf: array of buffer_heads for journal_commit_transaction
619 * @j_wbufsize: maximum number of buffer_heads allowed in j_wbuf, the
620 * number that will fit in j_blocksize
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700621 * @j_private: An opaque pointer to fs-private information.
622 */
623
624struct journal_s
625{
626 /* General journaling state flags [j_state_lock] */
627 unsigned long j_flags;
628
629 /*
630 * Is there an outstanding uncleared error on the journal (from a prior
631 * abort)? [j_state_lock]
632 */
633 int j_errno;
634
635 /* The superblock buffer */
636 struct buffer_head *j_sb_buffer;
637 journal_superblock_t *j_superblock;
638
639 /* Version of the superblock format */
640 int j_format_version;
641
642 /*
643 * Protect the various scalars in the journal
644 */
645 spinlock_t j_state_lock;
646
647 /*
648 * Number of processes waiting to create a barrier lock [j_state_lock]
649 */
650 int j_barrier_count;
651
652 /* The barrier lock itself */
653 struct semaphore j_barrier;
654
655 /*
656 * Transactions: The current running transaction...
657 * [j_state_lock] [caller holding open handle]
658 */
659 transaction_t *j_running_transaction;
660
661 /*
662 * the transaction we are pushing to disk
663 * [j_state_lock] [caller holding open handle]
664 */
665 transaction_t *j_committing_transaction;
666
667 /*
668 * ... and a linked circular list of all transactions waiting for
669 * checkpointing. [j_list_lock]
670 */
671 transaction_t *j_checkpoint_transactions;
672
673 /*
674 * Wait queue for waiting for a locked transaction to start committing,
675 * or for a barrier lock to be released
676 */
677 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_transaction_locked;
678
679 /* Wait queue for waiting for checkpointing to complete */
680 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_logspace;
681
682 /* Wait queue for waiting for commit to complete */
683 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_done_commit;
684
685 /* Wait queue to trigger checkpointing */
686 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_checkpoint;
687
688 /* Wait queue to trigger commit */
689 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_commit;
690
691 /* Wait queue to wait for updates to complete */
692 wait_queue_head_t j_wait_updates;
693
694 /* Semaphore for locking against concurrent checkpoints */
695 struct semaphore j_checkpoint_sem;
696
697 /*
698 * Journal head: identifies the first unused block in the journal.
699 * [j_state_lock]
700 */
701 unsigned long j_head;
702
703 /*
704 * Journal tail: identifies the oldest still-used block in the journal.
705 * [j_state_lock]
706 */
707 unsigned long j_tail;
708
709 /*
710 * Journal free: how many free blocks are there in the journal?
711 * [j_state_lock]
712 */
713 unsigned long j_free;
714
715 /*
716 * Journal start and end: the block numbers of the first usable block
717 * and one beyond the last usable block in the journal. [j_state_lock]
718 */
719 unsigned long j_first;
720 unsigned long j_last;
721
722 /*
723 * Device, blocksize and starting block offset for the location where we
724 * store the journal.
725 */
726 struct block_device *j_dev;
727 int j_blocksize;
728 unsigned int j_blk_offset;
729
730 /*
731 * Device which holds the client fs. For internal journal this will be
732 * equal to j_dev.
733 */
734 struct block_device *j_fs_dev;
735
736 /* Total maximum capacity of the journal region on disk. */
737 unsigned int j_maxlen;
738
739 /*
740 * Protects the buffer lists and internal buffer state.
741 */
742 spinlock_t j_list_lock;
743
744 /* Optional inode where we store the journal. If present, all */
745 /* journal block numbers are mapped into this inode via */
746 /* bmap(). */
747 struct inode *j_inode;
748
749 /*
750 * Sequence number of the oldest transaction in the log [j_state_lock]
751 */
752 tid_t j_tail_sequence;
753
754 /*
755 * Sequence number of the next transaction to grant [j_state_lock]
756 */
757 tid_t j_transaction_sequence;
758
759 /*
760 * Sequence number of the most recently committed transaction
761 * [j_state_lock].
762 */
763 tid_t j_commit_sequence;
764
765 /*
766 * Sequence number of the most recent transaction wanting commit
767 * [j_state_lock]
768 */
769 tid_t j_commit_request;
770
771 /*
772 * Journal uuid: identifies the object (filesystem, LVM volume etc)
773 * backed by this journal. This will eventually be replaced by an array
774 * of uuids, allowing us to index multiple devices within a single
775 * journal and to perform atomic updates across them.
776 */
777 __u8 j_uuid[16];
778
779 /* Pointer to the current commit thread for this journal */
780 struct task_struct *j_task;
781
782 /*
783 * Maximum number of metadata buffers to allow in a single compound
784 * commit transaction
785 */
786 int j_max_transaction_buffers;
787
788 /*
789 * What is the maximum transaction lifetime before we begin a commit?
790 */
791 unsigned long j_commit_interval;
792
793 /* The timer used to wakeup the commit thread: */
794 struct timer_list *j_commit_timer;
795
796 /*
797 * The revoke table: maintains the list of revoked blocks in the
798 * current transaction. [j_revoke_lock]
799 */
800 spinlock_t j_revoke_lock;
801 struct jbd_revoke_table_s *j_revoke;
802 struct jbd_revoke_table_s *j_revoke_table[2];
803
804 /*
805 * array of bhs for journal_commit_transaction
806 */
807 struct buffer_head **j_wbuf;
808 int j_wbufsize;
809
810 /*
811 * An opaque pointer to fs-private information. ext3 puts its
812 * superblock pointer here
813 */
814 void *j_private;
815};
816
817/*
818 * Journal flag definitions
819 */
820#define JFS_UNMOUNT 0x001 /* Journal thread is being destroyed */
821#define JFS_ABORT 0x002 /* Journaling has been aborted for errors. */
822#define JFS_ACK_ERR 0x004 /* The errno in the sb has been acked */
823#define JFS_FLUSHED 0x008 /* The journal superblock has been flushed */
824#define JFS_LOADED 0x010 /* The journal superblock has been loaded */
825#define JFS_BARRIER 0x020 /* Use IDE barriers */
826
827/*
828 * Function declarations for the journaling transaction and buffer
829 * management
830 */
831
832/* Filing buffers */
833extern void __journal_temp_unlink_buffer(struct journal_head *jh);
834extern void journal_unfile_buffer(journal_t *, struct journal_head *);
835extern void __journal_unfile_buffer(struct journal_head *);
836extern void __journal_refile_buffer(struct journal_head *);
837extern void journal_refile_buffer(journal_t *, struct journal_head *);
838extern void __journal_file_buffer(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *, int);
839extern void __journal_free_buffer(struct journal_head *bh);
840extern void journal_file_buffer(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *, int);
841extern void __journal_clean_data_list(transaction_t *transaction);
842
843/* Log buffer allocation */
844extern struct journal_head * journal_get_descriptor_buffer(journal_t *);
845int journal_next_log_block(journal_t *, unsigned long *);
846
847/* Commit management */
848extern void journal_commit_transaction(journal_t *);
849
850/* Checkpoint list management */
851int __journal_clean_checkpoint_list(journal_t *journal);
Jan Karaf93ea412006-01-06 00:19:55 -0800852int __journal_remove_checkpoint(struct journal_head *);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700853void __journal_insert_checkpoint(struct journal_head *, transaction_t *);
854
855/* Buffer IO */
856extern int
857journal_write_metadata_buffer(transaction_t *transaction,
858 struct journal_head *jh_in,
859 struct journal_head **jh_out,
860 int blocknr);
861
862/* Transaction locking */
863extern void __wait_on_journal (journal_t *);
864
865/*
866 * Journal locking.
867 *
868 * We need to lock the journal during transaction state changes so that nobody
869 * ever tries to take a handle on the running transaction while we are in the
870 * middle of moving it to the commit phase. j_state_lock does this.
871 *
872 * Note that the locking is completely interrupt unsafe. We never touch
873 * journal structures from interrupts.
874 */
875
876static inline handle_t *journal_current_handle(void)
877{
878 return current->journal_info;
879}
880
881/* The journaling code user interface:
882 *
883 * Create and destroy handles
884 * Register buffer modifications against the current transaction.
885 */
886
887extern handle_t *journal_start(journal_t *, int nblocks);
888extern int journal_restart (handle_t *, int nblocks);
889extern int journal_extend (handle_t *, int nblocks);
890extern int journal_get_write_access(handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
891extern int journal_get_create_access (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
892extern int journal_get_undo_access(handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
893extern int journal_dirty_data (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
894extern int journal_dirty_metadata (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
895extern void journal_release_buffer (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
896extern int journal_forget (handle_t *, struct buffer_head *);
897extern void journal_sync_buffer (struct buffer_head *);
898extern int journal_invalidatepage(journal_t *,
899 struct page *, unsigned long);
Al Viro27496a82005-10-21 03:20:48 -0400900extern int journal_try_to_free_buffers(journal_t *, struct page *, gfp_t);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700901extern int journal_stop(handle_t *);
902extern int journal_flush (journal_t *);
903extern void journal_lock_updates (journal_t *);
904extern void journal_unlock_updates (journal_t *);
905
906extern journal_t * journal_init_dev(struct block_device *bdev,
907 struct block_device *fs_dev,
908 int start, int len, int bsize);
909extern journal_t * journal_init_inode (struct inode *);
910extern int journal_update_format (journal_t *);
911extern int journal_check_used_features
912 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long);
913extern int journal_check_available_features
914 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long);
915extern int journal_set_features
916 (journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long);
917extern int journal_create (journal_t *);
918extern int journal_load (journal_t *journal);
919extern void journal_destroy (journal_t *);
920extern int journal_recover (journal_t *journal);
921extern int journal_wipe (journal_t *, int);
922extern int journal_skip_recovery (journal_t *);
923extern void journal_update_superblock (journal_t *, int);
924extern void __journal_abort_hard (journal_t *);
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700925extern void journal_abort (journal_t *, int);
926extern int journal_errno (journal_t *);
927extern void journal_ack_err (journal_t *);
928extern int journal_clear_err (journal_t *);
929extern int journal_bmap(journal_t *, unsigned long, unsigned long *);
930extern int journal_force_commit(journal_t *);
931
932/*
933 * journal_head management
934 */
935struct journal_head *journal_add_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh);
936struct journal_head *journal_grab_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh);
937void journal_remove_journal_head(struct buffer_head *bh);
938void journal_put_journal_head(struct journal_head *jh);
939
940/*
941 * handle management
942 */
943extern kmem_cache_t *jbd_handle_cache;
944
Al Virodd0fc662005-10-07 07:46:04 +0100945static inline handle_t *jbd_alloc_handle(gfp_t gfp_flags)
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700946{
947 return kmem_cache_alloc(jbd_handle_cache, gfp_flags);
948}
949
950static inline void jbd_free_handle(handle_t *handle)
951{
952 kmem_cache_free(jbd_handle_cache, handle);
953}
954
955/* Primary revoke support */
956#define JOURNAL_REVOKE_DEFAULT_HASH 256
957extern int journal_init_revoke(journal_t *, int);
958extern void journal_destroy_revoke_caches(void);
959extern int journal_init_revoke_caches(void);
960
961extern void journal_destroy_revoke(journal_t *);
962extern int journal_revoke (handle_t *,
963 unsigned long, struct buffer_head *);
964extern int journal_cancel_revoke(handle_t *, struct journal_head *);
965extern void journal_write_revoke_records(journal_t *, transaction_t *);
966
967/* Recovery revoke support */
968extern int journal_set_revoke(journal_t *, unsigned long, tid_t);
969extern int journal_test_revoke(journal_t *, unsigned long, tid_t);
970extern void journal_clear_revoke(journal_t *);
971extern void journal_brelse_array(struct buffer_head *b[], int n);
972extern void journal_switch_revoke_table(journal_t *journal);
973
974/*
975 * The log thread user interface:
976 *
977 * Request space in the current transaction, and force transaction commit
978 * transitions on demand.
979 */
980
981int __log_space_left(journal_t *); /* Called with journal locked */
982int log_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid);
983int __log_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid);
984int journal_start_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t *tid);
985int journal_force_commit_nested(journal_t *journal);
986int log_wait_commit(journal_t *journal, tid_t tid);
987int log_do_checkpoint(journal_t *journal);
988
989void __log_wait_for_space(journal_t *journal);
990extern void __journal_drop_transaction(journal_t *, transaction_t *);
991extern int cleanup_journal_tail(journal_t *);
992
993/* Debugging code only: */
994
995#define jbd_ENOSYS() \
996do { \
997 printk (KERN_ERR "JBD unimplemented function %s\n", __FUNCTION__); \
998 current->state = TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE; \
999 schedule(); \
1000} while (1)
1001
1002/*
1003 * is_journal_abort
1004 *
1005 * Simple test wrapper function to test the JFS_ABORT state flag. This
1006 * bit, when set, indicates that we have had a fatal error somewhere,
1007 * either inside the journaling layer or indicated to us by the client
1008 * (eg. ext3), and that we and should not commit any further
1009 * transactions.
1010 */
1011
1012static inline int is_journal_aborted(journal_t *journal)
1013{
1014 return journal->j_flags & JFS_ABORT;
1015}
1016
1017static inline int is_handle_aborted(handle_t *handle)
1018{
1019 if (handle->h_aborted)
1020 return 1;
1021 return is_journal_aborted(handle->h_transaction->t_journal);
1022}
1023
1024static inline void journal_abort_handle(handle_t *handle)
1025{
1026 handle->h_aborted = 1;
1027}
1028
1029#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
1030
1031/* Comparison functions for transaction IDs: perform comparisons using
1032 * modulo arithmetic so that they work over sequence number wraps. */
1033
1034static inline int tid_gt(tid_t x, tid_t y)
1035{
1036 int difference = (x - y);
1037 return (difference > 0);
1038}
1039
1040static inline int tid_geq(tid_t x, tid_t y)
1041{
1042 int difference = (x - y);
1043 return (difference >= 0);
1044}
1045
1046extern int journal_blocks_per_page(struct inode *inode);
1047
1048/*
1049 * Return the minimum number of blocks which must be free in the journal
1050 * before a new transaction may be started. Must be called under j_state_lock.
1051 */
1052static inline int jbd_space_needed(journal_t *journal)
1053{
1054 int nblocks = journal->j_max_transaction_buffers;
1055 if (journal->j_committing_transaction)
1056 nblocks += journal->j_committing_transaction->
1057 t_outstanding_credits;
1058 return nblocks;
1059}
1060
1061/*
1062 * Definitions which augment the buffer_head layer
1063 */
1064
1065/* journaling buffer types */
1066#define BJ_None 0 /* Not journaled */
1067#define BJ_SyncData 1 /* Normal data: flush before commit */
1068#define BJ_Metadata 2 /* Normal journaled metadata */
1069#define BJ_Forget 3 /* Buffer superseded by this transaction */
1070#define BJ_IO 4 /* Buffer is for temporary IO use */
1071#define BJ_Shadow 5 /* Buffer contents being shadowed to the log */
1072#define BJ_LogCtl 6 /* Buffer contains log descriptors */
1073#define BJ_Reserved 7 /* Buffer is reserved for access by journal */
1074#define BJ_Locked 8 /* Locked for I/O during commit */
1075#define BJ_Types 9
1076
1077extern int jbd_blocks_per_page(struct inode *inode);
1078
1079#ifdef __KERNEL__
1080
1081#define buffer_trace_init(bh) do {} while (0)
1082#define print_buffer_fields(bh) do {} while (0)
1083#define print_buffer_trace(bh) do {} while (0)
1084#define BUFFER_TRACE(bh, info) do {} while (0)
1085#define BUFFER_TRACE2(bh, bh2, info) do {} while (0)
1086#define JBUFFER_TRACE(jh, info) do {} while (0)
1087
1088#endif /* __KERNEL__ */
1089
Linus Torvalds1da177e2005-04-16 15:20:36 -07001090#endif /* _LINUX_JBD_H */