Commit Graph

481 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Prakash Surya c2dceb5cd5 Add make rule for building Arch Linux packages
Added the necessary build infrastructure for building packages
compatible with the Arch Linux distribution. As such, one can now run:

    $ ./configure
    $ make pkg     # Alternatively, one can run 'make arch' as well

on an Arch Linux machine to create two binary packages compatible with
the pacman package manager, one for the spl userland utilties and
another for the spl kernel modules. The new packages can then be
installed by running:

    # pacman -U $package.pkg.tar.xz

In addition, source-only packages suitable for an Arch Linux chroot
environment or remote builder can also be built using the 'sarch' make
rule.

NOTE: Since the source dist tarball is created on the fly from the head
of the build tree, it's MD5 hash signature will be continually influx.
As a result, the md5sum variable was intentionally omitted from the
PKGBUILD files, and the '--skipinteg' makepkg option is used. This may
or may not have any serious security implications, as the source tarball
is not being downloaded from an outside source.

Signed-off-by: Prakash Surya <surya1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes: #68
2011-12-14 16:44:10 -08:00
Prakash Surya 44217f7aad Implement taskq_dispatch_prealloc() interface
This patch implements the taskq_dispatch_prealloc() interface which
was introduced by the following illumos-gate commit.  It allows for
a preallocated taskq_ent_t to be used when dispatching items to a
taskq.  This eliminates a memory allocation which helps minimize
lock contention in the taskq when dispatching functions.

    commit 5aeb94743e3be0c51e86f73096334611ae3a058e
    Author: Garrett D'Amore <garrett@nexenta.com>
    Date:   Wed Jul 27 07:13:44 2011 -0700

    734 taskq_dispatch_prealloc() desired
    943 zio_interrupt ends up calling taskq_dispatch with TQ_SLEEP

Signed-off-by: Prakash Surya <surya1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Issue #65
2011-12-13 16:10:57 -08:00
Prakash Surya 2c02b71b14 Replace tq_work_list and tq_threads in taskq_t
To lay the ground work for introducing the taskq_dispatch_prealloc()
interface, the tq_work_list and tq_threads fields had to be replaced
with new alternatives in the taskq_t structure.

The tq_threads field was replaced with tq_thread_list. Rather than
storing the pointers to the taskq's kernel threads in an array, they are
now stored as a list. In addition to laying the ground work for the
taskq_dispatch_prealloc() interface, this change could also enable taskq
threads to be dynamically created and destroyed as threads can now be
added and removed to this list relatively easily.

The tq_work_list field was replaced with tq_active_list. Instead of
keeping a list of taskq_ent_t's which are currently being serviced, a
list of taskq_threads currently servicing a taskq_ent_t is kept. This
frees up the taskq_ent_t's tqent_list field when it is being serviced
(i.e. now when a taskq_ent_t is being serviced, it's tqent_list field
will be empty).

Signed-off-by: Prakash Surya <surya1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Issue #65
2011-12-13 16:10:50 -08:00
Prakash Surya 93806f58a6 Fix usage of MUTEX macro in mutex_enter_nested
A call site of the MUTEX macro had incorrectly placed its closing
parenthesis, causing two parameters to be passed rather than one. This
change moves the misplaced parenthesis to fix the typographical error.

Signed-off-by: Prakash Surya <surya1@llnl.gov>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #70
2011-12-13 11:04:21 -08:00
Chris Dunlop 791dc876eb Allow 64-bit timestamps to be set on 64-bit kernels
ZFS and 64-bit linux are perfectly capable of dealing with 64-bit
timestamps, but ZFS deliberately prevents setting them.  Adjust
the SPL such that TIMESPEC_OVERFLOW will not always assume 32-bit
values and instead use the correct values for your kernel build.
This effectively allows 64-bit timestamps on 64-bit systems.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes ZFS issue #487
2011-12-12 11:06:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 1114ae6ae7 Prepend spl_ to all init/fini functions
This is a bit of cleanup I'd been meaning to get to for a while
to reduce the chance of a type conflict.  Well that conflict
finally occurred with the kstat_init() function which conflicts
with a function in the 2.6.32-6-pve kernel.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes #56
2011-11-11 09:18:28 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf fe71c0e567 Linux 3.1 compat, shrink_*cache_memory
As of Linux 3.1 the shrink_dcache_memory and shrink_icache_memory
functions have been removed.  This same task is now accomplished
more cleanly with per super block shrinkers.  This unfortunately
leaves us no easy way to support the dnlc_reduce_cache() function.

This support has always been entirely optional.  So when no
reasonable interface is available allow the dnlc_reduce_cache()
function to effectively become a no-op.

The downside of this change is that it will prevent the zfs arc
meta data limts from being enforced.  However, the current zfs
implementation in this regard is already flawed and needs to
be reworked.  If the arc needs to enfore a meta data limit it
will need to be extended to coordinate directly with the zpl.
This will allow us to drop all this compatibility code and get
more fine grained control over the cache management.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Issue #52
2011-11-09 19:36:30 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 0d0b523728 Linux 3.1 compat, vfs_fsync()
Preferentially use the vfs_fsync() function.  This function was
initially introduced in 2.6.29 and took three arguments.  As
of 2.6.35 the dentry argument was dropped from the function.
For older kernels fall back to using file_fsync() which also
took three arguments including the dentry.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Issue #52
2011-11-09 19:36:21 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 12ff95ff57 Linux 3.1 compat, kern_path_parent()
Prior to Linux 3.1 the kern_path_parent symbol was exported for
use by kernel modules.  As of Linux 3.1 it is now longer easily
available.  To handle this case the spl will now dynamically
look up address of the missing symbol at module load time.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Issue #52
2011-11-09 16:51:25 -08:00
Gunnar Beutner f5e76dea03 Cleaned up MUTEX() #define
The old define assumed a specific layout of the kmutex_t struct. This
patch makes the macro independent from the actual struct layout.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-10-19 09:59:32 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner 66cdc93b8c Remove the spinlocks for mutex_enter()/mutex_exit()
The m_owner variable is protected by the mutex itself. Reading the variable
is guaranteed to be atomic (due to it being a word-sized reference) and
ACCESS_ONCE() takes care of read cache effects.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-10-19 09:58:57 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner 3160d4f56b Fix race condition in mutex_exit()
On kernels with CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES mutex_exit() clears the mutex
owner after releasing the mutex. This would cause mutex_owner()
to return an incorrect owner if another thread managed to lock the
mutex before mutex_exit() had a chance to clear the owner.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes ZFS issue #167
2011-10-19 09:58:41 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner 763b2f3b57 Fixed invalid resource re-use in file_find()
File descriptors are a per-process resource. The same descriptor
in different processes can refer to different files. find_file()
incorrectly assumed that file descriptors are globally unique.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Closes ZFS issue #386
2011-10-11 09:51:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 86fd39f354 Linux 2.6.39 compat, mutex owner
Prior to Linux 2.6.39 when CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES was defined
the kernel stored a thread_info pointer as the mutex owner.
From this you could get the pointer of the current task_struct
to compare with get_current().

As of Linux 2.6.39 this behavior has changed and now the mutex
stores a pointer to the task_struct.  This commit detects the
type of pointer stored in the mutex and adjusts the mutex_owner()
and mutex_owned() functions to perform the correct comparision.
2011-06-24 13:00:08 -07:00
Darik Horn 0d54dcb566 Read the /etc/hostid file directly.
Deprecate the /usr/bin/hostid call by reading the /etc/hostid file
directly. Add the spl_hostid_path parameter to override the default
/etc/hostid path.

Rename the set_hostid() function to hostid_exec() to better reflect
actual behavior and complement the new hostid_read() function.

Use HW_INVALID_HOSTID as the spl_hostid sentinel value because
zero seems to be a valid gethostid() result on Linux.
2011-06-24 09:58:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf bf0c60c060 Add linux compatibility tests
While the splat tests were originally designed to stress test
the Solaris primatives.  I am extending them to include some kernel
compatibility tests.  Certain linux APIs have changed frequently.
These tests ensure that added compatibility is working properly
and no unnoticed regression have slipped in.

Test 1 and 2 add basic regression tests for shrink_icache_memory
and shrink_dcache_memory.  These are simply functional tests to
ensure we can call these functions safely.  Checking for correct
behavior is more difficult since other running processes will
influence the behavior.  However, these functions are provided
by the kernel so if we can successfully call them we assume they
are working correctly.

Test 3 checks that shrinker functions are being registered and
called correctly.  As of Linux 3.0 the shrinker API has changed
four different times so I felt the need to add a trivial test
case to ensure each variant works as expected.
2011-06-21 14:02:46 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a55bcaad18 Linux 3.0: Shrinker compatibility
Update the the wrapper macros for the memory shrinker to handle
this 4th API change.  The callback function now takes a
shrink_control structure.  This is certainly a step in the
right direction but it's annoying to have to accomidate yet
another version of the API.
2011-06-21 14:02:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 372c257233 Add TASKQ_NORECLAIM flag
It has become necessary to be able to optionally disable
direct memory reclaim for certain taskqs.  To support
this the TASKQ_NORECLAIM flags has been added which sets
the PF_MEMALLOC bit for all threads in the taskq.
2011-05-06 15:23:58 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c1f95c2b94 Correct MAXUID
The uid_t on most systems is in fact and unsigned 32-bit value.
This is almost always correct, however you could compile your
kernel to use an unsigned 16-bit value for uid_t.  In practice
I've never encountered a distribution which does this so I'm
willing to overlook this corner case for now.
2011-04-29 13:58:45 -07:00
Gunnar Beutner 9d4b7c17a0 Renamed 'struct fid' for NFS
Renamed 'struct fid' because its name conflicts with another
struct in the Linux kernel headers.  The fid_t typedef remains
unchanged intentionally.
2011-04-29 12:10:54 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d837ae395b Fix 32-bit MAXOFFSET_T definition
The correct definition of MAXOFFSET_T under Solaris is in reality
tied to the maximum size of a 'long long' type.  With this in mind
MAXOFFSET_T is now defined as LLONG_MAX which ensures the correct
value is used on both 32-bit and 64-bit systems.
2011-04-22 16:17:13 -07:00
Darik Horn fa6f7d8f9d Import spl_hostid as a module parameter.
Provide a call_usermodehelper() alternative by letting the hostid be passed as
a module parameter like this:

  $ modprobe spl spl_hostid=0x12345678

Internally change the spl_hostid variable to unsigned long because that is the
type that the coreutils /usr/bin/hostid returns.

Move the hostid command into GET_HOSTID_CMD for consistency with the similar
GET_KALLSYMS_ADDR_CMD invocation.

Use argv[0] instead of sh_path for consistency internally and with other Linux
drivers.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-04-21 09:41:01 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3dfc591ac4 Linux 2.6.39 compat, zlib_deflate_workspacesize()
The function zlib_deflate_workspacesize() now take 2 arguments.
This was done to avoid always having to allocate the maximum size
workspace (268K).  The caller can now specific the windowBits and
memLevel compression parameters to get a smaller workspace.

For our purposes we introduce a spl_zlib_deflate_workspacesize()
wrapper which accepts both arguments.  When the two argument
version of zlib_deflate_workspacesize() is available the arguments
are passed through.  When it's not we assume the worst case and
a maximally sized workspace is used.
2011-04-20 14:39:15 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf b1cbc4610c Linux 2.6.39 compat, kern_path_parent()
The path_lookup() function has been renamed to kern_path_parent()
and the flags argument has been removed.  The only behavior now
offered is that of LOOKUP_PARENT.  The spl already always passed
this flag so dropping the flag does not impact us.
2011-04-20 12:30:17 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 9b0f9079d2 Linux 2.6.39 compat, invalidate_inodes()
To resolve a potiential filesystem corruption issue a second
argument was added to invalidate_inodes().  This argument controls
whether dirty inodes are dropped or treated as busy when invalidating
a super block.  When only the legacy API is available the second
argument will be dropped for compatibility.
2011-04-19 09:08:08 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf e76f4bf11d Add dnlc_reduce_cache() support
Provide the dnlc_reduce_cache() function which attempts to prune
cached entries from the dcache and icache.  After the entries are
pruned any slabs which they may have been using are reaped.

Note the API takes a reclaim percentage but we don't have easy
access to the total number of cache entries to calculate the
reclaim count.  However, in practice this doesn't need to be
exactly correct.  We simply need to reclaim some useful fraction
(but not all) of the cache.  The caller can determine if more
needs to be done.
2011-04-06 20:06:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 83150861e6 Decrease target objects per slab
By decreasing the number of target objects per slab we increase
the likelyhood that a slab can be freed.  This reduces the level
of fragmentation in the slab which has been observed to be a
problem for certain workloads.  The penalty for this is that we
also decrease the speed which need objects can be allocated.
2011-04-06 20:06:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3336e29cc2 Add slab usage summeries to /proc
One of the most common things you want to know when looking at
the slab is how much memory is being used.  This information was
available in /proc/spl/kmem/slab but only on a per-slab basis.
This commit adds the following /proc/sys/kernel/spl/kmem/slab*
entries to make total slab usage easily available at a glance.

  slab_kmem_total - Total kmem slab size
  slab_kmem_avail - Alloc'd kmem slab size
  slab_kmem_max   - Max observed kmem slab size
  slab_vmem_total - Total vmem slab size
  slab_vmem_avail - Alloc'd vmem slab size
  slab_vmem_max   - Max observed vmem slab size

NOTE: The slab_*_max values are expected to over report because
they show maximum values since boot, not current values.
2011-04-06 20:06:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 495bd532ab Linux shrinker compat
The Linux shrinker has gone through three API changes since 2.6.22.
Rather than force every caller to understand all three APIs this
change consolidates the compatibility code in to the mm-compat.h
header.  The caller then can then use a single spl provided
shrinker API which does the right thing for your kernel.

SPL_SHRINKER_CALLBACK_PROTO(shrinker_callback, cb, nr_to_scan, gfp_mask);
SPL_SHRINKER_DECLARE(shrinker_struct, shrinker_callback, seeks);
spl_register_shrinker(&shrinker_struct);
spl_unregister_shrinker(&&shrinker_struct);
spl_exec_shrinker(&shrinker_struct, nr_to_scan, gfp_mask);
2011-04-06 20:06:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 91cb1d91a4 Add .va_dentry helper
While this extra structure memory does not exist under Solaris
it is needed under Linux to pass the dentry.  This allows the
dentry to be easily instantiated before the inode is unlocked.
2011-04-06 20:06:03 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 734fcac78d Add crgetfsuid()/crgetfsgid() helpers
Solaris credentials don't have an fsuid/fsguid field but Linux
credentials do.  To handle this case the Solaris API is being
modestly extended to include the crgetfsuid()/crgetfsgid()
helper functions.

Addititionally, because the crget*() helpers are implemented
identically regardless of HAVE_CRED_STRUCT they have been
moved outside the #ifdef to common code.  This simplification
means we only have one version of the helper to keep to to date.
2011-03-22 12:18:44 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf cb255ae572 Remove default GFP_NOFS allocations
As originally described in commit 82b8c8fa64
this was done to prevent certain deadlocks from occuring in the system.
However, as suspected the price for doing this proved to be too high.
The VM is having a hard time effectively reclaiming memory thus we are
reverting this change.

However, we still need to fundamentally handle the issue.  Under
Solaris the KM_PUSHPAGE mask is used commonly in I/O paths to ensure
a memory allocations will succeed.  We leverage this fact and redefine
KM_PUSHPAGE to include GFP_NOFS.  This ensures that in these common
I/O path we don't trigger additional reclaim.  This minimizes the
change to the Solaris code.
2011-03-19 14:50:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 6788762766 Linux 2.6.31 compat, include linux/seq_file.h
Explicitly include the linux/seq_file.h header in vfs.h.  This header
is required for the sequence handlers and is included indirectly in
newer kernels.
2011-03-07 13:52:00 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 47995fa691 Remove xvattr support
The xvattr support in the spl has always simply consisted of
defining a couple structures and a few #defines.  This was enough
to enable compilation of code which just passed xvattr types
around but not enough to effectively manipulate them.

This change removes even this minimal support leaving it up
to packages which leverage the spl to prove the full xvattr
support.  By removing it from the spl we ensure not conflict
with the higher level packages.

This just leaves minimal vnode support for basical manipulation
of files.  This code is does have the proper support functions
in the spl and a set of regression tests.

Additionally, this change removed the unused 'caller_context_t *'
type and replaces it with a 'void *'.
2011-03-02 11:34:46 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a4a1e1ecb4 Add TIMESPEC_OVERFLOW helper
Add the TIMESPEC_OVERFLOW helper macro to allow easy checking
of timespec overflow.
2011-03-02 11:34:43 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 19c1eb829d Add zlib regression test
A zlib regression test has been added to verify the correct behavior
of z_compress_level() and z_uncompress.  The test case simply takes
a 128k buffer, it compresses the buffer, it them uncompresses the
buffer, and finally it compares the buffers after the transform.
If the buffers match then everything is fine and no data was lost.
It performs this test for all 9 zlib compression levels.
2011-02-25 16:56:46 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 5c1967ebe2 Fix zlib compression
While portions of the code needed to support z_compress_level() and
z_uncompress() where in place.  In reality the current implementation
was non-functional, it just was compilable.

The critical missing component was to setup a workspace for the
compress/uncompress stream structures to use.  A kmem_cache was
added for the workspace area because we require a large chunk
of memory.  This avoids to need to continually alloc/free this
memory and vmap() the pages which is very slow.  Several objects
will reside in the per-cpu kmem_cache making them quick to acquire
and release.  A further optimization would be to adjust the
implementation to additional ensure the memory is local to the cpu.
Currently that may not be the case.
2011-02-25 16:56:22 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 5a52a782a0 Use Linux flock struct
Rather than defining our own structure which will conflict with
Linux's version when building 32-bit.  Simply setup a typedef
to always use the correct Linux version for both 32 ad 64-bit
builds.
2011-02-23 14:32:15 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 914b063133 Linux compat 2.6.37, invalidate_inodes()
In the 2.6.37 kernel the function invalidate_inodes() is no longer
exported for use by modules.  This memory management functionality
is needed to invalidate the inodes attached to a super block without
unmounting the filesystem.

Because this function still exists in the kernel and the prototype
is available is a common header all we strictly need is the symbol
address.  The address is obtained using spl_kallsyms_lookup_name()
and assigned to the variable invalidate_inodes_fn.  Then a #define
is used to replace all instances of invalidate_inodes() with a
call to the acquired address.  All the complexity is hidden behind
HAVE_INVALIDATE_INODES and invalidate_inodes() can be used as usual.

Long term we should try to get this, or another, interface made
available to modules again.
2011-02-23 12:44:32 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d599e4fa79 Block in cv_destroy() on all waiters
Previously we would ASSERT in cv_destroy() if it was ever called
with active waiters.  However, I've now seen several instances in
OpenSolaris code where they do the following:

  cv_broadcast();
  cv_destroy();

This leaves no time for active waiters to be woken up and scheduled
and we trip the ASSERT.  This has not been observed to be an issue
on OpenSolaris because their cv_destroy() basically does nothing.
They still do run the risk of the memory being free'd after the
cv_destroy() and hitting a bad paging request.  But in practice
this race is so small and unlikely it either doesn't happen, or
is so unlikely when it does happen the root cause has not yet been
identified.

Rather than risk the same issue in our code this change updates
cv_destroy() to block until all waiters have been woken and
scheduled.  This may take some time because each waiter must
acquire the mutex.

This change may have an impact on performance for frequently
created and destroyed condition variables.  That however is a price
worth paying it avoid crashing your system.  If performance issues
are observed they can be addressed by the caller.
2011-02-04 14:09:08 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 0aff071d18 Minor policy interface
Simply add the policy function wrappers.  They are completely
non-functional and always return that everything is OK, but once
again they simplify compilation of dependent packages for now.
These can/should be removed once the security policy of the
dependent application is completely understood and intergrade
as appropriate with Linux.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf ef57fb98e4 Add missing headers
Dependent packages require the following missing headers to
simplify compilation.  The headers are basically just stubbed
out with minimal content required.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 3fc97f9335 Add VSA_ACE_* and MAX_ACL_ENTRIES defines
The following flags are use to get the proper mask when getting
and setting ACLs.  I'm hopeful this can all largely go away at
some point.

We also add a define for the maximum number of ACL entries.
MAX_ACL_ENTRIES is used as the maximum number of entries for
each type.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf e2b25f698c Add MAXUID define
For Linux the maximum uid can vary depending on how your kernel
is built.  The Linux kernel still can be compiled with 16 but uids
and gids, although I'm not aware of a major distribution which does
this (maybe an embedded one?).  Given that caviot it is reasonably
safe to define the MAXUID as 2147483647.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 5f46a517f1 Add FIGNORECASE define
The FIGNORECASE case define is now needed, place it with the
related flags.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 3e5d3d3285 Add ksid_index_t and ksid_t types
Add the ksid_index_t enum and ksid_t type for use.  These types
are now used by packages which depend on the SPL.
2011-01-27 16:06:09 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d700637207 Minimal VFS additions
This patch simply removes the place holder vfs_t type and includes
some generic Linux VFS headers.  It also makes some minor fid_t
additions for compatibility.
2011-01-27 16:06:04 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 647fa73cf3 Remove VN_HOLD/VN_RELE/VOP_PUTPAGE
Previously these were defined to noops but rather than give
the misleading impression that these are actually implemented
I'm removing the type entirely for clarity.
2011-01-12 11:38:05 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf bd6ac72b03 Add a few additional vnode #defines
These additional constants now have users in dependant packages.
2011-01-12 11:38:05 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf dcd9cb5a17 Clean vattr_t and vsecattr_t types
Minor cleanup for the vattr_t and vsecattr_t types.
2011-01-12 11:38:04 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 1b439713f1 FRSYNC Should Use O_SYNC
The Solaris FRSYNC maps most logically to the Linux O_SYNC.  There
is no O_RSYNC on Linux but this wasn't noticed until just recently.
2011-01-12 11:38:04 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 4295b530ee Add vn_mode_to_vtype/vn_vtype to_mode helpers
Add simple helpers to convert a vnode->v_type to a inode->i_mode.
These should be used sparingly but they are handy to have.
2011-01-12 11:38:04 -08:00
Neependra Khare 3f688a8c38 Add cv_timedwait_interruptible() function
The cv_timedwait() function by definition must wait unconditionally
for cv_signal()/cv_broadcast() before waking.  This causes processes
to go in the D state which increases the load average.  The load
average is the summation of processes in D state and run queue.

To avoid this it can be desirable to sleep interruptibly.  These
processes do not count against the load average but may be woken by
a signal.  It is up to the caller to determine why the process
was woken it may be for one of three reasons.

  1) cv_signal()/cv_broadcast()
  2) the timeout expired
  3) a signal was received

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2011-01-11 12:14:48 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 6bf4d76f47 Linux Compat: inode->i_mutex/i_sem
Create spl_inode_lock/spl_inode_unlock compability macros to simply
access to the inode mutex/sem.  This avoids the need to have to ugly
up the code with the required #define's at every call site.  At the
moment the SPL only uses this in one place but higher layers can
benefit from the macro.
2011-01-11 12:14:48 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 9fe45dc1ac Add Thread Specific Data (TSD) Implementation
Thread specific data has implemented using a hash table, this avoids
the need to add a member to the task structure and allows maximum
portability between kernels.  This implementation has been optimized
to keep the tsd_set() and tsd_get() times as small as possible.

The majority of the entries in the hash table are for specific tsd
entries.  These entries are hashed by the product of their key and
pid because by design the key and pid are guaranteed to be unique.
Their product also has the desirable properly that it will be uniformly
distributed over the hash bins providing neither the pid nor key is zero.
Under linux the zero pid is always the init process and thus won't be
used, and this implementation is careful to never to assign a zero key.
By default the hash table is sized to 512 bins which is expected to
be sufficient for light to moderate usage of thread specific data.

The hash table contains two additional type of entries.  They first
type is entry is called a 'key' entry and it is added to the hash during
tsd_create().  It is used to store the address of the destructor function
and it is used as an anchor point.  All tsd entries which use the same
key will be linked to this entry.  This is used during tsd_destory() to
quickly call the destructor function for all tsd associated with the key.
The 'key' entry may be looked up with tsd_hash_search() by passing the
key you wish to lookup and DTOR_PID constant as the pid.

The second type of entry is called a 'pid' entry and it is added to the
hash the first time a process set a key.  The 'pid' entry is also used
as an anchor and all tsd for the process will be linked to it.  This
list is using during tsd_exit() to ensure all registered destructors
are run for the process.  The 'pid' entry may be looked up with
tsd_hash_search() by passing the PID_KEY constant as the key, and
the process pid.  Note that tsd_exit() is called by thread_exit()
so if your using the Solaris thread API you should not need to call
tsd_exit() directly.
2010-12-07 10:02:32 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia c2f997b0b3 Make kmutex_t typesafe in all cases.
When HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER and CONFIG_SMP are defined, kmutex_t is just
a typedef for struct mutex.

This is generally OK but has the downside that it can make mistakes
such as mutex_lock(&kmutex_var) to pass by unnoticed until someone
compiles the code without HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER or CONFIG_SMP (in which
case kmutex_t is a real struct). Note that the correct API to call
should have been mutex_enter() rather than mutex_lock().

We prevent these kind of mistakes by making kmutex_t a real structure
with only one field. This makes kmutex_t typesafe and it shouldn't
have any impact on the generated assembly code.

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-11-29 11:25:32 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 058de03caa Clear cv->cv_mutex when not in use
For debugging purposes the condition varaibles keep track of the
mutex used during a wait.  The idea is to validate that all callers
always use the same mutex.  Unfortunately, we have seen cases where
the caller reuses the condition variable with a different mutex but
in a way which is known to be safe.  My reading of the man pages
suggests you should not do this and always cv_destroy()/cv_init()
a new mutex.  However, there is overhead in doing this and it does
appear to be allowed under Solaris.

To accomidate this behavior cv_wait_common() and __cv_timedwait()
have been modified to clear the associated mutex when the last
waiter is dropped.  This ensures that while the condition variable
is in use the incorrect mutex case is detected.  It also allows the
condition variable to be safely recycled without requiring the
overhead of a cv_destroy()/cv_init() as long as it isn't currently
in use.

Finally, spin lock cv->cv_lock was removed because it is not required.
When the condition variable is used properly the caller will always
be holding the mutex so the spin lock is redundant.  The lock was
originally added because I expected to need to protect more than
just the cv->cv_mutex.  It turns out that was not the case.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-11-29 11:02:34 -08:00
Ned Bass 00ba7ef900 Give ENOTSUP a valid user space error value
The ZFS module returns ENOTSUP for several error conditions where an operation
is not (yet) supported.  The SPL defined ENOTSUP in terms of ENOTSUPP, but that
is an internal Linux kernel error code that should not be seen by user
programs.  As a result the zfs utilities print a confusing error message if an
unsupported operation is attempted:

    internal error: Unknown error 524
    Aborted

This change defines ENOTSUP in terms of EOPNOTSUPP which is consistent with
user space.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-11-10 13:25:49 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a50cede388 Linux 2.6.36 compat, wrap RLIM64_INFINITY
As of linux-2.6.36 RLIM64_INFINITY is defined in linux/resource.h.
This is handled by conditionally defining RLIM64_INFINITY in the
SPL only when the kernel does not provide it.
2010-11-09 13:28:55 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 8294c69bb7 Clear owner after dropping mutex
It's important to clear mp->owner after calling mutex_unlock()
because when CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES is defined the mutex owner
is verified in mutex_unlock().  If we set it to NULL this check
fails and the lockdep support is immediately disabled.
2010-11-05 11:52:30 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia a68d91d770 atomic_*_*_nv() functions need to return the new value atomically.
A local variable must be used for the return value to avoid a
potential race once the spin lock is dropped.

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-09-17 16:03:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a7958f7eef Support custom build directories
One of the neat tricks an autoconf style project is capable of
is allow configurion/building in a directory other than the
source directory.  The major advantage to this is that you can
build the project various different ways while making changes
in a single source tree.

For example, this project is designed to work on various different
Linux distributions each of which work slightly differently.  This
means that changes need to verified on each of those supported
distributions perferably before the change is committed to the
public git repo.

Using nfs and custom build directories makes this much easier.
I now have a single source tree in nfs mounted on several different
systems each running a supported distribution.  When I make a
change to the source base I suspect may break things I can
concurrently build from the same source on all the systems each
in their own subdirectory.

wget -c http://github.com/downloads/behlendorf/spl/spl-x.y.z.tar.gz
tar -xzf spl-x.y.z.tar.gz
cd spl-x-y-z

------------------------- run concurrently ----------------------
<ubuntu system>  <fedora system>  <debian system>  <rhel6 system>
mkdir ubuntu     mkdir fedora     mkdir debian     mkdir rhel6
cd ubuntu        cd fedora        cd debian        cd rhel6
../configure     ../configure     ../configure     ../configure
make             make             make             make
make check       make check       make check       make check

This is something the project has almost supported for a long time
but finishing this support should save me lots of time.
2010-09-05 21:49:05 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 73fc084e92 Move vendor check to spl-build.m4
This check was previously done with a hack in config.guess.
However, since a new config.guess is copied in to place when
forcing a full autoreconf this change was easily lost and
never a good idea.  This commit also updates all of the
autoconf style support scripts in config.
2010-09-02 16:12:02 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8371f981f1 Add list_link_replace() function
The list_link_replace() function with swap a new item it to the place
of an old item in a list.  It is the callers responsibility to ensure
all lists involved are locked properly.
2010-08-27 14:23:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d85e28ad69 Add MUTEX_NOT_HELD() function
Simply implement the missing MUTEX_NOT_HELD() function using
the !MUTEX_HELD construct.
2010-08-27 14:23:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 2b3543025c Stub out kmem cache defrag API
At some point we are going to need to implement the kmem cache
move callbacks to allow for kmem cache defragmentation.  This
commit simply lays a small part of the API ground work, it does
not actually implement any of this feature.  This is safe for
now because the move callbacks are just an optimization.  Even
if they are registered we don't ever really have to call them.
2010-08-27 14:23:42 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8dbd3fbd5e Add missing atomic functions
These functions were not previous needed so they were not added.
Now they are so add the full set.

atomic_inc_32_nv()
atomic_dec_32_nv()
atomic_inc_64_nv()
atomic_dec_64_nv()
2010-08-27 13:02:55 -07:00
Li Wei 4be55565fe Fix stack overflow in vn_rdwr() due to memory reclaim
Unless __GFP_IO and __GFP_FS are removed from the file mapping gfp
mask we may enter memory reclaim during IO.  In this case shrink_slab()
entered another file system which is notoriously hungry for stack.
This additional stack usage may cause a stack overflow.  This patch
removes __GFP_IO and __GFP_FS from the mapping gfp mask of each file
during vn_open() to avoid any reclaim in the vn_rdwr() IO path.  The
original mask is then restored at vn_close() time.  Hats off to the
loop driver which does something similiar for the same reason.

  [...]
  shrink_slab+0xdc/0x153
  try_to_free_pages+0x1da/0x2d7
  __alloc_pages+0x1d7/0x2da
  do_generic_mapping_read+0x2c9/0x36f
  file_read_actor+0x0/0x145
  __generic_file_aio_read+0x14f/0x19b
  generic_file_aio_read+0x34/0x39
  do_sync_read+0xc7/0x104
  vfs_read+0xcb/0x171
  :spl:vn_rdwr+0x2b8/0x402
  :zfs:vdev_file_io_start+0xad/0xe1
  [...]

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-08-12 09:34:33 -07:00
Ned Bass 46aa7b3939 Correctly handle rwsem_is_locked() behavior
A race condition in rwsem_is_locked() was fixed in Linux 2.6.33 and the fix was
backported to RHEL5 as of kernel 2.6.18-190.el5.  Details can be found here:

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=526092

The race condition was fixed in the kernel by acquiring the semaphore's
wait_lock inside rwsem_is_locked().  The SPL worked around the race condition
by acquiring the wait_lock before calling that function, but with the fix in
place it must not do that.

This commit implements an autoconf test to detect whether the fixed version of
rwsem_is_locked() is present.  The previous version of rwsem_is_locked() was an
inline static function while the new version is exported as a symbol which we
can check for in module.symvers.  Depending on the result we correctly
implement the needed compatibility macros for proper spinlock handling.

Finally, we do the right thing with spin locks in RW_*_HELD() by using the
new compatibility macros.  We only only acquire the semaphore's wait_lock if
it is calling a rwsem_is_locked() that does not itself try to acquire the lock.

Some new overhead and a small harmless race is introduced by this change.
This is because RW_READ_HELD() and RW_WRITE_HELD() now acquire and release
the wait_lock twice: once for the call to rwsem_is_locked() and once for
the call to rw_owner().  This can't be avoided if calling a rwsem_is_locked()
that takes the wait_lock, as it will in more recent kernels.

The other case which only occurs in legacy kernels could be optimized by
taking the lock only once, as was done prior to this commit.  However, I
decided that the performance gain probably wasn't significant enough to
justify the messy special cases required.

The function spl_rw_get_owner() was only used to enable the afore-mentioned
optimization.  Since it is no longer used, I removed it.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-08-10 16:43:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 099dc9c2d2 Add uninstall Makefile targets
Extend the Makefiles with an uninstall target to cleanly
remove a package which was installed with 'make install'.

Additionally, ensure a 'depmod -a' is run as part of the
install to update the module dependency information.
2010-07-28 14:55:32 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 287b2fb117 Add Debian and Slackware style packaging via alien
The long term fix for Debian and Slackware style packaging is
to add native support for building these packages.  Unfortunately,
that is a large chunk of work I don't have time for right now.
That said it would be nice to have at least basic packages for
these distributions.

As a quick short/medium term solution I've settled on using alien
to convert the RPM packages to DEB or TGZ style packages.  The
build system has been updated with the following build targets
which will first build RPM packages and then convert them as
needed to the target package type:

  make rpm: Create .rpm packages
  make deb: Create .deb packages
  make tgz: Create .tgz packages
  make pkg: Create the right package type for your distribution

The solution comes with lot of caveats and your mileage may vary.
But basically the big limitations are that the resulting packages:

  1) Will not have the correct dependency information.
  2) Will not not include the kernel version in the release.
  3) Will not handle all differences between distributions.

But the resulting packages should be easy to install and remove
from your system and take care of running 'depmod -a' and such.
As I said at the top this is not the right long term solution.
If any of the upstream distribution maintainers want to jump in
and help do this right for their distribution I'd love the help.
2010-07-27 15:52:34 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 10129680f8 Ensure kmem_alloc() and vmem_alloc() never fail
The Solaris semantics for kmem_alloc() and vmem_alloc() are that they
must never fail when called with KM_SLEEP.  They may only fail if
called with KM_NOSLEEP otherwise they must block until memory is
available.  This is quite different from how the Linux memory
allocators work, under Linux a memory allocation failure is always
possible and must be dealt with.

At one point in the past the kmem code did properly implement this
behavior, however as the code evolved this behavior was overlooked
in places.  This patch goes through all three implementations of
the kmem/vmem allocation functions and ensures that they will all
block in the KM_SLEEP case when memory is not available.  They
may still fail in the KM_NOSLEEP case in which case the caller
is responsible for handling the failure.

Special care is taken in vmalloc_nofail() to avoid thrashing the
system on the virtual address space spin lock.  The down side of
course is if you do see a failure here, which is unlikely for
64-bit systems, your allocation will delay for an entire second.
Still this is preferable to locking up your system and it is the
best we can do given the constraints.

Additionally, the code was cleaned up to be much more readable
and comments were added to describe the various kmem-debug-*
configure options.  The default configure options remain:
"--enable-debug-kmem --disable-debug-kmem-tracking"
2010-07-26 15:47:55 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 15b52c083e Fix max_ncpus definition.
It was being defined as the constant 64 and at first I changed it to be
NR_CPUS instead.

However, NR_CPUS can be a large value on recent kernels (4096), and this
may cause too large kmem allocations to happen.

Therefore, now we use num_possible_cpus(), which should return a (typically)
small value which represents the maximum number of CPUs than can be brought
online in the running hardware (this value is determined at boot time by
arch-specific kernel code).

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-07-20 15:49:25 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 81672c0122 Display DEBUG keyword during module load when --enable-debug is used.
Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-07-20 15:31:03 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 9dd5d138b2 Fix bcopy() to allow memory area overlap
Under Solaris bcopy() allows overlapping memory areas so we
must use memmove() instead of memcpy().

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-07-20 13:48:53 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 22cd0f19b1 Fix compilation error due to undefined ACCESS_ONCE macro.
When CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES is turned on in RHEL5's kernel config, the mutexes
store the owner for debugging purposes, therefore the SPL will enable
HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER. However, the SPL code uses ACCESS_ONCE() to access the
owner, and this macro is not defined in the RHEL5 kernel, therefore we define it
ourselves in include/linux/compiler_compat.h.

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <ricardo.correia@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-07-20 13:47:52 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf b17edc10a9 Prefix all SPL debug macros with 'S'
To avoid conflicts with symbols defined by dependent packages
all debugging symbols have been prefixed with a 'S' for SPL.
Any dependent package needing to integrate with the SPL debug
should include the spl-debug.h header and use the 'S' prefixed
macros.  They must also build with DEBUG defined.
2010-07-20 13:30:40 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 55abb0929e Split <sys/debug.h> header
To avoid symbol conflicts with dependent packages the debug
header must be split in to several parts.  The <sys/debug.h>
header now only contains the Solaris macro's such as ASSERT
and VERIFY.  The spl-debug.h header contain the spl specific
debugging infrastructure and should be included by any package
which needs to use the spl logging.  Finally the spl-trace.h
header contains internal data structures only used for the log
facility and should not be included by anythign by spl-debug.c.

This way dependent packages can include the standard Solaris
headers without picking up any SPL debug macros.  However, if
the dependant package want to integrate with the SPL debugging
subsystem they can then explicitly include spl-debug.h.

Along with this change I have dropped the CHECK_STACK macros
because the upstream Linux kernel now has much better stack
depth checking built in and we don't need this complexity.

Additionally SBUG has been replaced with PANIC and provided as
part of the Solaris macro set.  While the Solaris version is
really panic() that conflicts with the Linux kernel so we'll
just have to make due to PANIC.  It should rarely be called
directly, the prefered usage would be an ASSERT or VERIFY.

There's lots of change here but this cleanup was overdue.
2010-07-20 13:29:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf f0ff89fc86 Linux 2.6.35 compat: filp_fsync() dropped 'stuct dentry *'
The prototype for filp_fsync() drop the unused argument 'stuct dentry *'.
I've fixed this by adding the needed autoconf check and moving all of
those filp related functions to file_compat.h.  This will simplify
handling any further API changes in the future.
2010-07-14 11:40:55 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 82b8c8fa64 Proposed fix for low memory ZFS deadlocks
Deadlocks in the zvol were observed when one of the ZFS threads
performing IO trys to allocate memory while the system is low
on memory.  The low memory condition causes dirty pages to be
synced to the zvol but this can't progress because the original
thread is blocked waiting on a memory allocation.  Thus we end
up deadlocking.

A proper solution proposed by Wizeman is to change KM_SLEEP from
GFP_KERNEL top GFP_NOFS.  This will prevent the memory allocation
which is trying to allocate memory from forcing a sync to the
zvol in shrink_page_list()->pageout().

The down side to all of this is that we are using a pretty big
hammer by changing KM_SLEEP.  This change means ALL of the zfs
memory allocations will be until to trigger dirty data to be
synced.  The caller still should be able to reclaim memory from
the various slab caches.  We will be totally dependent of other
kernel processes which happen to be running and a small number
of asynchronous reclaim threads to trigger the reclaim of dirty
data pages.  This should be OK but I think we may see some
slightly longer allocation times when under memory pressure.

We shall see.
2010-07-13 21:30:56 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a4bfd8ea1b Add __divdi3(), remove __udivdi3() kernel dependency
Up until now no SPL consumer attempted to perform signed 64-bit
division so there was no need to support this.  That has now
changed so I adding 64-bit division support for 32-bit platforms.
The signed implementation is based on the unsigned version.

Since the have been several bug reports in the past concerning
correct 64-bit division on 32-bit platforms I added some long
over due regression tests.  Much to my surprise the unsigned
64-bit division regression tests failed.

This was surprising because __udivdi3() was implemented by simply
calling div64_u64() which is provided by the kernel.  This meant
that the linux kernels 64-bit division algorithm on 32-bit platforms
was flawed.  After some investigation this turned out to be exactly
the case.

Because of this I was forced to abandon the kernel helper and
instead to fully implement 64-bit division in the spl.  There are
several published implementation out there on how to do this
properly and I settled on one proposed in the book Hacker's Delight.
Their proposed algoritm is freely available without restriction
and I have just modified it to be linux kernel friendly.

The update implementation now passed all the unsigned and signed
regression tests.  This should be functional, but not fast, which is
good enough for out purposes.  If you want fast too I'd strongly
suggest you upgrade to a 64-bit platform.  I have also reported the
kernel bug and we'll see if we can't get it fixed up stream.
2010-07-13 16:44:02 -07:00
Ned Bass f0d8bb26b4 Implementation of the TQ_FRONT flag.
Adds a task queue to receive tasks dispatched with TQ_FRONT.  Worker
threads pull tasks from this high priority queue before the default
pending queue.

Executing tasks out of FIFO order potentially breaks taskq_lowest_id()
if we do not preserve the ordering of the work list by taskqid.
Therefore, instead of always appending to the work list, we search for
the appropriate place to insert a task.  The common case is to append
to the list, so we make this operation efficient by searching the work
list in reverse order.

Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2010-07-01 10:59:38 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c950d1480d Only make compiler warnings fatal with --enable-debug
While in theory I like the idea of compiler warnings always being
fatal.  In practice this causes problems when small harmless errors
cause build failures for end users.  To handle this I've updated
the build system such that -Werror is only used when --enable-debug
is passed to configure.  This is how I always build when developing
so I'll catch all build warnings and end users will not get stuck
by minor issues.
2010-06-30 17:05:36 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 6801b7154c Linux-2.6.33 compat, O_DSYNC flag added
Prior to linux-2.6.33 only O_DSYNC semantics were implemented and
they used the O_SYNC flag.  As of linux-2.6.33 this behavior was
properly split in to O_SYNC and O_DSYNC respectively.
2010-06-30 12:49:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 79a3bf130b Linux-2.6.33 compat, .ctl_name removed from struct ctl_table
As of linux-2.6.33 the ctl_name member of the ctl_table struct
has been entirely removed.  The upstream code has been updated
to depend entirely on the the procname member.  To handle this
all references to ctl_name are wrapped in a CTL_NAME macro which
simply expands to nothing for newer kernels.  Older kernels are
supported by having it expand to .ctl_name = X just as before.
2010-06-30 12:49:12 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf ede0bdffb6 Treat mutex->owner as volatile
When HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER is defined and we are directly accessing
mutex->owner treat is as volative with the ACCESS_ONCE() helper.
Without this you may get a stale cached value when accessing it
from different cpus.  This can result in incorrect behavior from
mutex_owned() and mutex_owner().  This is not a problem for the
!HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER case because in this case all the accesses
are covered by a spin lock which similarly gaurentees we will
not be accessing stale data.

Secondly, check CONFIG_SMP before allowing access to mutex->owner.
I see that for non-SMP setups the kernel does not track the owner
so we cannot rely on it.

Thirdly, check CONFIG_MUTEX_DEBUG when this is defined and the
HAVE_MUTEX_OWNER is defined surprisingly the mutex->owner will
not be cleared on mutex_exit().  When this is the case the SPL
needs to make sure to do it to ensure MUTEX_HELD() behaves as
expected or you will certainly assert in mutex_destroy().

Finally, improve the mutex regression tests.  For mutex_owned() we
now minimally check that it behaves correctly when checked from the
owner thread or the non-owner thread.  This subtle behaviour has bit
me before and I'd like to catch it early next time if it reappears.

As for mutex_owned() regression test additonally verify that
mutex->owner is always cleared on mutex_exit().
2010-06-28 16:02:57 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 5be4767ae1 Accept but ignore TASKQ_DC_BATCH and TQ_FRONT
For the moment the SPL accepts the TASKQ_DC_BATCH and TQ_FRONT
flags however they get silently ignored.  This is harmless for
the moment but it does need to be implemented at some point.
2010-06-28 11:39:43 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf e6de04b73c Add kmem_vasprintf function
We might as well have both asprintf() variants.  This allows us
to safely pass a va_list through several levels of the stack
using va_copy() instead of va_start().
2010-06-24 09:41:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 438683c0a9 Revert "Support TQ_FRONT flag used by taskq_dispatch()"
This reverts commit eb12b3782c.
2010-06-21 10:19:44 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8ffef449ef Add missing header util/sscanf.h 2010-06-14 14:20:31 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf def465ad4b Include kstat.h from kmem.h
It turns out Solaris incidentally includes kstat.h from kmem.h.  As
a side effect of this certain higher level .c files which should
explicitly include kstat.h don't because they happen to get it
via kmem.h.  To make like easier for everyone I do the same.
2010-06-14 14:18:48 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf eb12b3782c Support TQ_FRONT flag used by taskq_dispatch()
Allow taskq_dispatch() to insert work items at the head of the
queue instead of just the tail by passing the TQ_FRONT flag.
2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 32c6147dee Minor cleanup and Solaris API additions.
Minor formatting cleanups.

API additions:
* {U}INT8_{MIN,MAX}, {U}INT16_{MIN,MAX} macros.
* id_t typedef
* ddi_get_lbolt(), ddi_get_lbolt64() functions.
2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf b868e22f05 Add kmem_asprintf(), strfree(), strdup(), and minor cleanup.
This patch adds three missing Solaris functions: kmem_asprintf(), strfree(),
and strdup().  They are all implemented as a thin layer which just calls
their Linux counterparts.  As part of this an autoconf check for kvasprintf
was added because it does not appear in older kernels.  If the kernel does
not provide it then spl-generic implements it.

Additionally the dead DEBUG_KMEM_UNIMPLEMENTED code was removed to clean
things up and make the kmem.h a little more readable.
2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf bb1bb2c4c4 Add xuio_* structures and typedefs.
Add the basic xuio structure and typedefs for Solaris style zero copy.
There's a decent chance this will not be the way I handle this on Linux
but providing the basic types simplifies things for now.
2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 750a7101f8 Stub out additional missing headers 2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf ae4c36adce Cleanly split Linux proc.h (fs) from conflicting Solaris proc.h (process)
Under linux the proc.h header is for the /proc filesystem, and under
Solaris the proc/h header if for processes.  This patch correctly
moves the Linux proc functionality in a linux/proc_compat.h header
and leaves the sys/proc.h for use by Solaris.  Minor updates were
required to all the call sites where it was included of course.
2010-06-11 15:57:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 49638d8388 Refresh autogen.sh products with automake 1.11.1. 2010-05-21 15:52:06 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 32f5faff69 Simplify rwlock implementation.
Remove RW_COUNT() from the rwlock implementation.  The idea was that it
could be used as a generic wrapper for getting at the internal state
of a rwlock.  While a good idea it's proven problematic to keep it
correct for multiple archs and internal implementation changes.  In
short it hasn't been worth the trouble.

With that and simplicity in mind things have been updated to use the
rwsem_is_locked() function instead of RW_COUNT for the RW_*_HELD()
functions.  As for rw_upgrade() it remains only implemented for
the generic rwsem implemenation.  It remains to be determined if its
worth the effort of adding a custom implementation for each arch.
2010-05-20 14:20:34 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 23d91792ef Use KM_NODEBUG macro in preference to __GFP_NOWARN. 2010-05-20 14:16:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 716154c592 Public Release Prep
Updated AUTHORS, COPYING, DISCLAIMER, and INSTALL files.  Added
standardized headers to all source file to clearly indicate the
copyright, license, and to give credit where credit is due.
2010-05-17 15:18:00 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8e2140b770 Add 3 missing typedefs.
Add processorid_t, pc_t, index_t.
2010-05-14 09:42:53 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf a76df2dc0f Add console_*printf() functions.
Add support for the missing console_vprintf() and console_printf()
functions.
2010-05-14 09:40:52 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf f752b46eb3 Add cv_wait_interruptible() function.
This is a minor extension to the condition variable API to allow
for reasonable signal handling on Linux.  The cv_wait() function by
definition must wait unconditionally for cv_signal()/cv_broadcast()
before waking it.  This makes it impossible to woken by a signal
such as SIGTERM.  The cv_wait_interruptible() function was added
to handle this case.  It behaves identically to cv_wait() with the
exception that it waits interruptibly allowing a signal to wake it
up.  This means you do need to be careful and check issig() after
waking.
2010-05-14 09:24:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf ef6c136884 Disable rw_tryupgrade() for newer kernels
For kernels using the CONFIG_RWSEM_GENERIC_SPINLOCK implementation
nothing has changed.  But if your kernel is building with arch
specific rwsems rw_tryupgrade() has been disabled until it can
be implemented correctly.  In particular, the x86 implementation
now leverages atomic primatives for serialization rather than
spinlocks.  So to get this working again it will need to be
implemented as a cmpxchg for x86 and likely something similiar
for other arches we are interested in.  For now it's safest
to simply disable it.
2010-04-22 12:28:19 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8934764e60 Add support for 'make -s' silent builds
The cleanest way to do this is to set AM_LIBTOOLFLAGS = --silent.  However,
AM_LIBTOOLFLAGS is not honored by automake-1.9.6-2.1 which is what I have
been using.  To cleanly handle this I am updating to automake-1.11-3 which
is why it looks like there is a lot of churn in the Makefiles.
2010-03-26 15:41:17 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 16b719f006 Allow spl_config.h to be included by dependant packages (updated)
We need dependent packages to be able to include spl_config.h to
build properly.  This was partially solved in commit 0cbaeb1 by using
AH_BOTTOM to #undef common #defines (PACKAGE, VERSION, etc) which
autoconf always adds and cannot be easily removed.  This solution
works as long as the spl_config.h is included before your projects
config.h.  That turns out to be easier said than done.  In particular,
this is a problem when your package includes its config.h using the
-include gcc option which ensures the first thing included is your
config.h.

To handle all cases cleanly I have removed the AH_BOTTOM hack and
replaced it with an AC_CONFIG_HEADERS command.  This command runs
immediately after spl_config.h is written and with a little awk-foo
it strips the offending #defines from the file.  This eliminates
the problem entirely and makes header safe for inclusion.

Also in this change I have removed the few places in the code where
spl_config.h is included.  It is now added to the gcc compile line
to ensure the config results are always available.

Finally, I have also disabled the verbose kernel builds.  If you
want them back you can always build with 'make V=1'.  Since things
are working now they don't need to be on by default.
2010-03-22 14:45:33 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3977f8370f Linux 2.6.32 compat, proc_handler() API change
As of linux-2.6.32 the 'struct file *filp' argument was dropped from
the proc_handle() prototype.  It was apparently unused _almost_
everywhere in the kernel and this was simply cleanup.

I've added a new SPL_AC_5ARGS_PROC_HANDLER autoconf check for this and
the proper compat macros to correctly define the prototypes and some
helper functions.  It's not pretty but API compat changes rarely are.
2010-03-04 12:14:56 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia 694921bc49 sun-misc-gitignore
Add .gitignore files.

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <Ricardo.M.Correia@Sun.COM>
2010-01-08 09:37:54 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia f7e8739c94 sun-fix-whitespace
Whitespace fixes.

Signed-off-by: Ricardo M. Correia <Ricardo.M.Correia@Sun.COM>
2010-01-08 09:37:54 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 3a03ce5cbf Check for changed gaurd macro in 2.6.28+ for rwsem implementation.
As part of the 2.6.28 cleanup which moved all the linux/include/asm/
headers in to linux/arch, the guard headers for many header files
changed.  The i386 rwsem implementation keys off this header to
ensure the internal members of the rwsem structure are interpreted
correctly.  This change checks for the new guard macro in addition
to the only one, the implementation of the rwsem has not changed
for i386 so this is safe and correct.
2009-12-17 11:57:44 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d04c8a563c Atomic64 compatibility for 32-bit systems without kernel support.
This patch is another step towards updating the code to handle the
32-bit kernels which I have not been regularly testing.  This changes
do not really impact the common case I'm expected which is the latest
kernel running on an x86_64 arch.

Until the linux-2.6.31 kernel the x86 arch did not have support for
64-bit atomic operations.  Additionally, the new atomic_compat.h support
for this case was wrong because it embedded a spinlock in the atomic
variable which must always and only be 64-bits total.  To handle these
32-bit issues we now simply fall back to the --enable-atomic-spinlock
implementation if the kernel does not provide the 64-bit atomic funcs.

The second issue this patch addresses is the DEBUG_KMEM assumption that
there will always be atomic64 funcs available.  On 32-bit archs this may
not be true, and actually that's just fine.  In that case the kernel will
will never be able to allocate more the 32-bits worth anyway.  So just
check if atomic64 funcs are available, if they are not it means this
is a 32-bit machine and we can safely use atomic_t's instead.
2009-12-04 15:54:12 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 5652e7b497 When using x86 specific rwsem correctly intepret rwsem->count. 2009-12-01 15:47:27 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a5d6f6020a Add missing atomic64 compat helpers for 32-bit systems.
The use of these functions was added with the recent atomic work
and not tested on 32-bit systems.  Add the missing compat functions:
atomic64_inc, atomic64_dec, atomic64_add_return, atomic64_sub_return,
atomic64_inc_return, atomic64_dec_return.
2009-12-01 10:15:27 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 1273cf284b Always use the generic mutex_destroy(). 2009-11-15 15:04:02 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 05b48408fb Add mutex_enter_nested() as wrapper for mutex_lock_nested().
This symbol can be used by GPL modules which use the SPL to handle
cases where a call path takes a two different locks by the same
name.  This is needed to avoid a false positive in the lock checker.
2009-11-15 14:27:15 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 8b45dda2bc Linux 2.6.31 kmem cache alignment fixes and cleanup.
The big fix here is the removal of kmalloc() in kv_alloc().  It used
to be true in previous kernels that kmallocs over PAGE_SIZE would
always be pages aligned.  This is no longer true atleast in 2.6.31
there are no longer any alignment expectations.  Since kv_alloc()
requires the resulting address to be page align we no only either
directly allocate pages in the KMC_KMEM case, or directly call
__vmalloc() both of which will always return a page aligned address.
Additionally, to avoid wasting memory size is always a power of two.

As for cleanup several helper functions were introduced to calculate
the aligned sizes of various data structures.  This helps ensure no
case is accidentally missed where the alignment needs to be taken in
to account.  The helpers now use P2ROUNDUP_TYPE instead of P2ROUNDUP
which is safer since the type will be explict and we no longer count
on the compiler to auto promote types hopefully as we expected.

Always wnforce minimum (SPL_KMEM_CACHE_ALIGN) and maximum (PAGE_SIZE)
alignment restrictions at cache creation time.

Use SPL_KMEM_CACHE_ALIGN in splat alignment test.
2009-11-13 11:12:43 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf c89fdee4d3 Remove __GFP_NOFAIL in kmem and retry internally.
As of 2.6.31 it's clear __GFP_NOFAIL should no longer be used and it
may disappear from the kernel at any time.  To handle this I have simply
added *_nofail wrappers in the kmem implementation which perform the
retry for non-atomic allocations.

From linux-2.6.31 mm/page_alloc.c:1166
/*
 * __GFP_NOFAIL is not to be used in new code.
 *
 * All __GFP_NOFAIL callers should be fixed so that they
 * properly detect and handle allocation failures.
 *
 * We most definitely don't want callers attempting to
 * allocate greater than order-1 page units with
 * __GFP_NOFAIL.
 */
WARN_ON_ONCE(order > 1);
2009-11-12 15:11:24 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf baf2979ed3 Linux 2.6.31 Compatibility Updates
SPL_AC_2ARGS_SET_FS_PWD macro updated to explicitly include
linux/fs_struct.h which was dropped from linux/sched.h.

min_wmark_pages, low_wmark_pages, high_wmark_pages macros
introduced in newer kernels.  For older kernels mm_compat.h
was introduced to define them as needed as direct mappings
to per zone min_pages, low_pages, max_pages.
2009-11-10 14:06:57 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 055ffd98cf Autoconf --enable-debug-* cleanup
Cleanup the --enable-debug-* configure options, this has been pending
for quite some time and I am glad I finally got to it.  To summerize:

1) All SPL_AC_DEBUG_* macros were updated to be a more autoconf
friendly.  This mainly involved shift to the GNU approved usage of
AC_ARG_ENABLE and ensuring AS_IF is used rather than directly using
an if [ test ] construct.

2) --enable-debug-kmem=yes by default.  This simply enabled keeping
a running tally of total memory allocated and freed and reporting a
memory leak if there was one at module unload.  Additionally, it
ensure /proc/spl/kmem/slab will exist by default which is handy.
The overhead is low for this and it should not impact performance.

3) --enable-debug-kmem-tracking=no by default.  This option was added
to provide a configure option to enable to detailed memory allocation
tracking.  This support was always there but you had to know where to
turn it on.  By default this support is disabled because it is known
to badly hurt performence, however it is invaluable when chasing a
memory leak.

4) --enable-debug-kstat removed.  After further reflection I can't see
why you would ever really want to turn this support off.  It is now
always on which had the nice side effect of simplifying the proc handling
code in spl-proc.c.  We can now always assume the top level directory
will be there.

5) --enable-debug-callb removed.  This never really did anything, it was
put in provisionally because it might have been needed.  It turns out
it was not so I am just removing it to prevent confusion.
2009-10-30 13:58:51 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 302b88e6ab Add autoconf checks for atomic64_cmpxchg + atomic64_xchg
These functions didn't exist for all archs prior to 2.6.24.  This
patch addes an autoconf test to detect this and add them when needed.
The autoconf check is needed instead of just an #ifndef because in
the most modern kernels atomic64_{cmp}xchg are implemented as in
inline function and not a #define.
2009-10-30 13:53:17 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 5e9b5d832b Use Linux atomic primitives by default.
Previously Solaris style atomic primitives were implemented simply by
wrapping the desired operation in a global spinlock.  This was easy to
implement at the time when I wasn't 100% sure I could safely layer the
Solaris atomic primatives on the Linux counterparts.  It however was
likely not good for performance.

After more investigation however it does appear the Solaris primitives
can be layered on Linux's fairly safely.  The Linux atomic_t type really
just wraps a long so we can simply cast the Solaris unsigned value to
either a atomic_t or atomic64_t.  The only lingering problem for both
implementations is that Solaris provides no atomic read function.  This
means reading a 64-bit value on a 32-bit arch can (and will) result in
word breaking.  I was very concerned about this initially, but upon
further reflection it is a limitation of the Solaris API.  So really
we are just being bug-for-bug compatible here.

With this change the default implementation is layered on top of Linux
atomic types.  However, because we're assuming a lot about the internal
implementation of those types I've made it easy to fall-back to the
generic approach.  Simply build with --enable-atomic_spinlocks if
issues are encountered with the new implementation.
2009-10-30 10:55:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 51a727e90f Set cwd to '/' for the process executing insmod.
Ricardo has pointed out that under Solaris the cwd is set to '/'
during module load, while under Linux it is set to the callers cwd.
To handle this cleanly I've reworked the module *_init()/_exit()
macros so they call a *_setup()/_cleanup() function when any SPL
dependent module is loaded or unloaded.  This gives us a chance to
perform any needed modification of the process, in this case changing
the cwd.  It also handily provides a way to avoid creating wrapper
init()/exit() functions because the Solaris and Linux prototypes
differ slightly.  All dependent modules should now call the spl
helper macros spl_module_{init,exit}() instead of the native linux
versions.

Unfortunately, it appears that under Linux there has been no consistent
API in the kernel to set the cwd in a module.  Because of this I have
had to add more autoconf magic than I'd like.  However, what I have
done is correct and has been tested on RHEL5, SLES11, FC11, and CHAOS
kernels.

In addition, I have change the rootdir type from a 'void *' to the
correct 'vnode_t *' type.  And I've set rootdir to a non-NULL value.
2009-10-01 16:06:15 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 0e77fc118e Expand SEM() outside init_rwsem and directly call __init_rwsem().
We need to directly call __init_rwsem() or the name gets expanded
to SEM(lock-name).  This is safe and correct for the support arches
x86/x86_64/ppc/ppc64.
2009-09-29 03:19:09 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 4d54fdee1d Reimplement mutexs for Linux lock profiling/analysis
For a generic explanation of why mutexs needed to be reimplemented
to work with the kernel lock profiling see commits:
  e811949a57 and
  d28db80fd0

The specific changes made to the mutex implemetation are as follows.
The Linux mutex structure is now directly embedded in the kmutex_t.
This allows a kmutex_t to be directly case to a mutex struct and
passed directly to the Linux primative.

Just like with the rwlocks it is critical that these functions be
implemented as '#defines to ensure the location information is
preserved.  The preprocessor can then do a direct replacement of
the Solaris primative with the linux primative.

Just as with the rwlocks we need to track the lock owner.  Here
things get a little more interesting because depending on your
kernel version, and how you've built your kernel Linux may already
do this for you.  If your running a 2.6.29 or newer kernel on a
SMP system the lock owner will be tracked.  This was added to Linux
to support adaptive mutexs, more on that shortly.  Alternately, your
kernel might track the lock owner if you've set CONFIG_DEBUG_MUTEXES
in the kernel build.  If neither of the above things is true for
your kernel the kmutex_t type will include and track the lock owner
to ensure correct behavior.  This is all handled by a new autoconf
check called SPL_AC_MUTEX_OWNER.

Concerning adaptive mutexs these are a very recent development and
they did not make it in to either the latest FC11 of SLES11 kernels.
Ideally, I'd love to see this kernel change appear in one of these
distros because it does help performance.  From Linux kernel commit:
  0d66bf6d3514b35eb6897629059443132992dbd7
  "Testing with Ingo's test-mutex application...
  gave a 345% boost for VFS scalability on my testbox"
However, if you don't want to backport this change yourself you
can still simply export the task_curr() symbol.  The kmutex_t
implementation will use this symbol when it's available to
provide it's own adaptive mutexs.

Finally, DEBUG_MUTEX support was removed including the proc handlers.
This was done because now that we are cleanly integrated with the
kernel profiling all this information and much much more is available
in debug kernel builds.  This code was now redundant.

Update mutexs validated on:
    - SLES10   (ppc64)
    - SLES11   (x86_64)
    - CHAOS4.2 (x86_64)
    - RHEL5.3  (x86_64)
    - RHEL6    (x86_64)
    - FC11     (x86_64)
2009-09-25 14:47:01 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d28db80fd0 Update rwlocks to track owner to ensure correct semantics
The behavior of RW_*_HELD was updated because it was not quite right.
It is not sufficient to return non-zero when the lock is help, we must
only do this when the current task in the holder.

This means we need to track the lock owner which is not something
tracked in a Linux semaphore.  After some experimentation the
solution I settled on was to embed the Linux semaphore at the start
of a larger krwlock_t structure which includes the owner field.
This maintains good performance and allows us to cleanly intergrate
with the kernel lock analysis tools.  My reasons:

1) By placing the Linux semaphore at the start of krwlock_t we can
then simply cast krwlock_t to a rw_semaphore and pass that on to
the linux kernel.  This allows us to use '#defines so the preprocessor
can do direct replacement of the Solaris primative with the linux
equivilant.  This is important because it then maintains the location
information for each rw_* call point.

2) Additionally, by adding the owner to krwlock_t we can keep this
needed extra information adjacent to the lock itself.  This removes
the need for a fancy lookup to get the owner which is optimal for
performance.  We can also leverage the existing spin lock in the
semaphore to ensure owner is updated correctly.

3) All helper functions which do not need to strictly be implemented
as a define to preserve location information can be done as a static
inline function.

4) Adding the owner to krwlock_t allows us to remove all memory
allocations done during lock initialization.  This is good for all
the obvious reasons, we do give up the ability to specific the lock
name.  The Linux profiling tools will stringify the lock name used
in the code via the preprocessor and use that.

Update rwlocks validated on:
- SLES10   (ppc64)
- SLES11   (x86_64)
- CHAOS4.2 (x86_64)
- RHEL5.3  (x86_64)
- RHEL6    (x86_64)
- FC11     (x86_64)
2009-09-25 14:14:35 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf e811949a57 Reimplement rwlocks for Linux lock profiling/analysis.
It turns out that the previous rwlock implementation worked well but
did not integrate properly with the upstream kernel lock profiling/
analysis tools.  This is a major problem since it would be awfully
nice to be able to use the automatic lock checker and profiler.

The problem is that the upstream lock tools use the pre-processor
to create a lock class for each uniquely named locked.  Since the
rwsem was embedded in a wrapper structure the name was always the
same.  The effect was that we only ended up with one lock class for
the entire SPL which caused the lock dependency checker to flag
nearly everything as a possible deadlock.

The solution was to directly map a krwlock to a Linux rwsem using
a typedef there by eliminating the wrapper structure.  This was not
done initially because the rwsem implementation is specific to the arch.
To fully implement the Solaris krwlock API using only the provided rwsem
API is not possible.  It can only be done by directly accessing some of
the internal data member of the rwsem structure.

For example, the Linux API provides a different function for dropping
a reader vs writer lock.  Whereas the Solaris API uses the same function
and the caller does not pass in what type of lock it is.  This means to
properly drop the lock we need to determine if the lock is currently a
reader or writer lock.  Then we need to call the proper Linux API function.
Unfortunately, there is no provided API for this so we must extracted this
information directly from arch specific lock implementation.  This is
all do able, and what I did, but it does complicate things considerably.

The good news is that in addition to the profiling benefits of this
change.  We may see performance improvements due to slightly reduced
overhead when creating rwlocks and manipulating them.

The only function I was forced to sacrafice was rw_owner() because this
information is simply not stored anywhere in the rwsem.  Luckily this
appears not to be a commonly used function on Solaris, and it is my
understanding it is mainly used for debugging anyway.

In addition to the core rwlock changes, extensive updates were made to
the rwlock regression tests.  Each class of test was extended to provide
more API coverage and to be more rigerous in checking for misbehavior.

This is a pretty significant change and with that in mind I have been
careful to validate it on several platforms before committing.  The full
SPLAT regression test suite was run numberous times on all of the following
platforms.  This includes various kernels ranging from 2.6.16 to 2.6.29.

- SLES10   (ppc64)
- SLES11   (x86_64)
- CHAOS4.2 (x86_64)
- RHEL5.3  (x86_64)
- RHEL6    (x86_64)
- FC11     (x86_64)
2009-09-18 16:09:47 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c65d62d8bf Disable stack overflow checking by default.
The run time stack overflow checking is being disabled by default
because it is not safe for use with 2.6.29 and latter kernels.  These
kernels do now have their own stack overflow checking so this support
has become redundant anyway.  It can be re-enabled for older kernels or
arches without stack overflow checking by redefining CHECK_STACK().
2009-07-30 13:52:11 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 6ae7fef5b9 Update global_page_state() support for 2.6.29 kernels.
Basically everything we need to monitor the global memory state of
the system is now cleanly available via global_page_state().  The
problem is that this interface is still fairly recent, and there
has been one change in the page state enum which we need to handle.
These changes basically boil down to the following:
- If global_page_state() is available we should use it.  Several
  autoconf checks have been added to detect the correct enum names.
- If global_page_state() is not available check to see if
  get_zone_counts() symbol is available and use that.
- If the get_zone_counts() symbol is not exported we have no choice
  be to dynamically aquire it at load time.  This is an absolute
  last resort for old kernel which we don't want to patch to
  cleanly export the symbol.
2009-07-28 15:06:42 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf ec7d53e99a Add basic credential support and splat tests.
The previous credential implementation simply provided the needed types and
a couple of dummy functions needed.  This update correctly ties the basic
Solaris credential API in to one of two Linux kernel APIs.

Prior to 2.6.29 the linux kernel embeded all credentials in the task
structure.  For these kernels, we pass around the entire task struct as if
it were the credential, then we use the helper functions to extract the
credential related bits.

As of 2.6.29 a new credential type was added which we can and do fairly
cleanly layer on top of.  Once again the helper functions nicely hide
the implementation details from all callers.

Three tests were added to the splat test framework to verify basic
correctness.  They should be extended as needed when need credential
functions are added.
2009-07-27 17:18:59 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia ac95d0974b Fixed NULL dereference by tcd_for_each() when the kmalloc() call in module/spl/spl-debug.c:1163 returns NULL.
Signed-off-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
2009-07-14 15:24:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf b11b08ed64 Add a little paranoia here to ensure endianess is set correctly. 2009-07-14 14:28:04 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 06dea10380 Add basic groupmember() function, not sup groups. 2009-07-10 10:58:06 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf d3126abe75 Add ddi_copyin/ddi_copyout support for fake kernel originated ioctls. 2009-07-10 10:56:32 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 2a734e9c26 Define ACE_ALL_PERMS for use by ACLs 2009-07-09 15:00:25 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c18cbcfe66 Define FKIOCTL which is used on Solaris to mark an in-kernel ioctl. 2009-07-09 14:59:41 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3a68dc5374 Add ASSERTV macro to simplify removing variables (the V in ASSERTV)
which are only used in ASSERT().
2009-07-09 12:15:23 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 915404bd50 Add basic support for TASKQ_THREADS_CPU_PCT taskq flag which is
used to scale the number of threads based on the number of online
CPUs.  As CPUs are added/removed we should rescale the thread
count appropriately, but currently this is only done at create.
2009-07-09 10:07:52 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 86933a6e51 Simplify rpm build rules, added config/rpm.am.
Distro friendly changes such that the kernel modules are packaged seperately.
2009-07-01 14:37:44 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf f4f9cd75a1 Install spl-devel products in /usr/src/spl-SPL_VERSION/LINUX_VERSION/
Remove the spl symlink, it's just confusing
2009-06-26 16:30:44 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 2e0e7e6976 Packaging improvements for RHEL and SLES (part 2)
- Allow checking for exported symbols in both Module.symvers
  and Module.symvers.  My stock SLES kernel ships an objects
  directory with Module.symvers, yet produces a Module.symvers
  in the local build directory.
2009-06-16 11:34:28 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 39a3d2a421 Packaging improvements for RHEL and SLES
- Properly honor --prefix in build system and rpm spec file.
- Add '--define require_kdir' to spec file to support building
  rpms against kernel sources installed in non-default locations.
- Add '--define require_kobj' to spec file to support building
  rpms against kernel object installed in non-default locations.
- Stop suppressing errors in autogen.sh script.
- Improved logic to detect missing kernel objects when they are
  not located with the source.  This is the common case for SLES
  as well as in-tree chaos kernel builds and is done to simply
  support for multiple arches.
- Moved spl-devel build products to /usr/src/spl-<version>, a
  spl symlink is created to reference the last installed version.
2009-06-16 10:44:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf e554dffa60 SLES10 Fixes (part 9)
- Proper ioctl() 32/64-bit binary compatibility.  We need to ensure the
  ioctl data itself is always packed the same for 32/64-bit binaries.
  Additionally, the correct thing to do is encode this size in bytes
  as part of the command using _IOC_SIZE().
- Minor formatting changes to respect the 80 character limit.
- Move all SPLAT_SUBSYSTEM_* defines in to splat-ctl.h.
- Increase SPLAT_SUBSYSTEM_UNKNOWN because we were getting close
  to accidentally using it for a real registered subsystem.
2009-05-21 10:56:11 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 124ca8a5a9 SLES10 Fixes (part 7)
- Initial SLES testing uncovered a long standing bug in the debug
  tracing.  The tcd_for_each() macro expected a NULL to terminate
  the trace_data[i] array but this was only ever true due to luck.
  All trace_data[] iterators are now properly capped by TCD_TYPE_MAX.
- SPLAT_MAJOR 229 conflicted with a 'hvc' device on my SLES system.
  Since this was always an arbitrary choice I picked something else.
- The HAVE_PGDAT_LIST case should set pgdat_list_addr to the value stored
  at the address of the memory location returned by kallsyms_lookup_name().
2009-05-20 15:30:13 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 5232d256b4 SLES10 Fixes (part 6)
- Prior to 2.6.17 there were no *_pgdat helper functions in mm/mmzone.c.
  Instead for_each_zone() operated directly on pgdat_list which may or
  may not have been exported depending on how your kernel was compiled.
  Now new configure checks determine if you have the helpers or not, and
  if the needed symbols are exported.  If they are not exported then they
  are dynamically aquired at runtime by kallsyms_lookup_name().
2009-05-20 14:23:13 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 3731931529 Powerpc Fixes (part 1):
- Enable builds for powerpc ISA type.
- Add DIV_ROUND_UP and roundup macros if unavailable.
- Cast 64-bit values for %lld format string to (long long) to
  quiet compile warning.
2009-05-20 12:23:24 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf fe4573928f SLES10 Fixes (part 5):
- Fix incorrect mapping for spl_device_create()->class_device_create()
  which is the prefered API for 2.6.13 to 2.6.17 based kernels.
2009-05-20 11:54:40 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 6c9433c150 SLES10 Fixes (part 3):
- Configure check for mutex_lock_nested().  This function was introduced
  as part of the mutex validator in 2.6.18, but if it's unavailable then
  it's safe to fallback to a plain mutex_lock().
2009-05-20 11:00:39 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 96dded3844 SLES10 Fixes (part 2):
- Configure check, the div64_64() function was renamed to
  div64_u64() as of 2.6.26.
- Configure check, the global_page_state() fuction was introduced
  in 2.6.18 kernels.  The earlier 2.6.16 based SLES10 must not try
  and use it, thankfully get_zone_counts() is still available.
- To simplify debugging poison all symbols aquired dynamically
  using spl_kallsyms_lookup_name() with SYMBOL_POISON.
- Add console messages when the user mode helpers fail.
- spl_kmem_init_globals() use bit shifts instead of division.
- When the monotonic clock is unavailable __gethrtime() must perform
  the HZ division as an 'unsigned long long' because the SPL only
  implements __udivdi3(), and not __divdi3() for 'long long' division
  on 32-bit arches.
2009-05-20 10:08:37 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 759dfe7d43 Add list_move_tail() function. 2009-03-19 21:40:07 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 0cbaeb117a Allow spl_config.h to be included by dependant packages
We need dependent packages to be able to include spl_config.h so they
can leverage the configure checks the SPL has done.  This is important
because several of the spl headers need the results of these checks to
work properly.  Unfortunately, the autoheader build product is always
private to a particular build and defined certain common things.
(PACKAGE, VERSION, etc).  This prevents other packages which also use
autoheader from being include because the definitions conflict.  To
avoid this problem the SPL build system leverage AH_BOTTOM to include
a spl_unconfig.h at the botton of the autoheader build product.  This
custom include undefs all known shared symbols to prevent the confict.
This does however mean that those definition are also not availble
to the SPL package either.  The SPL package therefore uses the
equivilant SPL_META_* definitions.
2009-03-17 14:55:59 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf e11d6c5f50 FC10/i686 Compatibility Update (2.6.27.19-170.2.35.fc10.i686)
In the interests of portability I have added a FC10/i686 box to
my list of development platforms.  The hope is this will allow me
to keep current with upstream kernel API changes, and at the same
time ensure I don't accidentally break x86 support.  This patch
resolves all remaining issues observed under that environment.

1) SPL_AC_ZONE_STAT_ITEM_FIA autoconf check added.  As of 2.6.21
the kernel added a clean API for modules to get the global count
for free, inactive, and active pages.  The SPL attempts to detect
if this API is available and directly map spl_global_page_state()
to global_page_state().  If the full API is not available then
spl_global_page_state() is implemented as a thin layer to get
these values via get_zone_counts() if that symbol is available.

2) New kmem:vmem_size regression test added to validate correct
vmem_size() functionality.  The test case acquires the current
global vmem state, allocates from the vmem region, then verifies
the allocation is correctly reflected in the vmem_size() stats.

3) Change splat_kmem_cache_thread_test() to always use KMC_KMEM
based memory.  On x86 systems with limited virtual address space
failures resulted due to exhaustig the address space.  The tests
really need to problem exhausting all memory on the system thus
we need to use the physical address space.

4) Change kmem:slab_lock to cap it's memory usage at availrmem
instead of using the native linux nr_free_pages().  This provides
additional test coverage of the SPL Linux VM integration.

5) Change kmem:slab_overcommit to perform allocation of 256K
instead of 1M.  On x86 based systems it is not possible to create
a kmem backed slab with entires of that size.  To compensate for
this the number of allocations performed in increased by 4x.

6) Additional autoconf documentation for proposed upstream API
changes to make additional symbols available to modules.

7) Console error messages added when spl_kallsyms_lookup_name()
fails to locate an expected symbol.  This causes the module to fail
to load and we need to know exactly which symbol was not available.
2009-03-17 12:16:31 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 7257ec4185 Fix taskq_wait() not waiting bug
I'm very surprised this has not surfaced until now.  But the taskq_wait()
implementation work only wait successfully the first time it was called.
Subsequent usage of taskq_wait() on the taskq would not wait.

The issue was caused by tq->tq_lowest_id being set to MAX_INT after the
first wait completed.  This caused subsequent waits which check that the
waiting id is less than the lowest taskq id to always succeed.  The fix
is to ensure that tq->tq_lowest_id is never set larger than tq->tq_next.id.

Additional fixes which were added to this patch include:
1) Fix a race by placing the taskq_wait_check() in the tq->tq_lock spinlock.
2) taskq_wait() should wait for the largest outstanding id.
3) Multiple spelling corrections.
4) Added taskq wait regression test to validate correct behavior.
2009-03-15 15:13:49 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 8123ac4f0d Added SPL_AC_5ARGS_DEVICE_CREATE autoconf configure check
As of 2.6.27 kernels the device_create() API changed to include
a private data argument.  This check detects which version of
device_create() function the kernel has and properly defines
spl_device_create() to use the correct prototype.
2009-03-13 13:38:43 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 6c33eb8162 Minor bug fix in XDR code introduced in last minute change before landing.
1) Removed xdr_bytesrec typedef which has no consumers.  If we re-add
   it should also probably be xdr_bytesrec_t.
2009-03-11 16:27:35 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia f48b61938a Add XDR implementation
Added proper XDR implementation (Lustre bug 17662), needed for on-disk
compatibility between platforms of different endianness.
2009-03-11 13:00:26 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf 0c617c9a63 Build system cleanup
1) Undefine non-unique entries in spl_config.h
2) Minor Makefile cleanup
3) Don't use includedir for proper kernel header install
2009-03-11 12:37:34 -07:00
Brian Behlendorf c5f704607b Build system and packaging (RPM support)
An update to the build system to properly support all commonly
used Makefile targets these include:

  make all        # Build everything
  make install    # Install everything
  make clean	  # Clean up build products
  make distclean  # Clean up everything
  make dist       # Create package tarball
  make srpm       # Create package source RPM
  make rpm        # Create package binary RPMs
  make tags       # Create ctags and etags for everything

Extra care was taken to ensure that the source RPMs are fully
rebuildable against Fedora/RHEL/Chaos kernels.  To build binary
RPMs from the source RPM for your system simply run:

  rpmbuild --rebuild spl-x.y.z-1.src.rpm

This will produce two binary RPMs with correct 'requires'
dependencies for your kernel.  One will contain all spl modules
and support utilities, the other is a devel package for compiling
additional kernel modules which are dependant on the spl.

  spl-x.y.z-1_<kernel version>.x86_64.rpm
  spl-devel-x.y.2-1_<kernel version>.x86_64.rpm
2009-03-09 15:56:55 -07:00
Ricardo M. Correia 32f74c5280 XXX: Temporarily disable vmem_size(). 2009-03-05 10:13:59 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 04fa349d69 Merge branch 'kallsyms' 2009-03-04 10:19:41 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d1ff2312b0 Linux VM Integration Cleanup
Remove all instances of functions being reimplemented in the SPL.
When the prototypes are available in the linux headers but the
function address itself is not exported use kallsyms_lookup_name()
to find the address.  The function name itself can them become a
define which calls a function pointer.  This is preferable to
reimplementing the function in the SPL because it ensures we get
the correct version of the function for the running kernel.  This
is actually pretty safe because the prototype is defined in the
headers so we know we are calling the function properly.

This patch also includes a rhel5 kernel patch we exports the needed
symbols so we don't need to use kallsyms_lookup_name().  There are
autoconf checks to detect if the symbol is exported and if so to
use it directly.  We should add patches for stock upstream kernels
as needed if for no other reason than so we can easily track which
additional symbols we needed exported.  Those patches can also be
used by anyone willing to rebuild their kernel, but this should
not be a requirement.  The rhel5 version of the export-symbols
patch has been applied to the chaos kernel.

Additional fixes:
1) Implement vmem_size() function using get_vmalloc_info()
2) SPL_CHECK_SYMBOL_EXPORT macro updated to use $LINUX_OBJ instead
   of $LINUX because Module.symvers is a build product.  When
   $LINUX_OBJ != $LINUX we will not properly detect exported symbols.
3) SPL_LINUX_COMPILE_IFELSE macro updated to add include2 and
   $LINUX/include search paths to allow proper compilation when
   the kernel target build directory is not the source directory.
2009-03-04 10:04:15 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia eb7c7f44e8 Changed ptob()/btop() mult/div into bit shifts.
Added necessary include for PAGE_SHIFT.
2009-02-25 15:50:58 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia 7819a92a9b Added btop() and moved ptob() to include/sys/param.h. 2009-02-25 15:50:50 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia 4327ac3ff9 Changed z_compress_level() and z_uncompress() prototypes to match the ones in Solaris.
Fixes compilation warning.
2009-02-23 11:45:59 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf a1cf80b493 Matching kmem_free() fix for use after free case.
See commit bb01879ebe for a full
description.  This issue should have been addressed in the same
commit but it slipped my mind.
2009-02-19 12:28:10 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 99639e4a13 Add zone_get_hostid() function
Minimal support added for the zone_get_hostid() function.  Only
global zones are supported therefore this function must be called
with a NULL argumment.  Additionally, I've added the HW_HOSTID_LEN
define and updated all instances where a hard coded magic value
of 11 was used; "A good riddance of bad rubbish!"
2009-02-19 11:26:17 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf bb01879ebe Coverity 9654, 9654: Use After Free
Because vmem_free() was implemented as a macro using the ','
operator to evaluate both arguments and we performed the free
before evaluating size we would deference the free'd pointer.
To resolve the problem we just invert the ordering and evaluate
size first just as if it was evaluated by the caller when being
passed to this function.  This ensure that if the caller is
doing something reckless like performing an assignment as
part of the size argument we still perform it and it simply
doesn't get removed by the macro.  Oh course nobody should
be doing this sort of thing, but just in case.
2009-02-17 16:51:19 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 15dc8b072e Coverity 9652, 9653: No Effect
Removed 2 ASSERT()s which had no effect because by definition
size_t is always an unsigned type thus is always >= 0.
2009-02-17 16:30:58 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 014b1d6f54 Coverity 9641: Buffer Size
When SPLAT_TEST_INIT() initialized SPLAT_KMEM_TEST11_NAME the short
short test name overran the static length buffer of SPLAT_NAME_SIZE.
This was fixed by increasing the buffer length from 16 to 20 bytes.
2009-02-17 16:24:26 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 9b1b8e4c24 kmem slab magazine ageing deadlock
- The previous magazine ageing sceme relied on the on_each_cpu()
  function to call spl_magazine_age() on each cpu.  It turns out
  this could deadlock with do_flush_tlb_all() which also relies
  on the IPI based on_each_cpu().  To avoid this problem a per-
  magazine delayed work item is created and indepentantly
  scheduled to the correct cpu removing the need for on_each_cpu().
- Additionally two unused fields were removed from the type
  spl_kmem_cache_t, they were hold overs from previous cleanup.
    - struct work_struct work
    - struct timer_list timer
2009-02-17 15:52:18 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf f6c5d4ff88 Build system update
- Added default build flags:
  -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Werror -Wshadow
- Added missing Makefile's for include/ subdirectories.
2009-02-12 14:45:22 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 37db7d8cf9 kmem slab fixes
- Default SPL_KMEM_CACHE_DELAY changed to 15 to match Solaris.
- Aged out slab checking occurs every SPL_KMEM_CACHE_DELAY / 3.
- skc->skc_reap tunable added whichs allows callers of
  spl_slab_reclaim() to cap the number of slabs reclaimed.
  On Solaris all eligible slabs are always reclaimed, and this
  is still the default behavior.  However, I suspect that is
  not always wise for reasons such as in the next comment.
- spl_slab_reclaim() added cond_resched() while walking the
  slab/object free lists.  Soft lockups were observed when
  freeing large numbers of vmalloc'd slabs/objets.
- spl_slab_reclaim() 'sks->sks_ref > 0' check changes from
  incorrect 'break' to 'continue' to ensure all slabs are
  checked.
- spl_cache_age() reworked to avoid a deadlock with
  do_flush_tlb_all() which occured because we slept waiting
  for completion in spl_cache_age().  To waiting for magazine
  reclamation to finish is not required so we no longer wait.
- spl_magazine_create() and spl_magazine_destroy() shifted
  back to using for_each_online_cpu() instead of the
  spl_on_each_cpu() approach which was of course a bad idea
  due to memory allocations which Ricardo pointed out.
2009-02-12 13:32:10 -08:00
Ricardo M. Correia f500ccff35 Minor bug fix due to MAXOFFSET_T constant being too large on 32-bit systems. 2009-02-07 00:53:39 +00:00
Brian Behlendorf 4ab13d3b5c Additional Linux VM integration
Added support for Solaris swapfs_minfree, and swapfs_reserve tunables.
In additional availrmem is now available and return a reasonable value
which is reasonably analogous to the Solaris meaning.  On linux we
return the sun of free and inactive pages since these are all easily
reclaimable.

All tunables are available in /proc/sys/kernel/spl/vm/* and they may
need a little adjusting once we observe the real behavior.  Some of
the defaults are mapped to similar linux counterparts, others are
straight from the OpenSolaris defaults.
2009-02-05 12:26:34 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 36b313dacf Linux VM integration / device special files
Support added to provide reasonable values for the global Solaris
VM variables: minfree, desfree, lotsfree, needfree.  These values
are set to the sum of their per-zone linux counterparts which
should be close enough for Solaris consumers.

When a non-GPL app links against the SPL we cannot use the udev
interfaces, which means non of the device special files are created.
Because of this I had added a poor mans udev which cause the SPL
to invoke an upcall and create the basic devices when a minor
is registered.  When a minor is unregistered we use the vnode
interface to unlink the special file.
2009-02-04 15:15:41 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 31a033ecd4 2.6.27+ portability changes
- Added SPL_AC_3ARGS_ON_EACH_CPU configure check to determine
  if the older 4 argument version of on_each_cpu() should be
  used or the new 3 argument version.  The retry argument was
  dropped in the new API which was never used anyway.
- Updated work queue compatibility wrappers.  The old way this
  worked was to pass a data point when initialized the workqueue.
  The new API assumed the work item is embedding in a structure
  and we us container_of() to find that data pointer.
- Updated skc->skc_flags to be an unsigned long which is now
  type checked in the bit operations.  This silences the warnings.
- Updated autogen products and splat tests accordingly
2009-02-02 15:12:30 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 416bae036b Add new workqueue header 2009-01-30 21:11:42 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf ea3e6ca9e5 kmem_cache hardening and performance improvements
- Added slab work queue task which gradually ages and free's slabs
  from the cache which have not been used recently.
- Optimized slab packing algorithm to ensure each slab contains the
  maximum number of objects without create to large a slab.
- Fix deadlock, we can never call kv_free() under the skc_lock.  We
  now unlink the objects and slabs from the cache itself and attach
  them to a private work list.  The contents of the list are then
  subsequently freed outside the spin lock.
- Move magazine create/destroy operation on to local cpu.
- Further performace optimizations by minimize the usage of the large
  per-cache skc_lock.  This includes the addition of KMC_BIT_REAPING
  bit mask which is used to prevent concurrent reaping, and to defer
  new slab creation when reaping is occuring.
- Add KMC_BIT_DESTROYING bit mask which is set when the cache is being
  destroyed, this is used to catch any task accessing the cache while
  it is being destroyed.
- Add comments to all the functions and additional comments to try
  and make everything as clear as possible.
- Major cleanup and additions to the SPLAT kmem tests to more
  rigerously stress the cache implementation and look for any problems.
  This includes correctness and performance tests.
- Updated portable work queue interfaces
2009-01-30 20:54:49 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 0f233eac33 Pull the blkdev header in to the sunldi for some useful structure definitions and helper functions 2009-01-26 16:47:49 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 48e0606a52 Implement kmem cache alignment argument 2009-01-26 09:02:04 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf e4f3ea278e Remove stray ` from macro 2009-01-23 08:59:11 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 511176398c Update debug.h to standardize VERIFY3_IMPL error messages in debug and non-debug mode 2009-01-22 09:41:47 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 1e4ed6c990 Add missing stub headers 2009-01-09 16:04:44 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 121d48c97d Add basic ksid_lookupdomain and ksiddomain_rele support, just allocations 2009-01-09 15:30:53 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 0e41414946 Add two new stub headers 2009-01-09 14:04:13 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 97735c39e3 Add VOP_SEEK 2009-01-09 13:59:39 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d83ba26e18 Add missing policy includes, add missing sun ddi bits 2009-01-09 10:49:47 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 70997fb4b1 Add share.h stub 2009-01-09 10:06:18 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 71c8ab9c68 Drat fix missing ; 2009-01-09 10:05:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 23f5c4c281 Add missing callback_context_t and fid_t types 2009-01-09 10:03:37 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 703e7a3cf4 Add stubs for three more includes 2009-01-09 09:47:27 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf d702c04ff1 Add 5 splat tests for list handling 2009-01-07 12:54:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 4c18c39ecb Add include/sys/compress.h header 2009-01-06 09:47:00 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 160c63ab76 Add P2BOUNDARY macro 2009-01-06 09:23:13 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 7adbea4141 Pull in some default page typedefs 2009-01-05 16:14:38 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 0f37204417 Add DTRACE_PROBE(a) 2009-01-05 16:09:21 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf b53c565e65 Stub u8_textprep.h for inclusion purposes 2009-01-05 15:37:07 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf e9cb2b4f64 Add system taskq support 2009-01-05 15:08:03 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf 8a2b328b18 Remove u8_textprep, we will not be implementing this nightmare yet 2009-01-05 11:32:08 -08:00
Brian Behlendorf f3fc90c249 Include the header 2008-12-23 16:48:15 -08:00