/* Called with erase_completion_lock held */ staticstruct jffs2_eraseblock *jffs2_find_gc_block(struct jffs2_sb_info *c)
{ struct jffs2_eraseblock *ret; struct list_head *nextlist = NULL; int n = jiffies % 128;
/* Pick an eraseblock to garbage collect next. This is where we'll
put the clever wear-levelling algorithms. Eventually. */ /* We possibly want to favour the dirtier blocks more when the
number of free blocks is low. */
again: if (!list_empty(&c->bad_used_list) && c->nr_free_blocks > c->resv_blocks_gcbad) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from bad_used_list to GC next\n");
nextlist = &c->bad_used_list;
} elseif (n < 50 && !list_empty(&c->erasable_list)) { /* Note that most of them will have gone directly to be erased.
So don't favour the erasable_list _too_ much. */
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from erasable_list to GC next\n");
nextlist = &c->erasable_list;
} elseif (n < 110 && !list_empty(&c->very_dirty_list)) { /* Most of the time, pick one off the very_dirty list */
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from very_dirty_list to GC next\n");
nextlist = &c->very_dirty_list;
} elseif (n < 126 && !list_empty(&c->dirty_list)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from dirty_list to GC next\n");
nextlist = &c->dirty_list;
} elseif (!list_empty(&c->clean_list)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from clean_list to GC next\n");
nextlist = &c->clean_list;
} elseif (!list_empty(&c->dirty_list)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from dirty_list to GC next (clean_list was empty)\n");
nextlist = &c->dirty_list;
} elseif (!list_empty(&c->very_dirty_list)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from very_dirty_list to GC next (clean_list and dirty_list were empty)\n");
nextlist = &c->very_dirty_list;
} elseif (!list_empty(&c->erasable_list)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Picking block from erasable_list to GC next (clean_list and {very_,}dirty_list were empty)\n");
nextlist = &c->erasable_list;
} elseif (!list_empty(&c->erasable_pending_wbuf_list)) { /* There are blocks are waiting for the wbuf sync */
jffs2_dbg(1, "Synching wbuf in order to reuse erasable_pending_wbuf_list blocks\n");
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
jffs2_flush_wbuf_pad(c);
spin_lock(&c->erase_completion_lock); goto again;
} else { /* Eep. All were empty */
jffs2_dbg(1, "No clean, dirty _or_ erasable blocks to GC from! Where are they all?\n"); return NULL;
}
ret = list_entry(nextlist->next, struct jffs2_eraseblock, list);
list_del(&ret->list);
c->gcblock = ret;
ret->gc_node = ret->first_node; if (!ret->gc_node) {
pr_warn("Eep. ret->gc_node for block at 0x%08x is NULL\n",
ret->offset);
BUG();
}
/* Have we accidentally picked a clean block with wasted space ? */ if (ret->wasted_size) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Converting wasted_size %08x to dirty_size\n",
ret->wasted_size);
ret->dirty_size += ret->wasted_size;
c->wasted_size -= ret->wasted_size;
c->dirty_size += ret->wasted_size;
ret->wasted_size = 0;
}
return ret;
}
/* jffs2_garbage_collect_pass * Make a single attempt to progress GC. Move one node, and possibly * start erasing one eraseblock.
*/ int jffs2_garbage_collect_pass(struct jffs2_sb_info *c)
{ struct jffs2_inode_info *f; struct jffs2_inode_cache *ic; struct jffs2_eraseblock *jeb; struct jffs2_raw_node_ref *raw;
uint32_t gcblock_dirty; int ret = 0, inum, nlink; int xattr = 0;
if (mutex_lock_interruptible(&c->alloc_sem)) return -EINTR;
for (;;) { /* We can't start doing GC until we've finished checking
the node CRCs etc. */ int bucket, want_ino;
spin_lock(&c->erase_completion_lock); if (!c->unchecked_size) break;
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
if (!xattr)
xattr = jffs2_verify_xattr(c);
spin_lock(&c->inocache_lock); /* Instead of doing the inodes in numeric order, doing a lookup * in the hash for each possible number, just walk the hash * buckets of *existing* inodes. This means that we process * them out-of-order, but it can be a lot faster if there's
* a sparse inode# space. Which there often is. */
want_ino = c->check_ino; for (bucket = c->check_ino % c->inocache_hashsize ; bucket < c->inocache_hashsize; bucket++) { for (ic = c->inocache_list[bucket]; ic; ic = ic->next) { if (ic->ino < want_ino) continue;
if (ic->state != INO_STATE_CHECKEDABSENT &&
ic->state != INO_STATE_PRESENT) goto got_next; /* with inocache_lock held */
/* Point c->check_ino past the end of the last bucket. */
c->check_ino = ((c->highest_ino + c->inocache_hashsize + 1) &
~c->inocache_hashsize) - 1;
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock);
pr_crit("Checked all inodes but still 0x%x bytes of unchecked space?\n",
c->unchecked_size);
jffs2_dbg_dump_block_lists_nolock(c);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem); return -ENOSPC;
got_next: /* For next time round the loop, we want c->checked_ino to indicate * the *next* one we want to check. And since we're walking the
* buckets rather than doing it sequentially, it's: */
c->check_ino = ic->ino + c->inocache_hashsize;
if (!ic->pino_nlink) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Skipping check of ino #%d with nlink/pino zero\n",
ic->ino);
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock);
jffs2_xattr_delete_inode(c, ic); continue;
} switch(ic->state) { case INO_STATE_CHECKEDABSENT: case INO_STATE_PRESENT:
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock); continue;
case INO_STATE_GC: case INO_STATE_CHECKING:
pr_warn("Inode #%u is in state %d during CRC check phase!\n",
ic->ino, ic->state);
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock);
BUG();
case INO_STATE_READING: /* We need to wait for it to finish, lest we move on and trigger the BUG() above while we haven't yet
finished checking all its nodes */
jffs2_dbg(1, "Waiting for ino #%u to finish reading\n",
ic->ino); /* We need to come back again for the _same_ inode. We've
made no progress in this case, but that should be OK */
c->check_ino = ic->ino;
/* If there are any blocks which need erasing, erase them now */ if (!list_empty(&c->erase_complete_list) ||
!list_empty(&c->erase_pending_list)) {
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem);
jffs2_dbg(1, "%s(): erasing pending blocks\n", __func__); if (jffs2_erase_pending_blocks(c, 1)) return 0;
jffs2_dbg(1, "No progress from erasing block; doing GC anyway\n");
mutex_lock(&c->alloc_sem);
spin_lock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
}
/* First, work out which block we're garbage-collecting */
jeb = c->gcblock;
if (!jeb)
jeb = jffs2_find_gc_block(c);
if (!jeb) { /* Couldn't find a free block. But maybe we can just erase one and make 'progress'? */ if (c->nr_erasing_blocks) {
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem); return -EAGAIN;
}
jffs2_dbg(1, "Couldn't find erase block to garbage collect!\n");
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem); return -EIO;
}
if (!jeb->used_size) {
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem); goto eraseit;
}
raw = jeb->gc_node;
gcblock_dirty = jeb->dirty_size;
while(ref_obsolete(raw)) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Node at 0x%08x is obsolete... skipping\n",
ref_offset(raw));
raw = ref_next(raw); if (unlikely(!raw)) {
pr_warn("eep. End of raw list while still supposedly nodes to GC\n");
pr_warn("erase block at 0x%08x. free_size 0x%08x, dirty_size 0x%08x, used_size 0x%08x\n",
jeb->offset, jeb->free_size,
jeb->dirty_size, jeb->used_size);
jeb->gc_node = raw;
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem);
BUG();
}
}
jeb->gc_node = raw;
jffs2_dbg(1, "Going to garbage collect node at 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw));
if (!raw->next_in_ino) { /* Inode-less node. Clean marker, snapshot or something like that */
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock); if (ref_flags(raw) == REF_PRISTINE) { /* It's an unknown node with JFFS2_FEATURE_RWCOMPAT_COPY */
jffs2_garbage_collect_pristine(c, NULL, raw);
} else { /* Just mark it obsolete */
jffs2_mark_node_obsolete(c, raw);
}
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem); goto eraseit_lock;
}
ic = jffs2_raw_ref_to_ic(raw);
#ifdef CONFIG_JFFS2_FS_XATTR /* When 'ic' refers xattr_datum/xattr_ref, this node is GCed as xattr.
* We can decide whether this node is inode or xattr by ic->class. */ if (ic->class == RAWNODE_CLASS_XATTR_DATUM
|| ic->class == RAWNODE_CLASS_XATTR_REF) {
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
if (ic->class == RAWNODE_CLASS_XATTR_DATUM) {
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_xattr_datum(c, (struct jffs2_xattr_datum *)ic, raw);
} else {
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_xattr_ref(c, (struct jffs2_xattr_ref *)ic, raw);
} goto test_gcnode;
} #endif
/* We need to hold the inocache. Either the erase_completion_lock or the inocache_lock are sufficient; we trade down since the inocache_lock
causes less contention. */
spin_lock(&c->inocache_lock);
/* Three possibilities: 1. Inode is already in-core. We must iget it and do proper updating to its fragtree, etc. 2. Inode is not in-core, node is REF_PRISTINE. We lock the inocache to prevent a read_inode(), copy the node intact. 3. Inode is not in-core, node is not pristine. We must iget() and take the slow path.
*/
switch(ic->state) { case INO_STATE_CHECKEDABSENT: /* It's been checked, but it's not currently in-core. We can just copy any pristine nodes, but have to prevent anyone else from doing read_inode() while
we're at it, so we set the state accordingly */ if (ref_flags(raw) == REF_PRISTINE)
ic->state = INO_STATE_GC; else {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Ino #%u is absent but node not REF_PRISTINE. Reading.\n",
ic->ino);
} break;
case INO_STATE_PRESENT: /* It's in-core. GC must iget() it. */ break;
case INO_STATE_UNCHECKED: case INO_STATE_CHECKING: case INO_STATE_GC: /* Should never happen. We should have finished checking by the time we actually start doing any GC, and since we're holding the alloc_sem, no other garbage collection can happen.
*/
pr_crit("Inode #%u already in state %d in jffs2_garbage_collect_pass()!\n",
ic->ino, ic->state);
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem);
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock);
BUG();
case INO_STATE_READING: /* Someone's currently trying to read it. We must wait for them to finish and then go through the full iget() route to do the GC. However, sometimes read_inode() needs to get the alloc_sem() (for marking nodes invalid) so we must
drop the alloc_sem before sleeping. */
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem);
jffs2_dbg(1, "%s(): waiting for ino #%u in state %d\n",
__func__, ic->ino, ic->state);
sleep_on_spinunlock(&c->inocache_wq, &c->inocache_lock); /* And because we dropped the alloc_sem we must start again from the beginning. Ponder chance of livelock here -- we're returning success without actually making any progress.
Q: What are the chances that the inode is back in INO_STATE_READING again by the time we next enter this function? And that this happens enough times to cause a real delay?
A: Small enough that I don't care :)
*/ return 0;
}
/* OK. Now if the inode is in state INO_STATE_GC, we are going to copy the node intact, and we don't have to muck about with the fragtree etc. because we know it's not in-core. If it _was_ in-core, we go through
all the iget() crap anyway */
if (ic->state == INO_STATE_GC) {
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock);
if (ret != -EBADFD) {
spin_unlock(&c->inocache_lock); goto test_gcnode;
}
/* Fall through if it wanted us to, with inocache_lock held */
}
/* Prevent the fairly unlikely race where the gcblock is entirely obsoleted by the final close of a file which had the only valid nodes in the block, followed by erasure, followed by freeing of the ic because the erased block(s) held _all_ the nodes of that inode.... never been seen but
it's vaguely possible. */
f = jffs2_gc_fetch_inode(c, inum, !nlink); if (IS_ERR(f)) {
ret = PTR_ERR(f); goto release_sem;
} if (!f) {
ret = 0; goto release_sem;
}
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_live(c, jeb, raw, f);
jffs2_gc_release_inode(c, f);
test_gcnode: if (jeb->dirty_size == gcblock_dirty && !ref_obsolete(jeb->gc_node)) { /* Eep. This really should never happen. GC is broken */
pr_err("Error garbage collecting node at %08x!\n",
ref_offset(jeb->gc_node));
ret = -ENOSPC;
}
release_sem:
mutex_unlock(&c->alloc_sem);
eraseit_lock: /* If we've finished this block, start it erasing */
spin_lock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
eraseit: if (c->gcblock && !c->gcblock->used_size) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Block at 0x%08x completely obsoleted by GC. Moving to erase_pending_list\n",
c->gcblock->offset); /* We're GC'ing an empty block? */
list_add_tail(&c->gcblock->list, &c->erase_pending_list);
c->gcblock = NULL;
c->nr_erasing_blocks++;
jffs2_garbage_collect_trigger(c);
}
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
/* Now we have the lock for this inode. Check that it's still the one at the head
of the list. */
spin_lock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
if (c->gcblock != jeb) {
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
jffs2_dbg(1, "GC block is no longer gcblock. Restart\n"); goto upnout;
} if (ref_obsolete(raw)) {
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
jffs2_dbg(1, "node to be GC'd was obsoleted in the meantime.\n"); /* They'll call again */ goto upnout;
}
spin_unlock(&c->erase_completion_lock);
/* OK. Looks safe. And nobody can get us now because we have the semaphore. Move the block */ if (f->metadata && f->metadata->raw == raw) {
fn = f->metadata;
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_metadata(c, jeb, f, fn); goto upnout;
}
/* FIXME. Read node and do lookup? */ for (frag = frag_first(&f->fragtree); frag; frag = frag_next(frag)) { if (frag->node && frag->node->raw == raw) {
fn = frag->node;
end = frag->ofs + frag->size; if (!nrfrags++)
start = frag->ofs; if (nrfrags == frag->node->frags) break; /* We've found them all */
}
} if (fn) { if (ref_flags(raw) == REF_PRISTINE) {
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_pristine(c, f->inocache, raw); if (!ret) { /* Urgh. Return it sensibly. */
frag->node->raw = f->inocache->nodes;
} if (ret != -EBADFD) goto upnout;
} /* We found a datanode. Do the GC */ if((start >> PAGE_SHIFT) < ((end-1) >> PAGE_SHIFT)) { /* It crosses a page boundary. Therefore, it must be a hole. */
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_hole(c, jeb, f, fn, start, end);
} else { /* It could still be a hole. But we GC the page this way anyway */
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_dnode(c, jeb, f, fn, start, end);
} goto upnout;
}
/* Wasn't a dnode. Try dirent */ for (fd = f->dents; fd; fd=fd->next) { if (fd->raw == raw) break;
}
if (fd && fd->ino) {
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_dirent(c, jeb, f, fd);
} elseif (fd) {
ret = jffs2_garbage_collect_deletion_dirent(c, jeb, f, fd);
} else {
pr_warn("Raw node at 0x%08x wasn't in node lists for ino #%u\n",
ref_offset(raw), f->inocache->ino); if (ref_obsolete(raw)) {
pr_warn("But it's obsolete so we don't mind too much\n");
} else {
jffs2_dbg_dump_node(c, ref_offset(raw));
BUG();
}
}
upnout:
mutex_unlock(&f->sem);
return ret;
}
staticint jffs2_garbage_collect_pristine(struct jffs2_sb_info *c, struct jffs2_inode_cache *ic, struct jffs2_raw_node_ref *raw)
{ union jffs2_node_union *node;
size_t retlen; int ret;
uint32_t phys_ofs, alloclen;
uint32_t crc, rawlen; int retried = 0;
jffs2_dbg(1, "Going to GC REF_PRISTINE node at 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw));
/* Ask for a small amount of space (or the totlen if smaller) because we don't want to force wastage of the end of a block if splitting would
work. */ if (ic && alloclen > sizeof(struct jffs2_raw_inode) + JFFS2_MIN_DATA_LEN)
alloclen = sizeof(struct jffs2_raw_inode) + JFFS2_MIN_DATA_LEN;
ret = jffs2_reserve_space_gc(c, alloclen, &alloclen, rawlen); /* 'rawlen' is not the exact summary size; it is only an upper estimation */
if (ret) return ret;
if (alloclen < rawlen) { /* Doesn't fit untouched. We'll go the old route and split it */ return -EBADFD;
}
node = kmalloc(rawlen, GFP_KERNEL); if (!node) return -ENOMEM;
ret = jffs2_flash_read(c, ref_offset(raw), rawlen, &retlen, (char *)node); if (!ret && retlen != rawlen)
ret = -EIO; if (ret) goto out_node;
crc = crc32(0, node, sizeof(struct jffs2_unknown_node)-4); if (je32_to_cpu(node->u.hdr_crc) != crc) {
pr_warn("Header CRC failed on REF_PRISTINE node at 0x%08x: Read 0x%08x, calculated 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw), je32_to_cpu(node->u.hdr_crc), crc); goto bail;
}
switch(je16_to_cpu(node->u.nodetype)) { case JFFS2_NODETYPE_INODE:
crc = crc32(0, node, sizeof(node->i)-8); if (je32_to_cpu(node->i.node_crc) != crc) {
pr_warn("Node CRC failed on REF_PRISTINE data node at 0x%08x: Read 0x%08x, calculated 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw), je32_to_cpu(node->i.node_crc),
crc); goto bail;
}
if (je32_to_cpu(node->i.dsize)) {
crc = crc32(0, node->i.data, je32_to_cpu(node->i.csize)); if (je32_to_cpu(node->i.data_crc) != crc) {
pr_warn("Data CRC failed on REF_PRISTINE data node at 0x%08x: Read 0x%08x, calculated 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw),
je32_to_cpu(node->i.data_crc), crc); goto bail;
}
} break;
case JFFS2_NODETYPE_DIRENT:
crc = crc32(0, node, sizeof(node->d)-8); if (je32_to_cpu(node->d.node_crc) != crc) {
pr_warn("Node CRC failed on REF_PRISTINE dirent node at 0x%08x: Read 0x%08x, calculated 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw),
je32_to_cpu(node->d.node_crc), crc); goto bail;
}
if (strnlen(node->d.name, node->d.nsize) != node->d.nsize) {
pr_warn("Name in dirent node at 0x%08x contains zeroes\n",
ref_offset(raw)); goto bail;
}
if (node->d.nsize) {
crc = crc32(0, node->d.name, node->d.nsize); if (je32_to_cpu(node->d.name_crc) != crc) {
pr_warn("Name CRC failed on REF_PRISTINE dirent node at 0x%08x: Read 0x%08x, calculated 0x%08x\n",
ref_offset(raw),
je32_to_cpu(node->d.name_crc), crc); goto bail;
}
} break; default: /* If it's inode-less, we don't _know_ what it is. Just copy it intact */ if (ic) {
pr_warn("Unknown node type for REF_PRISTINE node at 0x%08x: 0x%04x\n",
ref_offset(raw), je16_to_cpu(node->u.nodetype)); goto bail;
}
}
/* OK, all the CRCs are good; this node can just be copied as-is. */
retry:
phys_ofs = write_ofs(c);
ret = jffs2_flash_write(c, phys_ofs, rawlen, &retlen, (char *)node);
if (ret || (retlen != rawlen)) {
pr_notice("Write of %d bytes at 0x%08x failed. returned %d, retlen %zd\n",
rawlen, phys_ofs, ret, retlen); if (retlen) {
jffs2_add_physical_node_ref(c, phys_ofs | REF_OBSOLETE, rawlen, NULL);
} else {
pr_notice("Not marking the space at 0x%08x as dirty because the flash driver returned retlen zero\n",
phys_ofs);
} if (!retried) { /* Try to reallocate space and retry */
uint32_t dummy; struct jffs2_eraseblock *jeb = &c->blocks[phys_ofs / c->sector_size];
retried = 1;
jffs2_dbg(1, "Retrying failed write of REF_PRISTINE node.\n");
if (S_ISBLK(JFFS2_F_I_MODE(f)) ||
S_ISCHR(JFFS2_F_I_MODE(f)) ) { /* For these, we don't actually need to read the old node */
mdatalen = jffs2_encode_dev(&dev, JFFS2_F_I_RDEV(f));
mdata = (char *)&dev;
jffs2_dbg(1, "%s(): Writing %d bytes of kdev_t\n",
__func__, mdatalen);
} elseif (S_ISLNK(JFFS2_F_I_MODE(f))) {
mdatalen = fn->size;
mdata = kmalloc(fn->size, GFP_KERNEL); if (!mdata) {
pr_warn("kmalloc of mdata failed in jffs2_garbage_collect_metadata()\n"); return -ENOMEM;
}
ret = jffs2_read_dnode(c, f, fn, mdata, 0, mdatalen); if (ret) {
pr_warn("read of old metadata failed in jffs2_garbage_collect_metadata(): %d\n",
ret);
kfree(mdata); return ret;
}
jffs2_dbg(1, "%s(): Writing %d bites of symlink target\n",
__func__, mdatalen);
}
ret = jffs2_reserve_space_gc(c, sizeof(ri) + mdatalen, &alloclen,
JFFS2_SUMMARY_INODE_SIZE); if (ret) {
pr_warn("jffs2_reserve_space_gc of %zd bytes for garbage_collect_metadata failed: %d\n", sizeof(ri) + mdatalen, ret); goto out;
}
last_frag = frag_last(&f->fragtree); if (last_frag) /* Fetch the inode length from the fragtree rather then
* from i_size since i_size may have not been updated yet */
ilen = last_frag->ofs + last_frag->size; else
ilen = JFFS2_F_I_SIZE(f);
rd.pino = cpu_to_je32(f->inocache->ino);
rd.version = cpu_to_je32(++f->highest_version);
rd.ino = cpu_to_je32(fd->ino); /* If the times on this inode were set by explicit utime() they can be different,
so refrain from splatting them. */ if (JFFS2_F_I_MTIME(f) == JFFS2_F_I_CTIME(f))
rd.mctime = cpu_to_je32(JFFS2_F_I_MTIME(f)); else
rd.mctime = cpu_to_je32(0);
rd.type = fd->type;
rd.node_crc = cpu_to_je32(crc32(0, &rd, sizeof(rd)-8));
rd.name_crc = cpu_to_je32(crc32(0, fd->name, rd.nsize));
ret = jffs2_reserve_space_gc(c, sizeof(rd)+rd.nsize, &alloclen,
JFFS2_SUMMARY_DIRENT_SIZE(rd.nsize)); if (ret) {
pr_warn("jffs2_reserve_space_gc of %zd bytes for garbage_collect_dirent failed: %d\n", sizeof(rd)+rd.nsize, ret); return ret;
}
new_fd = jffs2_write_dirent(c, f, &rd, fd->name, rd.nsize, ALLOC_GC);
if (IS_ERR(new_fd)) {
pr_warn("jffs2_write_dirent in garbage_collect_dirent failed: %ld\n",
PTR_ERR(new_fd)); return PTR_ERR(new_fd);
}
jffs2_add_fd_to_list(c, new_fd, &f->dents); return 0;
}
/* On a medium where we can't actually mark nodes obsolete pernamently, such as NAND flash, we need to work out whether this deletion dirent is still needed to actively delete a 'real' dirent with the same name that's still
somewhere else on the flash. */ if (!jffs2_can_mark_obsolete(c)) { struct jffs2_raw_dirent *rd; struct jffs2_raw_node_ref *raw; int ret;
size_t retlen; int name_len = strlen(fd->name);
uint32_t name_crc = crc32(0, fd->name, name_len);
uint32_t rawlen = ref_totlen(c, jeb, fd->raw);
rd = kmalloc(rawlen, GFP_KERNEL); if (!rd) return -ENOMEM;
/* Prevent the erase code from nicking the obsolete node refs while we're looking at them. I really don't like this extra lock but
can't see any alternative. Suggestions on a postcard to... */
mutex_lock(&c->erase_free_sem);
for (raw = f->inocache->nodes; raw != (void *)f->inocache; raw = raw->next_in_ino) {
cond_resched();
/* We only care about obsolete ones */ if (!(ref_obsolete(raw))) continue;
/* Any dirent with the same name is going to have the same length... */ if (ref_totlen(c, NULL, raw) != rawlen) continue;
/* Doesn't matter if there's one in the same erase block. We're going to
delete it too at the same time. */ if (SECTOR_ADDR(raw->flash_offset) == SECTOR_ADDR(fd->raw->flash_offset)) continue;
jffs2_dbg(1, "Check potential deletion dirent at %08x\n",
ref_offset(raw));
/* This is an obsolete node belonging to the same directory, and it's of the right
length. We need to take a closer look...*/
ret = jffs2_flash_read(c, ref_offset(raw), rawlen, &retlen, (char *)rd); if (ret) {
pr_warn("%s(): Read error (%d) reading obsolete node at %08x\n",
__func__, ret, ref_offset(raw)); /* If we can't read it, we don't need to continue to obsolete it. Continue */ continue;
} if (retlen != rawlen) {
pr_warn("%s(): Short read (%zd not %u) reading header from obsolete node at %08x\n",
__func__, retlen, rawlen,
ref_offset(raw)); continue;
}
if (je16_to_cpu(rd->nodetype) != JFFS2_NODETYPE_DIRENT) continue;
/* If the name CRC doesn't match, skip */ if (je32_to_cpu(rd->name_crc) != name_crc) continue;
/* If the name length doesn't match, or it's another deletion dirent, skip */ if (rd->nsize != name_len || !je32_to_cpu(rd->ino)) continue;
/* OK, check the actual name now */ if (memcmp(rd->name, fd->name, name_len)) continue;
/* OK. The name really does match. There really is still an older node on the flash which our deletion dirent obsoletes. So we have to write out
a new deletion dirent to replace it */
mutex_unlock(&c->erase_free_sem);
jffs2_dbg(1, "Deletion dirent at %08x still obsoletes real dirent \"%s\" at %08x for ino #%u\n",
ref_offset(fd->raw), fd->name,
ref_offset(raw), je32_to_cpu(rd->ino));
kfree(rd);
/* FIXME: If we're deleting a dirent which contains the current mtime and ctime,
we should update the metadata node with those times accordingly */
/* No need for it any more. Just mark it obsolete and remove it from the list */ while (*fdp) { if ((*fdp) == fd) {
found = 1;
*fdp = fd->next; break;
}
fdp = &(*fdp)->next;
} if (!found) {
pr_warn("Deletion dirent \"%s\" not found in list for ino #%u\n",
fd->name, f->inocache->ino);
}
jffs2_mark_node_obsolete(c, fd->raw);
jffs2_free_full_dirent(fd); return 0;
}
jffs2_dbg(1, "Writing replacement hole node for ino #%u from offset 0x%x to 0x%x\n",
f->inocache->ino, start, end);
memset(&ri, 0, sizeof(ri));
if(fn->frags > 1) {
size_t readlen;
uint32_t crc; /* It's partially obsoleted by a later write. So we have to
write it out again with the _same_ version as before */
ret = jffs2_flash_read(c, ref_offset(fn->raw), sizeof(ri), &readlen, (char *)&ri); if (readlen != sizeof(ri) || ret) {
pr_warn("Node read failed in jffs2_garbage_collect_hole. Ret %d, retlen %zd. Data will be lost by writing new hole node\n",
ret, readlen); goto fill;
} if (je16_to_cpu(ri.nodetype) != JFFS2_NODETYPE_INODE) {
pr_warn("%s(): Node at 0x%08x had node type 0x%04x instead of JFFS2_NODETYPE_INODE(0x%04x)\n",
__func__, ref_offset(fn->raw),
je16_to_cpu(ri.nodetype), JFFS2_NODETYPE_INODE); return -EIO;
} if (je32_to_cpu(ri.totlen) != sizeof(ri)) {
pr_warn("%s(): Node at 0x%08x had totlen 0x%x instead of expected 0x%zx\n",
__func__, ref_offset(fn->raw),
je32_to_cpu(ri.totlen), sizeof(ri)); return -EIO;
}
crc = crc32(0, &ri, sizeof(ri)-8); if (crc != je32_to_cpu(ri.node_crc)) {
pr_warn("%s: Node at 0x%08x had CRC 0x%08x which doesn't match calculated CRC 0x%08x\n",
__func__, ref_offset(fn->raw),
je32_to_cpu(ri.node_crc), crc); /* FIXME: We could possibly deal with this by writing new holes for each frag */
pr_warn("Data in the range 0x%08x to 0x%08x of inode #%u will be lost\n",
start, end, f->inocache->ino); goto fill;
} if (ri.compr != JFFS2_COMPR_ZERO) {
pr_warn("%s(): Node 0x%08x wasn't a hole node!\n",
__func__, ref_offset(fn->raw));
pr_warn("Data in the range 0x%08x to 0x%08x of inode #%u will be lost\n",
start, end, f->inocache->ino); goto fill;
}
} else {
fill:
ri.magic = cpu_to_je16(JFFS2_MAGIC_BITMASK);
ri.nodetype = cpu_to_je16(JFFS2_NODETYPE_INODE);
ri.totlen = cpu_to_je32(sizeof(ri));
ri.hdr_crc = cpu_to_je32(crc32(0, &ri, sizeof(struct jffs2_unknown_node)-4));
frag = frag_last(&f->fragtree); if (frag) /* Fetch the inode length from the fragtree rather then
* from i_size since i_size may have not been updated yet */
ilen = frag->ofs + frag->size; else
ilen = JFFS2_F_I_SIZE(f);
ret = jffs2_reserve_space_gc(c, sizeof(ri), &alloclen,
JFFS2_SUMMARY_INODE_SIZE); if (ret) {
pr_warn("jffs2_reserve_space_gc of %zd bytes for garbage_collect_hole failed: %d\n", sizeof(ri), ret); return ret;
}
new_fn = jffs2_write_dnode(c, f, &ri, NULL, 0, ALLOC_GC);
if (IS_ERR(new_fn)) {
pr_warn("Error writing new hole node: %ld\n", PTR_ERR(new_fn)); return PTR_ERR(new_fn);
} if (je32_to_cpu(ri.version) == f->highest_version) {
jffs2_add_full_dnode_to_inode(c, f, new_fn); if (f->metadata) {
jffs2_mark_node_obsolete(c, f->metadata->raw);
jffs2_free_full_dnode(f->metadata);
f->metadata = NULL;
} return 0;
}
/* * We should only get here in the case where the node we are * replacing had more than one frag, so we kept the same version * number as before. (Except in case of error -- see 'goto fill;' * above.)
*/
D1(if(unlikely(fn->frags <= 1)) {
pr_warn("%s(): Replacing fn with %d frag(s) but new ver %d != highest_version %d of ino #%d\n",
__func__, fn->frags, je32_to_cpu(ri.version),
f->highest_version, je32_to_cpu(ri.ino));
});
/* This is a partially-overlapped hole node. Mark it REF_NORMAL not REF_PRISTINE */
mark_ref_normal(new_fn->raw);
for (frag = jffs2_lookup_node_frag(&f->fragtree, fn->ofs);
frag; frag = frag_next(frag)) { if (frag->ofs > fn->size + fn->ofs) break; if (frag->node == fn) {
frag->node = new_fn;
new_fn->frags++;
fn->frags--;
}
} if (fn->frags) {
pr_warn("%s(): Old node still has frags!\n", __func__);
BUG();
} if (!new_fn->frags) {
pr_warn("%s(): New node has no frags!\n", __func__);
BUG();
}
jffs2_dbg(1, "Writing replacement dnode for ino #%u from offset 0x%x to 0x%x\n",
f->inocache->ino, start, end);
orig_end = end;
orig_start = start;
if (c->nr_free_blocks + c->nr_erasing_blocks > c->resv_blocks_gcmerge) { /* Attempt to do some merging. But only expand to cover logically adjacent frags if the block containing them is already considered to be dirty. Otherwise we end up with GC just going round in circles dirtying the nodes it already wrote out, especially on NAND where we have small eraseblocks and hence a much higher
chance of nodes having to be split to cross boundaries. */
struct jffs2_node_frag *frag;
uint32_t min, max;
min = start & ~(PAGE_SIZE-1);
max = min + PAGE_SIZE;
/* If the previous frag doesn't even reach the beginning, there's
excessive fragmentation. Just merge. */ if (frag->ofs > min) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Expanding down to cover partial frag (0x%x-0x%x)\n",
frag->ofs, frag->ofs+frag->size);
start = frag->ofs; continue;
} /* OK. This frag holds the first byte of the page. */ if (!frag->node || !frag->node->raw) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "First frag in page is hole (0x%x-0x%x). Not expanding down.\n",
frag->ofs, frag->ofs+frag->size); break;
} else {
/* OK, it's a frag which extends to the beginning of the page. Does it live in a block which is still considered clean? If so, don't obsolete it.
If not, cover it anyway. */
/* If the previous frag doesn't even reach the beginning, there's lots
of fragmentation. Just merge. */ if (frag->ofs+frag->size < max) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Expanding up to cover partial frag (0x%x-0x%x)\n",
frag->ofs, frag->ofs+frag->size);
end = frag->ofs + frag->size; continue;
}
if (!frag->node || !frag->node->raw) {
jffs2_dbg(1, "Last frag in page is hole (0x%x-0x%x). Not expanding up.\n",
frag->ofs, frag->ofs+frag->size); break;
} else {
/* OK, it's a frag which extends to the beginning of the page. Does it live in a block which is still considered clean? If so, don't obsolete it.
If not, cover it anyway. */
/* The rules state that we must obtain the folio lock *before* f->sem, so * drop f->sem temporarily. Since we also hold c->alloc_sem, nothing's * actually going to *change* so we're safe; we only allow reading. * * It is important to note that jffs2_write_begin() will ensure that its * folio is marked uptodate before allocating space. That means that if we * end up here trying to GC the *same* folio that jffs2_write_begin() is
* trying to write out, read_cache_folio() will not deadlock. */
mutex_unlock(&f->sem);
folio = read_cache_folio(inode->i_mapping, start >> PAGE_SHIFT,
__jffs2_read_folio, NULL); if (IS_ERR(folio)) {
pr_warn("read_cache_folio() returned error: %ld\n",
PTR_ERR(folio));
mutex_lock(&f->sem); return PTR_ERR(folio);
}
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