diff options
-rw-r--r-- | fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_sync.c | 141 |
1 files changed, 62 insertions, 79 deletions
diff --git a/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_sync.c b/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_sync.c index 7e9fb5251b2..d4b7b21a6e5 100644 --- a/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_sync.c +++ b/fs/xfs/linux-2.6/xfs_sync.c @@ -48,79 +48,6 @@ #include <linux/freezer.h> /* - * xfs_sync flushes any pending I/O to file system vfsp. - * - * This routine is called by vfs_sync() to make sure that things make it - * out to disk eventually, on sync() system calls to flush out everything, - * and when the file system is unmounted. For the vfs_sync() case, all - * we really need to do is sync out the log to make all of our meta-data - * updates permanent (except for timestamps). For calls from pflushd(), - * dirty pages are kept moving by calling pdflush() on the inodes - * containing them. We also flush the inodes that we can lock without - * sleeping and the superblock if we can lock it without sleeping from - * vfs_sync() so that items at the tail of the log are always moving out. - * - * Flags: - * SYNC_BDFLUSH - We're being called from vfs_sync() so we don't want - * to sleep if we can help it. All we really need - * to do is ensure that the log is synced at least - * periodically. We also push the inodes and - * superblock if we can lock them without sleeping - * and they are not pinned. - * SYNC_ATTR - We need to flush the inodes. If SYNC_BDFLUSH is not - * set, then we really want to lock each inode and flush - * it. - * SYNC_WAIT - All the flushes that take place in this call should - * be synchronous. - * SYNC_DELWRI - This tells us to push dirty pages associated with - * inodes. SYNC_WAIT and SYNC_BDFLUSH are used to - * determine if they should be flushed sync, async, or - * delwri. - * SYNC_CLOSE - This flag is passed when the system is being - * unmounted. We should sync and invalidate everything. - * SYNC_FSDATA - This indicates that the caller would like to make - * sure the superblock is safe on disk. We can ensure - * this by simply making sure the log gets flushed - * if SYNC_BDFLUSH is set, and by actually writing it - * out otherwise. - * SYNC_IOWAIT - The caller wants us to wait for all data I/O to complete - * before we return (including direct I/O). Forms the drain - * side of the write barrier needed to safely quiesce the - * filesystem. - * - */ -int -xfs_sync( - xfs_mount_t *mp, - int flags) -{ - int error; - - /* - * Get the Quota Manager to flush the dquots. - * - * If XFS quota support is not enabled or this filesystem - * instance does not use quotas XFS_QM_DQSYNC will always - * return zero. - */ - error = XFS_QM_DQSYNC(mp, flags); - if (error) { - /* - * If we got an IO error, we will be shutting down. - * So, there's nothing more for us to do here. - */ - ASSERT(error != EIO || XFS_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(mp)); - if (XFS_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(mp)) - return XFS_ERROR(error); - } - - if (flags & SYNC_IOWAIT) - xfs_filestream_flush(mp); - - return xfs_syncsub(mp, flags); -} - -/* * Sync all the inodes in the given AG according to the * direction given by the flags. */ @@ -396,22 +323,78 @@ xfs_sync_fsdata( } /* - * xfs sync routine for internal use + * xfs_sync flushes any pending I/O to file system vfsp. * - * This routine supports all of the flags defined for the generic vfs_sync - * interface as explained above under xfs_sync. + * This routine is called by vfs_sync() to make sure that things make it + * out to disk eventually, on sync() system calls to flush out everything, + * and when the file system is unmounted. For the vfs_sync() case, all + * we really need to do is sync out the log to make all of our meta-data + * updates permanent (except for timestamps). For calls from pflushd(), + * dirty pages are kept moving by calling pdflush() on the inodes + * containing them. We also flush the inodes that we can lock without + * sleeping and the superblock if we can lock it without sleeping from + * vfs_sync() so that items at the tail of the log are always moving out. + * + * Flags: + * SYNC_BDFLUSH - We're being called from vfs_sync() so we don't want + * to sleep if we can help it. All we really need + * to do is ensure that the log is synced at least + * periodically. We also push the inodes and + * superblock if we can lock them without sleeping + * and they are not pinned. + * SYNC_ATTR - We need to flush the inodes. If SYNC_BDFLUSH is not + * set, then we really want to lock each inode and flush + * it. + * SYNC_WAIT - All the flushes that take place in this call should + * be synchronous. + * SYNC_DELWRI - This tells us to push dirty pages associated with + * inodes. SYNC_WAIT and SYNC_BDFLUSH are used to + * determine if they should be flushed sync, async, or + * delwri. + * SYNC_CLOSE - This flag is passed when the system is being + * unmounted. We should sync and invalidate everything. + * SYNC_FSDATA - This indicates that the caller would like to make + * sure the superblock is safe on disk. We can ensure + * this by simply making sure the log gets flushed + * if SYNC_BDFLUSH is set, and by actually writing it + * out otherwise. + * SYNC_IOWAIT - The caller wants us to wait for all data I/O to complete + * before we return (including direct I/O). Forms the drain + * side of the write barrier needed to safely quiesce the + * filesystem. * */ -STATIC int -xfs_syncsub( +int +xfs_sync( xfs_mount_t *mp, int flags) { - int error = 0; + int error; int last_error = 0; uint log_flags = XFS_LOG_FORCE; /* + * Get the Quota Manager to flush the dquots. + * + * If XFS quota support is not enabled or this filesystem + * instance does not use quotas XFS_QM_DQSYNC will always + * return zero. + */ + error = XFS_QM_DQSYNC(mp, flags); + if (error) { + /* + * If we got an IO error, we will be shutting down. + * So, there's nothing more for us to do here. + */ + ASSERT(error != EIO || XFS_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(mp)); + if (XFS_FORCED_SHUTDOWN(mp)) + return XFS_ERROR(error); + } + + if (flags & SYNC_IOWAIT) + xfs_filestream_flush(mp); + + /* * Sync out the log. This ensures that the log is periodically * flushed even if there is not enough activity to fill it up. */ |