xfs_iwalk.c 14.1 KB
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
/*
 * Copyright (C) 2019 Oracle.  All Rights Reserved.
 * Author: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
 */
#include "xfs.h"
#include "xfs_fs.h"
#include "xfs_shared.h"
#include "xfs_format.h"
#include "xfs_log_format.h"
#include "xfs_trans_resv.h"
#include "xfs_mount.h"
#include "xfs_inode.h"
#include "xfs_btree.h"
#include "xfs_ialloc.h"
#include "xfs_ialloc_btree.h"
#include "xfs_iwalk.h"
#include "xfs_error.h"
#include "xfs_trace.h"
#include "xfs_icache.h"
#include "xfs_health.h"
#include "xfs_trans.h"

/*
 * Walking Inodes in the Filesystem
 * ================================
 *
 * This iterator function walks a subset of filesystem inodes in increasing
 * order from @startino until there are no more inodes.  For each allocated
 * inode it finds, it calls a walk function with the relevant inode number and
 * a pointer to caller-provided data.  The walk function can return the usual
 * negative error code to stop the iteration; 0 to continue the iteration; or
 * XFS_IWALK_ABORT to stop the iteration.  This return value is returned to the
 * caller.
 *
 * Internally, we allow the walk function to do anything, which means that we
 * cannot maintain the inobt cursor or our lock on the AGI buffer.  We
 * therefore cache the inobt records in kernel memory and only call the walk
 * function when our memory buffer is full.  @nr_recs is the number of records
 * that we've cached, and @sz_recs is the size of our cache.
 *
 * It is the responsibility of the walk function to ensure it accesses
 * allocated inodes, as the inobt records may be stale by the time they are
 * acted upon.
 */

struct xfs_iwalk_ag {
	struct xfs_mount		*mp;
	struct xfs_trans		*tp;

	/* Where do we start the traversal? */
	xfs_ino_t			startino;

	/* Array of inobt records we cache. */
	struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*recs;

	/* Number of entries allocated for the @recs array. */
	unsigned int			sz_recs;

	/* Number of entries in the @recs array that are in use. */
	unsigned int			nr_recs;

	/* Inode walk function and data pointer. */
	xfs_iwalk_fn			iwalk_fn;
	void				*data;
};

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/*
 * Loop over all clusters in a chunk for a given incore inode allocation btree
 * record.  Do a readahead if there are any allocated inodes in that cluster.
 */
STATIC void
xfs_iwalk_ichunk_ra(
	struct xfs_mount		*mp,
	xfs_agnumber_t			agno,
	struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*irec)
{
	struct xfs_ino_geometry		*igeo = M_IGEO(mp);
	xfs_agblock_t			agbno;
	struct blk_plug			plug;
	int				i;	/* inode chunk index */

	agbno = XFS_AGINO_TO_AGBNO(mp, irec->ir_startino);

	blk_start_plug(&plug);
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	for (i = 0; i < XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK; i += igeo->inodes_per_cluster) {
		xfs_inofree_t	imask;

		imask = xfs_inobt_maskn(i, igeo->inodes_per_cluster);
		if (imask & ~irec->ir_free) {
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			xfs_btree_reada_bufs(mp, agno, agbno,
					igeo->blocks_per_cluster,
					&xfs_inode_buf_ops);
		}
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		agbno += igeo->blocks_per_cluster;
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	}
	blk_finish_plug(&plug);
}

/*
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 * Lookup the inode chunk that the given @agino lives in and then get the
 * record if we found the chunk.  Set the bits in @irec's free mask that
 * correspond to the inodes before @agino so that we skip them.  This is how we
 * restart an inode walk that was interrupted in the middle of an inode record.
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 */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_grab_ichunk(
	struct xfs_btree_cur		*cur,	/* btree cursor */
	xfs_agino_t			agino,	/* starting inode of chunk */
	int				*icount,/* return # of inodes grabbed */
	struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*irec)	/* btree record */
{
	int				idx;	/* index into inode chunk */
	int				stat;
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	int				i;
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	int				error = 0;

	/* Lookup the inode chunk that this inode lives in */
	error = xfs_inobt_lookup(cur, agino, XFS_LOOKUP_LE, &stat);
	if (error)
		return error;
	if (!stat) {
		*icount = 0;
		return error;
	}

	/* Get the record, should always work */
	error = xfs_inobt_get_rec(cur, irec, &stat);
	if (error)
		return error;
	XFS_WANT_CORRUPTED_RETURN(cur->bc_mp, stat == 1);

	/* Check if the record contains the inode in request */
	if (irec->ir_startino + XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK <= agino) {
		*icount = 0;
		return 0;
	}

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	idx = agino - irec->ir_startino;
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	/*
	 * We got a right chunk with some left inodes allocated at it.  Grab
	 * the chunk record.  Mark all the uninteresting inodes free because
	 * they're before our start point.
	 */
	for (i = 0; i < idx; i++) {
		if (XFS_INOBT_MASK(i) & ~irec->ir_free)
			irec->ir_freecount++;
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	}

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	irec->ir_free |= xfs_inobt_maskn(0, idx);
	*icount = irec->ir_count - irec->ir_freecount;
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	return 0;
}

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/* Allocate memory for a walk. */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_alloc(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag	*iwag)
{
	size_t			size;

	ASSERT(iwag->recs == NULL);
	iwag->nr_recs = 0;

	/* Allocate a prefetch buffer for inobt records. */
	size = iwag->sz_recs * sizeof(struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore);
	iwag->recs = kmem_alloc(size, KM_MAYFAIL);
	if (iwag->recs == NULL)
		return -ENOMEM;

	return 0;
}

/* Free memory we allocated for a walk. */
STATIC void
xfs_iwalk_free(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag	*iwag)
{
	kmem_free(iwag->recs);
	iwag->recs = NULL;
}

/* For each inuse inode in each cached inobt record, call our function. */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag		*iwag)
{
	struct xfs_mount		*mp = iwag->mp;
	struct xfs_trans		*tp = iwag->tp;
	xfs_ino_t			ino;
	unsigned int			i, j;
	xfs_agnumber_t			agno;
	int				error;

	agno = XFS_INO_TO_AGNO(mp, iwag->startino);
	for (i = 0; i < iwag->nr_recs; i++) {
		struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*irec = &iwag->recs[i];

		trace_xfs_iwalk_ag_rec(mp, agno, irec);

		for (j = 0; j < XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK; j++) {
			/* Skip if this inode is free */
			if (XFS_INOBT_MASK(j) & irec->ir_free)
				continue;

			/* Otherwise call our function. */
			ino = XFS_AGINO_TO_INO(mp, agno, irec->ir_startino + j);
			error = iwag->iwalk_fn(mp, tp, ino, iwag->data);
			if (error)
				return error;
		}
	}

	return 0;
}

/* Delete cursor and let go of AGI. */
static inline void
xfs_iwalk_del_inobt(
	struct xfs_trans	*tp,
	struct xfs_btree_cur	**curpp,
	struct xfs_buf		**agi_bpp,
	int			error)
{
	if (*curpp) {
		xfs_btree_del_cursor(*curpp, error);
		*curpp = NULL;
	}
	if (*agi_bpp) {
		xfs_trans_brelse(tp, *agi_bpp);
		*agi_bpp = NULL;
	}
}

/*
 * Set ourselves up for walking inobt records starting from a given point in
 * the filesystem.
 *
 * If caller passed in a nonzero start inode number, load the record from the
 * inobt and make the record look like all the inodes before agino are free so
 * that we skip them, and then move the cursor to the next inobt record.  This
 * is how we support starting an iwalk in the middle of an inode chunk.
 *
 * If the caller passed in a start number of zero, move the cursor to the first
 * inobt record.
 *
 * The caller is responsible for cleaning up the cursor and buffer pointer
 * regardless of the error status.
 */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_ag_start(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag	*iwag,
	xfs_agnumber_t		agno,
	xfs_agino_t		agino,
	struct xfs_btree_cur	**curpp,
	struct xfs_buf		**agi_bpp,
	int			*has_more)
{
	struct xfs_mount	*mp = iwag->mp;
	struct xfs_trans	*tp = iwag->tp;
	int			icount;
	int			error;

	/* Set up a fresh cursor and empty the inobt cache. */
	iwag->nr_recs = 0;
	error = xfs_inobt_cur(mp, tp, agno, XFS_BTNUM_INO, curpp, agi_bpp);
	if (error)
		return error;

	/* Starting at the beginning of the AG?  That's easy! */
	if (agino == 0)
		return xfs_inobt_lookup(*curpp, 0, XFS_LOOKUP_GE, has_more);

	/*
	 * Otherwise, we have to grab the inobt record where we left off, stuff
	 * the record into our cache, and then see if there are more records.
	 * We require a lookup cache of at least two elements so that we don't
	 * have to deal with tearing down the cursor to walk the records.
	 */
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	error = xfs_iwalk_grab_ichunk(*curpp, agino, &icount,
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			&iwag->recs[iwag->nr_recs]);
	if (error)
		return error;
	if (icount)
		iwag->nr_recs++;

	/*
	 * The prefetch calculation is supposed to give us a large enough inobt
	 * record cache that grab_ichunk can stage a partial first record and
	 * the loop body can cache a record without having to check for cache
	 * space until after it reads an inobt record.
	 */
	ASSERT(iwag->nr_recs < iwag->sz_recs);

	return xfs_btree_increment(*curpp, 0, has_more);
}

/*
 * The inobt record cache is full, so preserve the inobt cursor state and
 * run callbacks on the cached inobt records.  When we're done, restore the
 * cursor state to wherever the cursor would have been had the cache not been
 * full (and therefore we could've just incremented the cursor) if *@has_more
 * is true.  On exit, *@has_more will indicate whether or not the caller should
 * try for more inode records.
 */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag		*iwag,
	xfs_agnumber_t			agno,
	struct xfs_btree_cur		**curpp,
	struct xfs_buf			**agi_bpp,
	int				*has_more)
{
	struct xfs_mount		*mp = iwag->mp;
	struct xfs_trans		*tp = iwag->tp;
	struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*irec;
	xfs_agino_t			restart;
	int				error;

	ASSERT(iwag->nr_recs > 0);

	/* Delete cursor but remember the last record we cached... */
	xfs_iwalk_del_inobt(tp, curpp, agi_bpp, 0);
	irec = &iwag->recs[iwag->nr_recs - 1];
	restart = irec->ir_startino + XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK - 1;

	error = xfs_iwalk_ag_recs(iwag);
	if (error)
		return error;

	/* ...empty the cache... */
	iwag->nr_recs = 0;

	if (!has_more)
		return 0;

	/* ...and recreate the cursor just past where we left off. */
	error = xfs_inobt_cur(mp, tp, agno, XFS_BTNUM_INO, curpp, agi_bpp);
	if (error)
		return error;

	return xfs_inobt_lookup(*curpp, restart, XFS_LOOKUP_GE, has_more);
}

/* Walk all inodes in a single AG, from @iwag->startino to the end of the AG. */
STATIC int
xfs_iwalk_ag(
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag		*iwag)
{
	struct xfs_mount		*mp = iwag->mp;
	struct xfs_trans		*tp = iwag->tp;
	struct xfs_buf			*agi_bp = NULL;
	struct xfs_btree_cur		*cur = NULL;
	xfs_agnumber_t			agno;
	xfs_agino_t			agino;
	int				has_more;
	int				error = 0;

	/* Set up our cursor at the right place in the inode btree. */
	agno = XFS_INO_TO_AGNO(mp, iwag->startino);
	agino = XFS_INO_TO_AGINO(mp, iwag->startino);
	error = xfs_iwalk_ag_start(iwag, agno, agino, &cur, &agi_bp, &has_more);

	while (!error && has_more) {
		struct xfs_inobt_rec_incore	*irec;

		cond_resched();

		/* Fetch the inobt record. */
		irec = &iwag->recs[iwag->nr_recs];
		error = xfs_inobt_get_rec(cur, irec, &has_more);
		if (error || !has_more)
			break;

		/* No allocated inodes in this chunk; skip it. */
		if (irec->ir_freecount == irec->ir_count) {
			error = xfs_btree_increment(cur, 0, &has_more);
			if (error)
				break;
			continue;
		}

		/*
		 * Start readahead for this inode chunk in anticipation of
		 * walking the inodes.
		 */
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		xfs_iwalk_ichunk_ra(mp, agno, irec);
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		/*
		 * If there's space in the buffer for more records, increment
		 * the btree cursor and grab more.
		 */
		if (++iwag->nr_recs < iwag->sz_recs) {
			error = xfs_btree_increment(cur, 0, &has_more);
			if (error || !has_more)
				break;
			continue;
		}

		/*
		 * Otherwise, we need to save cursor state and run the callback
		 * function on the cached records.  The run_callbacks function
		 * is supposed to return a cursor pointing to the record where
		 * we would be if we had been able to increment like above.
		 */
		ASSERT(has_more);
		error = xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks(iwag, agno, &cur, &agi_bp,
				&has_more);
	}

	if (iwag->nr_recs == 0 || error)
		goto out;

	/* Walk the unprocessed records in the cache. */
	error = xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks(iwag, agno, &cur, &agi_bp, &has_more);

out:
	xfs_iwalk_del_inobt(tp, &cur, &agi_bp, error);
	return error;
}

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/*
 * We experimentally determined that the reduction in ioctl call overhead
 * diminishes when userspace asks for more than 2048 inodes, so we'll cap
 * prefetch at this point.
 */
#define IWALK_MAX_INODE_PREFETCH	(2048U)

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/*
 * Given the number of inodes to prefetch, set the number of inobt records that
 * we cache in memory, which controls the number of inodes we try to read
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 * ahead.  Set the maximum if @inodes == 0.
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 */
static inline unsigned int
xfs_iwalk_prefetch(
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	unsigned int		inodes)
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{
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	unsigned int		inobt_records;

	/*
	 * If the caller didn't tell us the number of inodes they wanted,
	 * assume the maximum prefetch possible for best performance.
	 * Otherwise, cap prefetch at that maximum so that we don't start an
	 * absurd amount of prefetch.
	 */
	if (inodes == 0)
		inodes = IWALK_MAX_INODE_PREFETCH;
	inodes = min(inodes, IWALK_MAX_INODE_PREFETCH);

	/* Round the inode count up to a full chunk. */
	inodes = round_up(inodes, XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK);

	/*
	 * In order to convert the number of inodes to prefetch into an
	 * estimate of the number of inobt records to cache, we require a
	 * conversion factor that reflects our expectations of the average
	 * loading factor of an inode chunk.  Based on data gathered, most
	 * (but not all) filesystems manage to keep the inode chunks totally
	 * full, so we'll underestimate slightly so that our readahead will
	 * still deliver the performance we want on aging filesystems:
	 *
	 * inobt = inodes / (INODES_PER_CHUNK * (4 / 5));
	 *
	 * The funny math is to avoid integer division.
	 */
	inobt_records = (inodes * 5) / (4 * XFS_INODES_PER_CHUNK);

	/*
	 * Allocate enough space to prefetch at least two inobt records so that
	 * we can cache both the record where the iwalk started and the next
	 * record.  This simplifies the AG inode walk loop setup code.
	 */
	return max(inobt_records, 2U);
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}

/*
 * Walk all inodes in the filesystem starting from @startino.  The @iwalk_fn
 * will be called for each allocated inode, being passed the inode's number and
 * @data.  @max_prefetch controls how many inobt records' worth of inodes we
 * try to readahead.
 */
int
xfs_iwalk(
	struct xfs_mount	*mp,
	struct xfs_trans	*tp,
	xfs_ino_t		startino,
	xfs_iwalk_fn		iwalk_fn,
	unsigned int		inode_records,
	void			*data)
{
	struct xfs_iwalk_ag	iwag = {
		.mp		= mp,
		.tp		= tp,
		.iwalk_fn	= iwalk_fn,
		.data		= data,
		.startino	= startino,
		.sz_recs	= xfs_iwalk_prefetch(inode_records),
	};
	xfs_agnumber_t		agno = XFS_INO_TO_AGNO(mp, startino);
	int			error;

	ASSERT(agno < mp->m_sb.sb_agcount);

	error = xfs_iwalk_alloc(&iwag);
	if (error)
		return error;

	for (; agno < mp->m_sb.sb_agcount; agno++) {
		error = xfs_iwalk_ag(&iwag);
		if (error)
			break;
		iwag.startino = XFS_AGINO_TO_INO(mp, agno + 1, 0);
	}

	xfs_iwalk_free(&iwag);
	return error;
}