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Change-Id: Id7e003e4a53d0a0057c1c84e1cd704c80a6cb015
Fixes: bz#1744874
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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At the moment new stack doesn't populate frame->root->unique in all cases. This
makes it difficult to debug hung frames by examining successive state dumps.
Fuse and server xlators populate it whenever they can, but other xlators won't
be able to assign 'unique' when they need to create a new frame/stack because
they don't know what 'unique' fuse/server xlators already used. What we need is
for unique to be correct. If a stack with same unique is present in successive
statedumps, that means the same operation is still in progress. This makes
'finding hung frames' part of debugging hung frames easier.
fixes bz#1714098
Change-Id: I3e9a8f6b4111e260106c48a2ac3a41ef29361b9e
Signed-off-by: Pranith Kumar K <pkarampu@redhat.com>
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In scenarios where a mount fails before creating log file, doesn't
make sense to give message to 'check log file'. See below:
```
ERROR: failed to create logfile "/var/log/glusterfs/mnt.log" (No space left on device)
ERROR: failed to open logfile /var/log/glusterfs/mnt.log
Mount failed. Please check the log file for more details.
```
Fixes: bz#1688068
Change-Id: I1d837caa4f9bc9f1a37780783e95007e01ae4e3f
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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This patch fixed coverity issue in fuse-bridge.c.
CID : 1398630 : Resource leak
CID : 1399757 : Uninitialized pointer read
updates: bz#789278
Change-Id: I69f8591400ee56a5d215eeac443a8e3d7777db27
Signed-off-by: Sunny Kumar <sunkumar@redhat.com>
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updates bz#1193929
Change-Id: I55ffa8f086ad9570f2526d91c196d7de9ffe6add
Signed-off-by: Pranith Kumar K <pkarampu@redhat.com>
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This patch fixes memory leak reported by ASan.
Tracebacks:
ERROR: LeakSanitizer: detected memory leaks
Direct leak of 712 byte(s) in 1 object(s) allocated from:
#0 0x7f35139dc848 in __interceptor_malloc (/lib64/libasan.so.5+0xef848)
#1 0x7f35136efb29 in __gf_malloc ../libglusterfs/src/mem-pool.c:136
#2 0x7f3510591ce9 in fuse_thread_proc ../xlators/mount/fuse/src/fuse-bridge.c:5929
#3 0x7f351336d58d in start_thread (/lib64/libpthread.so.0+0x858d)
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: 712 byte(s) leaked in 1 allocation(s).
updates: bz#1633930
Change-Id: Ie5b4da6b338d8e5fc770c5b2da1238e3462468ac
Signed-off-by: Sunny Kumar <sunkumar@redhat.com>
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This patch implements a thread pool that is wait-free for adding jobs to
the queue and uses a very small locked region to get jobs. This makes it
possible to decrease contention drastically. It's based on wfcqueue
structure provided by urcu library.
It automatically enables more threads when load demands it, and stops
them when not needed. There's a maximum number of threads that can be
used. This value can be configured.
Depending on the workload, the maximum number of threads plays an
important role. So it needs to be configured for optimal performance.
Currently the thread pool doesn't self adjust the maximum for the
workload, so this configuration needs to be changed manually.
For this reason, the global thread pool has been made optional, so that
volumes can still use the thread pool provided by io-threads.
To enable it for bricks, the following option needs to be set:
config.global-threading = on
This option has no effect if bricks are already running. A restart is
required to activate it. It's recommended to also enable the following
option when running bricks with the global thread pool:
performance.iot-pass-through = on
To enable it for a FUSE mount point, the option '--global-threading'
must be added to the mount command. To change it, an umount and remount
is needed. It's recommended to disable the following option when using
global threading on a mount point:
performance.client-io-threads = off
To enable it for services managed by glusterd, glusterd needs to be
started with option '--global-threading'. In this case all daemons, like
self-heal, will be using the global thread pool.
Currently it can only be enabled for bricks, FUSE mounts and glusterd
services.
The maximum number of threads for clients and bricks can be configured
using the following options:
config.client-threads
config.brick-threads
These options can be applied online and its effect is immediate most of
the times. If one of them is set to 0, the maximum number of threads
will be calcutated as #cores * 2.
Some distributions use a very old userspace-rcu library (version 0.7)
for this reason, some header files from version 0.10 have been copied
into contrib/userspace-rcu and are used if the detected version is 0.7
or older.
An additional change has been made to io-threads to prevent that threads
are started when iot-pass-through is set.
Change-Id: I09d19e246b9e6d53c6247b29dfca6af6ee00a24b
updates: #532
Signed-off-by: Xavi Hernandez <xhernandez@redhat.com>
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When "auto-invalidation" option was not specified for mount script,
glusterfs cmdline ended with "--auto-invalidation=" option. This patch
fixes that bug in mount script.
Thanks to Amar for reporting it.
Change-Id: Ie5cd4c6ffb3ac644d9d2b032035f914a935d05a8
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra Gowdappa <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
updates: bz#1664934
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The setxattr function receives a pointer to raw data, which may not be
null-terminated. When this data needs to be interpreted as a string, an
explicit null termination needs to be added before using the value.
Change-Id: Id110f9b215b22786da5782adec9449ce38d0d563
updates: bz#1193929
Signed-off-by: Xavi Hernandez <xhernandez@redhat.com>
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Auto invalidation is necessary when same (meta)data is shared/access
across multiple mounts. However, if (meta)data is not shared, all
relevant I/O goes through the cache of single mount and hence is
coherent with (meta)data on bricks always. So, fuse-auto-invalidation
can be disabled for this case which gives a huge performance boost for
workloads that write data and then immediately read the data they just
wrote.
From glusterfs --help,
<snip>
--auto-invalidation[=BOOL] controls whether fuse-kernel can
auto-invalidate attribute, dentry and page-cache.
Disable this only if same files/directories are
not accessed across two different mounts
concurrently [default: "on"]
</snip>
Details on how disabling auto-invalidation helped to reduce pgbench
init times can be found at [1]. Time taken for pgbench init of scale
8000 was 8340s. That will be an improvement of 86% (59280s vs 8340s)
with auto-invalidations turned off along with other
optimizations. Just disabling auto-invalidation contributed 56%
improvement by reducing the total time taken by 33260s.
[1] https://www.spinics.net/lists/gluster-devel/msg25907.html
Change-Id: I0ed730dba9064bd9c576ad1800170a21e100e1ce
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra Gowdappa <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
updates: bz#1664934
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fixes: bz#1622665
Change-Id: I777d67b1b62c284c62a02277238ad7538eef001e
Signed-off-by: Iraj Jamali <ijamali@redhat.com>
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This reverts commit b87c397091bac6a4a6dec4e45a7671fad4a11770.
There seems to be some performance regression with the patch and hence recommended to have it reverted.
Updates: #325
Change-Id: Id85d6203173a44fad6cf51d39b3e96f37afcec09
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updates: bz#1622665
Change-Id: I9f3a75ed9be3d90f37843a140563c356830ef945
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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The current implementation of iobuf_pool has two problems:
- prealloc of 12.5MB memory, this limits the scale factor of the gluster
processes due to RAM requirements
- lock contention, as the current implementation has one global
iobuf_pool lock. Credits for debugging and addressing the same goes to
Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj@redhat.com>. Issue: #410
Hence changing the iobuf implementation to use per thread mem pool.
This may theoritically appear to cause perf dip as there is no preallocation.
But per thread mem pool will not have significant perf impact as the last
allocated memory is kept alive for subsequent allocs, for some time.
The worst case would be if iobufs requested are of random sizes each time.
The best case is, if we get iobuf request of the same size. From the perf
tests, this patch did not seem to cause any perf decrease.
Note that, with this patch, the rdma performance is going to degrade
drastically. In one of the previous patchsets we had fixes to not
degrade rdma perf, but rdma is not supported and also not tested [1].
Hence the decision was to not have code in rdma that is not tested
and not supported.
[1] https://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/gluster-users.old/2018-July/034400.html
Updates: #325
Change-Id: Ic2ef3bd498f9250dea25f25ba0c01fde19584b27
Signed-off-by: Poornima G <pgurusid@redhat.com>
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Use the (f)getxattr based clearlocks interface to
interrupt a pending lock request.
updates: #465
Change-Id: I4e91a4d8791fc688fed400a02de4c53487e61be2
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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The inode LRU mechanism is moot in fuse xlator (ie. there is no
limit for the LRU list), as fuse inodes are referenced from
kernel context, and thus they can only be dropped on request of
the kernel. This might results in a high number of passive
inodes which are useless for the glusterfs client, causing a
significant memory overhead.
This change tries to remedy this by extending the LRU semantics
and allowing to set a finite limit on the fuse inode LRU.
A brief history of problem:
When gluster's inode table was designed, fuse didn't have any
'invalidate' method, which means, userspace application could
never ask kernel to send a 'forget()' fop, instead had to wait
for kernel to send it based on kernel's parameters. Inode table
remembers the number of times kernel has cached the inode based
on the 'nlookup' parameter. And 'nlookup' field is not used by
no other entry points (like server-protocol, gfapi etc).
Hence the inode_table of fuse module always has to have lru-limit
as '0', which means no limit. GlusterFS always had to keep all
inodes in memory as kernel would have had a reference to it.
Again, the reason for this is, kernel's glusterfs inode reference
was pointer of 'inode_t' structure in glusterfs. As it is a
pointer, we could never free it (to prevent segfault, or memory
corruption).
Solution:
In the inode table, handle the prune case of inodes with 'nlookup'
differently, and call a 'invalidator' method, which in this case is
fuse_invalidate(), and it sends the request to kernel for getting
the forget request.
When the kernel sends the forget, it means, it has dropped all
the reference to the inode, and it will send the forget with the
'nlookup' parameter too. We just need to make sure to reduce the
'nlookup' value we have when we get forget. That automatically
cause the relevant prune to happen.
Credits: Csaba Henk, Xavier Hernandez, Raghavendra Gowdappa, Nithya B
fixes: bz#1560969
Change-Id: Ifee0737b23b12b1426c224ec5b8f591f487d83a2
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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* libglusterfs changes to add new fop
* Fuse changes:
- Changes in fuse bridge xlator to receive and send responses
* posix changes to perform the op on the backend filesystem
* protocol and rpc changes for sending and receiving the fop
* gfapi changes for performing the fop
* tools: glfs-copy-file-range tool for testing copy_file_range fop
- Although, copy_file_range support has been added to the upstream
fuse kernel module, no release has been made yet of a kernel
which contains the support. It is expected to come in the
upcoming release of linux-4.20
So, as of now, executing copy_file_range fop on a fused based
filesystem results in fuse kernel module sending read on the
source fd and write on the destination fd.
Therefore a small gfapi based tool has been written to be able
test the copy_file_range fop. This tool is similar (in functionality)
to the example program given in copy_file_range man page.
So, running regular copy_file_range on a fuse mount point and
running gfapi based glfs-copy-file-range tool gives some idea about
how fast, the copy_file_range (or reflink) can be.
On the local machine this was the result obtained.
mount -t glusterfs workstation:new /mnt/glusterfs
[root@workstation ~]# cd /mnt/glusterfs/
[root@workstation glusterfs]# ls
file
[root@workstation glusterfs]# cd
[root@workstation ~]# time /tmp/a.out /mnt/glusterfs/file /mnt/glusterfs/new
real 0m6.495s
user 0m0.000s
sys 0m1.439s
[root@workstation ~]# time glfs-copy-file-range $(hostname) new /tmp/glfs.log /file /rrr
OPEN_SRC: opening /file is success
OPEN_DST: opening /rrr is success
FSTAT_SRC: fstat on /rrr is success
copy_file_range successful
real 0m0.309s
user 0m0.039s
sys 0m0.017s
This tool needs following arguments
1) hostname
2) volume name
3) log file path
4) source file path (relative to the gluster volume root)
5) destination file path (relative to the gluster volume root)
"glfs-copy-file-range <hostname> <volume> <log file path> <source> <destination>"
- Added a testcase as well to run glfs-copy-file-range tool
* io-stats changes to capture the fop for profiling
* NOTE:
- Added conditional check to see whether the copy_file_range syscall
is available or not. If not, then return ENOSYS.
- Added conditional check for kernel minor version in fuse_kernel.h
and fuse-bridge while referring to copy_file_range. And the kernel
minor version is kept as it is. i.e. 24. Increment it in future
when there is a kernel release which contains the support for
copy_file_range fop in fuse kernel module.
* The document which contains a writeup on this enhancement can be found at
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1BSILbXr_knynNwxSyyu503JoTz5QFM_4suNIh2WwrSc/edit
Change-Id: I280069c814dd21ce6ec3be00a884fc24ab692367
updates: #536
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra Bhat <raghavendra@redhat.com>
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Fixes: #164
Change-Id: I93ad6f0232a1dc534df099059f69951e1339086f
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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libglusterfs devel package headers are referenced in code using
include semantics for a program, this while it works can be better
especially when dealing with out of tree xlator builds or in
general out of tree devel package usage.
Towards this, the following changes are done,
- moved all devel headers under a glusterfs directory
- Included these headers using system header notation <> in all
code outside of libglusterfs
- Included these headers using own program notation "" within
libglusterfs
This change although big, is just moving around the headers and
making it correct when including these headers from other sources.
This helps us correctly include libglusterfs includes without
namespace conflicts.
Change-Id: Id2a98854e671a7ee5d73be44da5ba1a74252423b
Updates: bz#1193929
Signed-off-by: ShyamsundarR <srangana@redhat.com>
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Since gcc-8.2.x (fedora-28 or so) gcc has been emitting warnings
about buggy use of strncpy.
e.g.
warning: ‘strncpy’ output truncated before terminating nul
copying as many bytes from a string as its length
and
warning: ‘strncpy’ specified bound depends on the length of the
source argument
Since we're copying string fragments and explicitly null terminating
use memcpy to silence the warning
Change-Id: I413d84b5f4157f15c99e9af3e154ce594d5bcdc1
updates: bz#1193929
Signed-off-by: Kaleb S. KEITHLEY <kkeithle@redhat.com>
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We add dummy interrupt handling for the FLUSH
fuse message. It can be enabled by the
"--fuse-flush-handle-interrupt" hidden command line
option, or "-ofuse-flush-handle-interrupt=yes"
mount option.
It serves no other than diagnostic & demonstational
purposes -- to exercise the interrupt handling framework
a bit and to give an usage example.
Documentation is also provided that showcases interrupt
handling via FLUSH.
Change-Id: I522f1e798501d06b74ac3592a5f73c1ab0590c60
updates: #465
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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- add sub-framework to send timed responses to kernel
- add interrupt handler queue
- implement INTERRUPT
fuse_interrupt looks up handlers for interrupted messages
in the queue. If found, it invokes the handler function.
Else responds with EAGAIN with a delay.
See spec at
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/filesystems/fuse.txt?h=v4.17#n148
and explanation in comments.
Change-Id: I1a79d3679b31f36e14b4ac8f60b7f2c1ea2badfb
updates: #465
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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Currently, there are possibilities in few places, where a user-controlled
(like filename, program parameter etc) string can be passed as 'fmt' for
printf(), which can lead to segfault, if the user's string contains '%s',
'%d' in it.
While fixing it, makes sense to make the explicit check for such issues
across the codebase, by making the format call properly.
Fixes: CVE-2018-14661
Fixes: bz#1644763
Change-Id: Ib547293f2d9eb618594cbff0df3b9c800e88bde4
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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Change check condition from
"[[:space:]+]${mount_point}[[:space:]+]fuse" to
"[[:space:]+]${mount_point}[[:space:]+]fuse.glusterfs". Fix false
postive check result for mount points of other FUSEes, such as "fuse.sshfs".
Change-Id: I13898b50a651a8f5ecc3a94d01b3b5de37ec4cbc
fixes: bz#1640026
Signed-off-by: Han Han <hhan@redhat.com>
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This patch is continuation of commit
fb4b914ce84bc83a5f418719c5ba7c25689a9251. This patch extends that
logic to all inode based operations and not just open(dir).
<snip>
mount/fuse: never fail open(dir) with ENOENT
open(dir) being an operation on inode should never fail with
ENOENT. If gfid is not present, the appropriate error is ESTALE. This
will enable kernel to retry open after a revalidate lookup.
</snip>
Change-Id: I6313f520827e9af725485631cb6a9d9718243bc4
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra G <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
Fixes: bz#1627620
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When compiling in other architectures there appear many warnings. Some
of them are actual problems that prevent gluster to work correctly on
those architectures.
Change-Id: Icdc7107a2bc2da662903c51910beddb84bdf03c0
fixes: bz#1632717
Signed-off-by: Xavi Hernandez <xhernandez@redhat.com>
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On systems where /bin/sh is not Bash, running plain mount.glusterfs
gives the unhelpful error "can't shift that many".
The argument parsing can be a little improved. Adding a check for the
number of arguments, minimal two (Gluster ip:/volume, and mountpoint),
but possibly more (-o, -v etc.).
With the additional check, running 'mount.glusterfs -h' now shows the
following messags:
Usage: /sbin/mount.glusterfs <server>:<volume/subdir> <mountpoint> -o<options>
Options:
man 8 mount.glusterfs
To display the version number of the mount helper: /sbin/mount.glusterfs -V
Change-Id: I50e3ade0c6217fab4155f35ad8cb35d99d52e133
Fixes: bz#1564890
Reported-by: Alexander Zimmermann <alexander.zimmermann96@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
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Change-Id: Ia84cc24c8924e6d22d02ac15f611c10e26db99b4
Signed-off-by: Nigel Babu <nigelb@redhat.com>
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Change-Id: I6f5d8140a06f3c1b2d196849299f8d483028d33b
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This patch is continuation of commit
fb4b914ce84bc83a5f418719c5ba7c25689a9251.
<snip>
mount/fuse: never fail open(dir) with ENOENT
open(dir) being an operation on inode should never fail with
ENOENT. If gfid is not present, the appropriate error is
ESTALE. This will enable kernel to retry open after a revalidate
lookup.
</snip>
Earlier commit failed to fix codepath where error response is sent
back on gfid resolution failures in fuse_open(dir)_resume. Current
patch completes that work
Change-Id: Ia07e3cece404811703c8cfbac9b402ca5fe98c1e
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra G <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
updates: bz#1627620
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xlators/storage/posix/src/posix-inode-fd-ops.c:
xlators/storage/posix/src/posix-helpers.c:
xlators/storage/bd/src/bd.c:
xlators/protocol/client/src/client-lk.c:
xlators/performance/quick-read/src/quick-read.c:
xlators/performance/io-cache/src/page.c
xlators/nfs/server/src/nfs3-helpers.c
xlators/nfs/server/src/nfs-fops.c
xlators/nfs/server/src/mount3udp_svc.c
xlators/nfs/server/src/mount3.c
xlators/mount/fuse/src/fuse-helpers.c
xlators/mount/fuse/src/fuse-bridge.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-utils.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-syncop.h
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-snapshot.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-rpc-ops.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-replace-brick.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-op-sm.c
xlators/mgmt/glusterd/src/glusterd-mgmt.c
xlators/meta/src/subvolumes-dir.c
xlators/meta/src/graph-dir.c
xlators/features/trash/src/trash.c
xlators/features/shard/src/shard.h
xlators/features/shard/src/shard.c
xlators/features/marker/src/marker-quota.c
xlators/features/locks/src/common.c
xlators/features/leases/src/leases-internal.c
xlators/features/gfid-access/src/gfid-access.c
xlators/features/cloudsync/src/cloudsync-plugins/src/cloudsyncs3/src/libcloudsyncs3.c
xlators/features/bit-rot/src/bitd/bit-rot.c
xlators/features/bit-rot/src/bitd/bit-rot-scrub.c
bxlators/encryption/crypt/src/metadata.c
xlators/encryption/crypt/src/crypt.c
xlators/performance/md-cache/src/md-cache.c:
Move to GF_MALLOC() instead of GF_CALLOC() when possible
It doesn't make sense to calloc (allocate and clear) memory
when the code right away fills that memory with data.
It may be optimized by the compiler, or have a microscopic
performance improvement.
In some cases, also changed allocation size to be sizeof some
struct or type instead of a pointer - easier to read.
In some cases, removed redundant strlen() calls by saving the result
into a variable.
1. Only done for the straightforward cases. There's room for improvement.
2. Please review carefully, especially for string allocation, with the
terminating NULL string.
Only compile-tested!
.. and allocate memory as much as needed.
xlators/nfs/server/src/mount3.c :
Don't blindly allocate PATH_MAX, but strlen() the string and allocate
appropriately.
Also, align error messges.
updates: bz#1193929
Original-Author: Yaniv Kaul <ykaul@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Yaniv Kaul <ykaul@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Yaniv Kaul <ykaul@redhat.com>
Change-Id: Ibda6f33dd180b7f7694f20a12af1e9576fe197f5
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modifications
PROBLEM:
Stats of dentries that are readdirp'd ahead can become stale due to
fops like writes, truncate etc that modify the file pointed by
dentries. When a readdir is finally wound at offset corresponding to
these entries, the iatts that are returned to the application come
from readdir-ahead's cache, which are stale by now. This problem gets
further aggravated when caching translators/modules cache and continue
to serve this stale information.
FIX:
* Store the iatt in context of the inode pointed by dentry.
* Whenever the inode pointed by dentry undergoes modification, in cbk
of modification fop, update the iatt stored in inode-ctx to reflect
the modification.
* When serving a readdirp response from application, update iatts of
dentries with the iatts stored in the context of inodes pointed by
these dentries.
* Some fops don't have valid iatts in their responses. For eg., write
response whose data is still cached in write-behind will have zeroed
out stat. In this case keep only ia_type and ia_gfid and reset rest
of the iatt members to zero.
- fuse-bridge in this case just sends "entry" information back to
kernel and attr is not sent.
- gfapi sets entry->inode to NULL and zeroes out the entire stat
* There is one tiny race between the entry creation and a readdirp on
its parent dir, which could cause the inode-ctx setting and inode
ctx reading to happen on two different inode objects. To prevent
this, when entry->inode doesn't eqaul to linked_inode,
- fuse-bridge is made to send only "entry" information without
attributes
- gfapi sets entry->inode to NULL and zeroes out the entire stat.
Change-Id: Ia27ff49a61922e88c73a1547ad8aacc9968a69df
BUG: 1390050
Updates: bz#1390050
Signed-off-by: Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra G <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
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Please review, it's not always just the comments that were fixed.
I've had to revert of course all calls to creat() that were changed
to create() ...
Only compile-tested!
Change-Id: I7d02e82d9766e272a7fd9cc68e51901d69e5aab5
updates: bz#1193929
Signed-off-by: Yaniv Kaul <ykaul@redhat.com>
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Change-Id: Iae712828ee656008faf5fe2bc4e6f96fa12ea4cb
fixes: bz#1600687
Signed-off-by: Vitaly Lipatov <lav@etersoft.ru>
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In mount.glusterfs avoid using the which tool as it may not exist
on minimal system installs. Use the "command -v" builtin as
it is expected to be more portable.
Remove a extra semicolon while we're at it.
Change-Id: Ib682ed4955d5bad1beb94b65d10f4c44e9490767
fixes: bz#1593351
Signed-off-by: John Mulligan <jmulligan@redhat.com>
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This change was done in https://review.gluster.org/16945. While the
changes added there were required, it was not necessary to remove the
getattr part. As fuse's lookup on root(/) comes as getattr only, this
change is very much required.
The previous fix for this bug was to add the check for revalidation in
lookup when it was sent on root. But I had removed the part where
getattr is coming on root. The removing was not requried to fix the
issue then. Added back this part of the code, to make sure we have
proper validation of root inode in many places like acl, etc.
updates: bz#1437780
Change-Id: I859c4ee1a3f407465cbf19f8934530848424ff50
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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Updates: bz#1193929
Change-Id: I4dd4d0e607f89650ebb74b893b911b554472826d
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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- Added kernel-writeback-cache command line and xlator
option for requesting utilisation of the writeback
cache of the kernel in FUSE_INIT (see [1]).
- Added attr-times-granularity command line and xlator
option via which granularity of the {a,m,c}time in
stat (attr) data that we support can be indicated to
kernel. This is a means to avoid divergence of the
attr times between kernel and userspace that could
occur with writeback-cache, while still maintaining
maximum time precision the FUSE server is capable of
(see [2]).
- Handling FATTR_CTIME flag in FUSE_SETATTR that
indicates presence of ctime in setattr payload.
Currently we cannot associate arbitrary ctimes to
files on backend, so we just touch them to update
their ctimes to current time. Having ctimes in setattr
payload is also a side effect of writeback cache
(see [3] and [4]).
[1]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=4d99ff8,
"fuse: Turn writeback cache on"
[2]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=e27c9d3,
"fuse: fuse: add time_gran to INIT_OUT"
[3]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=1e18bda,
"fuse: add .write_inode"
[4]: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=ab9e13f,
"fuse: allow ctime flushing to userspace"
Updates: #435
Change-Id: Id174c8e0c815c4456c35f8c53e41a6a507d91855
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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problem: With the current code, post graph switch the old fd is received for
fuse_getattr and since it is associated with old inode, it does not
have the inode ctx across xlators in new graph. Hence, dht
errored out saying "no layout" for fstat call. Hence the EINVAL.
Solution: if fd is passed, init and resolve fd to carry on getattr
test case:
- Created a single brick distributed volume
- Started untar
- Added a new-brick
Without this fix, untar used to abort with ERROR.
Change-Id: I5805c463fb9a04ba5c24829b768127097ff8b9f9
fixes: bz#1566207
Signed-off-by: Susant Palai <spalai@redhat.com>
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fuse xlator used to override the filesystem
block size of the storage backend to indicate
its preferences. Now we retire this tweak and
pass on what we get from the backend.
This fixes the anomaly reported in the referred
BUG. For more background, see the following email,
which was sent out to gluster-devel and gluster-users
mailing lists to gauge if anyone sees any use of
this tweak:
http://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/gluster-devel/2018-March/054660.html
http://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/gluster-users/2018-March/033775.html
Noone vetoed the removal of it but it got endorsement:
http://lists.gluster.org/pipermail/gluster-devel/2018-March/054686.html
BUG: 1523219
Change-Id: I3b7111d3037a1b91a288c1589f407b2c48d81bfa
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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Updates #412
Change-Id: Ida53d8b630feabb856a3551fa888f92382ade768
Signed-off-by: Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj@redhat.com>
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Usage: Use 'reader-thread-count=<NUM>' as command line option to
set the thread count at the time of mounting the volume.
Next task is to make these threads auto-scale based on the load,
instead of having the user remount the volume everytime to change
the thread count.
Updates #412
Change-Id: I94aa1505e5ae6a133683d473e0e4e0edd139b76b
Signed-off-by: Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj@redhat.com>
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GETATTR FUSE message can carry a file handle
reference in which case it serves as a hint
for the FUSE server that the stat data is
preferably acquired in context of the given
filehandle (which we call '"fgetattr"-like
semantics').
So far FUSE ignored the GETTATTR provided
filehandle and grabbed a file handle
heuristically. This caused confusion in the
caching layers, which has been tracked down
as one of the reasons of referred BUG.
As of the BUG, this is just a partial fix.
BUG: 1512691
Change-Id: I67eebbf5407ca725ed111fbda4181ead10d03f6d
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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Updates: #389
Change-Id: I4153df72d5eeecefa7579170899db4c340128bea
Signed-off-by: Kinglong Mee <mijinlong@open-fs.com>
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BUG: 1534602
Change-Id: Ide42cf9cffe462d0cc46272b327c2a05999f09ba
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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Added 2 more types which are present in gluster codebase, mainly
IATT and UUID.
Updates #203
Change-Id: Ib6d6d6aefb88c3494fbf93dcbe08d9979484968f
Signed-off-by: Amar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>
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- call_stack_set_group() will take the ownership of passed
buffer from caller;
- to indicate the change, its signature is changed from
including the buffer directly to take a pointer to it;
- either the content of the buffer is copied to the
groups_small embedded buffer of the call stack, or
the buffer is set as groups_large member of the call
stack;
- the groups member of the call stack is set to,
respectively, groups_small or groups_large, according
to the memory management conventions of the call stack;
- the buffer address is overwritten with junk to effectively
prevent the caller from using it further on.
Also move call_stack_set_group to stack.c from stack.h
to prevent "defined but not used [-Wunused-function]"
warnings (not using it anymore in call_stack_alloc_group()
implementation, which saved us from this so far).
protocol/server: refactor gid_resolve()
In gid_resolve there are two cases:
either the gid_cache_lookup() call returns
a value or not. The result is caputured in
the agl variable, and throughout the function,
each particular stage of the implementation
comes with an agl and a no-agl variant.
In most cases this is explicitly indicated
via an
if (agl) {
...
} else {
...
}
but some of this branching are expressed via
goto constructs (obfuscating the fact we stated
above, that is, each particular stage having
an agl/no-agl variant).
In the current refactor, we bring the agl
conditional to the top, and present the
agl/non-agl implementations sequentially.
Also we take the opportunity to clean up and
fix the agl case:
- remove the spurious
gl.gl_list = agl->gl_list;
setting, as gl is not used in the agl caae
- populate the group list of call stack from
agl, fixing thus referred BUG.
Also fixes BUG: 1513920
Change-Id: I61f4574ba21969f7661b9ff0c9dce202b874025d
BUG: 1513928
Signed-off-by: Csaba Henk <csaba@redhat.com>
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The restriction of using fds opened by the same Pid means fds cannot
be shared across threads of multithreaded application. Note that fops
from kernel have different Pid for different threads. Imagine
following sequence of operations:
* Turn off performance.open-behind
* Thread t1 opens an fd - fd1 - on file "file". Let's assume nodeid of
"file" is "nodeid-file".
* Thread t2 does RENAME ("newfile", "file"). Let's assume nodeid of
"newfile" as "nodeid-newfile".
* t2 proceeds to do fstat (fd1)
The above set of operations can sometimes result in ESTALE/ENOENT
errors. RENAME overwrites "file" with "newfile" changing its nodeid
from "nodeid-file" to "nodeid-newfile" and post RENAME, "nodeid-file" is
removed from the backend. If fstat carries nodeid-file as argument,
which can happen if lookup has not refreshed the nodeid of "file" and
since t2 doesn't have an fd opened, fuse_getattr_resume uses STAT
which will fail as "nodeid-file" no longer exists.
Since the above set of operations and sharing of fds across
multiple threads are valid, this is a bug.
The fix is to use any fd opened on the inode. In this specific example
fuse_getattr_resume will find fd1 and winds down the call as fstat
(fd1) which won't fail.
Cross-checked with "Miklos Szeredi" <mszeredi.at.redhat.dot.com> for
any security issues with this solution and he approves the solution.
Thanks to "Miklos Szeredi" <mszeredi.at.redhat.dot.com> for all the
pointers and discussions.
Change-Id: I88dd29b3607cd2594eee9d72a1637b5346c8d49c
BUG: 1510401
Signed-off-by: Raghavendra G <rgowdapp@redhat.com>
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This reduces the space used from four bytes to one, and allows
new code to use familiar C99 types/values interoperably with our
old cruft. It does *not* change current declarations or code;
that will be left for a separate - much larger - patch.
Updates: #80
Change-Id: I5baedd17d3fb05b38f0d8b8bb9dd62824475842e
Signed-off-by: Jeff Darcy <jdarcy@fb.com>
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Updates: #242
BUG: 1428063
Change-Id: Iaaf2edf99b2ecc75f6d30762c752a6d445c1c826
Signed-off-by: Poornima G <pgurusid@redhat.com>
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