- 30 Oct, 2002 40 commits
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch adds ACL support to the ext2 filesystem.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch adds ACL support to the ext3 filesystem.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch provides converts extended attributes passed in from user space to a generic Posix ACL representation.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch (as well as the previous one) implements core ACL support which is needed for XFS as well as ext2/3 ACL support. It causes umask handling to be skilled for inodes that contain POSIX acl's, so that the original mode information can be passed down to the low-level fs code, which will take care of handling the umask.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch (as well as the following two) implements core ACL support. This set of convenience functions is used by the ext2/3 filesystem, and may be useful to other filesystems that wish to use "struct posix_acl" as their internal representation of acl's. User mode tools which support this interface may be found at http://acl.bestbits.at
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch adds extended attribute support to the ext2 filesystem. This uses the generic extended attribute patch which was developed by Andreas Gruenbacher and the XFS team. As a result, the user space utilities which work for XFS will also work with these patches.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch adds extended attribute support to the ext3 filesystem. This uses the generic extended attribute patch which was developed by Andreas Gruenbacher and the XFS team. As a result, the user space utilities which work for XFS will also work with these patches.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
(now uses struct block_device * to index devices, and uses hash.h for hash function) This patch creates a meta block cache which is utilized by the ext3 and ext2 extended attribute patch (patches 2 and 3, respectively). This cache allows directory blocks to be indexed by multiple keys. In the case of the extended attribute patches, it is used to look up blocks by both the block number and by the hash of the extended attributes. This is extremely important to allow the sharing of acl's when stored as extended attributes. Otherwise every single file would require its own, separate, one block overhead to store then ACL, even though there might be a large number of files that have the same ACL.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch allows filesystems with expanded inodes to be mounted. (compatibility feature flags will be used to control whether or not the filesystem should be mounted in case the new inode fields will result in compatibility issues). This allows for future compatibility with newer versions of ext2fs.
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch allows forward compatibility with future filesystems which are dynamically grown by using an alternate algorithm for storing the block group descriptors. It's also a bit more efficient, in that it uses just a little bit less disk space. Currently, the ext2 filesystem format requires either relocating the inode table, or reserving space in before doing the on-line resize. The new scheme, which is documented in "Planned Extensions to the Ext2/3 Filesystem", by Stephen Tweedie and I (see: http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net/extensions-ext23)
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Theodore Y. Ts'o authored
This patch adds support for default mount options to be stored in the superblock, so they don't have to be specified on the mount command line (or in /etc/fstab). While I was in the code, I also cleaned up the handling of how mount options are processed in the ext2 and ext3 filesystems. Most mount options are now processed *after* the superblock has been read in. This allows for a much cleaner handling of those default mount option parameters that were already stored in the superblock: the resuid, resgid, and s_errors fields were handled using some fairly gross special cases. Now the only mount option which is processed first is the sb option, which specifies the location of the superblock. This allows the handling of all of the default mount parameters to be much more cleanly and more generally handled. This does change the behaviour from earlier kernels, in that if the sb mount option is specified, it must be specified *first*. However, this option is rarely used, and if it is, it generally is specified first, so this seems to be a reasonable restriction.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Linus Torvalds authored
into penguin.transmeta.com:/home/penguin/torvalds/repositories/kernel/linux
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Neil Brown authored
This means: 1/ We don't need an order-4 allocation for each nfsd that starts 2/ We don't need an order-4 allocation in skb_linearize when we receive a 32K write request 3/ It will be easier to incorporate the zero-copy read changes The pages are handed around using an xdr_buf (instead of svc_buf) much like the NFS client so future crypto code can use the same data structure for both client and server. The code assumes that most requests and replies fit in a single page. The exceptions are assumed to have some largish 'data' bit, and the rest must fit in a single page. The 'data' bits are file data, readdir data, and symlinks. There must be only one 'data' bit per request. This is all fine for nfs/nlm. This isn't complete: 1/ NFSv4 hasn't been converted yet (it won't compile) 2/ NFSv3 allows symlinks upto 4096, but the code will only support upto about 3800 at the moment 3/ readdir responses are limited to about 3800. but I thought that patch was big enough, and the rest can come later. This patch introduces vfs_readv and vfs_writev as parallels to vfs_read and vfs_write. This means there is a fair bit of duplication in read_write.c that should probably be tidied up...
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Neil Brown authored
nfsd_readdir - the common readdir code for all version of nfsd, contains a number of version-specific things with appropriate checks, and also does some xdr-encoding which rightly belongs elsewhere. This patch simplifies nfsd_readdir to do just the core stuff, and moves the version specifics into version specific files, and the xdr encoding into xdr encoding files.
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Neil Brown authored
I forgot to add '1' for the record-length header in RPC/TCP. Thanks to Hirokazu Takahashi <taka@valinux.co.jp>
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Neil Brown authored
Currently if the kmalloc in exports_open fails, the seq_file isn't seq_released. We now do the kmalloc first, and make sure to kfree if seq_open fails.
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Neil Brown authored
The 'unexport everything' that happens when the last nfsd thread dies was shuting down too much - things that should only be shut down on module unload.
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Matthew Dobson authored
There is one remaining instance of CONFIG_MULTIQUAD in the kernel source. Fix it to use the proper CONFIG_X86_NUMAQ instead.
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Neil Brown authored
Define an interface for interpreting and updating superblocks so we can more easily define new formats. With this patch, (almost) all superblock layout information is locating in a small set of routines dedicated to superblock handling. This will allow us to provide a similar set for a different format. The two exceptions are: 1/ autostart_array where the devices listed in the superblock are searched for. 2/ raid5 'knows' the maximum number of devices for compute_parity. These will be addressed in a later patch.
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Linus Torvalds authored
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Andi Kleen authored
A few updates for x86-64 in 2.5.44. Some of the bugs fixed were serious. - Don't count ACPI mappings in end_pfn. This shrinks mem_map a lot on many setups. - Fix mem= option. Remove custom mapping support. - Revert per_cpu implementation to the generic version. The optimized one that used %gs directly triggered too many toolkit problems and was an constant source of bugs. - Make sure pgd_offset_k works correctly for vmalloc mappings. This makes modules work again properly. - Export pci dma symbols - Export other symbols to make more modules work - Don't drop physical address bits >32bit on iommu free. - Add more prototypes to fix warnings - Resync pci subsystem with i386 - Fix pci dma kernel option parsing. - Do PCI peer bus scanning after ACPI in case it missed some busses (that's a workaround - 2.5 ACPI seems to have some problems here that I need to investigate more closely) - Remove the .eh_frame on linking. This saves several hundred KB in the bzImage - Fix MTRR initialization. It works properly now on SMP again. - Fix kernel option parsing, it was broken by section name changes in init.h - A few other cleanups and fixes. - Fix nonatomic warning in ioport.c
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Andrew Morton authored
Add a `cold' hint to struct pagevec, and teach truncate and page reclaim to use it. Empirical testing showed that truncate's pages tend to be hot. And page reclaim's are certainly cold.
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Andrew Morton authored
It is usually the case that pagecache reads use busmastering hardware to transfer the data into pagecache. This invalidates the CPU cache of the pagecache pages. So use cache-cold pages for pagecache reads. To avoid wasting cache-hot pages.
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Andrew Morton authored
Hot/Cold pages and zone->lock amortisation
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Martin Bligh. Implements __free_pages_bulk(). Release multiple pages of a given order into the buddy all within a single acquisition of the zone lock. This also removes current->local_pages. The per-task list of pages which only ever contained one page. To prevent other tasks from stealing pages which this task has just freed up. Given that we're freeing into the per-cpu caches, and that those are multipage caches, and the cpu-stickiness of the scheduler, I think current->local_pages is no longer needed.
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Andrew Morton authored
This is the hot-n-cold-pages series. It introduces a per-cpu lockless LIFO pool in front of the page allocator. For three reasons: 1: To reduce lock contention on the buddy lock: we allocate and free pages in, typically, 16-page chunks. 2: To return cache-warm pages to page allocation requests. 3: As infrastructure for a page reservation API which can be used to ensure that the GFP_ATOMIC radix-tree node and pte_chain allocations cannot fail. That code is not complete, and does not absolutely require hot-n-cold pages. It'll work OK though. We add two queues per CPU. The "hot" queue contains pages which the freeing code thought were likely to be cache-hot. By default, new allocations are satisfied from this queue. The "cold" queue contains pages which the freeing code expected to be cache-cold. The cold queue is mainly for lock amortisation, although it is possible to explicitly allocate cold pages. The readahead code does that. I have been hot and cold on these patches for quite some time - the benefit is not great. - 4% speedup in Randy Hron's benching of the autoconf regression tests on a 4-way. Most of this came from savings in pte_alloc and pmd_alloc: the pagetable clearing code liked the warmer pages (some architectures still have the pgt_cache, and can perhaps do away with them). - 1% to 2% speedup in kernel compiles on my 4-way and Martin's 32-way. - 60% speedup in a little test program which writes 80 kbytes to a file and ftruncates it to zero again. Ran four instances of that on 4-way and it loved the cache warmth. - 2.5% speedup in Specweb testing on 8-way - The thing which won me over: an 11% increase in throughput of the SDET benchmark on an 8-way PIII: with hot & cold: RESULT for 8 users is 17971 +12.1% RESULT for 16 users is 17026 +12.0% RESULT for 32 users is 17009 +10.4% RESULT for 64 users is 16911 +10.3% without: RESULT for 8 users is 16038 RESULT for 16 users is 15200 RESULT for 32 users is 15406 RESULT for 64 users is 15331 SDET is a very old SPEC test which simulates a development environment with a large number of users. Lots of users running a mix of shell commands, basically. These patches were written by Martin Bligh and myself. This one implements rmqueue_bulk() - a function for removing multiple pages of a given order from the buddy lists. This is for lock amortisation: take the highly-contended zone->lock with less frequency, do more work once it has been acquired.
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Andrew Morton authored
Convert global page state accounting to use per-cpu storage (I think this code remains a little buggy, btw. Note how I do per_cpu(page_states, cpu).member += (delta); This gets done at interrupt time and hence is assuming that the "+=" operation on a ulong is atomic wrt interrupts on all architectures. How do we feel about that assumption?)
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Andrew Morton authored
This is needed so that per-cpu information in the core kernel can be accessed from modules.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> This patch makes per_cpu bh_accounting safe for cpu_possible allocation by using cpu notifiers.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> This patch makes per_cpu tasklet vectors safe for cpu_possible allocation by using CPU notifiers.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> This patch changes the per-CPU data in timer management (tvec_bases) to use per_cpu data area and makes it safe for cpu_possible allocation by using CPU notifiers. End result - saving space. Depends on cpu_possible patch.
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Andrew Morton authored
Patch from Dipankar Sarma <dipankar@in.ibm.com> This patch convers RCU per_cpu data to use per_cpu data area and makes it safe for cpu_possible allocation by using CPU notifiers.
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Andrew Morton authored
A typical construct is: int cpu = get_cpu(); foo = per_cpu(bar, cpu); put_cpu(); but this generates a compiler warning on uniprocessor builds: unused variable `cpu'. Add a dummy ref to `cpu' to per_cpu() to prevent this.
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Andrew Morton authored
Convert balance_dirty_pages_ratelimited() to use percpu storage for the ratelimiting counters.
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Alexey Kuznetsov authored
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Andrew Morton authored
- allocate memory for cpu buffers in cpu_up_prepare - start the timer in cpu_online - free the memory for cpu buffers in cpu_up_cancel.
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Andrew Morton authored
From Manfred Spraul - remove all typedef, except the kmem_bufctl_t. It's a redefine for an int, i.e. qualifies as tiny. - convert most macros to inline functions.
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Andrew Morton authored
Manfred added a new lock to protect the global list of slab caches. We already have a semaphore from those but he needs locking from timer context. So here we remove that lock and just do a down_trylock() on the existing semaphore. If that fails give up - we'll try again next timer tick.
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Andrew Morton authored
Manfred had all this weird code to schedule a kernel thread onto a different CPU just so that we could bond a timer to that CPU. Convert it all to use the new add_timer_on().
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