This patch does the following:
1) Update device management code to match the kernel code.
2) Allocator fixes.
3) Add a program called btrfstune to set/clear the SEEDING
super block flags.
This patch adds transaction IDs to root tree pointers.
Transaction IDs in tree pointers are compared with the
generation numbers in block headers when reading root
blocks of trees. This can detect some types of IO errors.
Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
The offset field in struct btrfs_extent_ref records the position
inside file that file extent is referenced by. In the new back
reference system, tree leaves holding reference to file extent
are recorded explicitly. We can quickly scan these tree leaves, so the
offset field is not required.
This patch also makes the back reference system check the objectid
when extents are being deleted
Signed-off-by: Yan Zheng <zheng.yan@oracle.com>
This patch makes the back reference system to explicit record the
location of parent node for all types of extents. The location of
parent node is placed into the offset field of backref key. Every
time a tree block is balanced, the back references for the affected
lower level extents are updated.
This is a utility option for the resizer, it makes sure to allocate
at offset bytes in the disk or higher. It ensures the resizer will have
something to move when testing it.
This patch improves converter's allocator and fixes a bug in data relocation
function. The new allocator caches free blocks as Btrfs's default allocator.
In testing here, the user CPU time reduced to half of the original when
checksum and small file packing was disabled. This patch also enlarges the
size of block groups created by the converter.
The main changes in this patch are adding chunk handing and data relocation
ability. In the last step of conversion, the converter relocates data in system
chunk and move chunk tree into system chunk. In the rollback process, the
converter remove chunk tree from system chunk and copy data back.
Regards
YZ
---
Block headers now store the chunk tree uuid
Chunk items records the device uuid for each stripes
Device extent items record better back refs to the chunk tree
Block groups record better back refs to the chunk tree
The chunk tree format has also changed. The objectid of BTRFS_CHUNK_ITEM_KEY
used to be the logical offset of the chunk. Now it is a chunk tree id,
with the logical offset being stored in the offset field of the key.
This allows a single chunk tree to record multiple logical address spaces,
upping the number of bytes indexed by a chunk tree from 2^64 to
2^128.
The mkfs code bootstraps the filesystem on a single device. Once
the raid block groups are setup, it needs to recow all of the blocks so
that each tree is properly allocated.
The first problem is that these SETGET macros lose typing information,
and therefore can't see the 'packed' attribute and therefore take
unaligned access SIGBUS signals on sparc64 when trying to derefernce
the member.
The next problem is a similar issue in btrfs_name_hash(). This gets
passed things like &key.offset which is a member of a packed
structure, losing this packed'ness information btrfs_name_hash()
performs a potentially unaligned memory access, again resulting in a
SIGBUS.