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authorJosef Bacik <josef@redhat.com>2010-05-23 19:00:55 +0400
committerChris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>2010-05-25 18:34:57 +0400
commit4b46fce23349bfca781a32e2707a18328ca5ae22 (patch)
tree68f1200f2bc82d3f35218aef38e6d5d92bff4aca /fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h
parentc2c6ca417e2db7a519e6e92c82f4a933d940d076 (diff)
downloadlinux-4b46fce23349bfca781a32e2707a18328ca5ae22.tar.xz
Btrfs: add basic DIO read/write support
This provides basic DIO support for reading and writing. It does not do the work to recover from mismatching checksums, that will come later. A few design changes have been made from Jim's code (sorry Jim!) 1) Use the generic direct-io code. Jim originally re-wrote all the generic DIO code in order to account for all of BTRFS's oddities, but thanks to that work it seems like the best bet is to just ignore compression and such and just opt to fallback on buffered IO. 2) Fallback on buffered IO for compressed or inline extents. Jim's code did it's own buffering to make dio with compressed extents work. Now we just fallback onto normal buffered IO. 3) Use ordered extents for the writes so that all of the lock_extent() lookup_ordered() type checks continue to work. 4) Do the lock_extent() lookup_ordered() loop in readpage so we don't race with DIO writes. I've tested this with fsx and everything works great. This patch depends on my dio and filemap.c patches to work. Thanks, Signed-off-by: Josef Bacik <josef@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h')
-rw-r--r--fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h9
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h b/fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h
index c82f76a9f040..8ac365492a3f 100644
--- a/fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h
+++ b/fs/btrfs/ordered-data.h
@@ -72,6 +72,8 @@ struct btrfs_ordered_sum {
#define BTRFS_ORDERED_PREALLOC 4 /* set when writing to prealloced extent */
+#define BTRFS_ORDERED_DIRECT 5 /* set when we're doing DIO with this extent */
+
struct btrfs_ordered_extent {
/* logical offset in the file */
u64 file_offset;
@@ -140,7 +142,9 @@ int btrfs_dec_test_ordered_pending(struct inode *inode,
struct btrfs_ordered_extent **cached,
u64 file_offset, u64 io_size);
int btrfs_add_ordered_extent(struct inode *inode, u64 file_offset,
- u64 start, u64 len, u64 disk_len, int tyep);
+ u64 start, u64 len, u64 disk_len, int type);
+int btrfs_add_ordered_extent_dio(struct inode *inode, u64 file_offset,
+ u64 start, u64 len, u64 disk_len, int type);
int btrfs_add_ordered_sum(struct inode *inode,
struct btrfs_ordered_extent *entry,
struct btrfs_ordered_sum *sum);
@@ -151,6 +155,9 @@ void btrfs_start_ordered_extent(struct inode *inode,
int btrfs_wait_ordered_range(struct inode *inode, u64 start, u64 len);
struct btrfs_ordered_extent *
btrfs_lookup_first_ordered_extent(struct inode * inode, u64 file_offset);
+struct btrfs_ordered_extent *btrfs_lookup_ordered_range(struct inode *inode,
+ u64 file_offset,
+ u64 len);
int btrfs_ordered_update_i_size(struct inode *inode, u64 offset,
struct btrfs_ordered_extent *ordered);
int btrfs_find_ordered_sum(struct inode *inode, u64 offset, u64 disk_bytenr, u32 *sum);