linux/drivers/md/raid5.h
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   1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
   2#ifndef _RAID5_H
   3#define _RAID5_H
   4
   5#include <linux/raid/xor.h>
   6#include <linux/dmaengine.h>
   7
   8/*
   9 *
  10 * Each stripe contains one buffer per device.  Each buffer can be in
  11 * one of a number of states stored in "flags".  Changes between
  12 * these states happen *almost* exclusively under the protection of the
  13 * STRIPE_ACTIVE flag.  Some very specific changes can happen in bi_end_io, and
  14 * these are not protected by STRIPE_ACTIVE.
  15 *
  16 * The flag bits that are used to represent these states are:
  17 *   R5_UPTODATE and R5_LOCKED
  18 *
  19 * State Empty == !UPTODATE, !LOCK
  20 *        We have no data, and there is no active request
  21 * State Want == !UPTODATE, LOCK
  22 *        A read request is being submitted for this block
  23 * State Dirty == UPTODATE, LOCK
  24 *        Some new data is in this buffer, and it is being written out
  25 * State Clean == UPTODATE, !LOCK
  26 *        We have valid data which is the same as on disc
  27 *
  28 * The possible state transitions are:
  29 *
  30 *  Empty -> Want   - on read or write to get old data for  parity calc
  31 *  Empty -> Dirty  - on compute_parity to satisfy write/sync request.
  32 *  Empty -> Clean  - on compute_block when computing a block for failed drive
  33 *  Want  -> Empty  - on failed read
  34 *  Want  -> Clean  - on successful completion of read request
  35 *  Dirty -> Clean  - on successful completion of write request
  36 *  Dirty -> Clean  - on failed write
  37 *  Clean -> Dirty  - on compute_parity to satisfy write/sync (RECONSTRUCT or RMW)
  38 *
  39 * The Want->Empty, Want->Clean, Dirty->Clean, transitions
  40 * all happen in b_end_io at interrupt time.
  41 * Each sets the Uptodate bit before releasing the Lock bit.
  42 * This leaves one multi-stage transition:
  43 *    Want->Dirty->Clean
  44 * This is safe because thinking that a Clean buffer is actually dirty
  45 * will at worst delay some action, and the stripe will be scheduled
  46 * for attention after the transition is complete.
  47 *
  48 * There is one possibility that is not covered by these states.  That
  49 * is if one drive has failed and there is a spare being rebuilt.  We
  50 * can't distinguish between a clean block that has been generated
  51 * from parity calculations, and a clean block that has been
  52 * successfully written to the spare ( or to parity when resyncing).
  53 * To distinguish these states we have a stripe bit STRIPE_INSYNC that
  54 * is set whenever a write is scheduled to the spare, or to the parity
  55 * disc if there is no spare.  A sync request clears this bit, and
  56 * when we find it set with no buffers locked, we know the sync is
  57 * complete.
  58 *
  59 * Buffers for the md device that arrive via make_request are attached
  60 * to the appropriate stripe in one of two lists linked on b_reqnext.
  61 * One list (bh_read) for read requests, one (bh_write) for write.
  62 * There should never be more than one buffer on the two lists
  63 * together, but we are not guaranteed of that so we allow for more.
  64 *
  65 * If a buffer is on the read list when the associated cache buffer is
  66 * Uptodate, the data is copied into the read buffer and it's b_end_io
  67 * routine is called.  This may happen in the end_request routine only
  68 * if the buffer has just successfully been read.  end_request should
  69 * remove the buffers from the list and then set the Uptodate bit on
  70 * the buffer.  Other threads may do this only if they first check
  71 * that the Uptodate bit is set.  Once they have checked that they may
  72 * take buffers off the read queue.
  73 *
  74 * When a buffer on the write list is committed for write it is copied
  75 * into the cache buffer, which is then marked dirty, and moved onto a
  76 * third list, the written list (bh_written).  Once both the parity
  77 * block and the cached buffer are successfully written, any buffer on
  78 * a written list can be returned with b_end_io.
  79 *
  80 * The write list and read list both act as fifos.  The read list,
  81 * write list and written list are protected by the device_lock.
  82 * The device_lock is only for list manipulations and will only be
  83 * held for a very short time.  It can be claimed from interrupts.
  84 *
  85 *
  86 * Stripes in the stripe cache can be on one of two lists (or on
  87 * neither).  The "inactive_list" contains stripes which are not
  88 * currently being used for any request.  They can freely be reused
  89 * for another stripe.  The "handle_list" contains stripes that need
  90 * to be handled in some way.  Both of these are fifo queues.  Each
  91 * stripe is also (potentially) linked to a hash bucket in the hash
  92 * table so that it can be found by sector number.  Stripes that are
  93 * not hashed must be on the inactive_list, and will normally be at
  94 * the front.  All stripes start life this way.
  95 *
  96 * The inactive_list, handle_list and hash bucket lists are all protected by the
  97 * device_lock.
  98 *  - stripes have a reference counter. If count==0, they are on a list.
  99 *  - If a stripe might need handling, STRIPE_HANDLE is set.
 100 *  - When refcount reaches zero, then if STRIPE_HANDLE it is put on
 101 *    handle_list else inactive_list
 102 *
 103 * This, combined with the fact that STRIPE_HANDLE is only ever
 104 * cleared while a stripe has a non-zero count means that if the
 105 * refcount is 0 and STRIPE_HANDLE is set, then it is on the
 106 * handle_list and if recount is 0 and STRIPE_HANDLE is not set, then
 107 * the stripe is on inactive_list.
 108 *
 109 * The possible transitions are:
 110 *  activate an unhashed/inactive stripe (get_active_stripe())
 111 *     lockdev check-hash unlink-stripe cnt++ clean-stripe hash-stripe unlockdev
 112 *  activate a hashed, possibly active stripe (get_active_stripe())
 113 *     lockdev check-hash if(!cnt++)unlink-stripe unlockdev
 114 *  attach a request to an active stripe (add_stripe_bh())
 115 *     lockdev attach-buffer unlockdev
 116 *  handle a stripe (handle_stripe())
 117 *     setSTRIPE_ACTIVE,  clrSTRIPE_HANDLE ...
 118 *              (lockdev check-buffers unlockdev) ..
 119 *              change-state ..
 120 *              record io/ops needed clearSTRIPE_ACTIVE schedule io/ops
 121 *  release an active stripe (release_stripe())
 122 *     lockdev if (!--cnt) { if  STRIPE_HANDLE, add to handle_list else add to inactive-list } unlockdev
 123 *
 124 * The refcount counts each thread that have activated the stripe,
 125 * plus raid5d if it is handling it, plus one for each active request
 126 * on a cached buffer, and plus one if the stripe is undergoing stripe
 127 * operations.
 128 *
 129 * The stripe operations are:
 130 * -copying data between the stripe cache and user application buffers
 131 * -computing blocks to save a disk access, or to recover a missing block
 132 * -updating the parity on a write operation (reconstruct write and
 133 *  read-modify-write)
 134 * -checking parity correctness
 135 * -running i/o to disk
 136 * These operations are carried out by raid5_run_ops which uses the async_tx
 137 * api to (optionally) offload operations to dedicated hardware engines.
 138 * When requesting an operation handle_stripe sets the pending bit for the
 139 * operation and increments the count.  raid5_run_ops is then run whenever
 140 * the count is non-zero.
 141 * There are some critical dependencies between the operations that prevent some
 142 * from being requested while another is in flight.
 143 * 1/ Parity check operations destroy the in cache version of the parity block,
 144 *    so we prevent parity dependent operations like writes and compute_blocks
 145 *    from starting while a check is in progress.  Some dma engines can perform
 146 *    the check without damaging the parity block, in these cases the parity
 147 *    block is re-marked up to date (assuming the check was successful) and is
 148 *    not re-read from disk.
 149 * 2/ When a write operation is requested we immediately lock the affected
 150 *    blocks, and mark them as not up to date.  This causes new read requests
 151 *    to be held off, as well as parity checks and compute block operations.
 152 * 3/ Once a compute block operation has been requested handle_stripe treats
 153 *    that block as if it is up to date.  raid5_run_ops guaruntees that any
 154 *    operation that is dependent on the compute block result is initiated after
 155 *    the compute block completes.
 156 */
 157
 158/*
 159 * Operations state - intermediate states that are visible outside of
 160 *   STRIPE_ACTIVE.
 161 * In general _idle indicates nothing is running, _run indicates a data
 162 * processing operation is active, and _result means the data processing result
 163 * is stable and can be acted upon.  For simple operations like biofill and
 164 * compute that only have an _idle and _run state they are indicated with
 165 * sh->state flags (STRIPE_BIOFILL_RUN and STRIPE_COMPUTE_RUN)
 166 */
 167/**
 168 * enum check_states - handles syncing / repairing a stripe
 169 * @check_state_idle - check operations are quiesced
 170 * @check_state_run - check operation is running
 171 * @check_state_result - set outside lock when check result is valid
 172 * @check_state_compute_run - check failed and we are repairing
 173 * @check_state_compute_result - set outside lock when compute result is valid
 174 */
 175enum check_states {
 176        check_state_idle = 0,
 177        check_state_run, /* xor parity check */
 178        check_state_run_q, /* q-parity check */
 179        check_state_run_pq, /* pq dual parity check */
 180        check_state_check_result,
 181        check_state_compute_run, /* parity repair */
 182        check_state_compute_result,
 183};
 184
 185/**
 186 * enum reconstruct_states - handles writing or expanding a stripe
 187 */
 188enum reconstruct_states {
 189        reconstruct_state_idle = 0,
 190        reconstruct_state_prexor_drain_run,     /* prexor-write */
 191        reconstruct_state_drain_run,            /* write */
 192        reconstruct_state_run,                  /* expand */
 193        reconstruct_state_prexor_drain_result,
 194        reconstruct_state_drain_result,
 195        reconstruct_state_result,
 196};
 197
 198struct stripe_head {
 199        struct hlist_node       hash;
 200        struct list_head        lru;          /* inactive_list or handle_list */
 201        struct llist_node       release_list;
 202        struct r5conf           *raid_conf;
 203        short                   generation;     /* increments with every
 204                                                 * reshape */
 205        sector_t                sector;         /* sector of this row */
 206        short                   pd_idx;         /* parity disk index */
 207        short                   qd_idx;         /* 'Q' disk index for raid6 */
 208        short                   ddf_layout;/* use DDF ordering to calculate Q */
 209        short                   hash_lock_index;
 210        unsigned long           state;          /* state flags */
 211        atomic_t                count;        /* nr of active thread/requests */
 212        int                     bm_seq; /* sequence number for bitmap flushes */
 213        int                     disks;          /* disks in stripe */
 214        int                     overwrite_disks; /* total overwrite disks in stripe,
 215                                                  * this is only checked when stripe
 216                                                  * has STRIPE_BATCH_READY
 217                                                  */
 218        enum check_states       check_state;
 219        enum reconstruct_states reconstruct_state;
 220        spinlock_t              stripe_lock;
 221        int                     cpu;
 222        struct r5worker_group   *group;
 223
 224        struct stripe_head      *batch_head; /* protected by stripe lock */
 225        spinlock_t              batch_lock; /* only header's lock is useful */
 226        struct list_head        batch_list; /* protected by head's batch lock*/
 227
 228        union {
 229                struct r5l_io_unit      *log_io;
 230                struct ppl_io_unit      *ppl_io;
 231        };
 232
 233        struct list_head        log_list;
 234        sector_t                log_start; /* first meta block on the journal */
 235        struct list_head        r5c; /* for r5c_cache->stripe_in_journal */
 236
 237        struct page             *ppl_page; /* partial parity of this stripe */
 238        /**
 239         * struct stripe_operations
 240         * @target - STRIPE_OP_COMPUTE_BLK target
 241         * @target2 - 2nd compute target in the raid6 case
 242         * @zero_sum_result - P and Q verification flags
 243         * @request - async service request flags for raid_run_ops
 244         */
 245        struct stripe_operations {
 246                int                  target, target2;
 247                enum sum_check_flags zero_sum_result;
 248        } ops;
 249        struct r5dev {
 250                /* rreq and rvec are used for the replacement device when
 251                 * writing data to both devices.
 252                 */
 253                struct bio      req, rreq;
 254                struct bio_vec  vec, rvec;
 255                struct page     *page, *orig_page;
 256                struct bio      *toread, *read, *towrite, *written;
 257                sector_t        sector;                 /* sector of this page */
 258                unsigned long   flags;
 259                u32             log_checksum;
 260                unsigned short  write_hint;
 261        } dev[1]; /* allocated with extra space depending of RAID geometry */
 262};
 263
 264/* stripe_head_state - collects and tracks the dynamic state of a stripe_head
 265 *     for handle_stripe.
 266 */
 267struct stripe_head_state {
 268        /* 'syncing' means that we need to read all devices, either
 269         * to check/correct parity, or to reconstruct a missing device.
 270         * 'replacing' means we are replacing one or more drives and
 271         * the source is valid at this point so we don't need to
 272         * read all devices, just the replacement targets.
 273         */
 274        int syncing, expanding, expanded, replacing;
 275        int locked, uptodate, to_read, to_write, failed, written;
 276        int to_fill, compute, req_compute, non_overwrite;
 277        int injournal, just_cached;
 278        int failed_num[2];
 279        int p_failed, q_failed;
 280        int dec_preread_active;
 281        unsigned long ops_request;
 282
 283        struct md_rdev *blocked_rdev;
 284        int handle_bad_blocks;
 285        int log_failed;
 286        int waiting_extra_page;
 287};
 288
 289/* Flags for struct r5dev.flags */
 290enum r5dev_flags {
 291        R5_UPTODATE,    /* page contains current data */
 292        R5_LOCKED,      /* IO has been submitted on "req" */
 293        R5_DOUBLE_LOCKED,/* Cannot clear R5_LOCKED until 2 writes complete */
 294        R5_OVERWRITE,   /* towrite covers whole page */
 295/* and some that are internal to handle_stripe */
 296        R5_Insync,      /* rdev && rdev->in_sync at start */
 297        R5_Wantread,    /* want to schedule a read */
 298        R5_Wantwrite,
 299        R5_Overlap,     /* There is a pending overlapping request
 300                         * on this block */
 301        R5_ReadNoMerge, /* prevent bio from merging in block-layer */
 302        R5_ReadError,   /* seen a read error here recently */
 303        R5_ReWrite,     /* have tried to over-write the readerror */
 304
 305        R5_Expanded,    /* This block now has post-expand data */
 306        R5_Wantcompute, /* compute_block in progress treat as
 307                         * uptodate
 308                         */
 309        R5_Wantfill,    /* dev->toread contains a bio that needs
 310                         * filling
 311                         */
 312        R5_Wantdrain,   /* dev->towrite needs to be drained */
 313        R5_WantFUA,     /* Write should be FUA */
 314        R5_SyncIO,      /* The IO is sync */
 315        R5_WriteError,  /* got a write error - need to record it */
 316        R5_MadeGood,    /* A bad block has been fixed by writing to it */
 317        R5_ReadRepl,    /* Will/did read from replacement rather than orig */
 318        R5_MadeGoodRepl,/* A bad block on the replacement device has been
 319                         * fixed by writing to it */
 320        R5_NeedReplace, /* This device has a replacement which is not
 321                         * up-to-date at this stripe. */
 322        R5_WantReplace, /* We need to update the replacement, we have read
 323                         * data in, and now is a good time to write it out.
 324                         */
 325        R5_Discard,     /* Discard the stripe */
 326        R5_SkipCopy,    /* Don't copy data from bio to stripe cache */
 327        R5_InJournal,   /* data being written is in the journal device.
 328                         * if R5_InJournal is set for parity pd_idx, all the
 329                         * data and parity being written are in the journal
 330                         * device
 331                         */
 332        R5_OrigPageUPTDODATE,   /* with write back cache, we read old data into
 333                                 * dev->orig_page for prexor. When this flag is
 334                                 * set, orig_page contains latest data in the
 335                                 * raid disk.
 336                                 */
 337};
 338
 339/*
 340 * Stripe state
 341 */
 342enum {
 343        STRIPE_ACTIVE,
 344        STRIPE_HANDLE,
 345        STRIPE_SYNC_REQUESTED,
 346        STRIPE_SYNCING,
 347        STRIPE_INSYNC,
 348        STRIPE_REPLACED,
 349        STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE,
 350        STRIPE_DELAYED,
 351        STRIPE_DEGRADED,
 352        STRIPE_BIT_DELAY,
 353        STRIPE_EXPANDING,
 354        STRIPE_EXPAND_SOURCE,
 355        STRIPE_EXPAND_READY,
 356        STRIPE_IO_STARTED,      /* do not count towards 'bypass_count' */
 357        STRIPE_FULL_WRITE,      /* all blocks are set to be overwritten */
 358        STRIPE_BIOFILL_RUN,
 359        STRIPE_COMPUTE_RUN,
 360        STRIPE_OPS_REQ_PENDING,
 361        STRIPE_ON_UNPLUG_LIST,
 362        STRIPE_DISCARD,
 363        STRIPE_ON_RELEASE_LIST,
 364        STRIPE_BATCH_READY,
 365        STRIPE_BATCH_ERR,
 366        STRIPE_BITMAP_PENDING,  /* Being added to bitmap, don't add
 367                                 * to batch yet.
 368                                 */
 369        STRIPE_LOG_TRAPPED,     /* trapped into log (see raid5-cache.c)
 370                                 * this bit is used in two scenarios:
 371                                 *
 372                                 * 1. write-out phase
 373                                 *  set in first entry of r5l_write_stripe
 374                                 *  clear in second entry of r5l_write_stripe
 375                                 *  used to bypass logic in handle_stripe
 376                                 *
 377                                 * 2. caching phase
 378                                 *  set in r5c_try_caching_write()
 379                                 *  clear when journal write is done
 380                                 *  used to initiate r5c_cache_data()
 381                                 *  also used to bypass logic in handle_stripe
 382                                 */
 383        STRIPE_R5C_CACHING,     /* the stripe is in caching phase
 384                                 * see more detail in the raid5-cache.c
 385                                 */
 386        STRIPE_R5C_PARTIAL_STRIPE,      /* in r5c cache (to-be/being handled or
 387                                         * in conf->r5c_partial_stripe_list)
 388                                         */
 389        STRIPE_R5C_FULL_STRIPE, /* in r5c cache (to-be/being handled or
 390                                 * in conf->r5c_full_stripe_list)
 391                                 */
 392        STRIPE_R5C_PREFLUSH,    /* need to flush journal device */
 393};
 394
 395#define STRIPE_EXPAND_SYNC_FLAGS \
 396        ((1 << STRIPE_EXPAND_SOURCE) |\
 397        (1 << STRIPE_EXPAND_READY) |\
 398        (1 << STRIPE_EXPANDING) |\
 399        (1 << STRIPE_SYNC_REQUESTED))
 400/*
 401 * Operation request flags
 402 */
 403enum {
 404        STRIPE_OP_BIOFILL,
 405        STRIPE_OP_COMPUTE_BLK,
 406        STRIPE_OP_PREXOR,
 407        STRIPE_OP_BIODRAIN,
 408        STRIPE_OP_RECONSTRUCT,
 409        STRIPE_OP_CHECK,
 410        STRIPE_OP_PARTIAL_PARITY,
 411};
 412
 413/*
 414 * RAID parity calculation preferences
 415 */
 416enum {
 417        PARITY_DISABLE_RMW = 0,
 418        PARITY_ENABLE_RMW,
 419        PARITY_PREFER_RMW,
 420};
 421
 422/*
 423 * Pages requested from set_syndrome_sources()
 424 */
 425enum {
 426        SYNDROME_SRC_ALL,
 427        SYNDROME_SRC_WANT_DRAIN,
 428        SYNDROME_SRC_WRITTEN,
 429};
 430/*
 431 * Plugging:
 432 *
 433 * To improve write throughput, we need to delay the handling of some
 434 * stripes until there has been a chance that several write requests
 435 * for the one stripe have all been collected.
 436 * In particular, any write request that would require pre-reading
 437 * is put on a "delayed" queue until there are no stripes currently
 438 * in a pre-read phase.  Further, if the "delayed" queue is empty when
 439 * a stripe is put on it then we "plug" the queue and do not process it
 440 * until an unplug call is made. (the unplug_io_fn() is called).
 441 *
 442 * When preread is initiated on a stripe, we set PREREAD_ACTIVE and add
 443 * it to the count of prereading stripes.
 444 * When write is initiated, or the stripe refcnt == 0 (just in case) we
 445 * clear the PREREAD_ACTIVE flag and decrement the count
 446 * Whenever the 'handle' queue is empty and the device is not plugged, we
 447 * move any strips from delayed to handle and clear the DELAYED flag and set
 448 * PREREAD_ACTIVE.
 449 * In stripe_handle, if we find pre-reading is necessary, we do it if
 450 * PREREAD_ACTIVE is set, else we set DELAYED which will send it to the delayed queue.
 451 * HANDLE gets cleared if stripe_handle leaves nothing locked.
 452 */
 453
 454/* Note: disk_info.rdev can be set to NULL asynchronously by raid5_remove_disk.
 455 * There are three safe ways to access disk_info.rdev.
 456 * 1/ when holding mddev->reconfig_mutex
 457 * 2/ when resync/recovery/reshape is known to be happening - i.e. in code that
 458 *    is called as part of performing resync/recovery/reshape.
 459 * 3/ while holding rcu_read_lock(), use rcu_dereference to get the pointer
 460 *    and if it is non-NULL, increment rdev->nr_pending before dropping the RCU
 461 *    lock.
 462 * When .rdev is set to NULL, the nr_pending count checked again and if
 463 * it has been incremented, the pointer is put back in .rdev.
 464 */
 465
 466struct disk_info {
 467        struct md_rdev  *rdev, *replacement;
 468        struct page     *extra_page; /* extra page to use in prexor */
 469};
 470
 471/*
 472 * Stripe cache
 473 */
 474
 475#define NR_STRIPES              256
 476#define STRIPE_SIZE             PAGE_SIZE
 477#define STRIPE_SHIFT            (PAGE_SHIFT - 9)
 478#define STRIPE_SECTORS          (STRIPE_SIZE>>9)
 479#define IO_THRESHOLD            1
 480#define BYPASS_THRESHOLD        1
 481#define NR_HASH                 (PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(struct hlist_head))
 482#define HASH_MASK               (NR_HASH - 1)
 483#define MAX_STRIPE_BATCH        8
 484
 485/* bio's attached to a stripe+device for I/O are linked together in bi_sector
 486 * order without overlap.  There may be several bio's per stripe+device, and
 487 * a bio could span several devices.
 488 * When walking this list for a particular stripe+device, we must never proceed
 489 * beyond a bio that extends past this device, as the next bio might no longer
 490 * be valid.
 491 * This function is used to determine the 'next' bio in the list, given the
 492 * sector of the current stripe+device
 493 */
 494static inline struct bio *r5_next_bio(struct bio *bio, sector_t sector)
 495{
 496        int sectors = bio_sectors(bio);
 497
 498        if (bio->bi_iter.bi_sector + sectors < sector + STRIPE_SECTORS)
 499                return bio->bi_next;
 500        else
 501                return NULL;
 502}
 503
 504/* NOTE NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS must remain below 64.
 505 * This is because we sometimes take all the spinlocks
 506 * and creating that much locking depth can cause
 507 * problems.
 508 */
 509#define NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS 8
 510#define STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS_MASK (NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS - 1)
 511
 512struct r5worker {
 513        struct work_struct work;
 514        struct r5worker_group *group;
 515        struct list_head temp_inactive_list[NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS];
 516        bool working;
 517};
 518
 519struct r5worker_group {
 520        struct list_head handle_list;
 521        struct list_head loprio_list;
 522        struct r5conf *conf;
 523        struct r5worker *workers;
 524        int stripes_cnt;
 525};
 526
 527/*
 528 * r5c journal modes of the array: write-back or write-through.
 529 * write-through mode has identical behavior as existing log only
 530 * implementation.
 531 */
 532enum r5c_journal_mode {
 533        R5C_JOURNAL_MODE_WRITE_THROUGH = 0,
 534        R5C_JOURNAL_MODE_WRITE_BACK = 1,
 535};
 536
 537enum r5_cache_state {
 538        R5_INACTIVE_BLOCKED,    /* release of inactive stripes blocked,
 539                                 * waiting for 25% to be free
 540                                 */
 541        R5_ALLOC_MORE,          /* It might help to allocate another
 542                                 * stripe.
 543                                 */
 544        R5_DID_ALLOC,           /* A stripe was allocated, don't allocate
 545                                 * more until at least one has been
 546                                 * released.  This avoids flooding
 547                                 * the cache.
 548                                 */
 549        R5C_LOG_TIGHT,          /* log device space tight, need to
 550                                 * prioritize stripes at last_checkpoint
 551                                 */
 552        R5C_LOG_CRITICAL,       /* log device is running out of space,
 553                                 * only process stripes that are already
 554                                 * occupying the log
 555                                 */
 556        R5C_EXTRA_PAGE_IN_USE,  /* a stripe is using disk_info.extra_page
 557                                 * for prexor
 558                                 */
 559};
 560
 561#define PENDING_IO_MAX 512
 562#define PENDING_IO_ONE_FLUSH 128
 563struct r5pending_data {
 564        struct list_head sibling;
 565        sector_t sector; /* stripe sector */
 566        struct bio_list bios;
 567};
 568
 569struct r5conf {
 570        struct hlist_head       *stripe_hashtbl;
 571        /* only protect corresponding hash list and inactive_list */
 572        spinlock_t              hash_locks[NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS];
 573        struct mddev            *mddev;
 574        int                     chunk_sectors;
 575        int                     level, algorithm, rmw_level;
 576        int                     max_degraded;
 577        int                     raid_disks;
 578        int                     max_nr_stripes;
 579        int                     min_nr_stripes;
 580
 581        /* reshape_progress is the leading edge of a 'reshape'
 582         * It has value MaxSector when no reshape is happening
 583         * If delta_disks < 0, it is the last sector we started work on,
 584         * else is it the next sector to work on.
 585         */
 586        sector_t                reshape_progress;
 587        /* reshape_safe is the trailing edge of a reshape.  We know that
 588         * before (or after) this address, all reshape has completed.
 589         */
 590        sector_t                reshape_safe;
 591        int                     previous_raid_disks;
 592        int                     prev_chunk_sectors;
 593        int                     prev_algo;
 594        short                   generation; /* increments with every reshape */
 595        seqcount_t              gen_lock;       /* lock against generation changes */
 596        unsigned long           reshape_checkpoint; /* Time we last updated
 597                                                     * metadata */
 598        long long               min_offset_diff; /* minimum difference between
 599                                                  * data_offset and
 600                                                  * new_data_offset across all
 601                                                  * devices.  May be negative,
 602                                                  * but is closest to zero.
 603                                                  */
 604
 605        struct list_head        handle_list; /* stripes needing handling */
 606        struct list_head        loprio_list; /* low priority stripes */
 607        struct list_head        hold_list; /* preread ready stripes */
 608        struct list_head        delayed_list; /* stripes that have plugged requests */
 609        struct list_head        bitmap_list; /* stripes delaying awaiting bitmap update */
 610        struct bio              *retry_read_aligned; /* currently retrying aligned bios   */
 611        unsigned int            retry_read_offset; /* sector offset into retry_read_aligned */
 612        struct bio              *retry_read_aligned_list; /* aligned bios retry list  */
 613        atomic_t                preread_active_stripes; /* stripes with scheduled io */
 614        atomic_t                active_aligned_reads;
 615        atomic_t                pending_full_writes; /* full write backlog */
 616        int                     bypass_count; /* bypassed prereads */
 617        int                     bypass_threshold; /* preread nice */
 618        int                     skip_copy; /* Don't copy data from bio to stripe cache */
 619        struct list_head        *last_hold; /* detect hold_list promotions */
 620
 621        atomic_t                reshape_stripes; /* stripes with pending writes for reshape */
 622        /* unfortunately we need two cache names as we temporarily have
 623         * two caches.
 624         */
 625        int                     active_name;
 626        char                    cache_name[2][32];
 627        struct kmem_cache       *slab_cache; /* for allocating stripes */
 628        struct mutex            cache_size_mutex; /* Protect changes to cache size */
 629
 630        int                     seq_flush, seq_write;
 631        int                     quiesce;
 632
 633        int                     fullsync;  /* set to 1 if a full sync is needed,
 634                                            * (fresh device added).
 635                                            * Cleared when a sync completes.
 636                                            */
 637        int                     recovery_disabled;
 638        /* per cpu variables */
 639        struct raid5_percpu {
 640                struct page     *spare_page; /* Used when checking P/Q in raid6 */
 641                void            *scribble;  /* space for constructing buffer
 642                                             * lists and performing address
 643                                             * conversions
 644                                             */
 645                int scribble_obj_size;
 646        } __percpu *percpu;
 647        int scribble_disks;
 648        int scribble_sectors;
 649        struct hlist_node node;
 650
 651        /*
 652         * Free stripes pool
 653         */
 654        atomic_t                active_stripes;
 655        struct list_head        inactive_list[NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS];
 656
 657        atomic_t                r5c_cached_full_stripes;
 658        struct list_head        r5c_full_stripe_list;
 659        atomic_t                r5c_cached_partial_stripes;
 660        struct list_head        r5c_partial_stripe_list;
 661        atomic_t                r5c_flushing_full_stripes;
 662        atomic_t                r5c_flushing_partial_stripes;
 663
 664        atomic_t                empty_inactive_list_nr;
 665        struct llist_head       released_stripes;
 666        wait_queue_head_t       wait_for_quiescent;
 667        wait_queue_head_t       wait_for_stripe;
 668        wait_queue_head_t       wait_for_overlap;
 669        unsigned long           cache_state;
 670        struct shrinker         shrinker;
 671        int                     pool_size; /* number of disks in stripeheads in pool */
 672        spinlock_t              device_lock;
 673        struct disk_info        *disks;
 674        struct bio_set          bio_split;
 675
 676        /* When taking over an array from a different personality, we store
 677         * the new thread here until we fully activate the array.
 678         */
 679        struct md_thread        *thread;
 680        struct list_head        temp_inactive_list[NR_STRIPE_HASH_LOCKS];
 681        struct r5worker_group   *worker_groups;
 682        int                     group_cnt;
 683        int                     worker_cnt_per_group;
 684        struct r5l_log          *log;
 685        void                    *log_private;
 686
 687        spinlock_t              pending_bios_lock;
 688        bool                    batch_bio_dispatch;
 689        struct r5pending_data   *pending_data;
 690        struct list_head        free_list;
 691        struct list_head        pending_list;
 692        int                     pending_data_cnt;
 693        struct r5pending_data   *next_pending_data;
 694};
 695
 696
 697/*
 698 * Our supported algorithms
 699 */
 700#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC       0 /* Rotating Parity N with Data Restart */
 701#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC      1 /* Rotating Parity 0 with Data Restart */
 702#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC        2 /* Rotating Parity N with Data Continuation */
 703#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC       3 /* Rotating Parity 0 with Data Continuation */
 704
 705/* Define non-rotating (raid4) algorithms.  These allow
 706 * conversion of raid4 to raid5.
 707 */
 708#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0              4 /* P or P,Q are initial devices */
 709#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N              5 /* P or P,Q are final devices. */
 710
 711/* DDF RAID6 layouts differ from md/raid6 layouts in two ways.
 712 * Firstly, the exact positioning of the parity block is slightly
 713 * different between the 'LEFT_*' modes of md and the "_N_*" modes
 714 * of DDF.
 715 * Secondly, or order of datablocks over which the Q syndrome is computed
 716 * is different.
 717 * Consequently we have different layouts for DDF/raid6 than md/raid6.
 718 * These layouts are from the DDFv1.2 spec.
 719 * Interestingly DDFv1.2-Errata-A does not specify N_CONTINUE but
 720 * leaves RLQ=3 as 'Vendor Specific'
 721 */
 722
 723#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_ZERO_RESTART 8 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=1 */
 724#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_RESTART    9 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=2 */
 725#define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_CONTINUE   10 /*DDF PRL=6 RLQ=3 */
 726
 727/* For every RAID5 algorithm we define a RAID6 algorithm
 728 * with exactly the same layout for data and parity, and
 729 * with the Q block always on the last device (N-1).
 730 * This allows trivial conversion from RAID5 to RAID6
 731 */
 732#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC_6     16
 733#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC_6    17
 734#define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC_6      18
 735#define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC_6     19
 736#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0_6            20
 737#define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N_6            ALGORITHM_PARITY_N
 738
 739static inline int algorithm_valid_raid5(int layout)
 740{
 741        return (layout >= 0) &&
 742                (layout <= 5);
 743}
 744static inline int algorithm_valid_raid6(int layout)
 745{
 746        return (layout >= 0 && layout <= 5)
 747                ||
 748                (layout >= 8 && layout <= 10)
 749                ||
 750                (layout >= 16 && layout <= 20);
 751}
 752
 753static inline int algorithm_is_DDF(int layout)
 754{
 755        return layout >= 8 && layout <= 10;
 756}
 757
 758extern void md_raid5_kick_device(struct r5conf *conf);
 759extern int raid5_set_cache_size(struct mddev *mddev, int size);
 760extern sector_t raid5_compute_blocknr(struct stripe_head *sh, int i, int previous);
 761extern void raid5_release_stripe(struct stripe_head *sh);
 762extern sector_t raid5_compute_sector(struct r5conf *conf, sector_t r_sector,
 763                                     int previous, int *dd_idx,
 764                                     struct stripe_head *sh);
 765extern struct stripe_head *
 766raid5_get_active_stripe(struct r5conf *conf, sector_t sector,
 767                        int previous, int noblock, int noquiesce);
 768extern int raid5_calc_degraded(struct r5conf *conf);
 769extern int r5c_journal_mode_set(struct mddev *mddev, int journal_mode);
 770#endif
 771