4 * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
5 * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License").
6 * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
8 * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
9 * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
10 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions
11 * and limitations under the License.
13 * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
14 * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
15 * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
16 * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
17 * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
23 * Copyright (C) 2011 Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC.
24 * Produced at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (cf, DISCLAIMER).
25 * Written by Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>.
32 #include <linux/blkdev.h>
33 #include <linux/elevator.h>
36 typedef unsigned __bitwise__ fmode_t
;
37 #endif /* HAVE_FMODE_T */
41 * The blk_queue_write_cache() interface has replaced blk_queue_flush()
42 * interface. However, the new interface is GPL-only thus we implement
43 * our own trivial wrapper when the GPL-only version is detected.
46 * The blk_queue_flush() interface has replaced blk_queue_ordered()
47 * interface. However, while the old interface was available to all the
48 * new one is GPL-only. Thus if the GPL-only version is detected we
49 * implement our own trivial helper.
52 * Legacy blk_queue_ordered() interface.
55 blk_queue_set_write_cache(struct request_queue
*q
, bool wc
, bool fua
)
57 #if defined(HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_WRITE_CACHE_GPL_ONLY)
58 spin_lock_irq(q
->queue_lock
);
60 queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_WC
, q
);
62 queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_WC
, q
);
64 queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_FUA
, q
);
66 queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_FUA
, q
);
67 spin_unlock_irq(q
->queue_lock
);
68 #elif defined(HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_WRITE_CACHE)
69 blk_queue_write_cache(q
, wc
, fua
);
70 #elif defined(HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_FLUSH_GPL_ONLY)
72 q
->flush_flags
|= REQ_FLUSH
;
74 q
->flush_flags
|= REQ_FUA
;
75 #elif defined(HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_FLUSH)
76 blk_queue_flush(q
, (wc
? REQ_FLUSH
: 0) | (fua
? REQ_FUA
: 0));
78 blk_queue_ordered(q
, QUEUE_ORDERED_DRAIN
, NULL
);
83 * Most of the blk_* macros were removed in 2.6.36. Ostensibly this was
84 * done to improve readability and allow easier grepping. However, from
85 * a portability stand point the macros are helpful. Therefore the needed
86 * macros are redefined here if they are missing from the kernel.
88 #ifndef blk_fs_request
89 #define blk_fs_request(rq) ((rq)->cmd_type == REQ_TYPE_FS)
94 * The blk_queue_stackable() queue flag was added in 2.6.27 to handle dm
95 * stacking drivers. Prior to this request stacking drivers were detected
96 * by checking (q->request_fn == NULL), for earlier kernels we revert to
97 * this legacy behavior.
99 #ifndef blk_queue_stackable
100 #define blk_queue_stackable(q) ((q)->request_fn == NULL)
105 * The blk_queue_max_hw_sectors() function replaces blk_queue_max_sectors().
107 #ifndef HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_MAX_HW_SECTORS
108 #define blk_queue_max_hw_sectors __blk_queue_max_hw_sectors
110 __blk_queue_max_hw_sectors(struct request_queue
*q
, unsigned int max_hw_sectors
)
112 blk_queue_max_sectors(q
, max_hw_sectors
);
118 * The blk_queue_max_segments() function consolidates
119 * blk_queue_max_hw_segments() and blk_queue_max_phys_segments().
121 #ifndef HAVE_BLK_QUEUE_MAX_SEGMENTS
122 #define blk_queue_max_segments __blk_queue_max_segments
124 __blk_queue_max_segments(struct request_queue
*q
, unsigned short max_segments
)
126 blk_queue_max_phys_segments(q
, max_segments
);
127 blk_queue_max_hw_segments(q
, max_segments
);
131 #ifndef HAVE_GET_DISK_RO
133 get_disk_ro(struct gendisk
*disk
)
138 policy
= disk
->part
[0]->policy
;
142 #endif /* HAVE_GET_DISK_RO */
144 #ifdef HAVE_BIO_BVEC_ITER
145 #define BIO_BI_SECTOR(bio) (bio)->bi_iter.bi_sector
146 #define BIO_BI_SIZE(bio) (bio)->bi_iter.bi_size
147 #define BIO_BI_IDX(bio) (bio)->bi_iter.bi_idx
148 #define BIO_BI_SKIP(bio) (bio)->bi_iter.bi_bvec_done
149 #define bio_for_each_segment4(bv, bvp, b, i) \
150 bio_for_each_segment((bv), (b), (i))
151 typedef struct bvec_iter bvec_iterator_t
;
153 #define BIO_BI_SECTOR(bio) (bio)->bi_sector
154 #define BIO_BI_SIZE(bio) (bio)->bi_size
155 #define BIO_BI_IDX(bio) (bio)->bi_idx
156 #define BIO_BI_SKIP(bio) (0)
157 #define bio_for_each_segment4(bv, bvp, b, i) \
158 bio_for_each_segment((bvp), (b), (i))
159 typedef int bvec_iterator_t
;
163 * Portable helper for correctly setting the FAILFAST flags. The
164 * correct usage has changed 3 times from 2.6.12 to 2.6.38.
167 bio_set_flags_failfast(struct block_device
*bdev
, int *flags
)
171 * Disable FAILFAST for loopback devices because of the
172 * following incorrect BUG_ON() in loop_make_request().
173 * This support is also disabled for md devices because the
174 * test suite layers md devices on top of loopback devices.
175 * This may be removed when the loopback driver is fixed.
177 * BUG_ON(!lo || (rw != READ && rw != WRITE));
179 if ((MAJOR(bdev
->bd_dev
) == LOOP_MAJOR
) ||
180 (MAJOR(bdev
->bd_dev
) == MD_MAJOR
))
183 #ifdef BLOCK_EXT_MAJOR
184 if (MAJOR(bdev
->bd_dev
) == BLOCK_EXT_MAJOR
)
186 #endif /* BLOCK_EXT_MAJOR */
187 #endif /* CONFIG_BUG */
189 #if defined(HAVE_BIO_RW_FAILFAST_DTD)
190 /* BIO_RW_FAILFAST_* preferred interface from 2.6.28 - 2.6.35 */
192 (1 << BIO_RW_FAILFAST_DEV
) |
193 (1 << BIO_RW_FAILFAST_TRANSPORT
) |
194 (1 << BIO_RW_FAILFAST_DRIVER
));
195 #elif defined(HAVE_REQ_FAILFAST_MASK)
197 * REQ_FAILFAST_* preferred interface from 2.6.36 - 2.6.xx,
198 * the BIO_* and REQ_* flags were unified under REQ_* flags.
200 *flags
|= REQ_FAILFAST_MASK
;
202 #error "Undefined block IO FAILFAST interface."
207 * Maximum disk label length, it may be undefined for some kernels.
209 #ifndef DISK_NAME_LEN
210 #define DISK_NAME_LEN 32
211 #endif /* DISK_NAME_LEN */
215 * The bio_endio() prototype changed slightly. These are helper
216 * macro's to ensure the prototype and invocation are handled.
218 #ifdef HAVE_1ARG_BIO_END_IO_T
219 #define BIO_END_IO_PROTO(fn, x, z) static void fn(struct bio *x)
220 #define BIO_END_IO(bio, error) bio->bi_error = error; bio_endio(bio);
222 #define BIO_END_IO_PROTO(fn, x, z) static void fn(struct bio *x, int z)
223 #define BIO_END_IO(bio, error) bio_endio(bio, error);
224 #endif /* HAVE_1ARG_BIO_END_IO_T */
227 * 2.6.38 - 2.6.x API,
228 * blkdev_get_by_path()
231 * 2.6.28 - 2.6.37 API,
232 * open_bdev_exclusive()
233 * close_bdev_exclusive()
235 * 2.6.12 - 2.6.27 API,
239 * Used to exclusively open a block device from within the kernel.
241 #if defined(HAVE_BLKDEV_GET_BY_PATH)
242 #define vdev_bdev_open(path, md, hld) blkdev_get_by_path(path, \
243 (md) | FMODE_EXCL, hld)
244 #define vdev_bdev_close(bdev, md) blkdev_put(bdev, (md) | FMODE_EXCL)
245 #elif defined(HAVE_OPEN_BDEV_EXCLUSIVE)
246 #define vdev_bdev_open(path, md, hld) open_bdev_exclusive(path, md, hld)
247 #define vdev_bdev_close(bdev, md) close_bdev_exclusive(bdev, md)
249 #define vdev_bdev_open(path, md, hld) open_bdev_excl(path, md, hld)
250 #define vdev_bdev_close(bdev, md) close_bdev_excl(bdev)
251 #endif /* HAVE_BLKDEV_GET_BY_PATH | HAVE_OPEN_BDEV_EXCLUSIVE */
255 * The function invalidate_bdev() lost it's second argument because
258 #ifdef HAVE_1ARG_INVALIDATE_BDEV
259 #define vdev_bdev_invalidate(bdev) invalidate_bdev(bdev)
261 #define vdev_bdev_invalidate(bdev) invalidate_bdev(bdev, 1)
262 #endif /* HAVE_1ARG_INVALIDATE_BDEV */
266 * The function was exported for use, prior to this it existed but the
267 * symbol was not exported.
269 * 4.4.0-6.21 API change for Ubuntu
270 * lookup_bdev() gained a second argument, FMODE_*, to check inode permissions.
272 #ifdef HAVE_1ARG_LOOKUP_BDEV
273 #define vdev_lookup_bdev(path) lookup_bdev(path)
275 #ifdef HAVE_2ARGS_LOOKUP_BDEV
276 #define vdev_lookup_bdev(path) lookup_bdev(path, 0)
278 #define vdev_lookup_bdev(path) ERR_PTR(-ENOTSUP)
279 #endif /* HAVE_2ARGS_LOOKUP_BDEV */
280 #endif /* HAVE_1ARG_LOOKUP_BDEV */
284 * To ensure good performance preferentially use the physical block size
285 * for proper alignment. The physical size is supposed to be the internal
286 * sector size used by the device. This is often 4096 byte for AF devices,
287 * while a smaller 512 byte logical size is supported for compatibility.
289 * Unfortunately, many drives still misreport their physical sector size.
290 * For devices which are known to lie you may need to manually set this
291 * at pool creation time with 'zpool create -o ashift=12 ...'.
293 * When the physical block size interface isn't available, we fall back to
294 * the logical block size interface and then the older hard sector size.
296 #ifdef HAVE_BDEV_PHYSICAL_BLOCK_SIZE
297 #define vdev_bdev_block_size(bdev) bdev_physical_block_size(bdev)
299 #ifdef HAVE_BDEV_LOGICAL_BLOCK_SIZE
300 #define vdev_bdev_block_size(bdev) bdev_logical_block_size(bdev)
302 #define vdev_bdev_block_size(bdev) bdev_hardsect_size(bdev)
303 #endif /* HAVE_BDEV_LOGICAL_BLOCK_SIZE */
304 #endif /* HAVE_BDEV_PHYSICAL_BLOCK_SIZE */
306 #ifndef HAVE_BIO_SET_OP_ATTRS
308 * Kernels without bio_set_op_attrs use bi_rw for the bio flags.
311 bio_set_op_attrs(struct bio
*bio
, unsigned rw
, unsigned flags
)
313 bio
->bi_rw
|= rw
| flags
;
318 * bio_set_flush - Set the appropriate flags in a bio to guarantee
319 * data are on non-volatile media on completion.
321 * 2.6.X - 2.6.36 API,
322 * WRITE_BARRIER - Tells the block layer to commit all previously submitted
323 * writes to stable storage before this one is started and that the current
324 * write is on stable storage upon completion. Also prevents reordering
325 * on both sides of the current operation.
328 * Introduce WRITE_FLUSH, WRITE_FUA, and WRITE_FLUSH_FUA flags as a
329 * replacement for WRITE_BARRIER to allow expressing richer semantics
330 * to the block layer. It's up to the block layer to implement the
331 * semantics correctly. Use the WRITE_FLUSH_FUA flag combination.
334 * REQ_FLUSH was renamed to REQ_PREFLUSH. For consistency with previous
335 * ZoL releases, prefer the WRITE_FLUSH_FUA flag set if it's available.
338 * The read/write flags and their modifiers, including WRITE_FLUSH,
339 * WRITE_FUA and WRITE_FLUSH_FUA were removed from fs.h in
340 * torvalds/linux@70fd7614 and replaced by direct flag modification
341 * of the REQ_ flags in bio->bi_opf. Use REQ_PREFLUSH.
344 bio_set_flush(struct bio
*bio
)
346 #if defined(REQ_PREFLUSH) /* >= 4.10 */
347 bio_set_op_attrs(bio
, 0, REQ_PREFLUSH
);
348 #elif defined(WRITE_FLUSH_FUA) /* >= 2.6.37 and <= 4.9 */
349 bio_set_op_attrs(bio
, 0, WRITE_FLUSH_FUA
);
350 #elif defined(WRITE_BARRIER) /* < 2.6.37 */
351 bio_set_op_attrs(bio
, 0, WRITE_BARRIER
);
353 #error "Allowing the build will cause bio_set_flush requests to be ignored."
367 * 2.6.x - 2.6.35 API,
368 * HAVE_BIO_RW_BARRIER
370 * Used to determine if a cache flush has been requested. This check has
371 * been left intentionally broad in order to cover both a legacy flush
372 * and the new preflush behavior introduced in Linux 4.8. This is correct
373 * in all cases but may have a performance impact for some kernels. It
374 * has the advantage of minimizing kernel specific changes in the zvol code.
377 static inline boolean_t
378 bio_is_flush(struct bio
*bio
)
380 #if defined(HAVE_REQ_OP_FLUSH) && defined(HAVE_BIO_BI_OPF)
381 return ((bio_op(bio
) == REQ_OP_FLUSH
) || (bio
->bi_opf
& REQ_PREFLUSH
));
382 #elif defined(REQ_PREFLUSH) && defined(HAVE_BIO_BI_OPF)
383 return (bio
->bi_opf
& REQ_PREFLUSH
);
384 #elif defined(REQ_PREFLUSH) && !defined(HAVE_BIO_BI_OPF)
385 return (bio
->bi_rw
& REQ_PREFLUSH
);
386 #elif defined(REQ_FLUSH)
387 return (bio
->bi_rw
& REQ_FLUSH
);
388 #elif defined(HAVE_BIO_RW_BARRIER)
389 return (bio
->bi_rw
& (1 << BIO_RW_BARRIER
));
391 #error "Allowing the build will cause flush requests to be ignored."
397 * REQ_FUA flag moved to bio->bi_opf
402 static inline boolean_t
403 bio_is_fua(struct bio
*bio
)
405 #if defined(HAVE_BIO_BI_OPF)
406 return (bio
->bi_opf
& REQ_FUA
);
407 #elif defined(REQ_FUA)
408 return (bio
->bi_rw
& REQ_FUA
);
410 #error "Allowing the build will cause fua requests to be ignored."
421 * 2.6.28 - 2.6.35 API,
424 * In all cases the normal I/O path is used for discards. The only
425 * difference is how the kernel tags individual I/Os as discards.
427 * Note that 2.6.32 era kernels provide both BIO_RW_DISCARD and REQ_DISCARD,
428 * where BIO_RW_DISCARD is the correct interface. Therefore, it is important
429 * that the HAVE_BIO_RW_DISCARD check occur before the REQ_DISCARD check.
431 static inline boolean_t
432 bio_is_discard(struct bio
*bio
)
434 #if defined(HAVE_REQ_OP_DISCARD)
435 return (bio_op(bio
) == REQ_OP_DISCARD
);
436 #elif defined(HAVE_BIO_RW_DISCARD)
437 return (bio
->bi_rw
& (1 << BIO_RW_DISCARD
));
438 #elif defined(REQ_DISCARD)
439 return (bio
->bi_rw
& REQ_DISCARD
);
441 /* potentially triggering the DMU_MAX_ACCESS assertion. */
442 #error "Allowing the build will cause discard requests to become writes."
448 * REQ_OP_SECURE_ERASE
453 * 2.6.x - 2.6.35 API,
454 * Unsupported by kernel
456 static inline boolean_t
457 bio_is_secure_erase(struct bio
*bio
)
459 #if defined(HAVE_REQ_OP_SECURE_ERASE)
460 return (bio_op(bio
) == REQ_OP_SECURE_ERASE
);
461 #elif defined(REQ_SECURE)
462 return (bio
->bi_rw
& REQ_SECURE
);
470 * Discard granularity and alignment restrictions may now be set. For
471 * older kernels which do not support this it is safe to skip it.
473 #ifdef HAVE_DISCARD_GRANULARITY
475 blk_queue_discard_granularity(struct request_queue
*q
, unsigned int dg
)
477 q
->limits
.discard_granularity
= dg
;
480 #define blk_queue_discard_granularity(x, dg) ((void)0)
481 #endif /* HAVE_DISCARD_GRANULARITY */
484 * Default Linux IO Scheduler,
485 * Setting the scheduler to noop will allow the Linux IO scheduler to
486 * still perform front and back merging, while leaving the request
487 * ordering and prioritization to the ZFS IO scheduler.
489 #define VDEV_SCHEDULER "noop"
492 * A common holder for vdev_bdev_open() is used to relax the exclusive open
493 * semantics slightly. Internal vdev disk callers may pass VDEV_HOLDER to
494 * allow them to open the device multiple times. Other kernel callers and
495 * user space processes which don't pass this value will get EBUSY. This is
496 * currently required for the correct operation of hot spares.
498 #define VDEV_HOLDER ((void *)0x2401de7)
500 #ifndef HAVE_GENERIC_IO_ACCT
501 #define generic_start_io_acct(rw, slen, part) ((void)0)
502 #define generic_end_io_acct(rw, part, start_jiffies) ((void)0)
505 #endif /* _ZFS_BLKDEV_H */