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28 #include <sys/param.h>
29 #include <sys/systm.h>
31 #include <sys/vnode.h>
32 #include <sys/mount.h>
33 #include <sys/kernel.h>
34 #include <sys/malloc.h>
37 #include <sys/quota.h>
38 #include <sys/kdebug.h>
39 #include <libkern/OSByteOrder.h>
40 #include <sys/namei.h>
42 #include <kern/locks.h>
44 #include <miscfs/specfs/specdev.h>
45 #include <miscfs/fifofs/fifo.h>
48 #include "hfs_catalog.h"
49 #include "hfs_cnode.h"
50 #include "hfs_quota.h"
51 #include "hfs_format.h"
52 #include "hfs_kdebug.h"
53 #include "hfs_cprotect.h"
57 extern lck_attr_t
* hfs_lock_attr
;
58 extern lck_grp_t
* hfs_mutex_group
;
59 extern lck_grp_t
* hfs_rwlock_group
;
61 static void hfs_reclaim_cnode(hfsmount_t
*hfsmp
, struct cnode
*);
62 static int hfs_cnode_teardown (struct vnode
*vp
, vfs_context_t ctx
, int reclaim
);
63 static int hfs_isordered(struct cnode
*, struct cnode
*);
65 extern int hfs_removefile_callback(struct buf
*bp
, void *hfsmp
);
68 __inline__
int hfs_checkdeleted (struct cnode
*cp
) {
69 return ((cp
->c_flag
& (C_DELETED
| C_NOEXISTS
)) ? ENOENT
: 0);
73 * Function used by a special fcntl() that decorates a cnode/vnode that
74 * indicates it is backing another filesystem, like a disk image.
76 * the argument 'val' indicates whether or not to set the bit in the cnode flags
78 * Returns non-zero on failure. 0 on success
80 int hfs_set_backingstore (struct vnode
*vp
, int val
) {
81 struct cnode
*cp
= NULL
;
85 if (!vnode_isreg(vp
) && !vnode_isdir(vp
)) {
90 err
= hfs_lock (cp
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
);
96 cp
->c_flag
|= C_BACKINGSTORE
;
99 cp
->c_flag
&= ~C_BACKINGSTORE
;
102 /* unlock everything */
109 * Function used by a special fcntl() that check to see if a cnode/vnode
110 * indicates it is backing another filesystem, like a disk image.
112 * the argument 'val' is an output argument for whether or not the bit is set
114 * Returns non-zero on failure. 0 on success
117 int hfs_is_backingstore (struct vnode
*vp
, int *val
) {
118 struct cnode
*cp
= NULL
;
121 if (!vnode_isreg(vp
) && !vnode_isdir(vp
)) {
129 err
= hfs_lock (cp
, HFS_SHARED_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
);
134 if (cp
->c_flag
& C_BACKINGSTORE
) {
141 /* unlock everything */
151 * This is an internal function that is invoked from both hfs_vnop_inactive
152 * and hfs_vnop_reclaim. As VNOP_INACTIVE is not necessarily called from vnodes
153 * being recycled and reclaimed, it is important that we do any post-processing
154 * necessary for the cnode in both places. Important tasks include things such as
155 * releasing the blocks from an open-unlinked file when all references to it have dropped,
156 * and handling resource forks separately from data forks.
158 * Note that we take only the vnode as an argument here (rather than the cnode).
159 * Recall that each cnode supports two forks (rsrc/data), and we can always get the right
160 * cnode from either of the vnodes, but the reverse is not true -- we can't determine which
161 * vnode we need to reclaim if only the cnode is supplied.
163 * This function is idempotent and safe to call from both hfs_vnop_inactive and hfs_vnop_reclaim
164 * if both are invoked right after the other. In the second call, most of this function's if()
165 * conditions will fail, since they apply generally to cnodes still marked with C_DELETED.
166 * As a quick check to see if this function is necessary, determine if the cnode is already
167 * marked C_NOEXISTS. If it is, then it is safe to skip this function. The only tasks that
168 * remain for cnodes marked in such a fashion is to teardown their fork references and
169 * release all directory hints and hardlink origins. However, both of those are done
170 * in hfs_vnop_reclaim. hfs_update, by definition, is not necessary if the cnode's catalog
171 * entry is no longer there.
173 * 'reclaim' argument specifies whether or not we were called from hfs_vnop_reclaim. If we are
174 * invoked from hfs_vnop_reclaim, we can not call functions that cluster_push since the UBC info
175 * is totally gone by that point.
177 * Assumes that both truncate and cnode locks for 'cp' are held.
180 int hfs_cnode_teardown (struct vnode
*vp
, vfs_context_t ctx
, int reclaim
)
186 bool started_tr
= false;
187 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
= VTOHFS(vp
);
188 struct proc
*p
= vfs_context_proc(ctx
);
195 v_type
= vnode_vtype(vp
);
198 if (cp
->c_datafork
) {
201 if (cp
->c_rsrcfork
) {
206 * Push file data out for normal files that haven't been evicted from
207 * the namespace. We only do this if this function was not called from reclaim,
208 * because by that point the UBC information has been totally torn down.
210 * There should also be no way that a normal file that has NOT been deleted from
211 * the namespace to skip INACTIVE and go straight to RECLAIM. That race only happens
212 * when the file becomes open-unlinked.
214 if ((v_type
== VREG
) &&
215 (!ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_DELETED
)) &&
216 (!ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_NOEXISTS
)) &&
217 (VTOF(vp
)->ff_blocks
) &&
220 * If we're called from hfs_vnop_inactive, all this means is at the time
221 * the logic for deciding to call this function, there were not any lingering
222 * mmap/fd references for this file. However, there is nothing preventing the system
223 * from creating a new reference in between the time that logic was checked
224 * and we entered hfs_vnop_inactive. As a result, the only time we can guarantee
225 * that there aren't any references is during vnop_reclaim.
227 hfs_filedone(vp
, ctx
, 0);
231 * Remove any directory hints or cached origins
233 if (v_type
== VDIR
) {
234 hfs_reldirhints(cp
, 0);
236 if (cp
->c_flag
& C_HARDLINK
) {
241 * -- Handle open unlinked files --
243 * If the vnode is in use, it means a force unmount is in progress
244 * in which case we defer cleaning up until either we come back
245 * through here via hfs_vnop_reclaim, at which point the UBC
246 * information will have been torn down and the vnode might no
247 * longer be in use, or if it's still in use, it will get cleaned
248 * up when next remounted.
250 if (ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_DELETED
) && !vnode_isinuse(vp
, 0)) {
252 * This check is slightly complicated. We should only truncate data
253 * in very specific cases for open-unlinked files. This is because
254 * we want to ensure that the resource fork continues to be available
255 * if the caller has the data fork open. However, this is not symmetric;
256 * someone who has the resource fork open need not be able to access the data
257 * fork once the data fork has gone inactive.
259 * If we're the last fork, then we have cleaning up to do.
261 * A) last fork, and vp == c_vp
262 * Truncate away own fork data. If rsrc fork is not in core, truncate it too.
264 * B) last fork, and vp == c_rsrc_vp
265 * Truncate ourselves, assume data fork has been cleaned due to C).
267 * If we're not the last fork, then things are a little different:
269 * C) not the last fork, vp == c_vp
270 * Truncate ourselves. Once the file has gone out of the namespace,
271 * it cannot be further opened. Further access to the rsrc fork may
274 * D) not the last fork, vp == c_rsrc_vp
275 * Don't enter the block below, just clean up vnode and push it out of core.
278 if ((v_type
== VREG
|| v_type
== VLNK
) &&
279 ((forkcount
== 1) || (!VNODE_IS_RSRC(vp
)))) {
281 /* Truncate away our own fork data. (Case A, B, C above) */
282 if (VTOF(vp
)->ff_blocks
!= 0) {
286 * Encapsulate the entire change (including truncating the link) in
287 * nested transactions if we are modifying a symlink, because we know that its
288 * file length will be at most 4k, and we can fit both the truncation and
289 * any relevant bitmap changes into a single journal transaction. We also want
290 * the kill_block code to execute in the same transaction so that any dirty symlink
291 * blocks will not be written. Otherwise, rely on
292 * hfs_truncate doing its own transactions to ensure that we don't blow up
295 if (!started_tr
&& (v_type
== VLNK
)) {
296 if (hfs_start_transaction(hfsmp
) != 0) {
306 * At this point, we have decided that this cnode is
307 * suitable for full removal. We are about to deallocate
308 * its blocks and remove its entry from the catalog.
309 * If it was a symlink, then it's possible that the operation
310 * which created it is still in the current transaction group
311 * due to coalescing. Take action here to kill the data blocks
312 * of the symlink out of the journal before moving to
313 * deallocate the blocks. We need to be in the middle of
314 * a transaction before calling buf_iterate like this.
316 * Note: we have to kill any potential symlink buffers out of
317 * the journal prior to deallocating their blocks. This is so
318 * that we don't race with another thread that may be doing an
319 * an allocation concurrently and pick up these blocks. It could
320 * generate I/O against them which could go out ahead of our journal
324 if (hfsmp
->jnl
&& vnode_islnk(vp
)) {
325 buf_iterate(vp
, hfs_removefile_callback
, BUF_SKIP_NONLOCKED
, (void *)hfsmp
);
330 * This truncate call (and the one below) is fine from VNOP_RECLAIM's
331 * context because we're only removing blocks, not zero-filling new
332 * ones. The C_DELETED check above makes things much simpler.
334 error
= hfs_truncate(vp
, (off_t
)0, IO_NDELAY
, 0, ctx
);
340 /* (SYMLINKS ONLY): Close/End our transaction after truncating the file record */
342 hfs_end_transaction(hfsmp
);
349 * Truncate away the resource fork, if we represent the data fork and
350 * it is the last fork. That means, by definition, the rsrc fork is not in
351 * core. To avoid bringing a vnode into core for the sole purpose of deleting the
352 * data in the resource fork, we call cat_lookup directly, then hfs_release_storage
353 * to get rid of the resource fork's data. Note that because we are holding the
354 * cnode lock, it is impossible for a competing thread to create the resource fork
355 * vnode from underneath us while we do this.
357 * This is invoked via case A above only.
359 if ((cp
->c_blocks
> 0) && (forkcount
== 1) && (vp
!= cp
->c_rsrc_vp
)) {
360 struct cat_lookup_buffer
*lookup_rsrc
= NULL
;
361 struct cat_desc
*desc_ptr
= NULL
;
364 lookup_rsrc
= hfs_mallocz(sizeof(*lookup_rsrc
));
366 if (cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
== 0) {
367 /* Initialize the rsrc descriptor for lookup if necessary*/
368 MAKE_DELETED_NAME (lookup_rsrc
->lookup_name
, HFS_TEMPLOOKUP_NAMELEN
, cp
->c_fileid
);
370 lookup_rsrc
->lookup_desc
.cd_nameptr
= (const uint8_t*) lookup_rsrc
->lookup_name
;
371 lookup_rsrc
->lookup_desc
.cd_namelen
= strlen (lookup_rsrc
->lookup_name
);
372 lookup_rsrc
->lookup_desc
.cd_parentcnid
= hfsmp
->hfs_private_desc
[FILE_HARDLINKS
].cd_cnid
;
373 lookup_rsrc
->lookup_desc
.cd_cnid
= cp
->c_cnid
;
375 desc_ptr
= &lookup_rsrc
->lookup_desc
;
378 desc_ptr
= &cp
->c_desc
;
381 lockflags
= hfs_systemfile_lock (hfsmp
, SFL_CATALOG
, HFS_SHARED_LOCK
);
383 error
= cat_lookup (hfsmp
, desc_ptr
, 1, 0, (struct cat_desc
*) NULL
,
384 (struct cat_attr
*) NULL
, &lookup_rsrc
->lookup_fork
.ff_data
, NULL
);
386 hfs_systemfile_unlock (hfsmp
, lockflags
);
389 hfs_free(lookup_rsrc
, sizeof(*lookup_rsrc
));
394 * Make the filefork in our temporary struct look like a real
395 * filefork. Fill in the cp, sysfileinfo and rangelist fields..
397 rl_init (&lookup_rsrc
->lookup_fork
.ff_invalidranges
);
398 lookup_rsrc
->lookup_fork
.ff_cp
= cp
;
401 * If there were no errors, then we have the catalog's fork information
402 * for the resource fork in question. Go ahead and delete the data in it now.
405 error
= hfs_release_storage (hfsmp
, NULL
, &lookup_rsrc
->lookup_fork
, cp
->c_fileid
);
406 hfs_free(lookup_rsrc
, sizeof(*lookup_rsrc
));
413 * This fileid's resource fork extents have now been fully deleted on-disk
414 * and this CNID is no longer valid. At this point, we should be able to
415 * zero out cp->c_blocks to indicate there is no data left in this file.
422 * If we represent the last fork (or none in the case of a dir),
423 * and the cnode has become open-unlinked...
425 * We check c_blocks here because it is possible in the force
426 * unmount case for the data fork to be in use but the resource
427 * fork to not be in use in which case we will truncate the
428 * resource fork, but not the data fork. It will get cleaned
429 * up upon next mount.
431 if (forkcount
<= 1 && !cp
->c_blocks
) {
433 * If it has EA's, then we need to get rid of them.
435 * Note that this must happen outside of any other transactions
436 * because it starts/ends its own transactions and grabs its
437 * own locks. This is to prevent a file with a lot of attributes
438 * from creating a transaction that is too large (which panics).
440 if (ISSET(cp
->c_attr
.ca_recflags
, kHFSHasAttributesMask
))
441 ea_error
= hfs_removeallattr(hfsmp
, cp
->c_fileid
, &started_tr
);
444 * Remove the cnode's catalog entry and release all blocks it
445 * may have been using.
449 * Mark cnode in transit so that no one can get this
450 * cnode from cnode hash.
452 // hfs_chash_mark_in_transit(hfsmp, cp);
453 // XXXdbg - remove the cnode from the hash table since it's deleted
454 // otherwise someone could go to sleep on the cnode and not
455 // be woken up until this vnode gets recycled which could be
456 // a very long time...
457 hfs_chashremove(hfsmp
, cp
);
459 cp
->c_flag
|= C_NOEXISTS
; // XXXdbg
463 if (hfs_start_transaction(hfsmp
) != 0) {
471 * Reserve some space in the Catalog file.
473 if ((error
= cat_preflight(hfsmp
, CAT_DELETE
, &cookie
, p
))) {
478 lockflags
= hfs_systemfile_lock(hfsmp
, SFL_CATALOG
| SFL_ATTRIBUTE
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
);
480 if (cp
->c_blocks
> 0) {
481 printf("hfs_inactive: deleting non-empty%sfile %d, "
482 "blks %d\n", VNODE_IS_RSRC(vp
) ? " rsrc " : " ",
483 (int)cp
->c_fileid
, (int)cp
->c_blocks
);
487 // release the name pointer in the descriptor so that
488 // cat_delete() will use the file-id to do the deletion.
489 // in the case of hard links this is imperative (in the
490 // case of regular files the fileid and cnid are the
491 // same so it doesn't matter).
493 cat_releasedesc(&cp
->c_desc
);
496 * The descriptor name may be zero,
497 * in which case the fileid is used.
499 error
= cat_delete(hfsmp
, &cp
->c_desc
, &cp
->c_attr
);
501 if (error
&& truncated
&& (error
!= ENXIO
)) {
502 printf("hfs_inactive: couldn't delete a truncated file!");
505 /* Update HFS Private Data dir */
507 hfsmp
->hfs_private_attr
[FILE_HARDLINKS
].ca_entries
--;
508 if (vnode_isdir(vp
)) {
509 DEC_FOLDERCOUNT(hfsmp
, hfsmp
->hfs_private_attr
[FILE_HARDLINKS
]);
511 (void)cat_update(hfsmp
, &hfsmp
->hfs_private_desc
[FILE_HARDLINKS
],
512 &hfsmp
->hfs_private_attr
[FILE_HARDLINKS
], NULL
, NULL
);
515 hfs_systemfile_unlock(hfsmp
, lockflags
);
522 if (hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_QUOTAS
)
523 (void)hfs_chkiq(cp
, -1, NOCRED
, 0);
526 /* Already set C_NOEXISTS at the beginning of this block */
527 cp
->c_flag
&= ~C_DELETED
;
528 cp
->c_touch_chgtime
= TRUE
;
529 cp
->c_touch_modtime
= TRUE
;
532 hfs_volupdate(hfsmp
, (v_type
== VDIR
) ? VOL_RMDIR
: VOL_RMFILE
, 0);
534 } // if <open unlinked>
536 hfs_update(vp
, reclaim
? HFS_UPDATE_FORCE
: 0);
539 * Since we are about to finish what might be an inactive call, propagate
540 * any remaining modified or touch bits from the cnode to the vnode. This
541 * serves as a hint to vnode recycling that we shouldn't recycle this vnode
544 * For now, if the node *only* has a dirty atime, we don't mark
545 * the vnode as dirty. VFS's asynchronous recycling can actually
546 * lead to worse performance than having it synchronous. When VFS
547 * is fixed to be more performant, we can be more honest about
548 * marking vnodes as dirty when it's only the atime that's dirty.
550 if (hfs_is_dirty(cp
) == HFS_DIRTY
|| ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_DELETED
)) {
553 vnode_cleardirty(vp
);
558 cat_postflight(hfsmp
, &cookie
, p
);
561 hfs_end_transaction(hfsmp
);
572 * The last usecount on the vnode has gone away, so we need to tear down
573 * any remaining data still residing in the cnode. If necessary, write out
574 * remaining blocks or delete the cnode's entry in the catalog.
577 hfs_vnop_inactive(struct vnop_inactive_args
*ap
)
579 struct vnode
*vp
= ap
->a_vp
;
581 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
= VTOHFS(vp
);
582 struct proc
*p
= vfs_context_proc(ap
->a_context
);
584 int took_trunc_lock
= 0;
587 v_type
= vnode_vtype(vp
);
590 if ((hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_READ_ONLY
) || vnode_issystem(vp
) ||
591 (hfsmp
->hfs_freezing_proc
== p
)) {
597 * For safety, do NOT call vnode_recycle from inside this function. This can cause
598 * problems in the following scenario:
600 * vnode_create -> vnode_reclaim_internal -> vclean -> VNOP_INACTIVE
602 * If we're being invoked as a result of a reclaim that was already in-flight, then we
603 * cannot call vnode_recycle again. Being in reclaim means that there are no usecounts or
604 * iocounts by definition. As a result, if we were to call vnode_recycle, it would immediately
605 * try to re-enter reclaim again and panic.
607 * Currently, there are three things that can cause us (VNOP_INACTIVE) to get called.
608 * 1) last usecount goes away on the vnode (vnode_rele)
609 * 2) last iocount goes away on a vnode that previously had usecounts but didn't have
610 * vnode_recycle called (vnode_put)
611 * 3) vclean by way of reclaim
613 * In this function we would generally want to call vnode_recycle to speed things
614 * along to ensure that we don't leak blocks due to open-unlinked files. However, by
615 * virtue of being in this function already, we can call hfs_cnode_teardown, which
616 * will release blocks held by open-unlinked files, and mark them C_NOEXISTS so that
617 * there's no entry in the catalog and no backing store anymore. If that's the case,
618 * then we really don't care all that much when the vnode actually goes through reclaim.
619 * Further, the HFS VNOPs that manipulated the namespace in order to create the open-
620 * unlinked file in the first place should have already called vnode_recycle on the vnode
621 * to guarantee that it would go through reclaim in a speedy way.
624 if (cp
->c_flag
& C_NOEXISTS
) {
626 * If the cnode has already had its cat entry removed, then
627 * just skip to the end. We don't need to do anything here.
633 if ((v_type
== VREG
|| v_type
== VLNK
)) {
634 hfs_lock_truncate(cp
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
);
638 (void) hfs_lock(cp
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_ALLOW_NOEXISTS
);
641 * Call cnode_teardown to push out dirty blocks to disk, release open-unlinked
642 * files' blocks from being in use, and move the cnode from C_DELETED to C_NOEXISTS.
644 error
= hfs_cnode_teardown (vp
, ap
->a_context
, 0);
647 * Drop the truncate lock before unlocking the cnode
648 * (which can potentially perform a vnode_put and
649 * recycle the vnode which in turn might require the
652 if (took_trunc_lock
) {
653 hfs_unlock_truncate(cp
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
);
665 * File clean-up (zero fill and shrink peof).
669 hfs_filedone(struct vnode
*vp
, vfs_context_t context
,
670 hfs_file_done_opts_t opts
)
674 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
;
676 u_int32_t blks
, blocksize
;
683 if ((hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_READ_ONLY
) || (fp
->ff_blocks
== 0))
686 hfs_flush_invalid_ranges(vp
);
688 blocksize
= VTOVCB(vp
)->blockSize
;
689 blks
= leof
/ blocksize
;
690 if (((off_t
)blks
* (off_t
)blocksize
) != leof
)
693 * Shrink the peof to the smallest size neccessary to contain the leof.
695 if (blks
< fp
->ff_blocks
) {
696 (void) hfs_truncate(vp
, leof
, IO_NDELAY
, HFS_TRUNCATE_SKIPTIMES
, context
);
699 if (!ISSET(opts
, HFS_FILE_DONE_NO_SYNC
)) {
701 cluster_push(vp
, IO_CLOSE
);
702 hfs_lock(cp
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_ALLOW_NOEXISTS
);
705 * If the hfs_truncate didn't happen to flush the vnode's
706 * information out to disk, force it to be updated now that
707 * all invalid ranges have been zero-filled and validated:
717 * Reclaim a cnode so that it can be used for other purposes.
720 hfs_vnop_reclaim(struct vnop_reclaim_args
*ap
)
722 struct vnode
*vp
= ap
->a_vp
;
724 struct filefork
*fp
= NULL
;
725 struct filefork
*altfp
= NULL
;
726 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
= VTOHFS(vp
);
727 vfs_context_t ctx
= ap
->a_context
;
728 int reclaim_cnode
= 0;
732 v_type
= vnode_vtype(vp
);
736 * We don't take the truncate lock since by the time reclaim comes along,
737 * all dirty pages have been synced and nobody should be competing
738 * with us for this thread.
740 (void) hfs_lock(cp
, HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK
, HFS_LOCK_ALLOW_NOEXISTS
);
743 * Sync to disk any remaining data in the cnode/vnode. This includes
744 * a call to hfs_update if the cnode has outbound data.
746 * If C_NOEXISTS is set on the cnode, then there's nothing teardown needs to do
747 * because the catalog entry for this cnode is already gone.
749 if (!ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_NOEXISTS
)) {
750 err
= hfs_cnode_teardown(vp
, ctx
, 1);
754 * Keep track of an inactive hot file. Don't bother on ssd's since
755 * the tracking is done differently (it's done at read() time)
757 if (!vnode_isdir(vp
) &&
758 !vnode_issystem(vp
) &&
759 !(cp
->c_flag
& (C_DELETED
| C_NOEXISTS
)) &&
760 !(hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_CS_HOTFILE_PIN
)) {
761 (void) hfs_addhotfile(vp
);
763 vnode_removefsref(vp
);
766 * Find file fork for this vnode (if any)
767 * Also check if another fork is active
769 if (cp
->c_vp
== vp
) {
771 altfp
= cp
->c_rsrcfork
;
773 cp
->c_datafork
= NULL
;
775 } else if (cp
->c_rsrc_vp
== vp
) {
777 altfp
= cp
->c_datafork
;
779 cp
->c_rsrcfork
= NULL
;
780 cp
->c_rsrc_vp
= NULL
;
782 panic("hfs_vnop_reclaim: vp points to wrong cnode (vp=%p cp->c_vp=%p cp->c_rsrc_vp=%p)\n", vp
, cp
->c_vp
, cp
->c_rsrc_vp
);
785 * On the last fork, remove the cnode from its hash chain.
788 /* If we can't remove it then the cnode must persist! */
789 if (hfs_chashremove(hfsmp
, cp
) == 0)
792 * Remove any directory hints
794 if (vnode_isdir(vp
)) {
795 hfs_reldirhints(cp
, 0);
798 if(cp
->c_flag
& C_HARDLINK
) {
802 /* Release the file fork and related data */
804 /* Dump cached symlink data */
805 if (vnode_islnk(vp
) && (fp
->ff_symlinkptr
!= NULL
)) {
806 hfs_free(fp
->ff_symlinkptr
, fp
->ff_size
);
808 rl_remove_all(&fp
->ff_invalidranges
);
809 hfs_zfree(fp
, HFS_FILEFORK_ZONE
);
813 * If there was only one active fork then we can release the cnode.
816 hfs_chashwakeup(hfsmp
, cp
, H_ALLOC
| H_TRANSIT
);
818 hfs_reclaim_cnode(hfsmp
, cp
);
822 * cnode in use. If it is a directory, it could have
823 * no live forks. Just release the lock.
828 vnode_clearfsnode(vp
);
833 extern int (**hfs_vnodeop_p
) (void *);
835 extern int (**hfs_fifoop_p
) (void *);
839 extern int (**hfs_std_vnodeop_p
) (void *);
843 * hfs_getnewvnode - get new default vnode
845 * The vnode is returned with an iocount and the cnode locked.
846 * The cnode of the parent vnode 'dvp' may or may not be locked, depending on
847 * the circumstances. The cnode in question (if acquiring the resource fork),
848 * may also already be locked at the time we enter this function.
850 * Note that there are both input and output flag arguments to this function.
851 * If one of the input flags (specifically, GNV_USE_VP), is set, then
852 * hfs_getnewvnode will use the parameter *vpp, which is traditionally only
853 * an output parameter, as both an input and output parameter. It will use
854 * the vnode provided in the output, and pass it to vnode_create with the
855 * proper flavor so that a new vnode is _NOT_ created on our behalf when
856 * we dispatch to VFS. This may be important in various HFS vnode creation
857 * routines, such a create or get-resource-fork, because we risk deadlock if
858 * jetsam is involved.
860 * Deadlock potential exists if jetsam is synchronously invoked while we are waiting
861 * for a vnode to be recycled in order to give it the identity we want. If jetsam
862 * happens to target a process for termination that is blocked in-kernel, waiting to
863 * acquire the cnode lock on our parent 'dvp', while our current thread has it locked,
864 * neither side will make forward progress and the watchdog timer will eventually fire.
865 * To prevent this, a caller of hfs_getnewvnode may choose to proactively force
866 * any necessary vnode reclamation/recycling while it is not holding any locks and
867 * thus not prone to deadlock. If this is the case, GNV_USE_VP will be set and
868 * the parameter will be used as described above.
871 * In circumstances when GNV_USE_VP is set, this function _MUST_ clean up and either consume
872 * or dispose of the provided vnode. We funnel all errors to a single return value so that
873 * if provided_vp is still non-NULL, then we will dispose of the vnode. This will occur in
874 * all error cases of this function -- anywhere we zero/NULL out the *vpp parameter. It may
875 * also occur if the current thread raced with another to create the same vnode, and we
876 * find the entry already present in the cnode hash.
881 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
,
883 struct componentname
*cnp
,
884 struct cat_desc
*descp
,
886 struct cat_attr
*attrp
,
887 struct cat_fork
*forkp
,
891 struct mount
*mp
= HFSTOVFS(hfsmp
);
892 struct vnode
*vp
= NULL
;
894 struct vnode
*tvp
= NULLVP
;
895 struct cnode
*cp
= NULL
;
896 struct filefork
*fp
= NULL
;
897 int hfs_standard
= 0;
902 int need_update_identity
= 0;
903 struct vnode_fsparam vfsp
;
906 struct vnode
*provided_vp
= NULL
;
913 hfs_standard
= (hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_STANDARD
);
915 if (flags
& GNV_USE_VP
) {
916 /* Store the provided VP for later use */
920 /* Zero out the vpp regardless of provided input */
923 /* Zero out the out_flags */
926 if (attrp
->ca_fileid
== 0) {
932 if (IFTOVT(attrp
->ca_mode
) == VFIFO
) {
937 vtype
= IFTOVT(attrp
->ca_mode
);
938 issystemfile
= (descp
->cd_flags
& CD_ISMETA
) && (vtype
== VREG
);
939 wantrsrc
= flags
& GNV_WANTRSRC
;
943 (vtype
!= VDIR
&& forkp
&&
944 (attrp
->ca_blocks
< forkp
->cf_blocks
||
945 howmany((uint64_t)forkp
->cf_size
, hfsmp
->blockSize
) > forkp
->cf_blocks
||
946 (vtype
== VLNK
&& (uint64_t)forkp
->cf_size
> MAXPATHLEN
)))) {
947 /* Mark the FS as corrupt and bail out */
948 hfs_mark_inconsistent(hfsmp
, HFS_INCONSISTENCY_DETECTED
);
953 #ifdef HFS_CHECK_LOCK_ORDER
955 * The only case where it's permissible to hold the parent cnode
956 * lock is during a create operation (hfs_makenode) or when
957 * we don't need the cnode lock (GNV_SKIPLOCK).
960 (flags
& (GNV_CREATE
| GNV_SKIPLOCK
)) == 0 &&
961 VTOC(dvp
)->c_lockowner
== current_thread()) {
962 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: unexpected hold of parent cnode %p", VTOC(dvp
));
964 #endif /* HFS_CHECK_LOCK_ORDER */
967 * Get a cnode (new or existing)
969 cp
= hfs_chash_getcnode(hfsmp
, attrp
->ca_fileid
, vpp
, wantrsrc
,
970 (flags
& GNV_SKIPLOCK
), out_flags
, &hflags
);
973 * If the id is no longer valid for lookups we'll get back a NULL cp.
980 * We may have been provided a vnode via
981 * GNV_USE_VP. In this case, we have raced with
982 * a 2nd thread to create the target vnode. The provided
983 * vnode that was passed in will be dealt with at the
984 * end of the function, as we don't zero out the field
985 * until we're ready to pass responsibility to VFS.
990 * If we get a cnode/vnode pair out of hfs_chash_getcnode, then update the
991 * descriptor in the cnode as needed if the cnode represents a hardlink.
992 * We want the caller to get the most up-to-date copy of the descriptor
993 * as possible. However, we only do anything here if there was a valid vnode.
994 * If there isn't a vnode, then the cnode is brand new and needs to be initialized
995 * as it doesn't have a descriptor or cat_attr yet.
997 * If we are about to replace the descriptor with the user-supplied one, then validate
998 * that the descriptor correctly acknowledges this item is a hardlink. We could be
999 * subject to a race where the calling thread invoked cat_lookup, got a valid lookup
1000 * result but the file was not yet a hardlink. With sufficient delay between there
1001 * and here, we might accidentally copy in the raw inode ID into the descriptor in the
1002 * call below. If the descriptor's CNID is the same as the fileID then it must
1003 * not yet have been a hardlink when the lookup occurred.
1006 if (!(hfs_checkdeleted(cp
))) {
1008 // If the bytes of the filename in the descp do not match the bytes in the
1009 // cnp (and we're not looking up the resource fork), then we want to update
1010 // the vnode identity to contain the bytes that HFS stores so that when an
1011 // fsevent gets generated, it has the correct filename. otherwise daemons
1012 // that match filenames produced by fsevents with filenames they have stored
1013 // elsewhere (e.g. bladerunner, backupd, mds), the filenames will not match.
1014 // See: <rdar://problem/8044697> FSEvents doesn't always decompose diacritical unicode chars in the paths of the changed directories
1015 // for more details.
1017 #ifdef CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
1018 if (*vpp
&& cnp
&& cnp
->cn_nameptr
&& !(cnp
->cn_flags
& CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
) && descp
&& descp
->cd_nameptr
&& strncmp((const char *)cnp
->cn_nameptr
, (const char *)descp
->cd_nameptr
, descp
->cd_namelen
) != 0) {
1020 if (*vpp
&& cnp
&& cnp
->cn_nameptr
&& descp
&& descp
->cd_nameptr
&& strncmp((const char *)cnp
->cn_nameptr
, (const char *)descp
->cd_nameptr
, descp
->cd_namelen
) != 0) {
1022 vnode_update_identity (*vpp
, dvp
, (const char *)descp
->cd_nameptr
, descp
->cd_namelen
, 0, VNODE_UPDATE_NAME
);
1024 if ((cp
->c_flag
& C_HARDLINK
) && descp
->cd_nameptr
&& descp
->cd_namelen
> 0) {
1025 /* If cnode is uninitialized, its c_attr will be zeroed out; cnids wont match. */
1026 if ((descp
->cd_cnid
== cp
->c_attr
.ca_fileid
) &&
1027 (attrp
->ca_linkcount
!= cp
->c_attr
.ca_linkcount
)){
1029 if ((flags
& GNV_SKIPLOCK
) == 0) {
1031 * Then we took the lock. Drop it before calling
1032 * vnode_put, which may invoke hfs_vnop_inactive and need to take
1033 * the cnode lock again.
1039 * Emit ERECYCLE and GNV_CAT_ATTRCHANGED to
1040 * force a re-drive in the lookup routine.
1041 * Drop the iocount on the vnode obtained from
1042 * chash_getcnode if needed.
1050 * If we raced with VNOP_RECLAIM for this vnode, the hash code could
1051 * have observed it after the c_vp or c_rsrc_vp fields had been torn down;
1052 * the hash code peeks at those fields without holding the cnode lock because
1053 * it needs to be fast. As a result, we may have set H_ATTACH in the chash
1054 * call above. Since we're bailing out, unset whatever flags we just set, and
1055 * wake up all waiters for this cnode.
1058 hfs_chashwakeup(hfsmp
, cp
, hflags
);
1061 *out_flags
= GNV_CAT_ATTRCHANGED
;
1067 * Otherwise, CNID != fileid. Go ahead and copy in the new descriptor.
1069 * Replacing the descriptor here is fine because we looked up the item without
1070 * a vnode in hand before. If a vnode existed, its identity must be attached to this
1071 * item. We are not susceptible to the lookup fastpath issue at this point.
1073 replace_desc(cp
, descp
);
1076 * This item was a hardlink, and its name needed to be updated. By replacing the
1077 * descriptor above, we've now updated the cnode's internal representation of
1078 * its link ID/CNID, parent ID, and its name. However, VFS must now be alerted
1079 * to the fact that this vnode now has a new parent, since we cannot guarantee
1080 * that the new link lived in the same directory as the alternative name for
1083 if ((*vpp
!= NULL
) && (cnp
|| cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
)) {
1084 /* we could be requesting the rsrc of a hardlink file... */
1085 #ifdef CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
1086 if (cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
&& (cnp
== NULL
|| !(cnp
->cn_flags
& CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
))) {
1088 if (cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
) {
1091 // Update the identity with what we have stored on disk as
1092 // the name of this file. This is related to:
1093 // <rdar://problem/8044697> FSEvents doesn't always decompose diacritical unicode chars in the paths of the changed directories
1095 vnode_update_identity (*vpp
, dvp
, (const char *)cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
, cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
, 0,
1096 (VNODE_UPDATE_PARENT
| VNODE_UPDATE_NAME
));
1098 vnode_update_identity (*vpp
, dvp
, cnp
->cn_nameptr
, cnp
->cn_namelen
, cnp
->cn_hash
,
1099 (VNODE_UPDATE_PARENT
| VNODE_UPDATE_NAME
));
1107 * At this point, we have performed hardlink and open-unlinked checks
1108 * above. We have now validated the state of the vnode that was given back
1109 * to us from the cnode hash code and find it safe to return.
1117 * If this is a new cnode then initialize it.
1119 if (ISSET(cp
->c_hflag
, H_ALLOC
)) {
1120 lck_rw_init(&cp
->c_truncatelock
, hfs_rwlock_group
, hfs_lock_attr
);
1125 /* Make sure its still valid (ie exists on disk). */
1126 if (!(flags
& GNV_CREATE
)) {
1128 if (!hfs_valid_cnode (hfsmp
, dvp
, (wantrsrc
? NULL
: cnp
), cp
->c_fileid
, attrp
, &error
)) {
1129 hfs_chash_abort(hfsmp
, cp
);
1130 if ((flags
& GNV_SKIPLOCK
) == 0) {
1133 hfs_reclaim_cnode(hfsmp
, cp
);
1136 * If we hit this case, that means that the entry was there in the catalog when
1137 * we did a cat_lookup earlier. Think hfs_lookup. However, in between the time
1138 * that we checked the catalog and the time we went to get a vnode/cnode for it,
1139 * it had been removed from the namespace and the vnode totally reclaimed. As a result,
1140 * it's not there in the catalog during the check in hfs_valid_cnode and we bubble out
1141 * an ENOENT. To indicate to the caller that they should really double-check the
1142 * entry (it could have been renamed over and gotten a new fileid), we mark a bit
1143 * in the output flags.
1145 if (error
== ENOENT
) {
1146 *out_flags
= GNV_CAT_DELETED
;
1152 * Also, we need to protect the cat_attr acquired during hfs_lookup and passed into
1153 * this function as an argument because the catalog may have changed w.r.t hardlink
1154 * link counts and the firstlink field. If that validation check fails, then let
1155 * lookup re-drive itself to get valid/consistent data with the same failure condition below.
1157 if (error
== ERECYCLE
) {
1158 *out_flags
= GNV_CAT_ATTRCHANGED
;
1164 bcopy(attrp
, &cp
->c_attr
, sizeof(struct cat_attr
));
1165 bcopy(descp
, &cp
->c_desc
, sizeof(struct cat_desc
));
1167 /* The name was inherited so clear descriptor state... */
1168 descp
->cd_namelen
= 0;
1169 descp
->cd_nameptr
= NULL
;
1170 descp
->cd_flags
&= ~CD_HASBUF
;
1173 if ((vtype
== VREG
|| vtype
== VDIR
1174 || vtype
== VSOCK
|| vtype
== VFIFO
)
1175 && (descp
->cd_cnid
!= attrp
->ca_fileid
1176 || ISSET(attrp
->ca_recflags
, kHFSHasLinkChainMask
))) {
1177 cp
->c_flag
|= C_HARDLINK
;
1180 * Fix-up dir link counts.
1182 * Earlier versions of Leopard used ca_linkcount for posix
1183 * nlink support (effectively the sub-directory count + 2).
1184 * That is now accomplished using the ca_dircount field with
1185 * the corresponding kHFSHasFolderCountMask flag.
1187 * For directories the ca_linkcount is the true link count,
1188 * tracking the number of actual hardlinks to a directory.
1190 * We only do this if the mount has HFS_FOLDERCOUNT set;
1191 * at the moment, we only set that for HFSX volumes.
1193 if ((hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_FOLDERCOUNT
) &&
1195 !(attrp
->ca_recflags
& kHFSHasFolderCountMask
) &&
1196 (cp
->c_attr
.ca_linkcount
> 1)) {
1197 if (cp
->c_attr
.ca_entries
== 0)
1198 cp
->c_attr
.ca_dircount
= 0;
1200 cp
->c_attr
.ca_dircount
= cp
->c_attr
.ca_linkcount
- 2;
1202 cp
->c_attr
.ca_linkcount
= 1;
1203 cp
->c_attr
.ca_recflags
|= kHFSHasFolderCountMask
;
1204 if ( !(hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_READ_ONLY
) )
1205 cp
->c_flag
|= C_MODIFIED
;
1208 if (hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_QUOTAS
) {
1209 for (i
= 0; i
< MAXQUOTAS
; i
++)
1210 cp
->c_dquot
[i
] = NODQUOT
;
1213 /* Mark the output flag that we're vending a new cnode */
1214 *out_flags
|= GNV_NEW_CNODE
;
1217 if (vtype
== VDIR
) {
1218 if (cp
->c_vp
!= NULL
)
1219 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: orphaned vnode (data)");
1223 * Allocate and initialize a file fork...
1225 fp
= hfs_zalloc(HFS_FILEFORK_ZONE
);
1228 bcopy(forkp
, &fp
->ff_data
, sizeof(struct cat_fork
));
1230 bzero(&fp
->ff_data
, sizeof(struct cat_fork
));
1231 rl_init(&fp
->ff_invalidranges
);
1232 fp
->ff_sysfileinfo
= 0;
1235 if (cp
->c_rsrcfork
!= NULL
)
1236 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: orphaned rsrc fork");
1237 if (cp
->c_rsrc_vp
!= NULL
)
1238 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: orphaned vnode (rsrc)");
1239 cp
->c_rsrcfork
= fp
;
1240 cvpp
= &cp
->c_rsrc_vp
;
1241 if ( (tvp
= cp
->c_vp
) != NULLVP
)
1242 cp
->c_flag
|= C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
;
1244 if (cp
->c_datafork
!= NULL
)
1245 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: orphaned data fork");
1246 if (cp
->c_vp
!= NULL
)
1247 panic("hfs_getnewvnode: orphaned vnode (data)");
1248 cp
->c_datafork
= fp
;
1250 if ( (tvp
= cp
->c_rsrc_vp
) != NULLVP
)
1251 cp
->c_flag
|= C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
;
1254 if (tvp
!= NULLVP
) {
1256 * grab an iocount on the vnode we weren't
1257 * interested in (i.e. we want the resource fork
1258 * but the cnode already has the data fork)
1259 * to prevent it from being
1260 * recycled by us when we call vnode_create
1261 * which will result in a deadlock when we
1262 * try to take the cnode lock in hfs_vnop_fsync or
1263 * hfs_vnop_reclaim... vnode_get can be called here
1264 * because we already hold the cnode lock which will
1265 * prevent the vnode from changing identity until
1266 * we drop it.. vnode_get will not block waiting for
1267 * a change of state... however, it will return an
1268 * error if the current iocount == 0 and we've already
1269 * started to terminate the vnode... we don't need/want to
1270 * grab an iocount in the case since we can't cause
1271 * the fileystem to be re-entered on this thread for this vp
1273 * the matching vnode_put will happen in hfs_unlock
1274 * after we've dropped the cnode lock
1276 if ( vnode_get(tvp
) != 0)
1277 cp
->c_flag
&= ~(C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
| C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
);
1280 vfsp
.vnfs_vtype
= vtype
;
1281 vfsp
.vnfs_str
= "hfs";
1282 if ((cp
->c_flag
& C_HARDLINK
) && (vtype
== VDIR
)) {
1283 vfsp
.vnfs_dvp
= NULL
; /* no parent for me! */
1284 vfsp
.vnfs_cnp
= NULL
; /* no name for me! */
1286 vfsp
.vnfs_dvp
= dvp
;
1287 vfsp
.vnfs_cnp
= cnp
;
1290 vfsp
.vnfs_fsnode
= cp
;
1293 * Special Case HFS Standard VNOPs from HFS+, since
1294 * HFS standard is readonly/deprecated as of 10.6
1298 if (vtype
== VFIFO
)
1299 vfsp
.vnfs_vops
= hfs_fifoop_p
;
1302 if (vtype
== VBLK
|| vtype
== VCHR
)
1303 vfsp
.vnfs_vops
= hfs_specop_p
;
1305 else if (hfs_standard
)
1306 vfsp
.vnfs_vops
= hfs_std_vnodeop_p
;
1309 vfsp
.vnfs_vops
= hfs_vnodeop_p
;
1311 if (vtype
== VBLK
|| vtype
== VCHR
)
1312 vfsp
.vnfs_rdev
= attrp
->ca_rdev
;
1317 vfsp
.vnfs_filesize
= forkp
->cf_size
;
1319 vfsp
.vnfs_filesize
= 0;
1321 vfsp
.vnfs_flags
= VNFS_ADDFSREF
;
1322 #ifdef CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
1323 if (cnp
&& cnp
->cn_nameptr
&& !(cnp
->cn_flags
& CN_WANTSRSRCFORK
) && cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
&& strncmp((const char *)cnp
->cn_nameptr
, (const char *)cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
, cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
) != 0) {
1325 if (cnp
&& cnp
->cn_nameptr
&& cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
&& strncmp((const char *)cnp
->cn_nameptr
, (const char *)cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
, cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
) != 0) {
1328 // We don't want VFS to add an entry for this vnode because the name in the
1329 // cnp does not match the bytes stored on disk for this file. Instead we'll
1330 // update the identity later after the vnode is created and we'll do so with
1331 // the correct bytes for this filename. For more details, see:
1332 // <rdar://problem/8044697> FSEvents doesn't always decompose diacritical unicode chars in the paths of the changed directories
1334 vfsp
.vnfs_flags
|= VNFS_NOCACHE
;
1335 need_update_identity
= 1;
1336 } else if (dvp
== NULLVP
|| cnp
== NULL
|| !(cnp
->cn_flags
& MAKEENTRY
) || (flags
& GNV_NOCACHE
)) {
1337 vfsp
.vnfs_flags
|= VNFS_NOCACHE
;
1340 /* Tag system files */
1341 vfsp
.vnfs_marksystem
= issystemfile
;
1343 /* Tag root directory */
1344 if (descp
->cd_cnid
== kHFSRootFolderID
)
1345 vfsp
.vnfs_markroot
= 1;
1347 vfsp
.vnfs_markroot
= 0;
1350 * If provided_vp was non-NULL, then it is an already-allocated (but not
1351 * initialized) vnode. We simply need to initialize it to this identity.
1352 * If it was NULL, then assume that we need to call vnode_create with the
1353 * normal arguments/types.
1358 * After we assign the value of provided_vp into 'vp' (so that it can be
1359 * mutated safely by vnode_initialize), we can NULL it out. At this point, the disposal
1360 * and handling of the provided vnode will be the responsibility of VFS, which will
1361 * clean it up and vnode_put it properly if vnode_initialize fails.
1365 retval
= vnode_initialize (VNCREATE_FLAVOR
, VCREATESIZE
, &vfsp
, &vp
);
1366 /* See error handling below for resolving provided_vp */
1369 /* Do a standard vnode_create */
1370 retval
= vnode_create (VNCREATE_FLAVOR
, VCREATESIZE
, &vfsp
, &vp
);
1374 * We used a local variable to hold the result of vnode_create/vnode_initialize so that
1375 * on error cases in vnode_create we won't accidentally harm the cnode's fields
1379 /* Clean up if we encountered an error */
1381 if (fp
== cp
->c_datafork
)
1382 cp
->c_datafork
= NULL
;
1384 cp
->c_rsrcfork
= NULL
;
1386 hfs_zfree(fp
, HFS_FILEFORK_ZONE
);
1389 * If this is a newly created cnode or a vnode reclaim
1390 * occurred during the attachment, then cleanup the cnode.
1392 if ((cp
->c_vp
== NULL
) && (cp
->c_rsrc_vp
== NULL
)) {
1393 hfs_chash_abort(hfsmp
, cp
);
1394 hfs_reclaim_cnode(hfsmp
, cp
);
1397 hfs_chashwakeup(hfsmp
, cp
, H_ALLOC
| H_ATTACH
);
1398 if ((flags
& GNV_SKIPLOCK
) == 0){
1406 /* If no error, then assign the value into the cnode's fields */
1409 vnode_settag(vp
, VT_HFS
);
1410 if (cp
->c_flag
& C_HARDLINK
) {
1411 vnode_setmultipath(vp
);
1414 if (cp
->c_attr
.ca_recflags
& kHFSFastDevCandidateMask
) {
1415 vnode_setfastdevicecandidate(vp
);
1418 if (cp
->c_attr
.ca_recflags
& kHFSAutoCandidateMask
) {
1419 vnode_setautocandidate(vp
);
1425 if (vp
&& need_update_identity
) {
1427 // As above, update the name of the vnode if the bytes stored in hfs do not match
1428 // the bytes in the cnp. See this radar:
1429 // <rdar://problem/8044697> FSEvents doesn't always decompose diacritical unicode chars in the paths of the changed directories
1430 // for more details.
1432 vnode_update_identity (vp
, dvp
, (const char *)cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
, cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
, 0, VNODE_UPDATE_NAME
);
1436 * Tag resource fork vnodes as needing an VNOP_INACTIVE
1437 * so that any deferred removes (open unlinked files)
1438 * have the chance to process the resource fork.
1440 if (VNODE_IS_RSRC(vp
)) {
1443 KDBG(HFSDBG_GETNEWVNODE
, kdebug_vnode(cp
->c_vp
), kdebug_vnode(cp
->c_rsrc_vp
));
1445 /* Force VL_NEEDINACTIVE on this vnode */
1446 err
= vnode_ref(vp
);
1451 hfs_chashwakeup(hfsmp
, cp
, H_ALLOC
| H_ATTACH
);
1454 * Stop tracking an active hot file.
1456 if (!(flags
& GNV_CREATE
) && (vtype
!= VDIR
) && !issystemfile
&& !(hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_CS_HOTFILE_PIN
)) {
1457 (void) hfs_removehotfile(vp
);
1461 /* Initialize the cp data structures. The key should be in place now. */
1462 if (!issystemfile
&& (*out_flags
& GNV_NEW_CNODE
)) {
1463 cp_entry_init(cp
, mp
);
1472 /* Release our empty vnode if it was not used */
1473 vnode_put (provided_vp
);
1480 hfs_reclaim_cnode(hfsmount_t
*hfsmp
, struct cnode
*cp
)
1485 for (i
= 0; i
< MAXQUOTAS
; i
++) {
1486 if (cp
->c_dquot
[i
] != NODQUOT
) {
1487 dqreclaim(cp
->c_dquot
[i
]);
1488 cp
->c_dquot
[i
] = NODQUOT
;
1494 * If the descriptor has a name then release it
1496 if ((cp
->c_desc
.cd_flags
& CD_HASBUF
) && (cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
!= 0)) {
1497 const char *nameptr
;
1499 nameptr
= (const char *) cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
;
1500 cp
->c_desc
.cd_nameptr
= 0;
1501 cp
->c_desc
.cd_flags
&= ~CD_HASBUF
;
1502 cp
->c_desc
.cd_namelen
= 0;
1503 vfs_removename(nameptr
);
1507 * We only call this function if we are in hfs_vnop_reclaim and
1508 * attempting to reclaim a cnode with only one live fork. Because the vnode
1509 * went through reclaim, any future attempts to use this item will have to
1510 * go through lookup again, which will need to create a new vnode. Thus,
1511 * destroying the locks below is safe.
1514 lck_rw_destroy(&cp
->c_rwlock
, hfs_rwlock_group
);
1515 lck_rw_destroy(&cp
->c_truncatelock
, hfs_rwlock_group
);
1518 decmpfs_cnode_destroy(cp
->c_decmp
);
1519 decmpfs_cnode_free(cp
->c_decmp
);
1523 cp_entry_destroy(hfsmp
, cp
->c_cpentry
);
1524 cp
->c_cpentry
= NULL
;
1526 (void)hfsmp
; // Prevent compiler warning
1529 hfs_zfree(cp
, HFS_CNODE_ZONE
);
1536 * This function is used to validate data that is stored in-core against what is contained
1537 * in the catalog. Common uses include validating that the parent-child relationship still exist
1538 * for a specific directory entry (guaranteeing it has not been renamed into a different spot) at
1539 * the point of the check.
1542 hfs_valid_cnode(struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
, struct vnode
*dvp
, struct componentname
*cnp
,
1543 cnid_t cnid
, struct cat_attr
*cattr
, int *error
)
1545 struct cat_attr attr
;
1546 struct cat_desc cndesc
;
1550 /* System files are always valid */
1551 if (cnid
< kHFSFirstUserCatalogNodeID
) {
1556 /* XXX optimization: check write count in dvp */
1558 lockflags
= hfs_systemfile_lock(hfsmp
, SFL_CATALOG
, HFS_SHARED_LOCK
);
1562 struct cat_fork fork
;
1563 bzero(&cndesc
, sizeof(cndesc
));
1564 cndesc
.cd_nameptr
= (const u_int8_t
*)cnp
->cn_nameptr
;
1565 cndesc
.cd_namelen
= cnp
->cn_namelen
;
1566 cndesc
.cd_parentcnid
= VTOC(dvp
)->c_fileid
;
1567 cndesc
.cd_hint
= VTOC(dvp
)->c_childhint
;
1570 * We have to be careful when calling cat_lookup. The result argument
1571 * 'attr' may get different results based on whether or not you ask
1572 * for the filefork to be supplied as output. This is because cat_lookupbykey
1573 * will attempt to do basic validation/smoke tests against the resident
1574 * extents if there are no overflow extent records, but it needs someplace
1575 * in memory to store the on-disk fork structures.
1577 * Since hfs_lookup calls cat_lookup with a filefork argument, we should
1578 * do the same here, to verify that block count differences are not
1579 * due to calling the function with different styles. cat_lookupbykey
1580 * will request the volume be fsck'd if there is true on-disk corruption
1581 * where the number of blocks does not match the number generated by
1582 * summing the number of blocks in the resident extents.
1585 lookup
= cat_lookup (hfsmp
, &cndesc
, 0, 0, NULL
, &attr
, &fork
, NULL
);
1587 if ((lookup
== 0) && (cnid
== attr
.ca_fileid
)) {
1596 * In hfs_getnewvnode, we may encounter a time-of-check vs. time-of-vnode creation
1597 * race. Specifically, if there is no vnode/cnode pair for the directory entry
1598 * being looked up, we have to go to the catalog. But since we don't hold any locks (aside
1599 * from the dvp in 'shared' mode) there is nothing to protect us against the catalog record
1600 * changing in between the time we do the cat_lookup there and the time we re-grab the
1601 * catalog lock above to do another cat_lookup.
1603 * However, we need to check more than just the CNID and parent-child name relationships above.
1604 * Hardlinks can suffer the same race in the following scenario: Suppose we do a
1605 * cat_lookup, and find a leaf record and a raw inode for a hardlink. Now, we have
1606 * the cat_attr in hand (passed in above). But in between then and now, the vnode was
1607 * created by a competing hfs_getnewvnode call, and is manipulated and reclaimed before we get
1608 * a chance to do anything. This is possible if there are a lot of threads thrashing around
1609 * with the cnode hash. In this case, if we don't check/validate the cat_attr in-hand, we will
1610 * blindly stuff it into the cnode, which will make the in-core data inconsistent with what is
1611 * on disk. So validate the cat_attr below, if required. This race cannot happen if the cnode/vnode
1612 * already exists, as it does in the case of rename and delete.
1614 if (stillvalid
&& cattr
!= NULL
) {
1615 if (cattr
->ca_linkcount
!= attr
.ca_linkcount
) {
1621 if (cattr
->ca_union1
.cau_linkref
!= attr
.ca_union1
.cau_linkref
) {
1627 if (cattr
->ca_union3
.cau_firstlink
!= attr
.ca_union3
.cau_firstlink
) {
1633 if (cattr
->ca_union2
.cau_blocks
!= attr
.ca_union2
.cau_blocks
) {
1640 if (cat_idlookup(hfsmp
, cnid
, 0, 0, NULL
, NULL
, NULL
) == 0) {
1649 hfs_systemfile_unlock(hfsmp
, lockflags
);
1651 return (stillvalid
);
1656 * Per HI and Finder requirements, HFS should add in the
1657 * date/time that a particular directory entry was added
1658 * to the containing directory.
1659 * This is stored in the extended Finder Info for the
1662 * Note that this field is also set explicitly in the hfs_vnop_setxattr code.
1663 * We must ignore user attempts to set this part of the finderinfo, and
1664 * so we need to save a local copy of the date added, write in the user
1665 * finderinfo, then stuff the value back in.
1667 void hfs_write_dateadded (struct cat_attr
*attrp
, u_int32_t dateadded
) {
1668 u_int8_t
*finfo
= NULL
;
1670 /* overlay the FinderInfo to the correct pointer, and advance */
1671 finfo
= (u_int8_t
*)attrp
->ca_finderinfo
;
1675 * Make sure to write it out as big endian, since that's how
1676 * finder info is defined.
1678 * NOTE: This is a Unix-epoch timestamp, not a HFS/Traditional Mac timestamp.
1680 if (S_ISREG(attrp
->ca_mode
)) {
1681 struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*extinfo
= (struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*)finfo
;
1682 extinfo
->date_added
= OSSwapHostToBigInt32(dateadded
);
1683 attrp
->ca_recflags
|= kHFSHasDateAddedMask
;
1685 else if (S_ISDIR(attrp
->ca_mode
)) {
1686 struct FndrExtendedDirInfo
*extinfo
= (struct FndrExtendedDirInfo
*)finfo
;
1687 extinfo
->date_added
= OSSwapHostToBigInt32(dateadded
);
1688 attrp
->ca_recflags
|= kHFSHasDateAddedMask
;
1690 /* If it were neither directory/file, then we'd bail out */
1695 hfs_get_dateadded_internal(const uint8_t *finderinfo
, mode_t mode
)
1697 const uint8_t *finfo
= NULL
;
1698 u_int32_t dateadded
= 0;
1702 /* overlay the FinderInfo to the correct pointer, and advance */
1703 finfo
= finderinfo
+ 16;
1706 * FinderInfo is written out in big endian... make sure to convert it to host
1707 * native before we use it.
1709 if (S_ISREG(mode
)) {
1710 const struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*extinfo
= (const struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*)finfo
;
1711 dateadded
= OSSwapBigToHostInt32 (extinfo
->date_added
);
1713 else if (S_ISDIR(mode
)) {
1714 const struct FndrExtendedDirInfo
*extinfo
= (const struct FndrExtendedDirInfo
*)finfo
;
1715 dateadded
= OSSwapBigToHostInt32 (extinfo
->date_added
);
1722 hfs_get_dateadded(struct cnode
*cp
)
1724 if ((cp
->c_attr
.ca_recflags
& kHFSHasDateAddedMask
) == 0) {
1725 /* Date added was never set. Return 0. */
1729 return (hfs_get_dateadded_internal((u_int8_t
*)cp
->c_finderinfo
,
1730 cp
->c_attr
.ca_mode
));
1734 hfs_get_dateadded_from_blob(const uint8_t *finderinfo
, mode_t mode
)
1736 return (hfs_get_dateadded_internal(finderinfo
, mode
));
1740 * Per HI and Finder requirements, HFS maintains a "write/generation
1741 * count" for each file that is incremented on any write & pageout.
1742 * It should start at 1 to reserve "0" as a special value. If it
1743 * should ever wrap around, it will skip using 0.
1745 * Note that finderinfo is manipulated in hfs_vnop_setxattr and care
1746 * is and should be taken to ignore user attempts to set the part of
1747 * the finderinfo that records the generation counter.
1749 * Any change to the generation counter *must* not be visible before
1750 * the change that caused it (for obvious reasons), and given the
1751 * limitations of our current architecture, the change to the
1752 * generation counter may occur some time afterwards (particularly in
1753 * the case where a file is mapped writable---more on that below).
1755 * We make no guarantees about the consistency of a file. In other
1756 * words, a reader that is operating concurrently with a writer might
1757 * see some, but not all of writer's changes, and the generation
1758 * counter will *not* necessarily tell you this has happened. To
1759 * enforce consistency, clients must make their own arrangements
1760 * e.g. use file locking.
1762 * We treat files that are mapped writable as a special case: when
1763 * that happens, clients requesting the generation count will be told
1764 * it has a generation count of zero and they use that knowledge as a
1765 * hint that the file is changing and it therefore might be prudent to
1766 * wait until it is no longer mapped writable. Clients should *not*
1767 * rely on this behaviour however; we might decide that it's better
1768 * for us to publish the fact that a file is mapped writable via
1769 * alternate means and return the generation counter when it is mapped
1770 * writable as it still has some, albeit limited, use. We reserve the
1771 * right to make this change.
1773 * Lastly, it's important to realise that because data and metadata
1774 * take different paths through the system, it's possible upon crash
1775 * or sudden power loss and after a restart, that a change may be
1776 * visible to the rest of the system without a corresponding change to
1777 * the generation counter. The reverse may also be true, but for all
1778 * practical applications this shouldn't be an issue.
1780 void hfs_write_gencount (struct cat_attr
*attrp
, uint32_t gencount
) {
1781 u_int8_t
*finfo
= NULL
;
1783 /* overlay the FinderInfo to the correct pointer, and advance */
1784 finfo
= (u_int8_t
*)attrp
->ca_finderinfo
;
1788 * Make sure to write it out as big endian, since that's how
1789 * finder info is defined.
1791 * Generation count is only supported for files.
1793 if (S_ISREG(attrp
->ca_mode
)) {
1794 struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*extinfo
= (struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*)finfo
;
1795 extinfo
->write_gen_counter
= OSSwapHostToBigInt32(gencount
);
1798 /* If it were neither directory/file, then we'd bail out */
1803 * Increase the gen count by 1; if it wraps around to 0, increment by
1804 * two. The cnode *must* be locked exclusively by the caller.
1806 * You may think holding the lock is unnecessary because we only need
1807 * to change the counter, but consider this sequence of events: thread
1808 * A calls hfs_incr_gencount and the generation counter is 2 upon
1809 * entry. A context switch occurs and thread B increments the counter
1810 * to 3, thread C now gets the generation counter (for whatever
1811 * purpose), and then another thread makes another change and the
1812 * generation counter is incremented again---it's now 4. Now thread A
1813 * continues and it sets the generation counter back to 3. So you can
1814 * see, thread C would miss the change that caused the generation
1815 * counter to increment to 4 and for this reason the cnode *must*
1816 * always be locked exclusively.
1818 uint32_t hfs_incr_gencount (struct cnode
*cp
) {
1819 u_int8_t
*finfo
= NULL
;
1820 u_int32_t gcount
= 0;
1822 /* overlay the FinderInfo to the correct pointer, and advance */
1823 finfo
= (u_int8_t
*)cp
->c_finderinfo
;
1827 * FinderInfo is written out in big endian... make sure to convert it to host
1828 * native before we use it.
1830 * NOTE: the write_gen_counter is stored in the same location in both the
1831 * FndrExtendedFileInfo and FndrExtendedDirInfo structs (it's the
1832 * last 32-bit word) so it is safe to have one code path here.
1834 if (S_ISDIR(cp
->c_attr
.ca_mode
) || S_ISREG(cp
->c_attr
.ca_mode
)) {
1835 struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*extinfo
= (struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*)finfo
;
1836 gcount
= OSSwapBigToHostInt32 (extinfo
->write_gen_counter
);
1838 /* Was it zero to begin with (file originated in 10.8 or earlier?) */
1846 /* Did it wrap around ? */
1850 extinfo
->write_gen_counter
= OSSwapHostToBigInt32 (gcount
);
1852 SET(cp
->c_flag
, C_MINOR_MOD
);
1862 * There is no need for any locks here (other than an iocount on an
1863 * associated vnode) because reading and writing an aligned 32 bit
1864 * integer should be atomic on all platforms we support.
1867 hfs_get_gencount_internal(const uint8_t *finderinfo
, mode_t mode
)
1869 const uint8_t *finfo
= NULL
;
1870 u_int32_t gcount
= 0;
1872 /* overlay the FinderInfo to the correct pointer, and advance */
1877 * FinderInfo is written out in big endian... make sure to convert it to host
1878 * native before we use it.
1880 * NOTE: the write_gen_counter is stored in the same location in both the
1881 * FndrExtendedFileInfo and FndrExtendedDirInfo structs (it's the
1882 * last 32-bit word) so it is safe to have one code path here.
1884 if (S_ISDIR(mode
) || S_ISREG(mode
)) {
1885 const struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*extinfo
= (const struct FndrExtendedFileInfo
*)finfo
;
1886 gcount
= OSSwapBigToHostInt32 (extinfo
->write_gen_counter
);
1889 * Is it zero? File might originate in 10.8 or earlier. We lie and bump it to 1,
1890 * since the incrementer code is able to handle this case and will double-increment
1901 /* Getter for the gen count */
1902 u_int32_t
hfs_get_gencount (struct cnode
*cp
) {
1903 return hfs_get_gencount_internal(cp
->c_finderinfo
, cp
->c_attr
.ca_mode
);
1906 /* Getter for the gen count from a buffer (currently pointer to finderinfo)*/
1907 u_int32_t
hfs_get_gencount_from_blob (const uint8_t *finfoblob
, mode_t mode
) {
1908 return hfs_get_gencount_internal(finfoblob
, mode
);
1911 void hfs_clear_might_be_dirty_flag(cnode_t
*cp
)
1914 * If we're about to touch both mtime and ctime, we can clear the
1915 * C_MIGHT_BE_DIRTY_FROM_MAPPING since we can guarantee that
1916 * subsequent page-outs can only be for data made dirty before
1919 CLR(cp
->c_flag
, C_MIGHT_BE_DIRTY_FROM_MAPPING
);
1923 * Touch cnode times based on c_touch_xxx flags
1925 * cnode must be locked exclusive
1927 * This will also update the volume modify time
1930 hfs_touchtimes(struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
, struct cnode
* cp
)
1934 if (ISSET(hfsmp
->hfs_flags
, HFS_READ_ONLY
) || ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_NOEXISTS
)) {
1935 cp
->c_touch_acctime
= FALSE
;
1936 cp
->c_touch_chgtime
= FALSE
;
1937 cp
->c_touch_modtime
= FALSE
;
1938 CLR(cp
->c_flag
, C_NEEDS_DATEADDED
);
1942 else if (hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_STANDARD
) {
1943 /* HFS Standard doesn't support access times */
1944 cp
->c_touch_acctime
= FALSE
;
1948 ctx
= vfs_context_current();
1950 * Skip access time updates if:
1951 * . MNT_NOATIME is set
1952 * . a file system freeze is in progress
1953 * . a file system resize is in progress
1954 * . the vnode associated with this cnode is marked for rapid aging
1956 if (cp
->c_touch_acctime
) {
1957 if ((vfs_flags(hfsmp
->hfs_mp
) & MNT_NOATIME
) ||
1958 hfsmp
->hfs_freeze_state
!= HFS_THAWED
||
1959 (hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_RESIZE_IN_PROGRESS
) ||
1960 (cp
->c_vp
&& ((vnode_israge(cp
->c_vp
) || (vfs_ctx_skipatime(ctx
)))))) {
1962 cp
->c_touch_acctime
= FALSE
;
1965 if (cp
->c_touch_acctime
|| cp
->c_touch_chgtime
||
1966 cp
->c_touch_modtime
|| (cp
->c_flag
& C_NEEDS_DATEADDED
)) {
1970 if (cp
->c_touch_modtime
&& cp
->c_touch_chgtime
)
1971 hfs_clear_might_be_dirty_flag(cp
);
1975 if (cp
->c_touch_acctime
) {
1977 * When the access time is the only thing changing, we
1978 * won't necessarily write it to disk immediately. We
1979 * only do the atime update at vnode recycle time, when
1980 * fsync is called or when there's another reason to write
1983 cp
->c_atime
= tv
.tv_sec
;
1984 cp
->c_touch_acctime
= FALSE
;
1986 if (cp
->c_touch_modtime
) {
1987 cp
->c_touch_modtime
= FALSE
;
1988 time_t new_time
= tv
.tv_sec
;
1991 * HFS dates that WE set must be adjusted for DST
1993 if ((hfsmp
->hfs_flags
& HFS_STANDARD
) && gTimeZone
.tz_dsttime
) {
1997 if (cp
->c_mtime
!= new_time
) {
1998 cp
->c_mtime
= new_time
;
1999 cp
->c_flag
|= C_MINOR_MOD
;
2003 if (cp
->c_touch_chgtime
) {
2004 cp
->c_touch_chgtime
= FALSE
;
2005 if (cp
->c_ctime
!= tv
.tv_sec
) {
2006 cp
->c_ctime
= tv
.tv_sec
;
2007 cp
->c_flag
|= C_MINOR_MOD
;
2012 if (cp
->c_flag
& C_NEEDS_DATEADDED
) {
2013 hfs_write_dateadded (&(cp
->c_attr
), tv
.tv_sec
);
2014 cp
->c_flag
|= C_MINOR_MOD
;
2015 /* untwiddle the bit */
2016 cp
->c_flag
&= ~C_NEEDS_DATEADDED
;
2020 /* Touch the volume modtime if needed */
2022 hfs_note_header_minor_change(hfsmp
);
2023 HFSTOVCB(hfsmp
)->vcbLsMod
= tv
.tv_sec
;
2028 // Use this if you don't want to check the return code
2029 void hfs_lock_always(cnode_t
*cp
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
)
2031 hfs_lock(cp
, locktype
, HFS_LOCK_ALWAYS
);
2036 * N.B. If you add any failure cases, *make* sure hfs_lock_always works
2039 hfs_lock(struct cnode
*cp
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
, enum hfs_lockflags flags
)
2041 thread_t thread
= current_thread();
2043 if (cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
) {
2045 * Only the extents and bitmap files support lock recursion
2046 * here. The other system files support lock recursion in
2047 * hfs_systemfile_lock. Eventually, we should change to
2048 * handle recursion solely in hfs_systemfile_lock.
2050 if ((cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSExtentsFileID
) ||
2051 (cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSAllocationFileID
)) {
2052 cp
->c_syslockcount
++;
2054 panic("hfs_lock: locking against myself!");
2056 } else if (locktype
== HFS_SHARED_LOCK
) {
2057 lck_rw_lock_shared(&cp
->c_rwlock
);
2058 cp
->c_lockowner
= HFS_SHARED_OWNER
;
2059 } else { /* HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK */
2060 lck_rw_lock_exclusive(&cp
->c_rwlock
);
2061 cp
->c_lockowner
= thread
;
2063 /* Only the extents and bitmap files support lock recursion. */
2064 if ((cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSExtentsFileID
) ||
2065 (cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSAllocationFileID
)) {
2066 cp
->c_syslockcount
= 1;
2070 #ifdef HFS_CHECK_LOCK_ORDER
2072 * Regular cnodes (non-system files) cannot be locked
2073 * while holding the journal lock or a system file lock.
2075 if (!(cp
->c_desc
.cd_flags
& CD_ISMETA
) &&
2076 ((cp
->c_fileid
> kHFSFirstUserCatalogNodeID
) || (cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSRootFolderID
))) {
2077 vnode_t vp
= NULLVP
;
2079 /* Find corresponding vnode. */
2080 if (cp
->c_vp
!= NULLVP
&& VTOC(cp
->c_vp
) == cp
) {
2082 } else if (cp
->c_rsrc_vp
!= NULLVP
&& VTOC(cp
->c_rsrc_vp
) == cp
) {
2086 struct hfsmount
*hfsmp
= VTOHFS(vp
);
2088 if (hfsmp
->jnl
&& (journal_owner(hfsmp
->jnl
) == thread
)) {
2089 /* This will eventually be a panic here, but we need
2090 to fix where we create the hot files BTree
2092 printf("hfs_lock: bad lock order (cnode after journal)\n");
2094 if (hfsmp
->hfs_catalog_cp
&& hfsmp
->hfs_catalog_cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
) {
2095 panic("hfs_lock: bad lock order (cnode after catalog)");
2097 if (hfsmp
->hfs_attribute_cp
&& hfsmp
->hfs_attribute_cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
) {
2098 panic("hfs_lock: bad lock order (cnode after attribute)");
2100 if (hfsmp
->hfs_extents_cp
&& hfsmp
->hfs_extents_cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
) {
2101 panic("hfs_lock: bad lock order (cnode after extents)");
2105 #endif /* HFS_CHECK_LOCK_ORDER */
2108 * Skip cnodes for regular files that no longer exist
2109 * (marked deleted, catalog entry gone).
2111 if (((flags
& HFS_LOCK_ALLOW_NOEXISTS
) == 0) &&
2112 ((cp
->c_desc
.cd_flags
& CD_ISMETA
) == 0) &&
2113 (cp
->c_flag
& C_NOEXISTS
)) {
2120 bool hfs_lock_upgrade(cnode_t
*cp
)
2122 if (lck_rw_lock_shared_to_exclusive(&cp
->c_rwlock
)) {
2123 cp
->c_lockowner
= current_thread();
2130 * Lock a pair of cnodes.
2133 hfs_lockpair(struct cnode
*cp1
, struct cnode
*cp2
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
)
2135 struct cnode
*first
, *last
;
2139 * If cnodes match then just lock one.
2142 return hfs_lock(cp1
, locktype
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
);
2146 * Lock in cnode address order.
2156 if ( (error
= hfs_lock(first
, locktype
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
))) {
2159 if ( (error
= hfs_lock(last
, locktype
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
))) {
2167 * Check ordering of two cnodes. Return true if they are are in-order.
2170 hfs_isordered(struct cnode
*cp1
, struct cnode
*cp2
)
2174 if (cp1
== NULL
|| cp2
== (struct cnode
*)0xffffffff)
2176 if (cp2
== NULL
|| cp1
== (struct cnode
*)0xffffffff)
2179 * Locking order is cnode address order.
2185 * Acquire 4 cnode locks.
2186 * - locked in cnode address order (lesser address first).
2187 * - all or none of the locks are taken
2188 * - only one lock taken per cnode (dup cnodes are skipped)
2189 * - some of the cnode pointers may be null
2192 hfs_lockfour(struct cnode
*cp1
, struct cnode
*cp2
, struct cnode
*cp3
,
2193 struct cnode
*cp4
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
, struct cnode
**error_cnode
)
2195 struct cnode
* a
[3];
2196 struct cnode
* b
[3];
2197 struct cnode
* list
[4];
2202 *error_cnode
= NULL
;
2205 if (hfs_isordered(cp1
, cp2
)) {
2206 a
[0] = cp1
; a
[1] = cp2
;
2208 a
[0] = cp2
; a
[1] = cp1
;
2210 if (hfs_isordered(cp3
, cp4
)) {
2211 b
[0] = cp3
; b
[1] = cp4
;
2213 b
[0] = cp4
; b
[1] = cp3
;
2215 a
[2] = (struct cnode
*)0xffffffff; /* sentinel value */
2216 b
[2] = (struct cnode
*)0xffffffff; /* sentinel value */
2219 * Build the lock list, skipping over duplicates
2221 for (i
= 0, j
= 0, k
= 0; (i
< 2 || j
< 2); ) {
2222 tmp
= hfs_isordered(a
[i
], b
[j
]) ? a
[i
++] : b
[j
++];
2223 if (k
== 0 || tmp
!= list
[k
-1])
2228 * Now we can lock using list[0 - k].
2229 * Skip over NULL entries.
2231 for (i
= 0; i
< k
; ++i
) {
2233 if ((error
= hfs_lock(list
[i
], locktype
, HFS_LOCK_DEFAULT
))) {
2234 /* Only stuff error_cnode if requested */
2236 *error_cnode
= list
[i
];
2238 /* Drop any locks we acquired. */
2241 hfs_unlock(list
[i
]);
2254 hfs_unlock(struct cnode
*cp
)
2256 vnode_t rvp
= NULLVP
;
2257 vnode_t vp
= NULLVP
;
2258 u_int32_t c_flag
= 0;
2261 * Only the extents and bitmap file's support lock recursion.
2263 if ((cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSExtentsFileID
) ||
2264 (cp
->c_fileid
== kHFSAllocationFileID
)) {
2265 if (--cp
->c_syslockcount
> 0) {
2270 const thread_t thread
= current_thread();
2272 if (cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
) {
2273 c_flag
= cp
->c_flag
;
2275 // If we have the truncate lock, we must defer the puts
2276 if (cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== thread
) {
2277 if (ISSET(c_flag
, C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
)
2278 && !cp
->c_need_dvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
) {
2279 CLR(c_flag
, C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
);
2280 cp
->c_need_dvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
= true;
2282 if (ISSET(c_flag
, C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
)
2283 && !cp
->c_need_rvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
) {
2284 CLR(c_flag
, C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
);
2285 cp
->c_need_rvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
= true;
2289 CLR(cp
->c_flag
, (C_NEED_DATA_SETSIZE
| C_NEED_RSRC_SETSIZE
2290 | C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
| C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
));
2292 if (c_flag
& (C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
| C_NEED_DATA_SETSIZE
)) {
2295 if (c_flag
& (C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
| C_NEED_RSRC_SETSIZE
)) {
2296 rvp
= cp
->c_rsrc_vp
;
2299 cp
->c_lockowner
= NULL
;
2300 lck_rw_unlock_exclusive(&cp
->c_rwlock
);
2302 lck_rw_unlock_shared(&cp
->c_rwlock
);
2305 /* Perform any vnode post processing after cnode lock is dropped. */
2307 if (c_flag
& C_NEED_DATA_SETSIZE
) {
2308 ubc_setsize(vp
, VTOF(vp
)->ff_size
);
2311 * If this is a compressed file, we need to reset the
2312 * compression state. We will have set the size to zero
2313 * above and it will get fixed up later (in exactly the
2314 * same way that new vnodes are fixed up). Note that we
2315 * should only be able to get here if the truncate lock is
2316 * held exclusively and so we do the reset when that's
2319 decmpfs_cnode
*dp
= VTOCMP(vp
);
2320 if (dp
&& decmpfs_cnode_get_vnode_state(dp
) != FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN
)
2321 cp
->c_need_decmpfs_reset
= true;
2324 if (c_flag
& C_NEED_DVNODE_PUT
)
2328 if (c_flag
& C_NEED_RSRC_SETSIZE
)
2329 ubc_setsize(rvp
, VTOF(rvp
)->ff_size
);
2330 if (c_flag
& C_NEED_RVNODE_PUT
)
2336 * Unlock a pair of cnodes.
2339 hfs_unlockpair(struct cnode
*cp1
, struct cnode
*cp2
)
2347 * Unlock a group of cnodes.
2350 hfs_unlockfour(struct cnode
*cp1
, struct cnode
*cp2
, struct cnode
*cp3
, struct cnode
*cp4
)
2352 struct cnode
* list
[4];
2360 for (i
= 0; i
< k
; ++i
) {
2369 for (i
= 0; i
< k
; ++i
) {
2378 for (i
= 0; i
< k
; ++i
) {
2388 * Protect a cnode against a truncation.
2390 * Used mainly by read/write since they don't hold the
2391 * cnode lock across calls to the cluster layer.
2393 * The process doing a truncation must take the lock
2394 * exclusive. The read/write processes can take it
2395 * shared. The locktype argument is the same as supplied to
2399 hfs_lock_truncate(struct cnode
*cp
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
, enum hfs_lockflags flags
)
2401 thread_t thread
= current_thread();
2403 if (cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== thread
) {
2405 * Ignore grabbing the lock if it the current thread already
2406 * holds exclusive lock.
2408 * This is needed on the hfs_vnop_pagein path where we need to ensure
2409 * the file does not change sizes while we are paging in. However,
2410 * we may already hold the lock exclusive due to another
2411 * VNOP from earlier in the call stack. So if we already hold
2412 * the truncate lock exclusive, allow it to proceed, but ONLY if
2413 * it's in the recursive case.
2415 if ((flags
& HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE
) == 0) {
2416 panic("hfs_lock_truncate: cnode %p locked!", cp
);
2418 } else if (locktype
== HFS_SHARED_LOCK
) {
2419 lck_rw_lock_shared(&cp
->c_truncatelock
);
2420 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= HFS_SHARED_OWNER
;
2421 } else { /* HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK */
2422 lck_rw_lock_exclusive(&cp
->c_truncatelock
);
2423 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= thread
;
2427 bool hfs_truncate_lock_upgrade(struct cnode
*cp
)
2429 hfs_assert(cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== HFS_SHARED_OWNER
);
2430 if (!lck_rw_lock_shared_to_exclusive(&cp
->c_truncatelock
))
2432 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= current_thread();
2436 void hfs_truncate_lock_downgrade(struct cnode
*cp
)
2438 hfs_assert(cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== current_thread());
2439 lck_rw_lock_exclusive_to_shared(&cp
->c_truncatelock
);
2440 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= HFS_SHARED_OWNER
;
2444 * Attempt to get the truncate lock. If it cannot be acquired, error out.
2445 * This function is needed in the degenerate hfs_vnop_pagein during force unmount
2446 * case. To prevent deadlocks while a VM copy object is moving pages, HFS vnop pagein will
2447 * temporarily need to disable V2 semantics.
2449 int hfs_try_trunclock (struct cnode
*cp
, enum hfs_locktype locktype
, enum hfs_lockflags flags
)
2451 thread_t thread
= current_thread();
2452 boolean_t didlock
= false;
2454 if (cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== thread
) {
2456 * Ignore grabbing the lock if the current thread already
2457 * holds exclusive lock.
2459 * This is needed on the hfs_vnop_pagein path where we need to ensure
2460 * the file does not change sizes while we are paging in. However,
2461 * we may already hold the lock exclusive due to another
2462 * VNOP from earlier in the call stack. So if we already hold
2463 * the truncate lock exclusive, allow it to proceed, but ONLY if
2464 * it's in the recursive case.
2466 if ((flags
& HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE
) == 0) {
2467 panic("hfs_lock_truncate: cnode %p locked!", cp
);
2469 } else if (locktype
== HFS_SHARED_LOCK
) {
2470 didlock
= lck_rw_try_lock(&cp
->c_truncatelock
, LCK_RW_TYPE_SHARED
);
2472 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= HFS_SHARED_OWNER
;
2474 } else { /* HFS_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK */
2475 didlock
= lck_rw_try_lock (&cp
->c_truncatelock
, LCK_RW_TYPE_EXCLUSIVE
);
2477 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= thread
;
2486 * Unlock the truncate lock, which protects against size changes.
2488 * If HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE flag was set, it means that a previous
2489 * hfs_lock_truncate() might have skipped grabbing a lock because
2490 * the current thread was already holding the lock exclusive and
2491 * we may need to return from this function without actually unlocking
2492 * the truncate lock.
2495 hfs_unlock_truncate(struct cnode
*cp
, enum hfs_lockflags flags
)
2497 thread_t thread
= current_thread();
2500 * If HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE is set in the flags AND the current
2501 * lock owner of the truncate lock is our current thread, then
2502 * we must have skipped taking the lock earlier by in
2503 * hfs_lock_truncate() by setting HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE in the
2504 * flags (as the current thread was current lock owner).
2506 * If HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE is not set (most of the time) then
2507 * we check the lockowner field to infer whether the lock was taken
2508 * exclusively or shared in order to know what underlying lock
2511 if (flags
& HFS_LOCK_SKIP_IF_EXCLUSIVE
) {
2512 if (cp
->c_truncatelockowner
== thread
) {
2517 /* HFS_LOCK_EXCLUSIVE */
2518 if (thread
== cp
->c_truncatelockowner
) {
2519 vnode_t vp
= NULL
, rvp
= NULL
;
2522 * If there are pending set sizes, the cnode lock should be dropped
2525 hfs_assert(!(cp
->c_lockowner
== thread
2526 && ISSET(cp
->c_flag
, C_NEED_DATA_SETSIZE
| C_NEED_RSRC_SETSIZE
)));
2528 if (cp
->c_need_dvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
) {
2530 cp
->c_need_dvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
= false;
2532 if (cp
->c_need_rvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
) {
2533 rvp
= cp
->c_rsrc_vp
;
2534 cp
->c_need_rvnode_put_after_truncate_unlock
= false;
2538 bool reset_decmpfs
= cp
->c_need_decmpfs_reset
;
2539 cp
->c_need_decmpfs_reset
= false;
2542 cp
->c_truncatelockowner
= NULL
;
2543 lck_rw_unlock_exclusive(&cp
->c_truncatelock
);
2546 if (reset_decmpfs
) {
2547 decmpfs_cnode
*dp
= cp
->c_decmp
;
2548 if (dp
&& decmpfs_cnode_get_vnode_state(dp
) != FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN
)
2549 decmpfs_cnode_set_vnode_state(dp
, FILE_TYPE_UNKNOWN
, 0);
2558 } else { /* HFS_LOCK_SHARED */
2559 lck_rw_unlock_shared(&cp
->c_truncatelock
);