1 /* 2 * linux/fs/jbd2/revoke.c 3 * 4 * Written by Stephen C. Tweedie <sct@redhat.com>, 2000 5 * 6 * Copyright 2000 Red Hat corp --- All Rights Reserved 7 * 8 * This file is part of the Linux kernel and is made available under 9 * the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2, or at your 10 * option, any later version, incorporated herein by reference. 11 * 12 * Journal revoke routines for the generic filesystem journaling code; 13 * part of the ext2fs journaling system. 14 * 15 * Revoke is the mechanism used to prevent old log records for deleted 16 * metadata from being replayed on top of newer data using the same 17 * blocks. The revoke mechanism is used in two separate places: 18 * 19 * + Commit: during commit we write the entire list of the current 20 * transaction's revoked blocks to the journal 21 * 22 * + Recovery: during recovery we record the transaction ID of all 23 * revoked blocks. If there are multiple revoke records in the log 24 * for a single block, only the last one counts, and if there is a log 25 * entry for a block beyond the last revoke, then that log entry still 26 * gets replayed. 27 * 28 * We can get interactions between revokes and new log data within a 29 * single transaction: 30 * 31 * Block is revoked and then journaled: 32 * The desired end result is the journaling of the new block, so we 33 * cancel the revoke before the transaction commits. 34 * 35 * Block is journaled and then revoked: 36 * The revoke must take precedence over the write of the block, so we 37 * need either to cancel the journal entry or to write the revoke 38 * later in the log than the log block. In this case, we choose the 39 * latter: journaling a block cancels any revoke record for that block 40 * in the current transaction, so any revoke for that block in the 41 * transaction must have happened after the block was journaled and so 42 * the revoke must take precedence. 43 * 44 * Block is revoked and then written as data: 45 * The data write is allowed to succeed, but the revoke is _not_ 46 * cancelled. We still need to prevent old log records from 47 * overwriting the new data. We don't even need to clear the revoke 48 * bit here. 49 * 50 * We cache revoke status of a buffer in the current transaction in b_states 51 * bits. As the name says, revokevalid flag indicates that the cached revoke 52 * status of a buffer is valid and we can rely on the cached status. 53 * 54 * Revoke information on buffers is a tri-state value: 55 * 56 * RevokeValid clear: no cached revoke status, need to look it up 57 * RevokeValid set, Revoked clear: 58 * buffer has not been revoked, and cancel_revoke 59 * need do nothing. 60 * RevokeValid set, Revoked set: 61 * buffer has been revoked. 62 * 63 * Locking rules: 64 * We keep two hash tables of revoke records. One hashtable belongs to the 65 * running transaction (is pointed to by journal->j_revoke), the other one 66 * belongs to the committing transaction. Accesses to the second hash table 67 * happen only from the kjournald and no other thread touches this table. Also 68 * journal_switch_revoke_table() which switches which hashtable belongs to the 69 * running and which to the committing transaction is called only from 70 * kjournald. Therefore we need no locks when accessing the hashtable belonging 71 * to the committing transaction. 72 * 73 * All users operating on the hash table belonging to the running transaction 74 * have a handle to the transaction. Therefore they are safe from kjournald 75 * switching hash tables under them. For operations on the lists of entries in 76 * the hash table j_revoke_lock is used. 77 * 78 * Finally, also replay code uses the hash tables but at this moment no one else 79 * can touch them (filesystem isn't mounted yet) and hence no locking is 80 * needed. 81 */ 82 83 #ifndef __KERNEL__ 84 #include "jfs_user.h" 85 #else 86 #include <linux/time.h> 87 #include <linux/fs.h> 88 #include <linux/jbd2.h> 89 #include <linux/errno.h> 90 #include <linux/slab.h> 91 #include <linux/list.h> 92 #include <linux/init.h> 93 #include <linux/bio.h> 94 #include <linux/log2.h> 95 #include <linux/hash.h> 96 #endif 97 98 static struct kmem_cache *jbd2_revoke_record_cache; 99 static struct kmem_cache *jbd2_revoke_table_cache; 100 101 /* Each revoke record represents one single revoked block. During 102 journal replay, this involves recording the transaction ID of the 103 last transaction to revoke this block. */ 104 105 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s 106 { 107 struct list_head hash; 108 tid_t sequence; /* Used for recovery only */ 109 unsigned long long blocknr; 110 }; 111 112 113 /* The revoke table is just a simple hash table of revoke records. */ 114 struct jbd2_revoke_table_s 115 { 116 /* It is conceivable that we might want a larger hash table 117 * for recovery. Must be a power of two. */ 118 int hash_size; 119 int hash_shift; 120 struct list_head *hash_table; 121 }; 122 123 124 #ifdef __KERNEL__ 125 static void write_one_revoke_record(transaction_t *, 126 struct list_head *, 127 struct buffer_head **, int *, 128 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *); 129 static void flush_descriptor(journal_t *, struct buffer_head *, int); 130 #endif 131 132 /* Utility functions to maintain the revoke table */ 133 134 static inline int hash(journal_t *journal, unsigned long long block) 135 { 136 return hash_64(block, journal->j_revoke->hash_shift); 137 } 138 139 static int insert_revoke_hash(journal_t *journal, unsigned long long blocknr, 140 tid_t seq) 141 { 142 struct list_head *hash_list; 143 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 144 gfp_t gfp_mask = GFP_NOFS; 145 146 if (journal_oom_retry) 147 gfp_mask |= __GFP_NOFAIL; 148 record = kmem_cache_alloc(jbd2_revoke_record_cache, gfp_mask); 149 if (!record) 150 return -ENOMEM; 151 152 record->sequence = seq; 153 record->blocknr = blocknr; 154 hash_list = &journal->j_revoke->hash_table[hash(journal, blocknr)]; 155 spin_lock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 156 list_add(&record->hash, hash_list); 157 spin_unlock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 158 return 0; 159 } 160 161 /* Find a revoke record in the journal's hash table. */ 162 163 static struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *find_revoke_record(journal_t *journal, 164 unsigned long long blocknr) 165 { 166 struct list_head *hash_list; 167 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 168 169 hash_list = &journal->j_revoke->hash_table[hash(journal, blocknr)]; 170 171 spin_lock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 172 record = (struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *) hash_list->next; 173 while (&(record->hash) != hash_list) { 174 if (record->blocknr == blocknr) { 175 spin_unlock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 176 return record; 177 } 178 record = (struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *) record->hash.next; 179 } 180 spin_unlock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 181 return NULL; 182 } 183 184 void jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_caches(void) 185 { 186 if (jbd2_revoke_record_cache) { 187 kmem_cache_destroy(jbd2_revoke_record_cache); 188 jbd2_revoke_record_cache = NULL; 189 } 190 if (jbd2_revoke_table_cache) { 191 kmem_cache_destroy(jbd2_revoke_table_cache); 192 jbd2_revoke_table_cache = NULL; 193 } 194 } 195 196 int __init jbd2_journal_init_revoke_caches(void) 197 { 198 J_ASSERT(!jbd2_revoke_record_cache); 199 J_ASSERT(!jbd2_revoke_table_cache); 200 201 jbd2_revoke_record_cache = KMEM_CACHE(jbd2_revoke_record_s, 202 SLAB_HWCACHE_ALIGN|SLAB_TEMPORARY); 203 if (!jbd2_revoke_record_cache) 204 goto record_cache_failure; 205 206 jbd2_revoke_table_cache = KMEM_CACHE(jbd2_revoke_table_s, 207 SLAB_TEMPORARY); 208 if (!jbd2_revoke_table_cache) 209 goto table_cache_failure; 210 return 0; 211 table_cache_failure: 212 jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_caches(); 213 record_cache_failure: 214 return -ENOMEM; 215 } 216 217 static struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *jbd2_journal_init_revoke_table(int hash_size) 218 { 219 int shift = 0; 220 int tmp = hash_size; 221 struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *table; 222 223 table = kmem_cache_alloc(jbd2_revoke_table_cache, GFP_KERNEL); 224 if (!table) 225 goto out; 226 227 while((tmp >>= 1UL) != 0UL) 228 shift++; 229 230 table->hash_size = hash_size; 231 table->hash_shift = shift; 232 table->hash_table = 233 kmalloc(hash_size * sizeof(struct list_head), GFP_KERNEL); 234 if (!table->hash_table) { 235 kmem_cache_free(jbd2_revoke_table_cache, table); 236 table = NULL; 237 goto out; 238 } 239 240 for (tmp = 0; tmp < hash_size; tmp++) 241 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&table->hash_table[tmp]); 242 243 out: 244 return table; 245 } 246 247 static void jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_table(struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *table) 248 { 249 int i; 250 struct list_head *hash_list; 251 252 for (i = 0; i < table->hash_size; i++) { 253 hash_list = &table->hash_table[i]; 254 J_ASSERT(list_empty(hash_list)); 255 } 256 257 kfree(table->hash_table); 258 kmem_cache_free(jbd2_revoke_table_cache, table); 259 } 260 261 /* Initialise the revoke table for a given journal to a given size. */ 262 int jbd2_journal_init_revoke(journal_t *journal, int hash_size) 263 { 264 J_ASSERT(journal->j_revoke_table[0] == NULL); 265 J_ASSERT(is_power_of_2(hash_size)); 266 267 journal->j_revoke_table[0] = jbd2_journal_init_revoke_table(hash_size); 268 if (!journal->j_revoke_table[0]) 269 goto fail0; 270 271 journal->j_revoke_table[1] = jbd2_journal_init_revoke_table(hash_size); 272 if (!journal->j_revoke_table[1]) 273 goto fail1; 274 275 journal->j_revoke = journal->j_revoke_table[1]; 276 277 spin_lock_init(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 278 279 return 0; 280 281 fail1: 282 jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_table(journal->j_revoke_table[0]); 283 fail0: 284 return -ENOMEM; 285 } 286 287 /* Destroy a journal's revoke table. The table must already be empty! */ 288 void jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke(journal_t *journal) 289 { 290 journal->j_revoke = NULL; 291 if (journal->j_revoke_table[0]) 292 jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_table(journal->j_revoke_table[0]); 293 if (journal->j_revoke_table[1]) 294 jbd2_journal_destroy_revoke_table(journal->j_revoke_table[1]); 295 } 296 297 298 #ifdef __KERNEL__ 299 300 /* 301 * jbd2_journal_revoke: revoke a given buffer_head from the journal. This 302 * prevents the block from being replayed during recovery if we take a 303 * crash after this current transaction commits. Any subsequent 304 * metadata writes of the buffer in this transaction cancel the 305 * revoke. 306 * 307 * Note that this call may block --- it is up to the caller to make 308 * sure that there are no further calls to journal_write_metadata 309 * before the revoke is complete. In ext3, this implies calling the 310 * revoke before clearing the block bitmap when we are deleting 311 * metadata. 312 * 313 * Revoke performs a jbd2_journal_forget on any buffer_head passed in as a 314 * parameter, but does _not_ forget the buffer_head if the bh was only 315 * found implicitly. 316 * 317 * bh_in may not be a journalled buffer - it may have come off 318 * the hash tables without an attached journal_head. 319 * 320 * If bh_in is non-zero, jbd2_journal_revoke() will decrement its b_count 321 * by one. 322 */ 323 324 int jbd2_journal_revoke(handle_t *handle, unsigned long long blocknr, 325 struct buffer_head *bh_in) 326 { 327 struct buffer_head *bh = NULL; 328 journal_t *journal; 329 struct block_device *bdev; 330 int err; 331 332 might_sleep(); 333 if (bh_in) 334 BUFFER_TRACE(bh_in, "enter"); 335 336 journal = handle->h_transaction->t_journal; 337 if (!jbd2_journal_set_features(journal, 0, 0, JBD2_FEATURE_INCOMPAT_REVOKE)){ 338 J_ASSERT (!"Cannot set revoke feature!"); 339 return -EINVAL; 340 } 341 342 bdev = journal->j_fs_dev; 343 bh = bh_in; 344 345 if (!bh) { 346 bh = __find_get_block(bdev, blocknr, journal->j_blocksize); 347 if (bh) 348 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "found on hash"); 349 } 350 #ifdef JBD2_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING 351 else { 352 struct buffer_head *bh2; 353 354 /* If there is a different buffer_head lying around in 355 * memory anywhere... */ 356 bh2 = __find_get_block(bdev, blocknr, journal->j_blocksize); 357 if (bh2) { 358 /* ... and it has RevokeValid status... */ 359 if (bh2 != bh && buffer_revokevalid(bh2)) 360 /* ...then it better be revoked too, 361 * since it's illegal to create a revoke 362 * record against a buffer_head which is 363 * not marked revoked --- that would 364 * risk missing a subsequent revoke 365 * cancel. */ 366 J_ASSERT_BH(bh2, buffer_revoked(bh2)); 367 put_bh(bh2); 368 } 369 } 370 #endif 371 372 /* We really ought not ever to revoke twice in a row without 373 first having the revoke cancelled: it's illegal to free a 374 block twice without allocating it in between! */ 375 if (bh) { 376 if (!J_EXPECT_BH(bh, !buffer_revoked(bh), 377 "inconsistent data on disk")) { 378 if (!bh_in) 379 brelse(bh); 380 return -EIO; 381 } 382 set_buffer_revoked(bh); 383 set_buffer_revokevalid(bh); 384 if (bh_in) { 385 BUFFER_TRACE(bh_in, "call jbd2_journal_forget"); 386 jbd2_journal_forget(handle, bh_in); 387 } else { 388 BUFFER_TRACE(bh, "call brelse"); 389 __brelse(bh); 390 } 391 } 392 393 jbd_debug(2, "insert revoke for block %llu, bh_in=%p\n",blocknr, bh_in); 394 err = insert_revoke_hash(journal, blocknr, 395 handle->h_transaction->t_tid); 396 BUFFER_TRACE(bh_in, "exit"); 397 return err; 398 } 399 400 /* 401 * Cancel an outstanding revoke. For use only internally by the 402 * journaling code (called from jbd2_journal_get_write_access). 403 * 404 * We trust buffer_revoked() on the buffer if the buffer is already 405 * being journaled: if there is no revoke pending on the buffer, then we 406 * don't do anything here. 407 * 408 * This would break if it were possible for a buffer to be revoked and 409 * discarded, and then reallocated within the same transaction. In such 410 * a case we would have lost the revoked bit, but when we arrived here 411 * the second time we would still have a pending revoke to cancel. So, 412 * do not trust the Revoked bit on buffers unless RevokeValid is also 413 * set. 414 */ 415 int jbd2_journal_cancel_revoke(handle_t *handle, struct journal_head *jh) 416 { 417 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 418 journal_t *journal = handle->h_transaction->t_journal; 419 int need_cancel; 420 int did_revoke = 0; /* akpm: debug */ 421 struct buffer_head *bh = jh2bh(jh); 422 423 jbd_debug(4, "journal_head %p, cancelling revoke\n", jh); 424 425 /* Is the existing Revoke bit valid? If so, we trust it, and 426 * only perform the full cancel if the revoke bit is set. If 427 * not, we can't trust the revoke bit, and we need to do the 428 * full search for a revoke record. */ 429 if (test_set_buffer_revokevalid(bh)) { 430 need_cancel = test_clear_buffer_revoked(bh); 431 } else { 432 need_cancel = 1; 433 clear_buffer_revoked(bh); 434 } 435 436 if (need_cancel) { 437 record = find_revoke_record(journal, bh->b_blocknr); 438 if (record) { 439 jbd_debug(4, "cancelled existing revoke on " 440 "blocknr %llu\n", (unsigned long long)bh->b_blocknr); 441 spin_lock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 442 list_del(&record->hash); 443 spin_unlock(&journal->j_revoke_lock); 444 kmem_cache_free(jbd2_revoke_record_cache, record); 445 did_revoke = 1; 446 } 447 } 448 449 #ifdef JBD2_EXPENSIVE_CHECKING 450 /* There better not be one left behind by now! */ 451 record = find_revoke_record(journal, bh->b_blocknr); 452 J_ASSERT_JH(jh, record == NULL); 453 #endif 454 455 /* Finally, have we just cleared revoke on an unhashed 456 * buffer_head? If so, we'd better make sure we clear the 457 * revoked status on any hashed alias too, otherwise the revoke 458 * state machine will get very upset later on. */ 459 if (need_cancel) { 460 struct buffer_head *bh2; 461 bh2 = __find_get_block(bh->b_bdev, bh->b_blocknr, bh->b_size); 462 if (bh2) { 463 if (bh2 != bh) 464 clear_buffer_revoked(bh2); 465 __brelse(bh2); 466 } 467 } 468 return did_revoke; 469 } 470 471 /* 472 * journal_clear_revoked_flag clears revoked flag of buffers in 473 * revoke table to reflect there is no revoked buffers in the next 474 * transaction which is going to be started. 475 */ 476 void jbd2_clear_buffer_revoked_flags(journal_t *journal) 477 { 478 struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *revoke = journal->j_revoke; 479 int i = 0; 480 481 for (i = 0; i < revoke->hash_size; i++) { 482 struct list_head *hash_list; 483 struct list_head *list_entry; 484 hash_list = &revoke->hash_table[i]; 485 486 list_for_each(list_entry, hash_list) { 487 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 488 struct buffer_head *bh; 489 record = (struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *)list_entry; 490 bh = __find_get_block(journal->j_fs_dev, 491 record->blocknr, 492 journal->j_blocksize); 493 if (bh) { 494 clear_buffer_revoked(bh); 495 __brelse(bh); 496 } 497 } 498 } 499 } 500 501 /* journal_switch_revoke table select j_revoke for next transaction 502 * we do not want to suspend any processing until all revokes are 503 * written -bzzz 504 */ 505 void jbd2_journal_switch_revoke_table(journal_t *journal) 506 { 507 int i; 508 509 if (journal->j_revoke == journal->j_revoke_table[0]) 510 journal->j_revoke = journal->j_revoke_table[1]; 511 else 512 journal->j_revoke = journal->j_revoke_table[0]; 513 514 for (i = 0; i < journal->j_revoke->hash_size; i++) 515 INIT_LIST_HEAD(&journal->j_revoke->hash_table[i]); 516 } 517 518 /* 519 * Write revoke records to the journal for all entries in the current 520 * revoke hash, deleting the entries as we go. 521 */ 522 void jbd2_journal_write_revoke_records(transaction_t *transaction, 523 struct list_head *log_bufs) 524 { 525 journal_t *journal = transaction->t_journal; 526 struct buffer_head *descriptor; 527 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 528 struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *revoke; 529 struct list_head *hash_list; 530 int i, offset, count; 531 532 descriptor = NULL; 533 offset = 0; 534 count = 0; 535 536 /* select revoke table for committing transaction */ 537 revoke = journal->j_revoke == journal->j_revoke_table[0] ? 538 journal->j_revoke_table[1] : journal->j_revoke_table[0]; 539 540 for (i = 0; i < revoke->hash_size; i++) { 541 hash_list = &revoke->hash_table[i]; 542 543 while (!list_empty(hash_list)) { 544 record = (struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *) 545 hash_list->next; 546 write_one_revoke_record(transaction, log_bufs, 547 &descriptor, &offset, record); 548 count++; 549 list_del(&record->hash); 550 kmem_cache_free(jbd2_revoke_record_cache, record); 551 } 552 } 553 if (descriptor) 554 flush_descriptor(journal, descriptor, offset); 555 jbd_debug(1, "Wrote %d revoke records\n", count); 556 } 557 558 /* 559 * Write out one revoke record. We need to create a new descriptor 560 * block if the old one is full or if we have not already created one. 561 */ 562 563 static void write_one_revoke_record(transaction_t *transaction, 564 struct list_head *log_bufs, 565 struct buffer_head **descriptorp, 566 int *offsetp, 567 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record) 568 { 569 journal_t *journal = transaction->t_journal; 570 int csum_size = 0; 571 struct buffer_head *descriptor; 572 int sz, offset; 573 574 /* If we are already aborting, this all becomes a noop. We 575 still need to go round the loop in 576 jbd2_journal_write_revoke_records in order to free all of the 577 revoke records: only the IO to the journal is omitted. */ 578 if (is_journal_aborted(journal)) 579 return; 580 581 descriptor = *descriptorp; 582 offset = *offsetp; 583 584 /* Do we need to leave space at the end for a checksum? */ 585 if (jbd2_journal_has_csum_v2or3(journal)) 586 csum_size = sizeof(struct jbd2_journal_block_tail); 587 588 if (jbd2_has_feature_64bit(journal)) 589 sz = 8; 590 else 591 sz = 4; 592 593 /* Make sure we have a descriptor with space left for the record */ 594 if (descriptor) { 595 if (offset + sz > journal->j_blocksize - csum_size) { 596 flush_descriptor(journal, descriptor, offset); 597 descriptor = NULL; 598 } 599 } 600 601 if (!descriptor) { 602 descriptor = jbd2_journal_get_descriptor_buffer(transaction, 603 JBD2_REVOKE_BLOCK); 604 if (!descriptor) 605 return; 606 607 /* Record it so that we can wait for IO completion later */ 608 BUFFER_TRACE(descriptor, "file in log_bufs"); 609 jbd2_file_log_bh(log_bufs, descriptor); 610 611 offset = sizeof(jbd2_journal_revoke_header_t); 612 *descriptorp = descriptor; 613 } 614 615 if (jbd2_has_feature_64bit(journal)) 616 * ((__be64 *)(&descriptor->b_data[offset])) = 617 cpu_to_be64(record->blocknr); 618 else 619 * ((__be32 *)(&descriptor->b_data[offset])) = 620 cpu_to_be32(record->blocknr); 621 offset += sz; 622 623 *offsetp = offset; 624 } 625 626 /* 627 * Flush a revoke descriptor out to the journal. If we are aborting, 628 * this is a noop; otherwise we are generating a buffer which needs to 629 * be waited for during commit, so it has to go onto the appropriate 630 * journal buffer list. 631 */ 632 633 static void flush_descriptor(journal_t *journal, 634 struct buffer_head *descriptor, 635 int offset) 636 { 637 jbd2_journal_revoke_header_t *header; 638 639 if (is_journal_aborted(journal)) { 640 put_bh(descriptor); 641 return; 642 } 643 644 header = (jbd2_journal_revoke_header_t *)descriptor->b_data; 645 header->r_count = cpu_to_be32(offset); 646 jbd2_descriptor_block_csum_set(journal, descriptor); 647 648 set_buffer_jwrite(descriptor); 649 BUFFER_TRACE(descriptor, "write"); 650 set_buffer_dirty(descriptor); 651 write_dirty_buffer(descriptor, REQ_SYNC); 652 } 653 #endif 654 655 /* 656 * Revoke support for recovery. 657 * 658 * Recovery needs to be able to: 659 * 660 * record all revoke records, including the tid of the latest instance 661 * of each revoke in the journal 662 * 663 * check whether a given block in a given transaction should be replayed 664 * (ie. has not been revoked by a revoke record in that or a subsequent 665 * transaction) 666 * 667 * empty the revoke table after recovery. 668 */ 669 670 /* 671 * First, setting revoke records. We create a new revoke record for 672 * every block ever revoked in the log as we scan it for recovery, and 673 * we update the existing records if we find multiple revokes for a 674 * single block. 675 */ 676 677 int jbd2_journal_set_revoke(journal_t *journal, 678 unsigned long long blocknr, 679 tid_t sequence) 680 { 681 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 682 683 record = find_revoke_record(journal, blocknr); 684 if (record) { 685 /* If we have multiple occurrences, only record the 686 * latest sequence number in the hashed record */ 687 if (tid_gt(sequence, record->sequence)) 688 record->sequence = sequence; 689 return 0; 690 } 691 return insert_revoke_hash(journal, blocknr, sequence); 692 } 693 694 /* 695 * Test revoke records. For a given block referenced in the log, has 696 * that block been revoked? A revoke record with a given transaction 697 * sequence number revokes all blocks in that transaction and earlier 698 * ones, but later transactions still need replayed. 699 */ 700 701 int jbd2_journal_test_revoke(journal_t *journal, 702 unsigned long long blocknr, 703 tid_t sequence) 704 { 705 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 706 707 record = find_revoke_record(journal, blocknr); 708 if (!record) 709 return 0; 710 if (tid_gt(sequence, record->sequence)) 711 return 0; 712 return 1; 713 } 714 715 /* 716 * Finally, once recovery is over, we need to clear the revoke table so 717 * that it can be reused by the running filesystem. 718 */ 719 720 void jbd2_journal_clear_revoke(journal_t *journal) 721 { 722 int i; 723 struct list_head *hash_list; 724 struct jbd2_revoke_record_s *record; 725 struct jbd2_revoke_table_s *revoke; 726 727 revoke = journal->j_revoke; 728 729 for (i = 0; i < revoke->hash_size; i++) { 730 hash_list = &revoke->hash_table[i]; 731 while (!list_empty(hash_list)) { 732 record = (struct jbd2_revoke_record_s*) hash_list->next; 733 list_del(&record->hash); 734 kmem_cache_free(jbd2_revoke_record_cache, record); 735 } 736 } 737 } 738