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1
2/*
3 * Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Apple Computer, Inc. All rights reserved.
4 *
5 * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@
6 *
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7 * The contents of this file constitute Original Code as defined in and
8 * are subject to the Apple Public Source License Version 1.1 (the
9 * "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the
10 * License. Please obtain a copy of the License at
11 * http://www.apple.com/publicsource and read it before using this file.
b4c24cb9 12 *
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13 * This Original Code and all software distributed under the License are
14 * distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
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15 * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES,
16 * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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17 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. Please see the
18 * License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
19 * under the License.
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20 *
21 * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_END@
22 */
23/*
24 * This header contains the structures and function prototypes
25 * for the vfs journaling code. The data types are not meant
26 * to be modified by user code. Just use the functions and do
27 * not mess around with the structs.
28 */
29#ifndef _SYS_VFS_JOURNAL_H_
30#define _SYS_VFS_JOURNAL_H_
31
32#include <sys/appleapiopts.h>
33
34#ifdef __APPLE_API_UNSTABLE
35
36#include <sys/types.h>
37
38typedef struct block_info {
39 off_t bnum; // block # on the file system device
40 size_t bsize; // in bytes
41 struct buf *bp;
42} block_info;
43
44typedef struct block_list_header {
45 u_int16_t max_blocks; // max number of blocks in this chunk
46 u_int16_t num_blocks; // number of valid block numbers in block_nums
47 int32_t bytes_used; // how many bytes of this tbuffer are used
48 int32_t checksum; // on-disk: checksum of this header and binfo[0]
49 int32_t pad; // pad out to 16 bytes
50 block_info binfo[1]; // so we can reference them by name
51} block_list_header;
52
53
54struct journal;
55
56typedef struct transaction {
57 int tbuffer_size; // in bytes
58 char *tbuffer; // memory copy of the transaction
59 block_list_header *blhdr; // points to the first byte of tbuffer
60 int num_blhdrs; // how many buffers we've allocated
61 int total_bytes; // total # of bytes in transaction
62 int num_flushed; // how many bytes have been flushed
63 int num_killed; // how many bytes were "killed"
64 off_t journal_start; // where in the journal this transaction starts
65 off_t journal_end; // where in the journal this transaction ends
66 struct journal *jnl; // ptr back to the journal structure
67 struct transaction *next; // list of tr's (either completed or to be free'd)
68} transaction;
69
70
71/*
72 * This is written to block zero of the journal and it
73 * maintains overall state about the journal.
74 */
75typedef struct journal_header {
76 int32_t magic;
77 int32_t endian;
78 volatile off_t start; // zero-based byte offset of the start of the first transaction
79 volatile off_t end; // zero-based byte offset of where free space begins
80 off_t size; // size in bytes of the entire journal
81 int32_t blhdr_size; // size in bytes of each block_list_header in the journal
82 int32_t checksum;
83 int32_t jhdr_size; // block size (in bytes) of the journal header
84} journal_header;
85
86#define JOURNAL_HEADER_MAGIC 0x4a4e4c78 // 'JNLx'
87#define ENDIAN_MAGIC 0x12345678
88
89#define OLD_JOURNAL_HEADER_MAGIC 0x4a484452 // 'JHDR'
90
91
92/*
93 * In memory structure about the journal.
94 */
95typedef struct journal {
96 struct vnode *jdev; // vnode of the device where the journal lives
97 off_t jdev_offset; // byte offset to the start of the journal
98
99 struct vnode *fsdev; // vnode of the file system device
100
101 void (*flush)(void *arg); // fs callback to flush meta data blocks
102 void *flush_arg; // arg that's passed to flush()
103
104 int32_t flags;
105 int32_t tbuffer_size; // default transaction buffer size
106
107 char *header_buf; // in-memory copy of the journal header
108 journal_header *jhdr; // points to the first byte of header_buf
109
110 transaction *cur_tr; // for group-commit
111 transaction *completed_trs; // out-of-order transactions that completed
112 transaction *active_tr; // for nested transactions
113 int32_t nested_count; // for nested transactions
114 void *owner; // a ptr that's unique to the calling process
115
116 transaction *tr_freeme; // transaction structs that need to be free'd
117
118 volatile off_t active_start; // the active start that we only keep in memory
119 simple_lock_data_t old_start_lock; // guard access
120 volatile off_t old_start[16]; // this is how we do lazy start update
121
122 semaphore_t jsem;
123} journal;
124
125/* internal-only journal flags (top 16 bits) */
126#define JOURNAL_CLOSE_PENDING 0x00010000
127#define JOURNAL_INVALID 0x00020000
128
129/* journal_open/create options are always in the low-16 bits */
130#define JOURNAL_OPTION_FLAGS_MASK 0x0000ffff
131
132/*
133 * Prototypes.
134 */
135
136/*
137 * Call journal_create() to create a new journal. You only
138 * call this once, typically at file system creation time.
139 *
140 * The "jvp" argument is the vnode where the journal is written.
141 * The journal starts at "offset" and is "journal_size" bytes long.
142 *
143 * The "fsvp" argument is the vnode of your file system. It may be
144 * the same as "jvp".
145 *
146 * The "min_fs_block_size" argument is the minimum block size
147 * (in bytes) that the file system will ever write. Typically
148 * this is the block size of the file system (1k, 4k, etc) but
149 * on HFS+ it is the minimum block size of the underlying device.
150 *
151 * The flags argument lets you disable group commit if you
152 * want tighter guarantees on transactions (in exchange for
153 * lower performance).
154 *
155 * The tbuffer_size is the size of the transaction buffer
156 * used by the journal. If you specify zero, the journal code
157 * will use a reasonable defaults. The tbuffer_size should
158 * be an integer multiple of the min_fs_block_size.
159 *
160 * Returns a valid journal pointer or NULL if one could not
161 * be created.
162 */
163journal *journal_create(struct vnode *jvp,
164 off_t offset,
165 off_t journal_size,
166 struct vnode *fsvp,
167 size_t min_fs_block_size,
168 int32_t flags,
169 int32_t tbuffer_size,
170 void (*flush)(void *arg),
171 void *arg);
172
173/*
174 * Call journal_open() when mounting an existing file system
175 * that has a previously created journal. It will take care
176 * of validating the journal and replaying it if necessary.
177 *
178 * See journal_create() for a description of the arguments.
179 *
180 * Returns a valid journal pointer of NULL if it runs into
181 * trouble reading/playing back the journal.
182 */
183journal *journal_open(struct vnode *jvp,
184 off_t offset,
185 off_t journal_size,
186 struct vnode *fsvp,
187 size_t min_fs_block_size,
188 int32_t flags,
189 int32_t tbuffer_size,
190 void (*flush)(void *arg),
191 void *arg);
192
193/*
194 * Call journal_close() just before your file system is unmounted.
195 * It flushes any outstanding transactions and makes sure the
196 * journal is in a consistent state.
197 */
198void journal_close(journal *journal);
199
200/*
201 * flags for journal_create/open. only can use
202 * the low 16 bits for flags because internal
203 * bits go in the high 16.
204 */
205#define JOURNAL_NO_GROUP_COMMIT 0x00000001
206#define JOURNAL_RESET 0x00000002
207
208/*
209 * Transaction related functions.
210 *
211 * Before you start modifying file system meta data, you
212 * should call journal_start_transaction(). Then before
213 * you modify each block, call journal_modify_block_start()
214 * and when you're done, journal_modify_block_end(). When
215 * you've modified the last block as part of a transaction,
216 * call journal_end_transaction() to commit the changes.
217 *
218 * If you decide to abort the modifications to a block you
219 * should call journal_modify_block_abort().
220 *
221 * If as part of a transaction you need want to throw out
222 * any previous copies of a block (because it got deleted)
223 * then call journal_kill_block(). This will mark it so
224 * that the journal does not play it back (effectively
225 * dropping it).
226 */
227int journal_start_transaction(journal *jnl);
228int journal_modify_block_start(journal *jnl, struct buf *bp);
229int journal_modify_block_abort(journal *jnl, struct buf *bp);
230int journal_modify_block_end(journal *jnl, struct buf *bp);
231int journal_kill_block(journal *jnl, struct buf *bp);
232int journal_end_transaction(journal *jnl);
233
234int journal_active(journal *jnl);
235int journal_flush(journal *jnl);
236
237#endif /* __APPLE_API_UNSTABLE */
238#endif /* !_SYS_VFS_JOURNAL_H_ */