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authorJeff Layton <jlayton@primarydata.com>2014-08-05 15:13:30 -0400
committerJ. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>2014-08-05 16:09:20 -0400
commit14a571a8ecc69feadce8973bd67090a7d0430123 (patch)
tree72b2e29ca3b7adb1381dff4bf589da92fbd10cc7 /fs/nfsd
parentb687f6863eed050aa56fe176e513025907ecd287 (diff)
nfsd: add some comments to the nfsd4 object definitions
Add some comments that describe what each of these objects is, and how they related to one another. Signed-off-by: Jeff Layton <jlayton@primarydata.com> Signed-off-by: J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/nfsd')
-rw-r--r--fs/nfsd/netns.h8
-rw-r--r--fs/nfsd/state.h100
2 files changed, 101 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/fs/nfsd/netns.h b/fs/nfsd/netns.h
index 3831ef6e5c75..ea6749a32760 100644
--- a/fs/nfsd/netns.h
+++ b/fs/nfsd/netns.h
@@ -34,6 +34,14 @@
struct cld_net;
struct nfsd4_client_tracking_ops;
+/*
+ * Represents a nfsd "container". With respect to nfsv4 state tracking, the
+ * fields of interest are the *_id_hashtbls and the *_name_tree. These track
+ * the nfs4_client objects by either short or long form clientid.
+ *
+ * Each nfsd_net runs a nfs4_laundromat workqueue job when necessary to clean
+ * up expired clients and delegations within the container.
+ */
struct nfsd_net {
struct cld_net *cld_net;
diff --git a/fs/nfsd/state.h b/fs/nfsd/state.h
index 32a7c290d027..4a89e00d7461 100644
--- a/fs/nfsd/state.h
+++ b/fs/nfsd/state.h
@@ -72,6 +72,11 @@ struct nfsd4_callback {
bool cb_done;
};
+/*
+ * A core object that represents a "common" stateid. These are generally
+ * embedded within the different (more specific) stateid objects and contain
+ * fields that are of general use to any stateid.
+ */
struct nfs4_stid {
atomic_t sc_count;
#define NFS4_OPEN_STID 1
@@ -89,6 +94,27 @@ struct nfs4_stid {
void (*sc_free)(struct nfs4_stid *);
};
+/*
+ * Represents a delegation stateid. The nfs4_client holds references to these
+ * and they are put when it is being destroyed or when the delegation is
+ * returned by the client:
+ *
+ * o 1 reference as long as a delegation is still in force (taken when it's
+ * alloc'd, put when it's returned or revoked)
+ *
+ * o 1 reference as long as a recall rpc is in progress (taken when the lease
+ * is broken, put when the rpc exits)
+ *
+ * o 1 more ephemeral reference for each nfsd thread currently doing something
+ * with that delegation without holding the cl_lock
+ *
+ * If the server attempts to recall a delegation and the client doesn't do so
+ * before a timeout, the server may also revoke the delegation. In that case,
+ * the object will either be destroyed (v4.0) or moved to a per-client list of
+ * revoked delegations (v4.1+).
+ *
+ * This object is a superset of the nfs4_stid.
+ */
struct nfs4_delegation {
struct nfs4_stid dl_stid; /* must be first field */
struct list_head dl_perfile;
@@ -195,6 +221,11 @@ struct nfsd4_conn {
unsigned char cn_flags;
};
+/*
+ * Representation of a v4.1+ session. These are refcounted in a similar fashion
+ * to the nfs4_client. References are only taken when the server is actively
+ * working on the object (primarily during the processing of compounds).
+ */
struct nfsd4_session {
atomic_t se_ref;
struct list_head se_hash; /* hash by sessionid */
@@ -224,13 +255,30 @@ struct nfsd4_sessionid {
/*
* struct nfs4_client - one per client. Clientids live here.
- * o Each nfs4_client is hashed by clientid.
*
- * o Each nfs4_clients is also hashed by name
- * (the opaque quantity initially sent by the client to identify itself).
+ * The initial object created by an NFS client using SETCLIENTID (for NFSv4.0)
+ * or EXCHANGE_ID (for NFSv4.1+). These objects are refcounted and timestamped.
+ * Each nfsd_net_ns object contains a set of these and they are tracked via
+ * short and long form clientid. They are hashed and searched for under the
+ * per-nfsd_net client_lock spinlock.
+ *
+ * References to it are only held during the processing of compounds, and in
+ * certain other operations. In their "resting state" they have a refcount of
+ * 0. If they are not renewed within a lease period, they become eligible for
+ * destruction by the laundromat.
+ *
+ * These objects can also be destroyed prematurely by the fault injection code,
+ * or if the client sends certain forms of SETCLIENTID or EXCHANGE_ID updates.
+ * Care is taken *not* to do this however when the objects have an elevated
+ * refcount.
+ *
+ * o Each nfs4_client is hashed by clientid
+ *
+ * o Each nfs4_clients is also hashed by name (the opaque quantity initially
+ * sent by the client to identify itself).
*
- * o cl_perclient list is used to ensure no dangling stateowner references
- * when we expire the nfs4_client
+ * o cl_perclient list is used to ensure no dangling stateowner references
+ * when we expire the nfs4_client
*/
struct nfs4_client {
struct list_head cl_idhash; /* hash by cl_clientid.id */
@@ -340,6 +388,12 @@ struct nfs4_stateowner_operations {
void (*so_free)(struct nfs4_stateowner *);
};
+/*
+ * A core object that represents either an open or lock owner. The object and
+ * lock owner objects have one of these embedded within them. Refcounts and
+ * other fields common to both owner types are contained within these
+ * structures.
+ */
struct nfs4_stateowner {
struct list_head so_strhash;
struct list_head so_stateids;
@@ -354,6 +408,12 @@ struct nfs4_stateowner {
bool so_is_open_owner;
};
+/*
+ * When a file is opened, the client provides an open state owner opaque string
+ * that indicates the "owner" of that open. These objects are refcounted.
+ * References to it are held by each open state associated with it. This object
+ * is a superset of the nfs4_stateowner struct.
+ */
struct nfs4_openowner {
struct nfs4_stateowner oo_owner; /* must be first field */
struct list_head oo_perclient;
@@ -371,6 +431,12 @@ struct nfs4_openowner {
unsigned char oo_flags;
};
+/*
+ * Represents a generic "lockowner". Similar to an openowner. References to it
+ * are held by the lock stateids that are created on its behalf. This object is
+ * a superset of the nfs4_stateowner struct (or would be if it needed any extra
+ * fields).
+ */
struct nfs4_lockowner {
struct nfs4_stateowner lo_owner; /* must be first element */
};
@@ -385,7 +451,14 @@ static inline struct nfs4_lockowner * lockowner(struct nfs4_stateowner *so)
return container_of(so, struct nfs4_lockowner, lo_owner);
}
-/* nfs4_file: a file opened by some number of (open) nfs4_stateowners. */
+/*
+ * nfs4_file: a file opened by some number of (open) nfs4_stateowners.
+ *
+ * These objects are global. nfsd only keeps one instance of a nfs4_file per
+ * inode (though it may keep multiple file descriptors open per inode). These
+ * are tracked in the file_hashtbl which is protected by the state_lock
+ * spinlock.
+ */
struct nfs4_file {
atomic_t fi_ref;
spinlock_t fi_lock;
@@ -410,7 +483,20 @@ struct nfs4_file {
bool fi_had_conflict;
};
-/* "ol" stands for "Open or Lock". Better suggestions welcome. */
+/*
+ * A generic struct representing either a open or lock stateid. The nfs4_client
+ * holds a reference to each of these objects, and they in turn hold a
+ * reference to their respective stateowners. The client's reference is
+ * released in response to a close or unlock (depending on whether it's an open
+ * or lock stateid) or when the client is being destroyed.
+ *
+ * In the case of v4.0 open stateids, these objects are preserved for a little
+ * while after close in order to handle CLOSE replays. Those are eventually
+ * reclaimed via a LRU scheme by the laundromat.
+ *
+ * This object is a superset of the nfs4_stid. "ol" stands for "Open or Lock".
+ * Better suggestions welcome.
+ */
struct nfs4_ol_stateid {
struct nfs4_stid st_stid; /* must be first field */
struct list_head st_perfile;