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author | Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com> | 2009-09-21 14:47:50 +0400 |
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committer | Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com> | 2009-09-24 22:33:18 +0400 |
commit | 3bc303c254335dbd7c7012cc1760b12f1d5514d3 (patch) | |
tree | 7da17fbfd697216d9ed0ccd64ea9c03aaf3d52c1 /fs/notify | |
parent | 48541bd3dd4739b4d574b44ea47660c88d833677 (diff) | |
download | linux-3bc303c254335dbd7c7012cc1760b12f1d5514d3.tar.xz |
cifs: convert oplock breaks to use slow_work facility (try #4)
This is the fourth respin of the patch to convert oplock breaks to
use the slow_work facility.
A customer of ours was testing a backport of one of the earlier
patchsets, and hit a "Busy inodes after umount..." problem. An oplock
break job had raced with a umount, and the superblock got torn down and
its memory reused. When the oplock break job tried to dereference the
inode->i_sb, the kernel oopsed.
This patchset has the oplock break job hold an inode and vfsmount
reference until the oplock break completes. With this, there should be
no need to take a tcon reference (the vfsmount implicitly holds one
already).
Currently, when an oplock break comes in there's a chance that the
oplock break job won't occur if the allocation of the oplock_q_entry
fails. There are also some rather nasty races in the allocation and
handling these structs.
Rather than allocating oplock queue entries when an oplock break comes
in, add a few extra fields to the cifsFileInfo struct. Get rid of the
dedicated cifs_oplock_thread as well and queue the oplock break job to
the slow_work thread pool.
This approach also has the advantage that the oplock break jobs can
potentially run in parallel rather than be serialized like they are
today.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Steve French <sfrench@us.ibm.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/notify')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions