| /* | 
 |  *  linux/fs/buffer.c | 
 |  * | 
 |  *  Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 2002  Linus Torvalds | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Start bdflush() with kernel_thread not syscall - Paul Gortmaker, 12/95 | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Removed a lot of unnecessary code and simplified things now that | 
 |  * the buffer cache isn't our primary cache - Andrew Tridgell 12/96 | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Speed up hash, lru, and free list operations.  Use gfp() for allocating | 
 |  * hash table, use SLAB cache for buffer heads. SMP threading.  -DaveM | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Added 32k buffer block sizes - these are required older ARM systems. - RMK | 
 |  * | 
 |  * async buffer flushing, 1999 Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | #include <linux/kernel.h> | 
 | #include <linux/syscalls.h> | 
 | #include <linux/fs.h> | 
 | #include <linux/mm.h> | 
 | #include <linux/percpu.h> | 
 | #include <linux/slab.h> | 
 | #include <linux/capability.h> | 
 | #include <linux/blkdev.h> | 
 | #include <linux/file.h> | 
 | #include <linux/quotaops.h> | 
 | #include <linux/highmem.h> | 
 | #include <linux/module.h> | 
 | #include <linux/writeback.h> | 
 | #include <linux/hash.h> | 
 | #include <linux/suspend.h> | 
 | #include <linux/buffer_head.h> | 
 | #include <linux/task_io_accounting_ops.h> | 
 | #include <linux/bio.h> | 
 | #include <linux/notifier.h> | 
 | #include <linux/cpu.h> | 
 | #include <linux/bitops.h> | 
 | #include <linux/mpage.h> | 
 | #include <linux/bit_spinlock.h> | 
 |  | 
 | static int fsync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list); | 
 |  | 
 | #define BH_ENTRY(list) list_entry((list), struct buffer_head, b_assoc_buffers) | 
 |  | 
 | inline void | 
 | init_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh, bh_end_io_t *handler, void *private) | 
 | { | 
 | 	bh->b_end_io = handler; | 
 | 	bh->b_private = private; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static int sync_buffer(void *word) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct block_device *bd; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh | 
 | 		= container_of(word, struct buffer_head, b_state); | 
 |  | 
 | 	smp_mb(); | 
 | 	bd = bh->b_bdev; | 
 | 	if (bd) | 
 | 		blk_run_address_space(bd->bd_inode->i_mapping); | 
 | 	io_schedule(); | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void fastcall __lock_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	wait_on_bit_lock(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock, sync_buffer, | 
 | 							TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__lock_buffer); | 
 |  | 
 | void fastcall unlock_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	smp_mb__before_clear_bit(); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_locked(bh); | 
 | 	smp_mb__after_clear_bit(); | 
 | 	wake_up_bit(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Block until a buffer comes unlocked.  This doesn't stop it | 
 |  * from becoming locked again - you have to lock it yourself | 
 |  * if you want to preserve its state. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void __wait_on_buffer(struct buffer_head * bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	wait_on_bit(&bh->b_state, BH_Lock, sync_buffer, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static void | 
 | __clear_page_buffers(struct page *page) | 
 | { | 
 | 	ClearPagePrivate(page); | 
 | 	set_page_private(page, 0); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static void buffer_io_error(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; | 
 |  | 
 | 	printk(KERN_ERR "Buffer I/O error on device %s, logical block %Lu\n", | 
 | 			bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b), | 
 | 			(unsigned long long)bh->b_blocknr); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Default synchronous end-of-IO handler..  Just mark it up-to-date and | 
 |  * unlock the buffer. This is what ll_rw_block uses too. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void end_buffer_read_sync(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (uptodate) { | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		/* This happens, due to failed READA attempts. */ | 
 | 		clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	put_bh(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void end_buffer_write_sync(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) | 
 | { | 
 | 	char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (uptodate) { | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		if (!buffer_eopnotsupp(bh) && printk_ratelimit()) { | 
 | 			buffer_io_error(bh); | 
 | 			printk(KERN_WARNING "lost page write due to " | 
 | 					"I/O error on %s\n", | 
 | 				       bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b)); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		set_buffer_write_io_error(bh); | 
 | 		clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	put_bh(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Write out and wait upon all the dirty data associated with a block | 
 |  * device via its mapping.  Does not take the superblock lock. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int sync_blockdev(struct block_device *bdev) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (bdev) | 
 | 		ret = filemap_write_and_wait(bdev->bd_inode->i_mapping); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(sync_blockdev); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Write out and wait upon all dirty data associated with this | 
 |  * device.   Filesystem data as well as the underlying block | 
 |  * device.  Takes the superblock lock. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int fsync_bdev(struct block_device *bdev) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct super_block *sb = get_super(bdev); | 
 | 	if (sb) { | 
 | 		int res = fsync_super(sb); | 
 | 		drop_super(sb); | 
 | 		return res; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return sync_blockdev(bdev); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * freeze_bdev  --  lock a filesystem and force it into a consistent state | 
 |  * @bdev:	blockdevice to lock | 
 |  * | 
 |  * This takes the block device bd_mount_sem to make sure no new mounts | 
 |  * happen on bdev until thaw_bdev() is called. | 
 |  * If a superblock is found on this device, we take the s_umount semaphore | 
 |  * on it to make sure nobody unmounts until the snapshot creation is done. | 
 |  */ | 
 | struct super_block *freeze_bdev(struct block_device *bdev) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct super_block *sb; | 
 |  | 
 | 	down(&bdev->bd_mount_sem); | 
 | 	sb = get_super(bdev); | 
 | 	if (sb && !(sb->s_flags & MS_RDONLY)) { | 
 | 		sb->s_frozen = SB_FREEZE_WRITE; | 
 | 		smp_wmb(); | 
 |  | 
 | 		__fsync_super(sb); | 
 |  | 
 | 		sb->s_frozen = SB_FREEZE_TRANS; | 
 | 		smp_wmb(); | 
 |  | 
 | 		sync_blockdev(sb->s_bdev); | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (sb->s_op->write_super_lockfs) | 
 | 			sb->s_op->write_super_lockfs(sb); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	sync_blockdev(bdev); | 
 | 	return sb;	/* thaw_bdev releases s->s_umount and bd_mount_sem */ | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(freeze_bdev); | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * thaw_bdev  -- unlock filesystem | 
 |  * @bdev:	blockdevice to unlock | 
 |  * @sb:		associated superblock | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Unlocks the filesystem and marks it writeable again after freeze_bdev(). | 
 |  */ | 
 | void thaw_bdev(struct block_device *bdev, struct super_block *sb) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (sb) { | 
 | 		BUG_ON(sb->s_bdev != bdev); | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (sb->s_op->unlockfs) | 
 | 			sb->s_op->unlockfs(sb); | 
 | 		sb->s_frozen = SB_UNFROZEN; | 
 | 		smp_wmb(); | 
 | 		wake_up(&sb->s_wait_unfrozen); | 
 | 		drop_super(sb); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	up(&bdev->bd_mount_sem); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(thaw_bdev); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Various filesystems appear to want __find_get_block to be non-blocking. | 
 |  * But it's the page lock which protects the buffers.  To get around this, | 
 |  * we get exclusion from try_to_free_buffers with the blockdev mapping's | 
 |  * private_lock. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Hack idea: for the blockdev mapping, i_bufferlist_lock contention | 
 |  * may be quite high.  This code could TryLock the page, and if that | 
 |  * succeeds, there is no need to take private_lock. (But if | 
 |  * private_lock is contended then so is mapping->tree_lock). | 
 |  */ | 
 | static struct buffer_head * | 
 | __find_get_block_slow(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *bd_inode = bdev->bd_inode; | 
 | 	struct address_space *bd_mapping = bd_inode->i_mapping; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *ret = NULL; | 
 | 	pgoff_t index; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *head; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	int all_mapped = 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	index = block >> (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - bd_inode->i_blkbits); | 
 | 	page = find_get_page(bd_mapping, index); | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(&bd_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) | 
 | 		goto out_unlock; | 
 | 	head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (bh->b_blocknr == block) { | 
 | 			ret = bh; | 
 | 			get_bh(bh); | 
 | 			goto out_unlock; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) | 
 | 			all_mapped = 0; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* we might be here because some of the buffers on this page are | 
 | 	 * not mapped.  This is due to various races between | 
 | 	 * file io on the block device and getblk.  It gets dealt with | 
 | 	 * elsewhere, don't buffer_error if we had some unmapped buffers | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (all_mapped) { | 
 | 		printk("__find_get_block_slow() failed. " | 
 | 			"block=%llu, b_blocknr=%llu\n", | 
 | 			(unsigned long long)block, | 
 | 			(unsigned long long)bh->b_blocknr); | 
 | 		printk("b_state=0x%08lx, b_size=%zu\n", | 
 | 			bh->b_state, bh->b_size); | 
 | 		printk("device blocksize: %d\n", 1 << bd_inode->i_blkbits); | 
 | 	} | 
 | out_unlock: | 
 | 	spin_unlock(&bd_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* If invalidate_buffers() will trash dirty buffers, it means some kind | 
 |    of fs corruption is going on. Trashing dirty data always imply losing | 
 |    information that was supposed to be just stored on the physical layer | 
 |    by the user. | 
 |  | 
 |    Thus invalidate_buffers in general usage is not allwowed to trash | 
 |    dirty buffers. For example ioctl(FLSBLKBUF) expects dirty data to | 
 |    be preserved.  These buffers are simply skipped. | 
 |    | 
 |    We also skip buffers which are still in use.  For example this can | 
 |    happen if a userspace program is reading the block device. | 
 |  | 
 |    NOTE: In the case where the user removed a removable-media-disk even if | 
 |    there's still dirty data not synced on disk (due a bug in the device driver | 
 |    or due an error of the user), by not destroying the dirty buffers we could | 
 |    generate corruption also on the next media inserted, thus a parameter is | 
 |    necessary to handle this case in the most safe way possible (trying | 
 |    to not corrupt also the new disk inserted with the data belonging to | 
 |    the old now corrupted disk). Also for the ramdisk the natural thing | 
 |    to do in order to release the ramdisk memory is to destroy dirty buffers. | 
 |  | 
 |    These are two special cases. Normal usage imply the device driver | 
 |    to issue a sync on the device (without waiting I/O completion) and | 
 |    then an invalidate_buffers call that doesn't trash dirty buffers. | 
 |  | 
 |    For handling cache coherency with the blkdev pagecache the 'update' case | 
 |    is been introduced. It is needed to re-read from disk any pinned | 
 |    buffer. NOTE: re-reading from disk is destructive so we can do it only | 
 |    when we assume nobody is changing the buffercache under our I/O and when | 
 |    we think the disk contains more recent information than the buffercache. | 
 |    The update == 1 pass marks the buffers we need to update, the update == 2 | 
 |    pass does the actual I/O. */ | 
 | void invalidate_bdev(struct block_device *bdev) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping = bdev->bd_inode->i_mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (mapping->nrpages == 0) | 
 | 		return; | 
 |  | 
 | 	invalidate_bh_lrus(); | 
 | 	invalidate_mapping_pages(mapping, 0, -1); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Kick pdflush then try to free up some ZONE_NORMAL memory. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void free_more_memory(void) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct zone **zones; | 
 | 	pg_data_t *pgdat; | 
 |  | 
 | 	wakeup_pdflush(1024); | 
 | 	yield(); | 
 |  | 
 | 	for_each_online_pgdat(pgdat) { | 
 | 		zones = pgdat->node_zonelists[gfp_zone(GFP_NOFS)].zones; | 
 | 		if (*zones) | 
 | 			try_to_free_pages(zones, 0, GFP_NOFS); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * I/O completion handler for block_read_full_page() - pages | 
 |  * which come unlocked at the end of I/O. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void end_buffer_async_read(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) | 
 | { | 
 | 	unsigned long flags; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *first; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *tmp; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	int page_uptodate = 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!buffer_async_read(bh)); | 
 |  | 
 | 	page = bh->b_page; | 
 | 	if (uptodate) { | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 		if (printk_ratelimit()) | 
 | 			buffer_io_error(bh); | 
 | 		SetPageError(page); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Be _very_ careful from here on. Bad things can happen if | 
 | 	 * two buffer heads end IO at almost the same time and both | 
 | 	 * decide that the page is now completely done. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	first = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	local_irq_save(flags); | 
 | 	bit_spin_lock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_async_read(bh); | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	tmp = bh; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (!buffer_uptodate(tmp)) | 
 | 			page_uptodate = 0; | 
 | 		if (buffer_async_read(tmp)) { | 
 | 			BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(tmp)); | 
 | 			goto still_busy; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		tmp = tmp->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (tmp != bh); | 
 | 	bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 | 	local_irq_restore(flags); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * If none of the buffers had errors and they are all | 
 | 	 * uptodate then we can set the page uptodate. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (page_uptodate && !PageError(page)) | 
 | 		SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	return; | 
 |  | 
 | still_busy: | 
 | 	bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 | 	local_irq_restore(flags); | 
 | 	return; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Completion handler for block_write_full_page() - pages which are unlocked | 
 |  * during I/O, and which have PageWriteback cleared upon I/O completion. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void end_buffer_async_write(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) | 
 | { | 
 | 	char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; | 
 | 	unsigned long flags; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *first; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *tmp; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!buffer_async_write(bh)); | 
 |  | 
 | 	page = bh->b_page; | 
 | 	if (uptodate) { | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		if (printk_ratelimit()) { | 
 | 			buffer_io_error(bh); | 
 | 			printk(KERN_WARNING "lost page write due to " | 
 | 					"I/O error on %s\n", | 
 | 			       bdevname(bh->b_bdev, b)); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		set_bit(AS_EIO, &page->mapping->flags); | 
 | 		set_buffer_write_io_error(bh); | 
 | 		clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 		SetPageError(page); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	first = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	local_irq_save(flags); | 
 | 	bit_spin_lock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 |  | 
 | 	clear_buffer_async_write(bh); | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	tmp = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	while (tmp != bh) { | 
 | 		if (buffer_async_write(tmp)) { | 
 | 			BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(tmp)); | 
 | 			goto still_busy; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		tmp = tmp->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 | 	local_irq_restore(flags); | 
 | 	end_page_writeback(page); | 
 | 	return; | 
 |  | 
 | still_busy: | 
 | 	bit_spin_unlock(BH_Uptodate_Lock, &first->b_state); | 
 | 	local_irq_restore(flags); | 
 | 	return; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * If a page's buffers are under async readin (end_buffer_async_read | 
 |  * completion) then there is a possibility that another thread of | 
 |  * control could lock one of the buffers after it has completed | 
 |  * but while some of the other buffers have not completed.  This | 
 |  * locked buffer would confuse end_buffer_async_read() into not unlocking | 
 |  * the page.  So the absence of BH_Async_Read tells end_buffer_async_read() | 
 |  * that this buffer is not under async I/O. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The page comes unlocked when it has no locked buffer_async buffers | 
 |  * left. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * PageLocked prevents anyone starting new async I/O reads any of | 
 |  * the buffers. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * PageWriteback is used to prevent simultaneous writeout of the same | 
 |  * page. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * PageLocked prevents anyone from starting writeback of a page which is | 
 |  * under read I/O (PageWriteback is only ever set against a locked page). | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void mark_buffer_async_read(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_async_read; | 
 | 	set_buffer_async_read(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void mark_buffer_async_write(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_async_write; | 
 | 	set_buffer_async_write(bh); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_async_write); | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * fs/buffer.c contains helper functions for buffer-backed address space's | 
 |  * fsync functions.  A common requirement for buffer-based filesystems is | 
 |  * that certain data from the backing blockdev needs to be written out for | 
 |  * a successful fsync().  For example, ext2 indirect blocks need to be | 
 |  * written back and waited upon before fsync() returns. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The functions mark_buffer_inode_dirty(), fsync_inode_buffers(), | 
 |  * inode_has_buffers() and invalidate_inode_buffers() are provided for the | 
 |  * management of a list of dependent buffers at ->i_mapping->private_list. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Locking is a little subtle: try_to_free_buffers() will remove buffers | 
 |  * from their controlling inode's queue when they are being freed.  But | 
 |  * try_to_free_buffers() will be operating against the *blockdev* mapping | 
 |  * at the time, not against the S_ISREG file which depends on those buffers. | 
 |  * So the locking for private_list is via the private_lock in the address_space | 
 |  * which backs the buffers.  Which is different from the address_space  | 
 |  * against which the buffers are listed.  So for a particular address_space, | 
 |  * mapping->private_lock does *not* protect mapping->private_list!  In fact, | 
 |  * mapping->private_list will always be protected by the backing blockdev's | 
 |  * ->private_lock. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Which introduces a requirement: all buffers on an address_space's | 
 |  * ->private_list must be from the same address_space: the blockdev's. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * address_spaces which do not place buffers at ->private_list via these | 
 |  * utility functions are free to use private_lock and private_list for | 
 |  * whatever they want.  The only requirement is that list_empty(private_list) | 
 |  * be true at clear_inode() time. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * FIXME: clear_inode should not call invalidate_inode_buffers().  The | 
 |  * filesystems should do that.  invalidate_inode_buffers() should just go | 
 |  * BUG_ON(!list_empty). | 
 |  * | 
 |  * FIXME: mark_buffer_dirty_inode() is a data-plane operation.  It should | 
 |  * take an address_space, not an inode.  And it should be called | 
 |  * mark_buffer_dirty_fsync() to clearly define why those buffers are being | 
 |  * queued up. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * FIXME: mark_buffer_dirty_inode() doesn't need to add the buffer to the | 
 |  * list if it is already on a list.  Because if the buffer is on a list, | 
 |  * it *must* already be on the right one.  If not, the filesystem is being | 
 |  * silly.  This will save a ton of locking.  But first we have to ensure | 
 |  * that buffers are taken *off* the old inode's list when they are freed | 
 |  * (presumably in truncate).  That requires careful auditing of all | 
 |  * filesystems (do it inside bforget()).  It could also be done by bringing | 
 |  * b_inode back. | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * The buffer's backing address_space's private_lock must be held | 
 |  */ | 
 | static inline void __remove_assoc_queue(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	list_del_init(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); | 
 | 	WARN_ON(!bh->b_assoc_map); | 
 | 	if (buffer_write_io_error(bh)) | 
 | 		set_bit(AS_EIO, &bh->b_assoc_map->flags); | 
 | 	bh->b_assoc_map = NULL; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int inode_has_buffers(struct inode *inode) | 
 | { | 
 | 	return !list_empty(&inode->i_data.private_list); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * osync is designed to support O_SYNC io.  It waits synchronously for | 
 |  * all already-submitted IO to complete, but does not queue any new | 
 |  * writes to the disk. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * To do O_SYNC writes, just queue the buffer writes with ll_rw_block as | 
 |  * you dirty the buffers, and then use osync_inode_buffers to wait for | 
 |  * completion.  Any other dirty buffers which are not yet queued for | 
 |  * write will not be flushed to disk by the osync. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int osync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 | 	struct list_head *p; | 
 | 	int err = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(lock); | 
 | repeat: | 
 | 	list_for_each_prev(p, list) { | 
 | 		bh = BH_ENTRY(p); | 
 | 		if (buffer_locked(bh)) { | 
 | 			get_bh(bh); | 
 | 			spin_unlock(lock); | 
 | 			wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 			if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 				err = -EIO; | 
 | 			brelse(bh); | 
 | 			spin_lock(lock); | 
 | 			goto repeat; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	spin_unlock(lock); | 
 | 	return err; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * sync_mapping_buffers - write out and wait upon a mapping's "associated" | 
 |  *                        buffers | 
 |  * @mapping: the mapping which wants those buffers written | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Starts I/O against the buffers at mapping->private_list, and waits upon | 
 |  * that I/O. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Basically, this is a convenience function for fsync(). | 
 |  * @mapping is a file or directory which needs those buffers to be written for | 
 |  * a successful fsync(). | 
 |  */ | 
 | int sync_mapping_buffers(struct address_space *mapping) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (buffer_mapping == NULL || list_empty(&mapping->private_list)) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	return fsync_buffers_list(&buffer_mapping->private_lock, | 
 | 					&mapping->private_list); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(sync_mapping_buffers); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Called when we've recently written block `bblock', and it is known that | 
 |  * `bblock' was for a buffer_boundary() buffer.  This means that the block at | 
 |  * `bblock + 1' is probably a dirty indirect block.  Hunt it down and, if it's | 
 |  * dirty, schedule it for IO.  So that indirects merge nicely with their data. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void write_boundary_block(struct block_device *bdev, | 
 | 			sector_t bblock, unsigned blocksize) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = __find_get_block(bdev, bblock + 1, blocksize); | 
 | 	if (bh) { | 
 | 		if (buffer_dirty(bh)) | 
 | 			ll_rw_block(WRITE, 1, &bh); | 
 | 		put_bh(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void mark_buffer_dirty_inode(struct buffer_head *bh, struct inode *inode) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping; | 
 | 	struct address_space *buffer_mapping = bh->b_page->mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 	mark_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 	if (!mapping->assoc_mapping) { | 
 | 		mapping->assoc_mapping = buffer_mapping; | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		BUG_ON(mapping->assoc_mapping != buffer_mapping); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if (list_empty(&bh->b_assoc_buffers)) { | 
 | 		spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 		list_move_tail(&bh->b_assoc_buffers, | 
 | 				&mapping->private_list); | 
 | 		bh->b_assoc_map = mapping; | 
 | 		spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_dirty_inode); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Mark the page dirty, and set it dirty in the radix tree, and mark the inode | 
 |  * dirty. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * If warn is true, then emit a warning if the page is not uptodate and has | 
 |  * not been truncated. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int __set_page_dirty(struct page *page, | 
 | 		struct address_space *mapping, int warn) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (unlikely(!mapping)) | 
 | 		return !TestSetPageDirty(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (TestSetPageDirty(page)) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	write_lock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock); | 
 | 	if (page->mapping) {	/* Race with truncate? */ | 
 | 		WARN_ON_ONCE(warn && !PageUptodate(page)); | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (mapping_cap_account_dirty(mapping)) { | 
 | 			__inc_zone_page_state(page, NR_FILE_DIRTY); | 
 | 			task_io_account_write(PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		radix_tree_tag_set(&mapping->page_tree, | 
 | 				page_index(page), PAGECACHE_TAG_DIRTY); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	write_unlock_irq(&mapping->tree_lock); | 
 | 	__mark_inode_dirty(mapping->host, I_DIRTY_PAGES); | 
 |  | 
 | 	return 1; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Add a page to the dirty page list. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * It is a sad fact of life that this function is called from several places | 
 |  * deeply under spinlocking.  It may not sleep. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * If the page has buffers, the uptodate buffers are set dirty, to preserve | 
 |  * dirty-state coherency between the page and the buffers.  It the page does | 
 |  * not have buffers then when they are later attached they will all be set | 
 |  * dirty. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The buffers are dirtied before the page is dirtied.  There's a small race | 
 |  * window in which a writepage caller may see the page cleanness but not the | 
 |  * buffer dirtiness.  That's fine.  If this code were to set the page dirty | 
 |  * before the buffers, a concurrent writepage caller could clear the page dirty | 
 |  * bit, see a bunch of clean buffers and we'd end up with dirty buffers/clean | 
 |  * page on the dirty page list. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * We use private_lock to lock against try_to_free_buffers while using the | 
 |  * page's buffer list.  Also use this to protect against clean buffers being | 
 |  * added to the page after it was set dirty. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * FIXME: may need to call ->reservepage here as well.  That's rather up to the | 
 |  * address_space though. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int __set_page_dirty_buffers(struct page *page) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping = page_mapping(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (unlikely(!mapping)) | 
 | 		return !TestSetPageDirty(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(&mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	if (page_has_buffers(page)) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bh = head; | 
 |  | 
 | 		do { | 
 | 			set_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 			bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	spin_unlock(&mapping->private_lock); | 
 |  | 
 | 	return __set_page_dirty(page, mapping, 1); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__set_page_dirty_buffers); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Write out and wait upon a list of buffers. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * We have conflicting pressures: we want to make sure that all | 
 |  * initially dirty buffers get waited on, but that any subsequently | 
 |  * dirtied buffers don't.  After all, we don't want fsync to last | 
 |  * forever if somebody is actively writing to the file. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Do this in two main stages: first we copy dirty buffers to a | 
 |  * temporary inode list, queueing the writes as we go.  Then we clean | 
 |  * up, waiting for those writes to complete. | 
 |  *  | 
 |  * During this second stage, any subsequent updates to the file may end | 
 |  * up refiling the buffer on the original inode's dirty list again, so | 
 |  * there is a chance we will end up with a buffer queued for write but | 
 |  * not yet completed on that list.  So, as a final cleanup we go through | 
 |  * the osync code to catch these locked, dirty buffers without requeuing | 
 |  * any newly dirty buffers for write. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int fsync_buffers_list(spinlock_t *lock, struct list_head *list) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 | 	struct list_head tmp; | 
 | 	int err = 0, err2; | 
 |  | 
 | 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&tmp); | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(lock); | 
 | 	while (!list_empty(list)) { | 
 | 		bh = BH_ENTRY(list->next); | 
 | 		__remove_assoc_queue(bh); | 
 | 		if (buffer_dirty(bh) || buffer_locked(bh)) { | 
 | 			list_add(&bh->b_assoc_buffers, &tmp); | 
 | 			if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 				get_bh(bh); | 
 | 				spin_unlock(lock); | 
 | 				/* | 
 | 				 * Ensure any pending I/O completes so that | 
 | 				 * ll_rw_block() actually writes the current | 
 | 				 * contents - it is a noop if I/O is still in | 
 | 				 * flight on potentially older contents. | 
 | 				 */ | 
 | 				ll_rw_block(SWRITE, 1, &bh); | 
 | 				brelse(bh); | 
 | 				spin_lock(lock); | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	while (!list_empty(&tmp)) { | 
 | 		bh = BH_ENTRY(tmp.prev); | 
 | 		list_del_init(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); | 
 | 		get_bh(bh); | 
 | 		spin_unlock(lock); | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			err = -EIO; | 
 | 		brelse(bh); | 
 | 		spin_lock(lock); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	 | 
 | 	spin_unlock(lock); | 
 | 	err2 = osync_buffers_list(lock, list); | 
 | 	if (err) | 
 | 		return err; | 
 | 	else | 
 | 		return err2; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Invalidate any and all dirty buffers on a given inode.  We are | 
 |  * probably unmounting the fs, but that doesn't mean we have already | 
 |  * done a sync().  Just drop the buffers from the inode list. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * NOTE: we take the inode's blockdev's mapping's private_lock.  Which | 
 |  * assumes that all the buffers are against the blockdev.  Not true | 
 |  * for reiserfs. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void invalidate_inode_buffers(struct inode *inode) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (inode_has_buffers(inode)) { | 
 | 		struct address_space *mapping = &inode->i_data; | 
 | 		struct list_head *list = &mapping->private_list; | 
 | 		struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 		spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 		while (!list_empty(list)) | 
 | 			__remove_assoc_queue(BH_ENTRY(list->next)); | 
 | 		spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Remove any clean buffers from the inode's buffer list.  This is called | 
 |  * when we're trying to free the inode itself.  Those buffers can pin it. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Returns true if all buffers were removed. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int remove_inode_buffers(struct inode *inode) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int ret = 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (inode_has_buffers(inode)) { | 
 | 		struct address_space *mapping = &inode->i_data; | 
 | 		struct list_head *list = &mapping->private_list; | 
 | 		struct address_space *buffer_mapping = mapping->assoc_mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 		spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 		while (!list_empty(list)) { | 
 | 			struct buffer_head *bh = BH_ENTRY(list->next); | 
 | 			if (buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 				ret = 0; | 
 | 				break; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			__remove_assoc_queue(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Create the appropriate buffers when given a page for data area and | 
 |  * the size of each buffer.. Use the bh->b_this_page linked list to | 
 |  * follow the buffers created.  Return NULL if unable to create more | 
 |  * buffers. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The retry flag is used to differentiate async IO (paging, swapping) | 
 |  * which may not fail from ordinary buffer allocations. | 
 |  */ | 
 | struct buffer_head *alloc_page_buffers(struct page *page, unsigned long size, | 
 | 		int retry) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head; | 
 | 	long offset; | 
 |  | 
 | try_again: | 
 | 	head = NULL; | 
 | 	offset = PAGE_SIZE; | 
 | 	while ((offset -= size) >= 0) { | 
 | 		bh = alloc_buffer_head(GFP_NOFS); | 
 | 		if (!bh) | 
 | 			goto no_grow; | 
 |  | 
 | 		bh->b_bdev = NULL; | 
 | 		bh->b_this_page = head; | 
 | 		bh->b_blocknr = -1; | 
 | 		head = bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 		bh->b_state = 0; | 
 | 		atomic_set(&bh->b_count, 0); | 
 | 		bh->b_private = NULL; | 
 | 		bh->b_size = size; | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* Link the buffer to its page */ | 
 | 		set_bh_page(bh, page, offset); | 
 |  | 
 | 		init_buffer(bh, NULL, NULL); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return head; | 
 | /* | 
 |  * In case anything failed, we just free everything we got. | 
 |  */ | 
 | no_grow: | 
 | 	if (head) { | 
 | 		do { | 
 | 			bh = head; | 
 | 			head = head->b_this_page; | 
 | 			free_buffer_head(bh); | 
 | 		} while (head); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Return failure for non-async IO requests.  Async IO requests | 
 | 	 * are not allowed to fail, so we have to wait until buffer heads | 
 | 	 * become available.  But we don't want tasks sleeping with  | 
 | 	 * partially complete buffers, so all were released above. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (!retry) | 
 | 		return NULL; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* We're _really_ low on memory. Now we just | 
 | 	 * wait for old buffer heads to become free due to | 
 | 	 * finishing IO.  Since this is an async request and | 
 | 	 * the reserve list is empty, we're sure there are  | 
 | 	 * async buffer heads in use. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	free_more_memory(); | 
 | 	goto try_again; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(alloc_page_buffers); | 
 |  | 
 | static inline void | 
 | link_dev_buffers(struct page *page, struct buffer_head *head) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *tail; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		tail = bh; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh); | 
 | 	tail->b_this_page = head; | 
 | 	attach_page_buffers(page, head); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Initialise the state of a blockdev page's buffers. | 
 |  */  | 
 | static void | 
 | init_page_buffers(struct page *page, struct block_device *bdev, | 
 | 			sector_t block, int size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = head; | 
 | 	int uptodate = PageUptodate(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { | 
 | 			init_buffer(bh, NULL, NULL); | 
 | 			bh->b_bdev = bdev; | 
 | 			bh->b_blocknr = block; | 
 | 			if (uptodate) | 
 | 				set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			set_buffer_mapped(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		block++; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Create the page-cache page that contains the requested block. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * This is user purely for blockdev mappings. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static struct page * | 
 | grow_dev_page(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, | 
 | 		pgoff_t index, int size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = bdev->bd_inode; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 	page = find_or_create_page(inode->i_mapping, index, | 
 | 		(mapping_gfp_mask(inode->i_mapping) & ~__GFP_FS)|__GFP_MOVABLE); | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		return NULL; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (page_has_buffers(page)) { | 
 | 		bh = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 		if (bh->b_size == size) { | 
 | 			init_page_buffers(page, bdev, block, size); | 
 | 			return page; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (!try_to_free_buffers(page)) | 
 | 			goto failed; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Allocate some buffers for this page | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	bh = alloc_page_buffers(page, size, 0); | 
 | 	if (!bh) | 
 | 		goto failed; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Link the page to the buffers and initialise them.  Take the | 
 | 	 * lock to be atomic wrt __find_get_block(), which does not | 
 | 	 * run under the page lock. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	spin_lock(&inode->i_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	link_dev_buffers(page, bh); | 
 | 	init_page_buffers(page, bdev, block, size); | 
 | 	spin_unlock(&inode->i_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	return page; | 
 |  | 
 | failed: | 
 | 	BUG(); | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | 	return NULL; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Create buffers for the specified block device block's page.  If | 
 |  * that page was dirty, the buffers are set dirty also. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int | 
 | grow_buffers(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, int size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	pgoff_t index; | 
 | 	int sizebits; | 
 |  | 
 | 	sizebits = -1; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		sizebits++; | 
 | 	} while ((size << sizebits) < PAGE_SIZE); | 
 |  | 
 | 	index = block >> sizebits; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Check for a block which wants to lie outside our maximum possible | 
 | 	 * pagecache index.  (this comparison is done using sector_t types). | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (unlikely(index != block >> sizebits)) { | 
 | 		char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE]; | 
 |  | 
 | 		printk(KERN_ERR "%s: requested out-of-range block %llu for " | 
 | 			"device %s\n", | 
 | 			__FUNCTION__, (unsigned long long)block, | 
 | 			bdevname(bdev, b)); | 
 | 		return -EIO; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	block = index << sizebits; | 
 | 	/* Create a page with the proper size buffers.. */ | 
 | 	page = grow_dev_page(bdev, block, index, size); | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | 	return 1; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static struct buffer_head * | 
 | __getblk_slow(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, int size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	/* Size must be multiple of hard sectorsize */ | 
 | 	if (unlikely(size & (bdev_hardsect_size(bdev)-1) || | 
 | 			(size < 512 || size > PAGE_SIZE))) { | 
 | 		printk(KERN_ERR "getblk(): invalid block size %d requested\n", | 
 | 					size); | 
 | 		printk(KERN_ERR "hardsect size: %d\n", | 
 | 					bdev_hardsect_size(bdev)); | 
 |  | 
 | 		dump_stack(); | 
 | 		return NULL; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	for (;;) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head * bh; | 
 | 		int ret; | 
 |  | 
 | 		bh = __find_get_block(bdev, block, size); | 
 | 		if (bh) | 
 | 			return bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 		ret = grow_buffers(bdev, block, size); | 
 | 		if (ret < 0) | 
 | 			return NULL; | 
 | 		if (ret == 0) | 
 | 			free_more_memory(); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * The relationship between dirty buffers and dirty pages: | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Whenever a page has any dirty buffers, the page's dirty bit is set, and | 
 |  * the page is tagged dirty in its radix tree. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * At all times, the dirtiness of the buffers represents the dirtiness of | 
 |  * subsections of the page.  If the page has buffers, the page dirty bit is | 
 |  * merely a hint about the true dirty state. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * When a page is set dirty in its entirety, all its buffers are marked dirty | 
 |  * (if the page has buffers). | 
 |  * | 
 |  * When a buffer is marked dirty, its page is dirtied, but the page's other | 
 |  * buffers are not. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Also.  When blockdev buffers are explicitly read with bread(), they | 
 |  * individually become uptodate.  But their backing page remains not | 
 |  * uptodate - even if all of its buffers are uptodate.  A subsequent | 
 |  * block_read_full_page() against that page will discover all the uptodate | 
 |  * buffers, will set the page uptodate and will perform no I/O. | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * mark_buffer_dirty - mark a buffer_head as needing writeout | 
 |  * @bh: the buffer_head to mark dirty | 
 |  * | 
 |  * mark_buffer_dirty() will set the dirty bit against the buffer, then set its | 
 |  * backing page dirty, then tag the page as dirty in its address_space's radix | 
 |  * tree and then attach the address_space's inode to its superblock's dirty | 
 |  * inode list. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * mark_buffer_dirty() is atomic.  It takes bh->b_page->mapping->private_lock, | 
 |  * mapping->tree_lock and the global inode_lock. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void fastcall mark_buffer_dirty(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	WARN_ON_ONCE(!buffer_uptodate(bh)); | 
 | 	if (!buffer_dirty(bh) && !test_set_buffer_dirty(bh)) | 
 | 		__set_page_dirty(bh->b_page, page_mapping(bh->b_page), 0); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Decrement a buffer_head's reference count.  If all buffers against a page | 
 |  * have zero reference count, are clean and unlocked, and if the page is clean | 
 |  * and unlocked then try_to_free_buffers() may strip the buffers from the page | 
 |  * in preparation for freeing it (sometimes, rarely, buffers are removed from | 
 |  * a page but it ends up not being freed, and buffers may later be reattached). | 
 |  */ | 
 | void __brelse(struct buffer_head * buf) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (atomic_read(&buf->b_count)) { | 
 | 		put_bh(buf); | 
 | 		return; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	printk(KERN_ERR "VFS: brelse: Trying to free free buffer\n"); | 
 | 	WARN_ON(1); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * bforget() is like brelse(), except it discards any | 
 |  * potentially dirty data. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void __bforget(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	clear_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 	if (!list_empty(&bh->b_assoc_buffers)) { | 
 | 		struct address_space *buffer_mapping = bh->b_page->mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 		spin_lock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 		list_del_init(&bh->b_assoc_buffers); | 
 | 		bh->b_assoc_map = NULL; | 
 | 		spin_unlock(&buffer_mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	__brelse(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static struct buffer_head *__bread_slow(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) { | 
 | 		unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		return bh; | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		get_bh(bh); | 
 | 		bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync; | 
 | 		submit_bh(READ, bh); | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			return bh; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	brelse(bh); | 
 | 	return NULL; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Per-cpu buffer LRU implementation.  To reduce the cost of __find_get_block(). | 
 |  * The bhs[] array is sorted - newest buffer is at bhs[0].  Buffers have their | 
 |  * refcount elevated by one when they're in an LRU.  A buffer can only appear | 
 |  * once in a particular CPU's LRU.  A single buffer can be present in multiple | 
 |  * CPU's LRUs at the same time. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * This is a transparent caching front-end to sb_bread(), sb_getblk() and | 
 |  * sb_find_get_block(). | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The LRUs themselves only need locking against invalidate_bh_lrus.  We use | 
 |  * a local interrupt disable for that. | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | #define BH_LRU_SIZE	8 | 
 |  | 
 | struct bh_lru { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bhs[BH_LRU_SIZE]; | 
 | }; | 
 |  | 
 | static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct bh_lru, bh_lrus) = {{ NULL }}; | 
 |  | 
 | #ifdef CONFIG_SMP | 
 | #define bh_lru_lock()	local_irq_disable() | 
 | #define bh_lru_unlock()	local_irq_enable() | 
 | #else | 
 | #define bh_lru_lock()	preempt_disable() | 
 | #define bh_lru_unlock()	preempt_enable() | 
 | #endif | 
 |  | 
 | static inline void check_irqs_on(void) | 
 | { | 
 | #ifdef irqs_disabled | 
 | 	BUG_ON(irqs_disabled()); | 
 | #endif | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * The LRU management algorithm is dopey-but-simple.  Sorry. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void bh_lru_install(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *evictee = NULL; | 
 | 	struct bh_lru *lru; | 
 |  | 
 | 	check_irqs_on(); | 
 | 	bh_lru_lock(); | 
 | 	lru = &__get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); | 
 | 	if (lru->bhs[0] != bh) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bhs[BH_LRU_SIZE]; | 
 | 		int in; | 
 | 		int out = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 		get_bh(bh); | 
 | 		bhs[out++] = bh; | 
 | 		for (in = 0; in < BH_LRU_SIZE; in++) { | 
 | 			struct buffer_head *bh2 = lru->bhs[in]; | 
 |  | 
 | 			if (bh2 == bh) { | 
 | 				__brelse(bh2); | 
 | 			} else { | 
 | 				if (out >= BH_LRU_SIZE) { | 
 | 					BUG_ON(evictee != NULL); | 
 | 					evictee = bh2; | 
 | 				} else { | 
 | 					bhs[out++] = bh2; | 
 | 				} | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		while (out < BH_LRU_SIZE) | 
 | 			bhs[out++] = NULL; | 
 | 		memcpy(lru->bhs, bhs, sizeof(bhs)); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	bh_lru_unlock(); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (evictee) | 
 | 		__brelse(evictee); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Look up the bh in this cpu's LRU.  If it's there, move it to the head. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static struct buffer_head * | 
 | lookup_bh_lru(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *ret = NULL; | 
 | 	struct bh_lru *lru; | 
 | 	unsigned int i; | 
 |  | 
 | 	check_irqs_on(); | 
 | 	bh_lru_lock(); | 
 | 	lru = &__get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bh = lru->bhs[i]; | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (bh && bh->b_bdev == bdev && | 
 | 				bh->b_blocknr == block && bh->b_size == size) { | 
 | 			if (i) { | 
 | 				while (i) { | 
 | 					lru->bhs[i] = lru->bhs[i - 1]; | 
 | 					i--; | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				lru->bhs[0] = bh; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			get_bh(bh); | 
 | 			ret = bh; | 
 | 			break; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	bh_lru_unlock(); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Perform a pagecache lookup for the matching buffer.  If it's there, refresh | 
 |  * it in the LRU and mark it as accessed.  If it is not present then return | 
 |  * NULL | 
 |  */ | 
 | struct buffer_head * | 
 | __find_get_block(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = lookup_bh_lru(bdev, block, size); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (bh == NULL) { | 
 | 		bh = __find_get_block_slow(bdev, block); | 
 | 		if (bh) | 
 | 			bh_lru_install(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if (bh) | 
 | 		touch_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	return bh; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__find_get_block); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * __getblk will locate (and, if necessary, create) the buffer_head | 
 |  * which corresponds to the passed block_device, block and size. The | 
 |  * returned buffer has its reference count incremented. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * __getblk() cannot fail - it just keeps trying.  If you pass it an | 
 |  * illegal block number, __getblk() will happily return a buffer_head | 
 |  * which represents the non-existent block.  Very weird. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * __getblk() will lock up the machine if grow_dev_page's try_to_free_buffers() | 
 |  * attempt is failing.  FIXME, perhaps? | 
 |  */ | 
 | struct buffer_head * | 
 | __getblk(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = __find_get_block(bdev, block, size); | 
 |  | 
 | 	might_sleep(); | 
 | 	if (bh == NULL) | 
 | 		bh = __getblk_slow(bdev, block, size); | 
 | 	return bh; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__getblk); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Do async read-ahead on a buffer.. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void __breadahead(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = __getblk(bdev, block, size); | 
 | 	if (likely(bh)) { | 
 | 		ll_rw_block(READA, 1, &bh); | 
 | 		brelse(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__breadahead); | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  *  __bread() - reads a specified block and returns the bh | 
 |  *  @bdev: the block_device to read from | 
 |  *  @block: number of block | 
 |  *  @size: size (in bytes) to read | 
 |  *  | 
 |  *  Reads a specified block, and returns buffer head that contains it. | 
 |  *  It returns NULL if the block was unreadable. | 
 |  */ | 
 | struct buffer_head * | 
 | __bread(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block, unsigned size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = __getblk(bdev, block, size); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (likely(bh) && !buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 		bh = __bread_slow(bh); | 
 | 	return bh; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bread); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * invalidate_bh_lrus() is called rarely - but not only at unmount. | 
 |  * This doesn't race because it runs in each cpu either in irq | 
 |  * or with preempt disabled. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void invalidate_bh_lru(void *arg) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct bh_lru *b = &get_cpu_var(bh_lrus); | 
 | 	int i; | 
 |  | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { | 
 | 		brelse(b->bhs[i]); | 
 | 		b->bhs[i] = NULL; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	put_cpu_var(bh_lrus); | 
 | } | 
 | 	 | 
 | void invalidate_bh_lrus(void) | 
 | { | 
 | 	on_each_cpu(invalidate_bh_lru, NULL, 1, 1); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void set_bh_page(struct buffer_head *bh, | 
 | 		struct page *page, unsigned long offset) | 
 | { | 
 | 	bh->b_page = page; | 
 | 	BUG_ON(offset >= PAGE_SIZE); | 
 | 	if (PageHighMem(page)) | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * This catches illegal uses and preserves the offset: | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		bh->b_data = (char *)(0 + offset); | 
 | 	else | 
 | 		bh->b_data = page_address(page) + offset; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(set_bh_page); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Called when truncating a buffer on a page completely. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void discard_buffer(struct buffer_head * bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 	bh->b_bdev = NULL; | 
 | 	clear_buffer_mapped(bh); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_req(bh); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_new(bh); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_delay(bh); | 
 | 	clear_buffer_unwritten(bh); | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * block_invalidatepage - invalidate part of all of a buffer-backed page | 
 |  * | 
 |  * @page: the page which is affected | 
 |  * @offset: the index of the truncation point | 
 |  * | 
 |  * block_invalidatepage() is called when all or part of the page has become | 
 |  * invalidatedby a truncate operation. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * block_invalidatepage() does not have to release all buffers, but it must | 
 |  * ensure that no dirty buffer is left outside @offset and that no I/O | 
 |  * is underway against any of the blocks which are outside the truncation | 
 |  * point.  Because the caller is about to free (and possibly reuse) those | 
 |  * blocks on-disk. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void block_invalidatepage(struct page *page, unsigned long offset) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *head, *bh, *next; | 
 | 	unsigned int curr_off = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		unsigned int next_off = curr_off + bh->b_size; | 
 | 		next = bh->b_this_page; | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * is this block fully invalidated? | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		if (offset <= curr_off) | 
 | 			discard_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		curr_off = next_off; | 
 | 		bh = next; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * We release buffers only if the entire page is being invalidated. | 
 | 	 * The get_block cached value has been unconditionally invalidated, | 
 | 	 * so real IO is not possible anymore. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (offset == 0) | 
 | 		try_to_release_page(page, 0); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_invalidatepage); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * We attach and possibly dirty the buffers atomically wrt | 
 |  * __set_page_dirty_buffers() via private_lock.  try_to_free_buffers | 
 |  * is already excluded via the page lock. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void create_empty_buffers(struct page *page, | 
 | 			unsigned long blocksize, unsigned long b_state) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *tail; | 
 |  | 
 | 	head = alloc_page_buffers(page, blocksize, 1); | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		bh->b_state |= b_state; | 
 | 		tail = bh; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh); | 
 | 	tail->b_this_page = head; | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(&page->mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	if (PageUptodate(page) || PageDirty(page)) { | 
 | 		bh = head; | 
 | 		do { | 
 | 			if (PageDirty(page)) | 
 | 				set_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 			if (PageUptodate(page)) | 
 | 				set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	attach_page_buffers(page, head); | 
 | 	spin_unlock(&page->mapping->private_lock); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(create_empty_buffers); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * We are taking a block for data and we don't want any output from any | 
 |  * buffer-cache aliases starting from return from that function and | 
 |  * until the moment when something will explicitly mark the buffer | 
 |  * dirty (hopefully that will not happen until we will free that block ;-) | 
 |  * We don't even need to mark it not-uptodate - nobody can expect | 
 |  * anything from a newly allocated buffer anyway. We used to used | 
 |  * unmap_buffer() for such invalidation, but that was wrong. We definitely | 
 |  * don't want to mark the alias unmapped, for example - it would confuse | 
 |  * anyone who might pick it with bread() afterwards... | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Also..  Note that bforget() doesn't lock the buffer.  So there can | 
 |  * be writeout I/O going on against recently-freed buffers.  We don't | 
 |  * wait on that I/O in bforget() - it's more efficient to wait on the I/O | 
 |  * only if we really need to.  That happens here. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void unmap_underlying_metadata(struct block_device *bdev, sector_t block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *old_bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 	might_sleep(); | 
 |  | 
 | 	old_bh = __find_get_block_slow(bdev, block); | 
 | 	if (old_bh) { | 
 | 		clear_buffer_dirty(old_bh); | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(old_bh); | 
 | 		clear_buffer_req(old_bh); | 
 | 		__brelse(old_bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(unmap_underlying_metadata); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * NOTE! All mapped/uptodate combinations are valid: | 
 |  * | 
 |  *	Mapped	Uptodate	Meaning | 
 |  * | 
 |  *	No	No		"unknown" - must do get_block() | 
 |  *	No	Yes		"hole" - zero-filled | 
 |  *	Yes	No		"allocated" - allocated on disk, not read in | 
 |  *	Yes	Yes		"valid" - allocated and up-to-date in memory. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * "Dirty" is valid only with the last case (mapped+uptodate). | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * While block_write_full_page is writing back the dirty buffers under | 
 |  * the page lock, whoever dirtied the buffers may decide to clean them | 
 |  * again at any time.  We handle that by only looking at the buffer | 
 |  * state inside lock_buffer(). | 
 |  * | 
 |  * If block_write_full_page() is called for regular writeback | 
 |  * (wbc->sync_mode == WB_SYNC_NONE) then it will redirty a page which has a | 
 |  * locked buffer.   This only can happen if someone has written the buffer | 
 |  * directly, with submit_bh().  At the address_space level PageWriteback | 
 |  * prevents this contention from occurring. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int __block_write_full_page(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, | 
 | 			get_block_t *get_block, struct writeback_control *wbc) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int err; | 
 | 	sector_t block; | 
 | 	sector_t last_block; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head; | 
 | 	const unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	int nr_underway = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 |  | 
 | 	last_block = (i_size_read(inode) - 1) >> inode->i_blkbits; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) { | 
 | 		create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, | 
 | 					(1 << BH_Dirty)|(1 << BH_Uptodate)); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Be very careful.  We have no exclusion from __set_page_dirty_buffers | 
 | 	 * here, and the (potentially unmapped) buffers may become dirty at | 
 | 	 * any time.  If a buffer becomes dirty here after we've inspected it | 
 | 	 * then we just miss that fact, and the page stays dirty. | 
 | 	 * | 
 | 	 * Buffers outside i_size may be dirtied by __set_page_dirty_buffers; | 
 | 	 * handle that here by just cleaning them. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 |  | 
 | 	block = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); | 
 | 	head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Get all the dirty buffers mapped to disk addresses and | 
 | 	 * handle any aliases from the underlying blockdev's mapping. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (block > last_block) { | 
 | 			/* | 
 | 			 * mapped buffers outside i_size will occur, because | 
 | 			 * this page can be outside i_size when there is a | 
 | 			 * truncate in progress. | 
 | 			 */ | 
 | 			/* | 
 | 			 * The buffer was zeroed by block_write_full_page() | 
 | 			 */ | 
 | 			clear_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 			set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 		} else if (!buffer_mapped(bh) && buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 			WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); | 
 | 			err = get_block(inode, block, bh, 1); | 
 | 			if (err) | 
 | 				goto recover; | 
 | 			if (buffer_new(bh)) { | 
 | 				/* blockdev mappings never come here */ | 
 | 				clear_buffer_new(bh); | 
 | 				unmap_underlying_metadata(bh->b_bdev, | 
 | 							bh->b_blocknr); | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		block++; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * If it's a fully non-blocking write attempt and we cannot | 
 | 		 * lock the buffer then redirty the page.  Note that this can | 
 | 		 * potentially cause a busy-wait loop from pdflush and kswapd | 
 | 		 * activity, but those code paths have their own higher-level | 
 | 		 * throttling. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		if (wbc->sync_mode != WB_SYNC_NONE || !wbc->nonblocking) { | 
 | 			lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		} else if (test_set_buffer_locked(bh)) { | 
 | 			redirty_page_for_writepage(wbc, page); | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 			mark_buffer_async_write(bh); | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} while ((bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * The page and its buffers are protected by PageWriteback(), so we can | 
 | 	 * drop the bh refcounts early. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	BUG_ON(PageWriteback(page)); | 
 | 	set_page_writeback(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		if (buffer_async_write(bh)) { | 
 | 			submit_bh(WRITE, bh); | 
 | 			nr_underway++; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		bh = next; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	err = 0; | 
 | done: | 
 | 	if (nr_underway == 0) { | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * The page was marked dirty, but the buffers were | 
 | 		 * clean.  Someone wrote them back by hand with | 
 | 		 * ll_rw_block/submit_bh.  A rare case. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		end_page_writeback(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * The page and buffer_heads can be released at any time from | 
 | 		 * here on. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		wbc->pages_skipped++;	/* We didn't write this page */ | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return err; | 
 |  | 
 | recover: | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * ENOSPC, or some other error.  We may already have added some | 
 | 	 * blocks to the file, so we need to write these out to avoid | 
 | 	 * exposing stale data. | 
 | 	 * The page is currently locked and not marked for writeback | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	/* Recovery: lock and submit the mapped buffers */ | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (buffer_mapped(bh) && buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 			lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 			mark_buffer_async_write(bh); | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			/* | 
 | 			 * The buffer may have been set dirty during | 
 | 			 * attachment to a dirty page. | 
 | 			 */ | 
 | 			clear_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} while ((bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); | 
 | 	SetPageError(page); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(PageWriteback(page)); | 
 | 	mapping_set_error(page->mapping, err); | 
 | 	set_page_writeback(page); | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		if (buffer_async_write(bh)) { | 
 | 			clear_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 			submit_bh(WRITE, bh); | 
 | 			nr_underway++; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		bh = next; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	goto done; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static int __block_prepare_write(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, | 
 | 		unsigned from, unsigned to, get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	unsigned block_start, block_end; | 
 | 	sector_t block; | 
 | 	int err = 0; | 
 | 	unsigned blocksize, bbits; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *wait[2], **wait_bh=wait; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(from > PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(to > PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(from > to); | 
 |  | 
 | 	blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) | 
 | 		create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); | 
 | 	head = page_buffers(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	bbits = inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	block = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - bbits); | 
 |  | 
 | 	for(bh = head, block_start = 0; bh != head || !block_start; | 
 | 	    block++, block_start=block_end, bh = bh->b_this_page) { | 
 | 		block_end = block_start + blocksize; | 
 | 		if (block_end <= from || block_start >= to) { | 
 | 			if (PageUptodate(page)) { | 
 | 				if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 					set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (buffer_new(bh)) | 
 | 			clear_buffer_new(bh); | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { | 
 | 			WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); | 
 | 			err = get_block(inode, block, bh, 1); | 
 | 			if (err) | 
 | 				break; | 
 | 			if (buffer_new(bh)) { | 
 | 				unmap_underlying_metadata(bh->b_bdev, | 
 | 							bh->b_blocknr); | 
 | 				if (PageUptodate(page)) { | 
 | 					set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 					continue; | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				if (block_end > to || block_start < from) { | 
 | 					void *kaddr; | 
 |  | 
 | 					kaddr = kmap_atomic(page, KM_USER0); | 
 | 					if (block_end > to) | 
 | 						memset(kaddr+to, 0, | 
 | 							block_end-to); | 
 | 					if (block_start < from) | 
 | 						memset(kaddr+block_start, | 
 | 							0, from-block_start); | 
 | 					flush_dcache_page(page); | 
 | 					kunmap_atomic(kaddr, KM_USER0); | 
 | 				} | 
 | 				continue; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (PageUptodate(page)) { | 
 | 			if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 				set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			continue;  | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (!buffer_uptodate(bh) && !buffer_delay(bh) && | 
 | 		    !buffer_unwritten(bh) && | 
 | 		     (block_start < from || block_end > to)) { | 
 | 			ll_rw_block(READ, 1, &bh); | 
 | 			*wait_bh++=bh; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * If we issued read requests - let them complete. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	while(wait_bh > wait) { | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(*--wait_bh); | 
 | 		if (!buffer_uptodate(*wait_bh)) | 
 | 			err = -EIO; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if (!err) { | 
 | 		bh = head; | 
 | 		do { | 
 | 			if (buffer_new(bh)) | 
 | 				clear_buffer_new(bh); | 
 | 		} while ((bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	/* Error case: */ | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Zero out any newly allocated blocks to avoid exposing stale | 
 | 	 * data.  If BH_New is set, we know that the block was newly | 
 | 	 * allocated in the above loop. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	block_start = 0; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		block_end = block_start+blocksize; | 
 | 		if (block_end <= from) | 
 | 			goto next_bh; | 
 | 		if (block_start >= to) | 
 | 			break; | 
 | 		if (buffer_new(bh)) { | 
 | 			clear_buffer_new(bh); | 
 | 			zero_user_page(page, block_start, bh->b_size, KM_USER0); | 
 | 			set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			mark_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | next_bh: | 
 | 		block_start = block_end; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	return err; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static int __block_commit_write(struct inode *inode, struct page *page, | 
 | 		unsigned from, unsigned to) | 
 | { | 
 | 	unsigned block_start, block_end; | 
 | 	int partial = 0; | 
 | 	unsigned blocksize; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head; | 
 |  | 
 | 	blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 |  | 
 | 	for(bh = head = page_buffers(page), block_start = 0; | 
 | 	    bh != head || !block_start; | 
 | 	    block_start=block_end, bh = bh->b_this_page) { | 
 | 		block_end = block_start + blocksize; | 
 | 		if (block_end <= from || block_start >= to) { | 
 | 			if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 				partial = 1; | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 			mark_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * If this is a partial write which happened to make all buffers | 
 | 	 * uptodate then we can optimize away a bogus readpage() for | 
 | 	 * the next read(). Here we 'discover' whether the page went | 
 | 	 * uptodate as a result of this (potentially partial) write. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (!partial) | 
 | 		SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Generic "read page" function for block devices that have the normal | 
 |  * get_block functionality. This is most of the block device filesystems. | 
 |  * Reads the page asynchronously --- the unlock_buffer() and | 
 |  * set/clear_buffer_uptodate() functions propagate buffer state into the | 
 |  * page struct once IO has completed. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int block_read_full_page(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	sector_t iblock, lblock; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh, *head, *arr[MAX_BUF_PER_PAGE]; | 
 | 	unsigned int blocksize; | 
 | 	int nr, i; | 
 | 	int fully_mapped = 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 | 	blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) | 
 | 		create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); | 
 | 	head = page_buffers(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	iblock = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); | 
 | 	lblock = (i_size_read(inode)+blocksize-1) >> inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	nr = 0; | 
 | 	i = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			continue; | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { | 
 | 			int err = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 			fully_mapped = 0; | 
 | 			if (iblock < lblock) { | 
 | 				WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); | 
 | 				err = get_block(inode, iblock, bh, 0); | 
 | 				if (err) | 
 | 					SetPageError(page); | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { | 
 | 				zero_user_page(page, i * blocksize, blocksize, | 
 | 						KM_USER0); | 
 | 				if (!err) | 
 | 					set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 				continue; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			/* | 
 | 			 * get_block() might have updated the buffer | 
 | 			 * synchronously | 
 | 			 */ | 
 | 			if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 				continue; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		arr[nr++] = bh; | 
 | 	} while (i++, iblock++, (bh = bh->b_this_page) != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (fully_mapped) | 
 | 		SetPageMappedToDisk(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (!nr) { | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * All buffers are uptodate - we can set the page uptodate | 
 | 		 * as well. But not if get_block() returned an error. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		if (!PageError(page)) | 
 | 			SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 		unlock_page(page); | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Stage two: lock the buffers */ | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { | 
 | 		bh = arr[i]; | 
 | 		lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		mark_buffer_async_read(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Stage 3: start the IO.  Check for uptodateness | 
 | 	 * inside the buffer lock in case another process reading | 
 | 	 * the underlying blockdev brought it uptodate (the sct fix). | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { | 
 | 		bh = arr[i]; | 
 | 		if (buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			end_buffer_async_read(bh, 1); | 
 | 		else | 
 | 			submit_bh(READ, bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* utility function for filesystems that need to do work on expanding | 
 |  * truncates.  Uses prepare/commit_write to allow the filesystem to | 
 |  * deal with the hole.   | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int __generic_cont_expand(struct inode *inode, loff_t size, | 
 | 				 pgoff_t index, unsigned int offset) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping = inode->i_mapping; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	unsigned long limit; | 
 | 	int err; | 
 |  | 
 | 	err = -EFBIG; | 
 |         limit = current->signal->rlim[RLIMIT_FSIZE].rlim_cur; | 
 | 	if (limit != RLIM_INFINITY && size > (loff_t)limit) { | 
 | 		send_sig(SIGXFSZ, current, 0); | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	if (size > inode->i_sb->s_maxbytes) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	err = -ENOMEM; | 
 | 	page = grab_cache_page(mapping, index); | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 | 	err = mapping->a_ops->prepare_write(NULL, page, offset, offset); | 
 | 	if (err) { | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * ->prepare_write() may have instantiated a few blocks | 
 | 		 * outside i_size.  Trim these off again. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		unlock_page(page); | 
 | 		page_cache_release(page); | 
 | 		vmtruncate(inode, inode->i_size); | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	err = mapping->a_ops->commit_write(NULL, page, offset, offset); | 
 |  | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | 	if (err > 0) | 
 | 		err = 0; | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return err; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int generic_cont_expand(struct inode *inode, loff_t size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	pgoff_t index; | 
 | 	unsigned int offset; | 
 |  | 
 | 	offset = (size & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1)); /* Within page */ | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* ugh.  in prepare/commit_write, if from==to==start of block, we | 
 | 	** skip the prepare.  make sure we never send an offset for the start | 
 | 	** of a block | 
 | 	*/ | 
 | 	if ((offset & (inode->i_sb->s_blocksize - 1)) == 0) { | 
 | 		/* caller must handle this extra byte. */ | 
 | 		offset++; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	index = size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 |  | 
 | 	return __generic_cont_expand(inode, size, index, offset); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int generic_cont_expand_simple(struct inode *inode, loff_t size) | 
 | { | 
 | 	loff_t pos = size - 1; | 
 | 	pgoff_t index = pos >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 | 	unsigned int offset = (pos & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - 1)) + 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* prepare/commit_write can handle even if from==to==start of block. */ | 
 | 	return __generic_cont_expand(inode, size, index, offset); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * For moronic filesystems that do not allow holes in file. | 
 |  * We may have to extend the file. | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | int cont_prepare_write(struct page *page, unsigned offset, | 
 | 		unsigned to, get_block_t *get_block, loff_t *bytes) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping = page->mapping; | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = mapping->host; | 
 | 	struct page *new_page; | 
 | 	pgoff_t pgpos; | 
 | 	long status; | 
 | 	unsigned zerofrom; | 
 | 	unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 |  | 
 | 	while(page->index > (pgpos = *bytes>>PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT)) { | 
 | 		status = -ENOMEM; | 
 | 		new_page = grab_cache_page(mapping, pgpos); | 
 | 		if (!new_page) | 
 | 			goto out; | 
 | 		/* we might sleep */ | 
 | 		if (*bytes>>PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT != pgpos) { | 
 | 			unlock_page(new_page); | 
 | 			page_cache_release(new_page); | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		zerofrom = *bytes & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; | 
 | 		if (zerofrom & (blocksize-1)) { | 
 | 			*bytes |= (blocksize-1); | 
 | 			(*bytes)++; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		status = __block_prepare_write(inode, new_page, zerofrom, | 
 | 						PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, get_block); | 
 | 		if (status) | 
 | 			goto out_unmap; | 
 | 		zero_user_page(new_page, zerofrom, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - zerofrom, | 
 | 				KM_USER0); | 
 | 		generic_commit_write(NULL, new_page, zerofrom, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); | 
 | 		unlock_page(new_page); | 
 | 		page_cache_release(new_page); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (page->index < pgpos) { | 
 | 		/* completely inside the area */ | 
 | 		zerofrom = offset; | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		/* page covers the boundary, find the boundary offset */ | 
 | 		zerofrom = *bytes & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* if we will expand the thing last block will be filled */ | 
 | 		if (to > zerofrom && (zerofrom & (blocksize-1))) { | 
 | 			*bytes |= (blocksize-1); | 
 | 			(*bytes)++; | 
 | 		} | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* starting below the boundary? Nothing to zero out */ | 
 | 		if (offset <= zerofrom) | 
 | 			zerofrom = offset; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	status = __block_prepare_write(inode, page, zerofrom, to, get_block); | 
 | 	if (status) | 
 | 		goto out1; | 
 | 	if (zerofrom < offset) { | 
 | 		zero_user_page(page, zerofrom, offset - zerofrom, KM_USER0); | 
 | 		__block_commit_write(inode, page, zerofrom, offset); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | out1: | 
 | 	ClearPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	return status; | 
 |  | 
 | out_unmap: | 
 | 	ClearPageUptodate(new_page); | 
 | 	unlock_page(new_page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(new_page); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return status; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int block_prepare_write(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to, | 
 | 			get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	int err = __block_prepare_write(inode, page, from, to, get_block); | 
 | 	if (err) | 
 | 		ClearPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	return err; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int block_commit_write(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	__block_commit_write(inode,page,from,to); | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int generic_commit_write(struct file *file, struct page *page, | 
 | 		unsigned from, unsigned to) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	loff_t pos = ((loff_t)page->index << PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT) + to; | 
 | 	__block_commit_write(inode,page,from,to); | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * No need to use i_size_read() here, the i_size | 
 | 	 * cannot change under us because we hold i_mutex. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (pos > inode->i_size) { | 
 | 		i_size_write(inode, pos); | 
 | 		mark_inode_dirty(inode); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * block_page_mkwrite() is not allowed to change the file size as it gets | 
 |  * called from a page fault handler when a page is first dirtied. Hence we must | 
 |  * be careful to check for EOF conditions here. We set the page up correctly | 
 |  * for a written page which means we get ENOSPC checking when writing into | 
 |  * holes and correct delalloc and unwritten extent mapping on filesystems that | 
 |  * support these features. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * We are not allowed to take the i_mutex here so we have to play games to | 
 |  * protect against truncate races as the page could now be beyond EOF.  Because | 
 |  * vmtruncate() writes the inode size before removing pages, once we have the | 
 |  * page lock we can determine safely if the page is beyond EOF. If it is not | 
 |  * beyond EOF, then the page is guaranteed safe against truncation until we | 
 |  * unlock the page. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int | 
 | block_page_mkwrite(struct vm_area_struct *vma, struct page *page, | 
 | 		   get_block_t get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = vma->vm_file->f_path.dentry->d_inode; | 
 | 	unsigned long end; | 
 | 	loff_t size; | 
 | 	int ret = -EINVAL; | 
 |  | 
 | 	lock_page(page); | 
 | 	size = i_size_read(inode); | 
 | 	if ((page->mapping != inode->i_mapping) || | 
 | 	    (page_offset(page) > size)) { | 
 | 		/* page got truncated out from underneath us */ | 
 | 		goto out_unlock; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* page is wholly or partially inside EOF */ | 
 | 	if (((page->index + 1) << PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT) > size) | 
 | 		end = size & ~PAGE_CACHE_MASK; | 
 | 	else | 
 | 		end = PAGE_CACHE_SIZE; | 
 |  | 
 | 	ret = block_prepare_write(page, 0, end, get_block); | 
 | 	if (!ret) | 
 | 		ret = block_commit_write(page, 0, end); | 
 |  | 
 | out_unlock: | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * nobh_prepare_write()'s prereads are special: the buffer_heads are freed | 
 |  * immediately, while under the page lock.  So it needs a special end_io | 
 |  * handler which does not touch the bh after unlocking it. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Note: unlock_buffer() sort-of does touch the bh after unlocking it, but | 
 |  * a race there is benign: unlock_buffer() only use the bh's address for | 
 |  * hashing after unlocking the buffer, so it doesn't actually touch the bh | 
 |  * itself. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static void end_buffer_read_nobh(struct buffer_head *bh, int uptodate) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (uptodate) { | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		/* This happens, due to failed READA attempts. */ | 
 | 		clear_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * On entry, the page is fully not uptodate. | 
 |  * On exit the page is fully uptodate in the areas outside (from,to) | 
 |  */ | 
 | int nobh_prepare_write(struct page *page, unsigned from, unsigned to, | 
 | 			get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	const unsigned blkbits = inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	const unsigned blocksize = 1 << blkbits; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head map_bh; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *read_bh[MAX_BUF_PER_PAGE]; | 
 | 	unsigned block_in_page; | 
 | 	unsigned block_start; | 
 | 	sector_t block_in_file; | 
 | 	char *kaddr; | 
 | 	int nr_reads = 0; | 
 | 	int i; | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 | 	int is_mapped_to_disk = 1; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (PageMappedToDisk(page)) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	block_in_file = (sector_t)page->index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - blkbits); | 
 | 	map_bh.b_page = page; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * We loop across all blocks in the page, whether or not they are | 
 | 	 * part of the affected region.  This is so we can discover if the | 
 | 	 * page is fully mapped-to-disk. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	for (block_start = 0, block_in_page = 0; | 
 | 		  block_start < PAGE_CACHE_SIZE; | 
 | 		  block_in_page++, block_start += blocksize) { | 
 | 		unsigned block_end = block_start + blocksize; | 
 | 		int create; | 
 |  | 
 | 		map_bh.b_state = 0; | 
 | 		create = 1; | 
 | 		if (block_start >= to) | 
 | 			create = 0; | 
 | 		map_bh.b_size = blocksize; | 
 | 		ret = get_block(inode, block_in_file + block_in_page, | 
 | 					&map_bh, create); | 
 | 		if (ret) | 
 | 			goto failed; | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(&map_bh)) | 
 | 			is_mapped_to_disk = 0; | 
 | 		if (buffer_new(&map_bh)) | 
 | 			unmap_underlying_metadata(map_bh.b_bdev, | 
 | 							map_bh.b_blocknr); | 
 | 		if (PageUptodate(page)) | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		if (buffer_new(&map_bh) || !buffer_mapped(&map_bh)) { | 
 | 			kaddr = kmap_atomic(page, KM_USER0); | 
 | 			if (block_start < from) | 
 | 				memset(kaddr+block_start, 0, from-block_start); | 
 | 			if (block_end > to) | 
 | 				memset(kaddr + to, 0, block_end - to); | 
 | 			flush_dcache_page(page); | 
 | 			kunmap_atomic(kaddr, KM_USER0); | 
 | 			continue; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (buffer_uptodate(&map_bh)) | 
 | 			continue;	/* reiserfs does this */ | 
 | 		if (block_start < from || block_end > to) { | 
 | 			struct buffer_head *bh = alloc_buffer_head(GFP_NOFS); | 
 |  | 
 | 			if (!bh) { | 
 | 				ret = -ENOMEM; | 
 | 				goto failed; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 			bh->b_state = map_bh.b_state; | 
 | 			atomic_set(&bh->b_count, 0); | 
 | 			bh->b_this_page = NULL; | 
 | 			bh->b_page = page; | 
 | 			bh->b_blocknr = map_bh.b_blocknr; | 
 | 			bh->b_size = blocksize; | 
 | 			bh->b_data = (char *)(long)block_start; | 
 | 			bh->b_bdev = map_bh.b_bdev; | 
 | 			bh->b_private = NULL; | 
 | 			read_bh[nr_reads++] = bh; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (nr_reads) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * The page is locked, so these buffers are protected from | 
 | 		 * any VM or truncate activity.  Hence we don't need to care | 
 | 		 * for the buffer_head refcounts. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		for (i = 0; i < nr_reads; i++) { | 
 | 			bh = read_bh[i]; | 
 | 			lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 			bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_nobh; | 
 | 			submit_bh(READ, bh); | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		for (i = 0; i < nr_reads; i++) { | 
 | 			bh = read_bh[i]; | 
 | 			wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 			if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 				ret = -EIO; | 
 | 			free_buffer_head(bh); | 
 | 			read_bh[i] = NULL; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (ret) | 
 | 			goto failed; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (is_mapped_to_disk) | 
 | 		SetPageMappedToDisk(page); | 
 |  | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | failed: | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < nr_reads; i++) { | 
 | 		if (read_bh[i]) | 
 | 			free_buffer_head(read_bh[i]); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Error recovery is pretty slack.  Clear the page and mark it dirty | 
 | 	 * so we'll later zero out any blocks which _were_ allocated. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	zero_user_page(page, 0, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, KM_USER0); | 
 | 	SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	set_page_dirty(page); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_prepare_write); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Make sure any changes to nobh_commit_write() are reflected in | 
 |  * nobh_truncate_page(), since it doesn't call commit_write(). | 
 |  */ | 
 | int nobh_commit_write(struct file *file, struct page *page, | 
 | 		unsigned from, unsigned to) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	loff_t pos = ((loff_t)page->index << PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT) + to; | 
 |  | 
 | 	SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 	set_page_dirty(page); | 
 | 	if (pos > inode->i_size) { | 
 | 		i_size_write(inode, pos); | 
 | 		mark_inode_dirty(inode); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_commit_write); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * nobh_writepage() - based on block_full_write_page() except | 
 |  * that it tries to operate without attaching bufferheads to | 
 |  * the page. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int nobh_writepage(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block, | 
 | 			struct writeback_control *wbc) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode * const inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	loff_t i_size = i_size_read(inode); | 
 | 	const pgoff_t end_index = i_size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 | 	unsigned offset; | 
 | 	int ret; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Is the page fully inside i_size? */ | 
 | 	if (page->index < end_index) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Is the page fully outside i_size? (truncate in progress) */ | 
 | 	offset = i_size & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); | 
 | 	if (page->index >= end_index+1 || !offset) { | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * The page may have dirty, unmapped buffers.  For example, | 
 | 		 * they may have been added in ext3_writepage().  Make them | 
 | 		 * freeable here, so the page does not leak. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | #if 0 | 
 | 		/* Not really sure about this  - do we need this ? */ | 
 | 		if (page->mapping->a_ops->invalidatepage) | 
 | 			page->mapping->a_ops->invalidatepage(page, offset); | 
 | #endif | 
 | 		unlock_page(page); | 
 | 		return 0; /* don't care */ | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * The page straddles i_size.  It must be zeroed out on each and every | 
 | 	 * writepage invocation because it may be mmapped.  "A file is mapped | 
 | 	 * in multiples of the page size.  For a file that is not a multiple of | 
 | 	 * the  page size, the remaining memory is zeroed when mapped, and | 
 | 	 * writes to that region are not written out to the file." | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	zero_user_page(page, offset, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - offset, KM_USER0); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	ret = mpage_writepage(page, get_block, wbc); | 
 | 	if (ret == -EAGAIN) | 
 | 		ret = __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_writepage); | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * This function assumes that ->prepare_write() uses nobh_prepare_write(). | 
 |  */ | 
 | int nobh_truncate_page(struct address_space *mapping, loff_t from) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = mapping->host; | 
 | 	unsigned blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	pgoff_t index = from >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 | 	unsigned offset = from & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); | 
 | 	unsigned to; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	const struct address_space_operations *a_ops = mapping->a_ops; | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if ((offset & (blocksize - 1)) == 0) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	ret = -ENOMEM; | 
 | 	page = grab_cache_page(mapping, index); | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	to = (offset + blocksize) & ~(blocksize - 1); | 
 | 	ret = a_ops->prepare_write(NULL, page, offset, to); | 
 | 	if (ret == 0) { | 
 | 		zero_user_page(page, offset, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - offset, | 
 | 				KM_USER0); | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * It would be more correct to call aops->commit_write() | 
 | 		 * here, but this is more efficient. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		SetPageUptodate(page); | 
 | 		set_page_dirty(page); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(nobh_truncate_page); | 
 |  | 
 | int block_truncate_page(struct address_space *mapping, | 
 | 			loff_t from, get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	pgoff_t index = from >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 | 	unsigned offset = from & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); | 
 | 	unsigned blocksize; | 
 | 	sector_t iblock; | 
 | 	unsigned length, pos; | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = mapping->host; | 
 | 	struct page *page; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 | 	int err; | 
 |  | 
 | 	blocksize = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	length = offset & (blocksize - 1); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Block boundary? Nothing to do */ | 
 | 	if (!length) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	length = blocksize - length; | 
 | 	iblock = (sector_t)index << (PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT - inode->i_blkbits); | 
 | 	 | 
 | 	page = grab_cache_page(mapping, index); | 
 | 	err = -ENOMEM; | 
 | 	if (!page) | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (!page_has_buffers(page)) | 
 | 		create_empty_buffers(page, blocksize, 0); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Find the buffer that contains "offset" */ | 
 | 	bh = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	pos = blocksize; | 
 | 	while (offset >= pos) { | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 		iblock++; | 
 | 		pos += blocksize; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	err = 0; | 
 | 	if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) { | 
 | 		WARN_ON(bh->b_size != blocksize); | 
 | 		err = get_block(inode, iblock, bh, 0); | 
 | 		if (err) | 
 | 			goto unlock; | 
 | 		/* unmapped? It's a hole - nothing to do */ | 
 | 		if (!buffer_mapped(bh)) | 
 | 			goto unlock; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Ok, it's mapped. Make sure it's up-to-date */ | 
 | 	if (PageUptodate(page)) | 
 | 		set_buffer_uptodate(bh); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (!buffer_uptodate(bh) && !buffer_delay(bh) && !buffer_unwritten(bh)) { | 
 | 		err = -EIO; | 
 | 		ll_rw_block(READ, 1, &bh); | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		/* Uhhuh. Read error. Complain and punt. */ | 
 | 		if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			goto unlock; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	zero_user_page(page, offset, length, KM_USER0); | 
 | 	mark_buffer_dirty(bh); | 
 | 	err = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | unlock: | 
 | 	unlock_page(page); | 
 | 	page_cache_release(page); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	return err; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * The generic ->writepage function for buffer-backed address_spaces | 
 |  */ | 
 | int block_write_full_page(struct page *page, get_block_t *get_block, | 
 | 			struct writeback_control *wbc) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct inode * const inode = page->mapping->host; | 
 | 	loff_t i_size = i_size_read(inode); | 
 | 	const pgoff_t end_index = i_size >> PAGE_CACHE_SHIFT; | 
 | 	unsigned offset; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Is the page fully inside i_size? */ | 
 | 	if (page->index < end_index) | 
 | 		return __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* Is the page fully outside i_size? (truncate in progress) */ | 
 | 	offset = i_size & (PAGE_CACHE_SIZE-1); | 
 | 	if (page->index >= end_index+1 || !offset) { | 
 | 		/* | 
 | 		 * The page may have dirty, unmapped buffers.  For example, | 
 | 		 * they may have been added in ext3_writepage().  Make them | 
 | 		 * freeable here, so the page does not leak. | 
 | 		 */ | 
 | 		do_invalidatepage(page, 0); | 
 | 		unlock_page(page); | 
 | 		return 0; /* don't care */ | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * The page straddles i_size.  It must be zeroed out on each and every | 
 | 	 * writepage invokation because it may be mmapped.  "A file is mapped | 
 | 	 * in multiples of the page size.  For a file that is not a multiple of | 
 | 	 * the  page size, the remaining memory is zeroed when mapped, and | 
 | 	 * writes to that region are not written out to the file." | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	zero_user_page(page, offset, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE - offset, KM_USER0); | 
 | 	return __block_write_full_page(inode, page, get_block, wbc); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | sector_t generic_block_bmap(struct address_space *mapping, sector_t block, | 
 | 			    get_block_t *get_block) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head tmp; | 
 | 	struct inode *inode = mapping->host; | 
 | 	tmp.b_state = 0; | 
 | 	tmp.b_blocknr = 0; | 
 | 	tmp.b_size = 1 << inode->i_blkbits; | 
 | 	get_block(inode, block, &tmp, 0); | 
 | 	return tmp.b_blocknr; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static void end_bio_bh_io_sync(struct bio *bio, int err) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh = bio->bi_private; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (err == -EOPNOTSUPP) { | 
 | 		set_bit(BIO_EOPNOTSUPP, &bio->bi_flags); | 
 | 		set_bit(BH_Eopnotsupp, &bh->b_state); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	bh->b_end_io(bh, test_bit(BIO_UPTODATE, &bio->bi_flags)); | 
 | 	bio_put(bio); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int submit_bh(int rw, struct buffer_head * bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct bio *bio; | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!buffer_locked(bh)); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!buffer_mapped(bh)); | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!bh->b_end_io); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (buffer_ordered(bh) && (rw == WRITE)) | 
 | 		rw = WRITE_BARRIER; | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Only clear out a write error when rewriting, should this | 
 | 	 * include WRITE_SYNC as well? | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (test_set_buffer_req(bh) && (rw == WRITE || rw == WRITE_BARRIER)) | 
 | 		clear_buffer_write_io_error(bh); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * from here on down, it's all bio -- do the initial mapping, | 
 | 	 * submit_bio -> generic_make_request may further map this bio around | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	bio = bio_alloc(GFP_NOIO, 1); | 
 |  | 
 | 	bio->bi_sector = bh->b_blocknr * (bh->b_size >> 9); | 
 | 	bio->bi_bdev = bh->b_bdev; | 
 | 	bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_page = bh->b_page; | 
 | 	bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_len = bh->b_size; | 
 | 	bio->bi_io_vec[0].bv_offset = bh_offset(bh); | 
 |  | 
 | 	bio->bi_vcnt = 1; | 
 | 	bio->bi_idx = 0; | 
 | 	bio->bi_size = bh->b_size; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bio->bi_end_io = end_bio_bh_io_sync; | 
 | 	bio->bi_private = bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bio_get(bio); | 
 | 	submit_bio(rw, bio); | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (bio_flagged(bio, BIO_EOPNOTSUPP)) | 
 | 		ret = -EOPNOTSUPP; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bio_put(bio); | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /** | 
 |  * ll_rw_block: low-level access to block devices (DEPRECATED) | 
 |  * @rw: whether to %READ or %WRITE or %SWRITE or maybe %READA (readahead) | 
 |  * @nr: number of &struct buffer_heads in the array | 
 |  * @bhs: array of pointers to &struct buffer_head | 
 |  * | 
 |  * ll_rw_block() takes an array of pointers to &struct buffer_heads, and | 
 |  * requests an I/O operation on them, either a %READ or a %WRITE.  The third | 
 |  * %SWRITE is like %WRITE only we make sure that the *current* data in buffers | 
 |  * are sent to disk. The fourth %READA option is described in the documentation | 
 |  * for generic_make_request() which ll_rw_block() calls. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * This function drops any buffer that it cannot get a lock on (with the | 
 |  * BH_Lock state bit) unless SWRITE is required, any buffer that appears to be | 
 |  * clean when doing a write request, and any buffer that appears to be | 
 |  * up-to-date when doing read request.  Further it marks as clean buffers that | 
 |  * are processed for writing (the buffer cache won't assume that they are | 
 |  * actually clean until the buffer gets unlocked). | 
 |  * | 
 |  * ll_rw_block sets b_end_io to simple completion handler that marks | 
 |  * the buffer up-to-date (if approriate), unlocks the buffer and wakes | 
 |  * any waiters.  | 
 |  * | 
 |  * All of the buffers must be for the same device, and must also be a | 
 |  * multiple of the current approved size for the device. | 
 |  */ | 
 | void ll_rw_block(int rw, int nr, struct buffer_head *bhs[]) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int i; | 
 |  | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bh = bhs[i]; | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (rw == SWRITE) | 
 | 			lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		else if (test_set_buffer_locked(bh)) | 
 | 			continue; | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (rw == WRITE || rw == SWRITE) { | 
 | 			if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 				bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_write_sync; | 
 | 				get_bh(bh); | 
 | 				submit_bh(WRITE, bh); | 
 | 				continue; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} else { | 
 | 			if (!buffer_uptodate(bh)) { | 
 | 				bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_read_sync; | 
 | 				get_bh(bh); | 
 | 				submit_bh(rw, bh); | 
 | 				continue; | 
 | 			} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * For a data-integrity writeout, we need to wait upon any in-progress I/O | 
 |  * and then start new I/O and then wait upon it.  The caller must have a ref on | 
 |  * the buffer_head. | 
 |  */ | 
 | int sync_dirty_buffer(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	WARN_ON(atomic_read(&bh->b_count) < 1); | 
 | 	lock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	if (test_clear_buffer_dirty(bh)) { | 
 | 		get_bh(bh); | 
 | 		bh->b_end_io = end_buffer_write_sync; | 
 | 		ret = submit_bh(WRITE, bh); | 
 | 		wait_on_buffer(bh); | 
 | 		if (buffer_eopnotsupp(bh)) { | 
 | 			clear_buffer_eopnotsupp(bh); | 
 | 			ret = -EOPNOTSUPP; | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if (!ret && !buffer_uptodate(bh)) | 
 | 			ret = -EIO; | 
 | 	} else { | 
 | 		unlock_buffer(bh); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * try_to_free_buffers() checks if all the buffers on this particular page | 
 |  * are unused, and releases them if so. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Exclusion against try_to_free_buffers may be obtained by either | 
 |  * locking the page or by holding its mapping's private_lock. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * If the page is dirty but all the buffers are clean then we need to | 
 |  * be sure to mark the page clean as well.  This is because the page | 
 |  * may be against a block device, and a later reattachment of buffers | 
 |  * to a dirty page will set *all* buffers dirty.  Which would corrupt | 
 |  * filesystem data on the same device. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * The same applies to regular filesystem pages: if all the buffers are | 
 |  * clean then we set the page clean and proceed.  To do that, we require | 
 |  * total exclusion from __set_page_dirty_buffers().  That is obtained with | 
 |  * private_lock. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * try_to_free_buffers() is non-blocking. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static inline int buffer_busy(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	return atomic_read(&bh->b_count) | | 
 | 		(bh->b_state & ((1 << BH_Dirty) | (1 << BH_Lock))); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static int | 
 | drop_buffers(struct page *page, struct buffer_head **buffers_to_free) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *head = page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *bh; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bh = head; | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		if (buffer_write_io_error(bh) && page->mapping) | 
 | 			set_bit(AS_EIO, &page->mapping->flags); | 
 | 		if (buffer_busy(bh)) | 
 | 			goto failed; | 
 | 		bh = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 |  | 
 | 	do { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; | 
 |  | 
 | 		if (!list_empty(&bh->b_assoc_buffers)) | 
 | 			__remove_assoc_queue(bh); | 
 | 		bh = next; | 
 | 	} while (bh != head); | 
 | 	*buffers_to_free = head; | 
 | 	__clear_page_buffers(page); | 
 | 	return 1; | 
 | failed: | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | int try_to_free_buffers(struct page *page) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space * const mapping = page->mapping; | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *buffers_to_free = NULL; | 
 | 	int ret = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!PageLocked(page)); | 
 | 	if (PageWriteback(page)) | 
 | 		return 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (mapping == NULL) {		/* can this still happen? */ | 
 | 		ret = drop_buffers(page, &buffers_to_free); | 
 | 		goto out; | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	spin_lock(&mapping->private_lock); | 
 | 	ret = drop_buffers(page, &buffers_to_free); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * If the filesystem writes its buffers by hand (eg ext3) | 
 | 	 * then we can have clean buffers against a dirty page.  We | 
 | 	 * clean the page here; otherwise the VM will never notice | 
 | 	 * that the filesystem did any IO at all. | 
 | 	 * | 
 | 	 * Also, during truncate, discard_buffer will have marked all | 
 | 	 * the page's buffers clean.  We discover that here and clean | 
 | 	 * the page also. | 
 | 	 * | 
 | 	 * private_lock must be held over this entire operation in order | 
 | 	 * to synchronise against __set_page_dirty_buffers and prevent the | 
 | 	 * dirty bit from being lost. | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	if (ret) | 
 | 		cancel_dirty_page(page, PAGE_CACHE_SIZE); | 
 | 	spin_unlock(&mapping->private_lock); | 
 | out: | 
 | 	if (buffers_to_free) { | 
 | 		struct buffer_head *bh = buffers_to_free; | 
 |  | 
 | 		do { | 
 | 			struct buffer_head *next = bh->b_this_page; | 
 | 			free_buffer_head(bh); | 
 | 			bh = next; | 
 | 		} while (bh != buffers_to_free); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(try_to_free_buffers); | 
 |  | 
 | void block_sync_page(struct page *page) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct address_space *mapping; | 
 |  | 
 | 	smp_mb(); | 
 | 	mapping = page_mapping(page); | 
 | 	if (mapping) | 
 | 		blk_run_backing_dev(mapping->backing_dev_info, page); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * There are no bdflush tunables left.  But distributions are | 
 |  * still running obsolete flush daemons, so we terminate them here. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * Use of bdflush() is deprecated and will be removed in a future kernel. | 
 |  * The `pdflush' kernel threads fully replace bdflush daemons and this call. | 
 |  */ | 
 | asmlinkage long sys_bdflush(int func, long data) | 
 | { | 
 | 	static int msg_count; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN)) | 
 | 		return -EPERM; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (msg_count < 5) { | 
 | 		msg_count++; | 
 | 		printk(KERN_INFO | 
 | 			"warning: process `%s' used the obsolete bdflush" | 
 | 			" system call\n", current->comm); | 
 | 		printk(KERN_INFO "Fix your initscripts?\n"); | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (func == 1) | 
 | 		do_exit(0); | 
 | 	return 0; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Buffer-head allocation | 
 |  */ | 
 | static struct kmem_cache *bh_cachep; | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * Once the number of bh's in the machine exceeds this level, we start | 
 |  * stripping them in writeback. | 
 |  */ | 
 | static int max_buffer_heads; | 
 |  | 
 | int buffer_heads_over_limit; | 
 |  | 
 | struct bh_accounting { | 
 | 	int nr;			/* Number of live bh's */ | 
 | 	int ratelimit;		/* Limit cacheline bouncing */ | 
 | }; | 
 |  | 
 | static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct bh_accounting, bh_accounting) = {0, 0}; | 
 |  | 
 | static void recalc_bh_state(void) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int i; | 
 | 	int tot = 0; | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (__get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).ratelimit++ < 4096) | 
 | 		return; | 
 | 	__get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).ratelimit = 0; | 
 | 	for_each_online_cpu(i) | 
 | 		tot += per_cpu(bh_accounting, i).nr; | 
 | 	buffer_heads_over_limit = (tot > max_buffer_heads); | 
 | } | 
 | 	 | 
 | struct buffer_head *alloc_buffer_head(gfp_t gfp_flags) | 
 | { | 
 | 	struct buffer_head *ret = kmem_cache_zalloc(bh_cachep, gfp_flags); | 
 | 	if (ret) { | 
 | 		INIT_LIST_HEAD(&ret->b_assoc_buffers); | 
 | 		get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr++; | 
 | 		recalc_bh_state(); | 
 | 		put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return ret; | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(alloc_buffer_head); | 
 |  | 
 | void free_buffer_head(struct buffer_head *bh) | 
 | { | 
 | 	BUG_ON(!list_empty(&bh->b_assoc_buffers)); | 
 | 	kmem_cache_free(bh_cachep, bh); | 
 | 	get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr--; | 
 | 	recalc_bh_state(); | 
 | 	put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); | 
 | } | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(free_buffer_head); | 
 |  | 
 | static void buffer_exit_cpu(int cpu) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int i; | 
 | 	struct bh_lru *b = &per_cpu(bh_lrus, cpu); | 
 |  | 
 | 	for (i = 0; i < BH_LRU_SIZE; i++) { | 
 | 		brelse(b->bhs[i]); | 
 | 		b->bhs[i] = NULL; | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	get_cpu_var(bh_accounting).nr += per_cpu(bh_accounting, cpu).nr; | 
 | 	per_cpu(bh_accounting, cpu).nr = 0; | 
 | 	put_cpu_var(bh_accounting); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | static int buffer_cpu_notify(struct notifier_block *self, | 
 | 			      unsigned long action, void *hcpu) | 
 | { | 
 | 	if (action == CPU_DEAD || action == CPU_DEAD_FROZEN) | 
 | 		buffer_exit_cpu((unsigned long)hcpu); | 
 | 	return NOTIFY_OK; | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | void __init buffer_init(void) | 
 | { | 
 | 	int nrpages; | 
 |  | 
 | 	bh_cachep = KMEM_CACHE(buffer_head, | 
 | 			SLAB_RECLAIM_ACCOUNT|SLAB_PANIC|SLAB_MEM_SPREAD); | 
 |  | 
 | 	/* | 
 | 	 * Limit the bh occupancy to 10% of ZONE_NORMAL | 
 | 	 */ | 
 | 	nrpages = (nr_free_buffer_pages() * 10) / 100; | 
 | 	max_buffer_heads = nrpages * (PAGE_SIZE / sizeof(struct buffer_head)); | 
 | 	hotcpu_notifier(buffer_cpu_notify, 0); | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__bforget); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__brelse); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(__wait_on_buffer); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_commit_write); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_prepare_write); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_page_mkwrite); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_read_full_page); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_sync_page); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_truncate_page); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(block_write_full_page); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(cont_prepare_write); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(end_buffer_read_sync); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(end_buffer_write_sync); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(file_fsync); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(fsync_bdev); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_block_bmap); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_commit_write); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_cont_expand); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_cont_expand_simple); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(init_buffer); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(invalidate_bdev); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(ll_rw_block); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(mark_buffer_dirty); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(submit_bh); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(sync_dirty_buffer); | 
 | EXPORT_SYMBOL(unlock_buffer); |