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27 * Copyright (c) 2011, 2019 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
30 #ifndef _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H
31 #define _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H
33 #include <sys/metaslab.h>
34 #include <sys/space_map.h>
35 #include <sys/range_tree.h>
39 #include <sys/multilist.h>
46 * Metaslab allocation tracing record.
48 typedef struct metaslab_alloc_trace
{
49 list_node_t mat_list_node
;
50 metaslab_group_t
*mat_mg
;
57 } metaslab_alloc_trace_t
;
60 * Used by the metaslab allocation tracing facility to indicate
61 * error conditions. These errors are stored to the offset member
62 * of the metaslab_alloc_trace_t record and displayed by mdb.
64 typedef enum trace_alloc_type
{
65 TRACE_ALLOC_FAILURE
= -1ULL,
66 TRACE_TOO_SMALL
= -2ULL,
67 TRACE_FORCE_GANG
= -3ULL,
68 TRACE_NOT_ALLOCATABLE
= -4ULL,
69 TRACE_GROUP_FAILURE
= -5ULL,
71 TRACE_CONDENSING
= -7ULL,
72 TRACE_VDEV_ERROR
= -8ULL,
73 TRACE_DISABLED
= -9ULL,
76 #define METASLAB_WEIGHT_PRIMARY (1ULL << 63)
77 #define METASLAB_WEIGHT_SECONDARY (1ULL << 62)
78 #define METASLAB_WEIGHT_CLAIM (1ULL << 61)
79 #define METASLAB_WEIGHT_TYPE (1ULL << 60)
80 #define METASLAB_ACTIVE_MASK \
81 (METASLAB_WEIGHT_PRIMARY | METASLAB_WEIGHT_SECONDARY | \
82 METASLAB_WEIGHT_CLAIM)
85 * The metaslab weight is used to encode the amount of free space in a
86 * metaslab, such that the "best" metaslab appears first when sorting the
87 * metaslabs by weight. The weight (and therefore the "best" metaslab) can
88 * be determined in two different ways: by computing a weighted sum of all
89 * the free space in the metaslab (a space based weight) or by counting only
90 * the free segments of the largest size (a segment based weight). We prefer
91 * the segment based weight because it reflects how the free space is
92 * comprised, but we cannot always use it -- legacy pools do not have the
93 * space map histogram information necessary to determine the largest
94 * contiguous regions. Pools that have the space map histogram determine
95 * the segment weight by looking at each bucket in the histogram and
96 * determining the free space whose size in bytes is in the range:
98 * We then encode the largest index, i, that contains regions into the
99 * segment-weighted value.
101 * Space-based weight:
103 * 64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8 0
104 * +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
105 * |PSC1| weighted-free space |
106 * +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
108 * PS - indicates primary and secondary activation
109 * C - indicates activation for claimed block zio
110 * space - the fragmentation-weighted space
112 * Segment-based weight:
114 * 64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8 0
115 * +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
116 * |PSC0| idx| count of segments in region |
117 * +-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+-------+
119 * PS - indicates primary and secondary activation
120 * C - indicates activation for claimed block zio
121 * idx - index for the highest bucket in the histogram
122 * count - number of segments in the specified bucket
124 #define WEIGHT_GET_ACTIVE(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 61, 3)
125 #define WEIGHT_SET_ACTIVE(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 61, 3, x)
127 #define WEIGHT_IS_SPACEBASED(weight) \
128 ((weight) == 0 || BF64_GET((weight), 60, 1))
129 #define WEIGHT_SET_SPACEBASED(weight) BF64_SET((weight), 60, 1, 1)
132 * These macros are only applicable to segment-based weighting.
134 #define WEIGHT_GET_INDEX(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 54, 6)
135 #define WEIGHT_SET_INDEX(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 54, 6, x)
136 #define WEIGHT_GET_COUNT(weight) BF64_GET((weight), 0, 54)
137 #define WEIGHT_SET_COUNT(weight, x) BF64_SET((weight), 0, 54, x)
140 * A metaslab class encompasses a category of allocatable top-level vdevs.
141 * Each top-level vdev is associated with a metaslab group which defines
142 * the allocatable region for that vdev. Examples of these categories include
143 * "normal" for data block allocations (i.e. main pool allocations) or "log"
144 * for allocations designated for intent log devices (i.e. slog devices).
145 * When a block allocation is requested from the SPA it is associated with a
146 * metaslab_class_t, and only top-level vdevs (i.e. metaslab groups) belonging
147 * to the class can be used to satisfy that request. Allocations are done
148 * by traversing the metaslab groups that are linked off of the mc_rotor field.
149 * This rotor points to the next metaslab group where allocations will be
150 * attempted. Allocating a block is a 3 step process -- select the metaslab
151 * group, select the metaslab, and then allocate the block. The metaslab
152 * class defines the low-level block allocator that will be used as the
153 * final step in allocation. These allocators are pluggable allowing each class
154 * to use a block allocator that best suits that class.
156 struct metaslab_class
{
159 metaslab_group_t
*mc_rotor
;
160 metaslab_ops_t
*mc_ops
;
164 * Track the number of metaslab groups that have been initialized
165 * and can accept allocations. An initialized metaslab group is
166 * one has been completely added to the config (i.e. we have
167 * updated the MOS config and the space has been added to the pool).
172 * Toggle to enable/disable the allocation throttle.
174 boolean_t mc_alloc_throttle_enabled
;
177 * The allocation throttle works on a reservation system. Whenever
178 * an asynchronous zio wants to perform an allocation it must
179 * first reserve the number of blocks that it wants to allocate.
180 * If there aren't sufficient slots available for the pending zio
181 * then that I/O is throttled until more slots free up. The current
182 * number of reserved allocations is maintained by the mc_alloc_slots
183 * refcount. The mc_alloc_max_slots value determines the maximum
184 * number of allocations that the system allows. Gang blocks are
185 * allowed to reserve slots even if we've reached the maximum
186 * number of allocations allowed.
188 uint64_t *mc_alloc_max_slots
;
189 zfs_refcount_t
*mc_alloc_slots
;
191 uint64_t mc_alloc_groups
; /* # of allocatable groups */
193 uint64_t mc_alloc
; /* total allocated space */
194 uint64_t mc_deferred
; /* total deferred frees */
195 uint64_t mc_space
; /* total space (alloc + free) */
196 uint64_t mc_dspace
; /* total deflated space */
197 uint64_t mc_histogram
[RANGE_TREE_HISTOGRAM_SIZE
];
200 * List of all loaded metaslabs in the class, sorted in order of most
203 multilist_t
*mc_metaslab_txg_list
;
207 * Per-allocator data structure.
209 typedef struct metaslab_group_allocator
{
210 uint64_t mga_cur_max_alloc_queue_depth
;
211 zfs_refcount_t mga_alloc_queue_depth
;
212 metaslab_t
*mga_primary
;
213 metaslab_t
*mga_secondary
;
214 } metaslab_group_allocator_t
;
217 * Metaslab groups encapsulate all the allocatable regions (i.e. metaslabs)
218 * of a top-level vdev. They are linked together to form a circular linked
219 * list and can belong to only one metaslab class. Metaslab groups may become
220 * ineligible for allocations for a number of reasons such as limited free
221 * space, fragmentation, or going offline. When this happens the allocator will
222 * simply find the next metaslab group in the linked list and attempt
223 * to allocate from that group instead.
225 struct metaslab_group
{
227 avl_tree_t mg_metaslab_tree
;
229 boolean_t mg_allocatable
; /* can we allocate? */
230 uint64_t mg_ms_ready
;
233 * A metaslab group is considered to be initialized only after
234 * we have updated the MOS config and added the space to the pool.
235 * We only allow allocation attempts to a metaslab group if it
236 * has been initialized.
238 boolean_t mg_initialized
;
240 uint64_t mg_free_capacity
; /* percentage free */
242 int64_t mg_activation_count
;
243 metaslab_class_t
*mg_class
;
246 metaslab_group_t
*mg_prev
;
247 metaslab_group_t
*mg_next
;
250 * In order for the allocation throttle to function properly, we cannot
251 * have too many IOs going to each disk by default; the throttle
252 * operates by allocating more work to disks that finish quickly, so
253 * allocating larger chunks to each disk reduces its effectiveness.
254 * However, if the number of IOs going to each allocator is too small,
255 * we will not perform proper aggregation at the vdev_queue layer,
256 * also resulting in decreased performance. Therefore, we will use a
259 * Each allocator in each metaslab group has a current queue depth
260 * (mg_alloc_queue_depth[allocator]) and a current max queue depth
261 * (mg_cur_max_alloc_queue_depth[allocator]), and each metaslab group
262 * has an absolute max queue depth (mg_max_alloc_queue_depth). We
263 * add IOs to an allocator until the mg_alloc_queue_depth for that
264 * allocator hits the cur_max. Every time an IO completes for a given
265 * allocator on a given metaslab group, we increment its cur_max until
266 * it reaches mg_max_alloc_queue_depth. The cur_max resets every txg to
267 * help protect against disks that decrease in performance over time.
269 * It's possible for an allocator to handle more allocations than
270 * its max. This can occur when gang blocks are required or when other
271 * groups are unable to handle their share of allocations.
273 uint64_t mg_max_alloc_queue_depth
;
275 metaslab_group_allocator_t
*mg_allocator
; /* array */
277 * A metalab group that can no longer allocate the minimum block
278 * size will set mg_no_free_space. Once a metaslab group is out
279 * of space then its share of work must be distributed to other
282 boolean_t mg_no_free_space
;
284 uint64_t mg_allocations
;
285 uint64_t mg_failed_allocations
;
286 uint64_t mg_fragmentation
;
287 uint64_t mg_histogram
[RANGE_TREE_HISTOGRAM_SIZE
];
290 boolean_t mg_disabled_updating
;
291 kmutex_t mg_ms_disabled_lock
;
292 kcondvar_t mg_ms_disabled_cv
;
296 * This value defines the number of elements in the ms_lbas array. The value
297 * of 64 was chosen as it covers all power of 2 buckets up to UINT64_MAX.
298 * This is the equivalent of highbit(UINT64_MAX).
303 * Each metaslab maintains a set of in-core trees to track metaslab
304 * operations. The in-core free tree (ms_allocatable) contains the list of
305 * free segments which are eligible for allocation. As blocks are
306 * allocated, the allocated segment are removed from the ms_allocatable and
307 * added to a per txg allocation tree (ms_allocating). As blocks are
308 * freed, they are added to the free tree (ms_freeing). These trees
309 * allow us to process all allocations and frees in syncing context
310 * where it is safe to update the on-disk space maps. An additional set
311 * of in-core trees is maintained to track deferred frees
312 * (ms_defer). Once a block is freed it will move from the
313 * ms_freed to the ms_defer tree. A deferred free means that a block
314 * has been freed but cannot be used by the pool until TXG_DEFER_SIZE
315 * transactions groups later. For example, a block that is freed in txg
316 * 50 will not be available for reallocation until txg 52 (50 +
317 * TXG_DEFER_SIZE). This provides a safety net for uberblock rollback.
318 * A pool could be safely rolled back TXG_DEFERS_SIZE transactions
319 * groups and ensure that no block has been reallocated.
321 * The simplified transition diagram looks like this:
327 * free segment (ms_allocatable) -> ms_allocating[4] -> (write to space map)
329 * | ms_freeing <--- FREE
334 * +-------- ms_defer[2] <-------+-------> (write to space map)
337 * Each metaslab's space is tracked in a single space map in the MOS,
338 * which is only updated in syncing context. Each time we sync a txg,
339 * we append the allocs and frees from that txg to the space map. The
340 * pool space is only updated once all metaslabs have finished syncing.
342 * To load the in-core free tree we read the space map from disk. This
343 * object contains a series of alloc and free records that are combined
344 * to make up the list of all free segments in this metaslab. These
345 * segments are represented in-core by the ms_allocatable and are stored
348 * As the space map grows (as a result of the appends) it will
349 * eventually become space-inefficient. When the metaslab's in-core
350 * free tree is zfs_condense_pct/100 times the size of the minimal
351 * on-disk representation, we rewrite it in its minimized form. If a
352 * metaslab needs to condense then we must set the ms_condensing flag to
353 * ensure that allocations are not performed on the metaslab that is
358 * This is the main lock of the metaslab and its purpose is to
359 * coordinate our allocations and frees [e.g metaslab_block_alloc(),
360 * metaslab_free_concrete(), ..etc] with our various syncing
361 * procedures [e.g. metaslab_sync(), metaslab_sync_done(), ..etc].
363 * The lock is also used during some miscellaneous operations like
364 * using the metaslab's histogram for the metaslab group's histogram
365 * aggregation, or marking the metaslab for initialization.
370 * Acquired together with the ms_lock whenever we expect to
371 * write to metaslab data on-disk (i.e flushing entries to
372 * the metaslab's space map). It helps coordinate readers of
373 * the metaslab's space map [see spa_vdev_remove_thread()]
374 * with writers [see metaslab_sync() or metaslab_flush()].
376 * Note that metaslab_load(), even though a reader, uses
377 * a completely different mechanism to deal with the reading
378 * of the metaslab's space map based on ms_synced_length. That
379 * said, the function still uses the ms_sync_lock after it
380 * has read the ms_sm [see relevant comment in metaslab_load()
383 kmutex_t ms_sync_lock
;
385 kcondvar_t ms_load_cv
;
390 uint64_t ms_fragmentation
;
392 range_tree_t
*ms_allocating
[TXG_SIZE
];
393 range_tree_t
*ms_allocatable
;
394 uint64_t ms_allocated_this_txg
;
395 uint64_t ms_allocating_total
;
398 * The following range trees are accessed only from syncing context.
399 * ms_free*tree only have entries while syncing, and are empty
402 range_tree_t
*ms_freeing
; /* to free this syncing txg */
403 range_tree_t
*ms_freed
; /* already freed this syncing txg */
404 range_tree_t
*ms_defer
[TXG_DEFER_SIZE
];
405 range_tree_t
*ms_checkpointing
; /* to add to the checkpoint */
408 * The ms_trim tree is the set of allocatable segments which are
409 * eligible for trimming. (When the metaslab is loaded, it's a
410 * subset of ms_allocatable.) It's kept in-core as long as the
411 * autotrim property is set and is not vacated when the metaslab
412 * is unloaded. Its purpose is to aggregate freed ranges to
413 * facilitate efficient trimming.
415 range_tree_t
*ms_trim
;
417 boolean_t ms_condensing
; /* condensing? */
418 boolean_t ms_condense_wanted
;
421 * The number of consumers which have disabled the metaslab.
423 uint64_t ms_disabled
;
426 * We must always hold the ms_lock when modifying ms_loaded
430 boolean_t ms_loading
;
431 kcondvar_t ms_flush_cv
;
432 boolean_t ms_flushing
;
435 * The following histograms count entries that are in the
436 * metaslab's space map (and its histogram) but are not in
437 * ms_allocatable yet, because they are in ms_freed, ms_freeing,
440 * When the metaslab is not loaded, its ms_weight needs to
441 * reflect what is allocatable (i.e. what will be part of
442 * ms_allocatable if it is loaded). The weight is computed from
443 * the spacemap histogram, but that includes ranges that are
444 * not yet allocatable (because they are in ms_freed,
445 * ms_freeing, or ms_defer[]). Therefore, when calculating the
446 * weight, we need to remove those ranges.
448 * The ranges in the ms_freed and ms_defer[] range trees are all
449 * present in the spacemap. However, the spacemap may have
450 * multiple entries to represent a contiguous range, because it
451 * is written across multiple sync passes, but the changes of
452 * all sync passes are consolidated into the range trees.
453 * Adjacent ranges that are freed in different sync passes of
454 * one txg will be represented separately (as 2 or more entries)
455 * in the space map (and its histogram), but these adjacent
456 * ranges will be consolidated (represented as one entry) in the
457 * ms_freed/ms_defer[] range trees (and their histograms).
459 * When calculating the weight, we can not simply subtract the
460 * range trees' histograms from the spacemap's histogram,
461 * because the range trees' histograms may have entries in
462 * higher buckets than the spacemap, due to consolidation.
463 * Instead we must subtract the exact entries that were added to
464 * the spacemap's histogram. ms_synchist and ms_deferhist[]
465 * represent these exact entries, so we can subtract them from
466 * the spacemap's histogram when calculating ms_weight.
468 * ms_synchist represents the same ranges as ms_freeing +
469 * ms_freed, but without consolidation across sync passes.
471 * ms_deferhist[i] represents the same ranges as ms_defer[i],
472 * but without consolidation across sync passes.
474 uint64_t ms_synchist
[SPACE_MAP_HISTOGRAM_SIZE
];
475 uint64_t ms_deferhist
[TXG_DEFER_SIZE
][SPACE_MAP_HISTOGRAM_SIZE
];
478 * Tracks the exact amount of allocated space of this metaslab
479 * (and specifically the metaslab's space map) up to the most
480 * recently completed sync pass [see usage in metaslab_sync()].
482 uint64_t ms_allocated_space
;
483 int64_t ms_deferspace
; /* sum of ms_defermap[] space */
484 uint64_t ms_weight
; /* weight vs. others in group */
485 uint64_t ms_activation_weight
; /* activation weight */
488 * Track of whenever a metaslab is selected for loading or allocation.
489 * We use this value to determine how long the metaslab should
492 uint64_t ms_selected_txg
;
494 * ms_load/unload_time can be used for performance monitoring
495 * (e.g. by dtrace or mdb).
497 hrtime_t ms_load_time
; /* time last loaded */
498 hrtime_t ms_unload_time
; /* time last unloaded */
499 hrtime_t ms_selected_time
; /* time last allocated from */
501 uint64_t ms_alloc_txg
; /* last successful alloc (debug only) */
502 uint64_t ms_max_size
; /* maximum allocatable size */
505 * -1 if it's not active in an allocator, otherwise set to the allocator
506 * this metaslab is active for.
509 boolean_t ms_primary
; /* Only valid if ms_allocator is not -1 */
512 * The metaslab block allocators can optionally use a size-ordered
513 * range tree and/or an array of LBAs. Not all allocators use
514 * this functionality. The ms_allocatable_by_size should always
515 * contain the same number of segments as the ms_allocatable. The
516 * only difference is that the ms_allocatable_by_size is ordered by
519 zfs_btree_t ms_allocatable_by_size
;
520 zfs_btree_t ms_unflushed_frees_by_size
;
521 uint64_t ms_lbas
[MAX_LBAS
];
523 metaslab_group_t
*ms_group
; /* metaslab group */
524 avl_node_t ms_group_node
; /* node in metaslab group tree */
525 txg_node_t ms_txg_node
; /* per-txg dirty metaslab links */
526 avl_node_t ms_spa_txg_node
; /* node in spa_metaslabs_by_txg */
528 * Node in metaslab class's selected txg list
530 multilist_node_t ms_class_txg_node
;
533 * Allocs and frees that are committed to the vdev log spacemap but
534 * not yet to this metaslab's spacemap.
536 range_tree_t
*ms_unflushed_allocs
;
537 range_tree_t
*ms_unflushed_frees
;
540 * We have flushed entries up to but not including this TXG. In
541 * other words, all changes from this TXG and onward should not
542 * be in this metaslab's space map and must be read from the
545 uint64_t ms_unflushed_txg
;
547 /* updated every time we are done syncing the metaslab's space map */
548 uint64_t ms_synced_length
;
553 typedef struct metaslab_unflushed_phys
{
554 /* on-disk counterpart of ms_unflushed_txg */
555 uint64_t msp_unflushed_txg
;
556 } metaslab_unflushed_phys_t
;
562 #endif /* _SYS_METASLAB_IMPL_H */