| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat, Inc. |
| * |
| * This file is released under the GPL. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef _LINUX_DM_TRANSACTION_MANAGER_H |
| #define _LINUX_DM_TRANSACTION_MANAGER_H |
| |
| #include "dm-block-manager.h" |
| |
| struct dm_transaction_manager; |
| struct dm_space_map; |
| |
| /*----------------------------------------------------------------*/ |
| |
| /* |
| * This manages the scope of a transaction. It also enforces immutability |
| * of the on-disk data structures by limiting access to writeable blocks. |
| * |
| * Clients should not fiddle with the block manager directly. |
| */ |
| |
| void dm_tm_destroy(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm); |
| |
| /* |
| * The non-blocking version of a transaction manager is intended for use in |
| * fast path code that needs to do lookups e.g. a dm mapping function. |
| * You create the non-blocking variant from a normal tm. The interface is |
| * the same, except that most functions will just return -EWOULDBLOCK. |
| * Methods that return void yet may block should not be called on a clone |
| * viz. dm_tm_inc, dm_tm_dec. Call dm_tm_destroy() as you would with a normal |
| * tm when you've finished with it. You may not destroy the original prior |
| * to clones. |
| */ |
| struct dm_transaction_manager *dm_tm_create_non_blocking_clone(struct dm_transaction_manager *real); |
| |
| /* |
| * We use a 2-phase commit here. |
| * |
| * i) Make all changes for the transaction *except* for the superblock. |
| * Then call dm_tm_pre_commit() to flush them to disk. |
| * |
| * ii) Lock your superblock. Update. Then call dm_tm_commit() which will |
| * unlock the superblock and flush it. No other blocks should be updated |
| * during this period. Care should be taken to never unlock a partially |
| * updated superblock; perform any operations that could fail *before* you |
| * take the superblock lock. |
| */ |
| int dm_tm_pre_commit(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm); |
| int dm_tm_commit(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, struct dm_block *superblock); |
| |
| /* |
| * These methods are the only way to get hold of a writeable block. |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * dm_tm_new_block() is pretty self-explanatory. Make sure you do actually |
| * write to the whole of @data before you unlock, otherwise you could get |
| * a data leak. (The other option is for tm_new_block() to zero new blocks |
| * before handing them out, which will be redundant in most, if not all, |
| * cases). |
| * Zeroes the new block and returns with write lock held. |
| */ |
| int dm_tm_new_block(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, |
| struct dm_block_validator *v, |
| struct dm_block **result); |
| |
| /* |
| * dm_tm_shadow_block() allocates a new block and copies the data from @orig |
| * to it. It then decrements the reference count on original block. Use |
| * this to update the contents of a block in a data structure, don't |
| * confuse this with a clone - you shouldn't access the orig block after |
| * this operation. Because the tm knows the scope of the transaction it |
| * can optimise requests for a shadow of a shadow to a no-op. Don't forget |
| * to unlock when you've finished with the shadow. |
| * |
| * The @inc_children flag is used to tell the caller whether it needs to |
| * adjust reference counts for children. (Data in the block may refer to |
| * other blocks.) |
| * |
| * Shadowing implicitly drops a reference on @orig so you must not have |
| * it locked when you call this. |
| */ |
| int dm_tm_shadow_block(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, dm_block_t orig, |
| struct dm_block_validator *v, |
| struct dm_block **result, int *inc_children); |
| |
| /* |
| * Read access. You can lock any block you want. If there's a write lock |
| * on it outstanding then it'll block. |
| */ |
| int dm_tm_read_lock(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, dm_block_t b, |
| struct dm_block_validator *v, |
| struct dm_block **result); |
| |
| void dm_tm_unlock(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, struct dm_block *b); |
| |
| /* |
| * Functions for altering the reference count of a block directly. |
| */ |
| void dm_tm_inc(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, dm_block_t b); |
| |
| void dm_tm_dec(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, dm_block_t b); |
| |
| int dm_tm_ref(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm, dm_block_t b, |
| uint32_t *result); |
| |
| struct dm_block_manager *dm_tm_get_bm(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm); |
| |
| /* |
| * If you're using a non-blocking clone the tm will build up a list of |
| * requested blocks that weren't in core. This call will request those |
| * blocks to be prefetched. |
| */ |
| void dm_tm_issue_prefetches(struct dm_transaction_manager *tm); |
| |
| /* |
| * A little utility that ties the knot by producing a transaction manager |
| * that has a space map managed by the transaction manager... |
| * |
| * Returns a tm that has an open transaction to write the new disk sm. |
| * Caller should store the new sm root and commit. |
| * |
| * The superblock location is passed so the metadata space map knows it |
| * shouldn't be used. |
| */ |
| int dm_tm_create_with_sm(struct dm_block_manager *bm, dm_block_t sb_location, |
| struct dm_transaction_manager **tm, |
| struct dm_space_map **sm); |
| |
| int dm_tm_open_with_sm(struct dm_block_manager *bm, dm_block_t sb_location, |
| void *sm_root, size_t root_len, |
| struct dm_transaction_manager **tm, |
| struct dm_space_map **sm); |
| |
| #endif /* _LINUX_DM_TRANSACTION_MANAGER_H */ |