4 This file is part of DRBD by Philipp Reisner and Lars Ellenberg.
6 Copyright (C) 2003-2008, LINBIT Information Technologies GmbH.
7 Copyright (C) 2003-2008, Philipp Reisner <philipp.reisner@linbit.com>.
8 Copyright (C) 2003-2008, Lars Ellenberg <lars.ellenberg@linbit.com>.
10 drbd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
15 drbd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 GNU General Public License for more details.
20 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 along with drbd; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
22 the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
29 #include <linux/list.h>
30 #include <linux/slab.h>
31 #include <linux/bitops.h>
32 #include <linux/string.h> /* for memset */
33 #include <linux/seq_file.h>
36 This header file (and its .c file; kernel-doc of functions see there)
37 define a helper framework to easily keep track of index:label associations,
38 and changes to an "active set" of objects, as well as pending transactions,
39 to persistently record those changes.
41 We use an LRU policy if it is necessary to "cool down" a region currently in
42 the active set before we can "heat" a previously unused region.
44 Because of this later property, it is called "lru_cache".
45 As it actually Tracks Objects in an Active SeT, we could also call it
46 toast (incidentally that is what may happen to the data on the
47 backend storage uppon next resync, if we don't get it right).
51 We replicate IO (more or less synchronously) to local and remote disk.
53 For crash recovery after replication node failure,
54 we need to resync all regions that have been target of in-flight WRITE IO
55 (in use, or "hot", regions), as we don't know wether or not those WRITEs have
56 made it to stable storage.
58 To avoid a "full resync", we need to persistently track these regions.
60 This is known as "write intent log", and can be implemented as on-disk
61 (coarse or fine grained) bitmap, or other meta data.
63 To avoid the overhead of frequent extra writes to this meta data area,
64 usually the condition is softened to regions that _may_ have been target of
65 in-flight WRITE IO, e.g. by only lazily clearing the on-disk write-intent
66 bitmap, trading frequency of meta data transactions against amount of
67 (possibly unnecessary) resync traffic.
69 If we set a hard limit on the area that may be "hot" at any given time, we
70 limit the amount of resync traffic needed for crash recovery.
72 For recovery after replication link failure,
73 we need to resync all blocks that have been changed on the other replica
74 in the mean time, or, if both replica have been changed independently [*],
75 all blocks that have been changed on either replica in the mean time.
76 [*] usually as a result of a cluster split-brain and insufficient protection.
77 but there are valid use cases to do this on purpose.
79 Tracking those blocks can be implemented as "dirty bitmap".
80 Having it fine-grained reduces the amount of resync traffic.
81 It should also be persistent, to allow for reboots (or crashes)
82 while the replication link is down.
84 There are various possible implementations for persistently storing
85 write intent log information, three of which are mentioned here.
88 The on-disk "dirty bitmap" may be re-used as "write-intent" bitmap as well.
89 To reduce the frequency of bitmap updates for write-intent log purposes,
90 one could dirty "chunks" (of some size) at a time of the (fine grained)
91 on-disk bitmap, while keeping the in-memory "dirty" bitmap as clean as
92 possible, flushing it to disk again when a previously "hot" (and on-disk
93 dirtied as full chunk) area "cools down" again (no IO in flight anymore,
94 and none expected in the near future either).
96 "Explicit (coarse) write intent bitmap"
97 An other implementation could chose a (probably coarse) explicit bitmap,
98 for write-intent log purposes, additionally to the fine grained dirty bitmap.
101 Yet an other implementation may keep track of the hot regions, by starting
102 with an empty set, and writing down a journal of region numbers that have
103 become "hot", or have "cooled down" again.
105 To be able to use a ring buffer for this journal of changes to the active
106 set, we not only record the actual changes to that set, but also record the
107 not changing members of the set in a round robin fashion. To do so, we use a
108 fixed (but configurable) number of slots which we can identify by index, and
109 associate region numbers (labels) with these indices.
110 For each transaction recording a change to the active set, we record the
111 change itself (index: -old_label, +new_label), and which index is associated
112 with which label (index: current_label) within a certain sliding window that
113 is moved further over the available indices with each such transaction.
115 Thus, for crash recovery, if the ringbuffer is sufficiently large, we can
116 accurately reconstruct the active set.
118 Sufficiently large depends only on maximum number of active objects, and the
119 size of the sliding window recording "index: current_label" associations within
122 This is what we call the "activity log".
124 Currently we need one activity log transaction per single label change, which
125 does not give much benefit over the "dirty chunks of bitmap" approach, other
126 than potentially less seeks.
128 We plan to change the transaction format to support multiple changes per
129 transaction, which then would reduce several (disjoint, "random") updates to
130 the bitmap into one transaction to the activity log ring buffer.
133 /* this defines an element in a tracked set
134 * .colision is for hash table lookup.
135 * When we process a new IO request, we know its sector, thus can deduce the
136 * region number (label) easily. To do the label -> object lookup without a
137 * full list walk, we use a simple hash table.
139 * .list is on one of three lists:
140 * in_use: currently in use (refcnt > 0, lc_number != LC_FREE)
141 * lru: unused but ready to be reused or recycled
142 * (lc_refcnt == 0, lc_number != LC_FREE),
143 * free: unused but ready to be recycled
144 * (lc_refcnt == 0, lc_number == LC_FREE),
146 * an element is said to be "in the active set",
147 * if either on "in_use" or "lru", i.e. lc_number != LC_FREE.
149 * DRBD currently (May 2009) only uses 61 elements on the resync lru_cache
150 * (total memory usage 2 pages), and up to 3833 elements on the act_log
151 * lru_cache, totalling ~215 kB for 64bit architecture, ~53 pages.
153 * We usually do not actually free these objects again, but only "recycle"
154 * them, as the change "index: -old_label, +LC_FREE" would need a transaction
155 * as well. Which also means that using a kmem_cache to allocate the objects
156 * from wastes some resources.
157 * But it avoids high order page allocations in kmalloc.
160 struct hlist_node colision
;
161 struct list_head list
; /* LRU list or free list */
163 /* back "pointer" into lc_cache->element[index],
164 * for paranoia, and for "lc_element_to_index" */
166 /* if we want to track a larger set of objects,
167 * it needs to become arch independend u64 */
170 /* special label when on free list */
171 #define LC_FREE (~0U)
175 /* the least recently used item is kept at lru->prev */
176 struct list_head lru
;
177 struct list_head free
;
178 struct list_head in_use
;
180 /* the pre-created kmem cache to allocate the objects from */
181 struct kmem_cache
*lc_cache
;
183 /* size of tracked objects, used to memset(,0,) them in lc_reset */
185 /* offset of struct lc_element member in the tracked object */
188 /* number of elements (indices) */
189 unsigned int nr_elements
;
190 /* Arbitrary limit on maximum tracked objects. Practical limit is much
191 * lower due to allocation failures, probably. For typical use cases,
192 * nr_elements should be a few thousand at most.
193 * This also limits the maximum value of lc_element.lc_index, allowing the
194 * 8 high bits of .lc_index to be overloaded with flags in the future. */
195 #define LC_MAX_ACTIVE (1<<24)
198 unsigned used
; /* number of lelements currently on in_use list */
199 unsigned long hits
, misses
, starving
, dirty
, changed
;
201 /* see below: flag-bits for lru_cache */
204 /* when changing the label of an index element */
205 unsigned int new_number
;
207 /* for paranoia when changing the label of an index element */
208 struct lc_element
*changing_element
;
213 /* nr_elements there */
214 struct hlist_head
*lc_slot
;
215 struct lc_element
**lc_element
;
219 /* flag-bits for lru_cache */
221 /* debugging aid, to catch concurrent access early.
222 * user needs to guarantee exclusive access by proper locking! */
224 /* if we need to change the set, but currently there is a changing
225 * transaction pending, we are "dirty", and must deferr further
226 * changing requests */
228 /* if we need to change the set, but currently there is no free nor
229 * unused element available, we are "starving", and must not give out
230 * further references, to guarantee that eventually some refcnt will
231 * drop to zero and we will be able to make progress again, changing
232 * the set, writing the transaction.
233 * if the statistics say we are frequently starving,
234 * nr_elements is too small. */
237 #define LC_PARANOIA (1<<__LC_PARANOIA)
238 #define LC_DIRTY (1<<__LC_DIRTY)
239 #define LC_STARVING (1<<__LC_STARVING)
241 extern struct lru_cache
*lc_create(const char *name
, struct kmem_cache
*cache
,
242 unsigned e_count
, size_t e_size
, size_t e_off
);
243 extern void lc_reset(struct lru_cache
*lc
);
244 extern void lc_destroy(struct lru_cache
*lc
);
245 extern void lc_set(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned int enr
, int index
);
246 extern void lc_del(struct lru_cache
*lc
, struct lc_element
*element
);
248 extern struct lc_element
*lc_try_get(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned int enr
);
249 extern struct lc_element
*lc_find(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned int enr
);
250 extern struct lc_element
*lc_get(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned int enr
);
251 extern unsigned int lc_put(struct lru_cache
*lc
, struct lc_element
*e
);
252 extern void lc_changed(struct lru_cache
*lc
, struct lc_element
*e
);
255 extern size_t lc_seq_printf_stats(struct seq_file
*seq
, struct lru_cache
*lc
);
257 extern void lc_seq_dump_details(struct seq_file
*seq
, struct lru_cache
*lc
, char *utext
,
258 void (*detail
) (struct seq_file
*, struct lc_element
*));
261 * lc_try_lock - can be used to stop lc_get() from changing the tracked set
262 * @lc: the lru cache to operate on
264 * Note that the reference counts and order on the active and lru lists may
265 * still change. Returns true if we acquired the lock.
267 static inline int lc_try_lock(struct lru_cache
*lc
)
269 return !test_and_set_bit(__LC_DIRTY
, &lc
->flags
);
273 * lc_unlock - unlock @lc, allow lc_get() to change the set again
274 * @lc: the lru cache to operate on
276 static inline void lc_unlock(struct lru_cache
*lc
)
278 clear_bit(__LC_DIRTY
, &lc
->flags
);
279 smp_mb__after_clear_bit();
282 static inline int lc_is_used(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned int enr
)
284 struct lc_element
*e
= lc_find(lc
, enr
);
285 return e
&& e
->refcnt
;
288 #define lc_entry(ptr, type, member) \
289 container_of(ptr, type, member)
291 extern struct lc_element
*lc_element_by_index(struct lru_cache
*lc
, unsigned i
);
292 extern unsigned int lc_index_of(struct lru_cache
*lc
, struct lc_element
*e
);