Btrfs: Wait for IO on the block device inodes of newly added devices

btrfs-vol -a /dev/xxx will zero the first and last two MB of the device.
The kernel code needs to wait for this IO to finish before it adds
the device.

btrfs metadata IO does not happen through the block device inode.  A
separate address space is used, allowing the zero filled buffer heads in
the block device inode to be written to disk after FS metadata starts
going down to the disk via the btrfs metadata inode.

The end result is zero filled metadata blocks after adding new devices
into the filesystem.

The fix is a simple filemap_write_and_wait on the block device inode
before actually inserting it into the pool of available devices.

Signed-off-by: Chris Mason <chris.mason@oracle.com>
This commit is contained in:
Chris Mason
2008-09-29 11:19:10 -04:00
parent 1a40e23b95
commit 8c8bee1d7c
4 changed files with 22 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@@ -460,6 +460,13 @@ int btrfs_wq_submit_bio(struct btrfs_fs_info *fs_info, struct inode *inode,
async->submit_bio_hook = submit_bio_hook;
async->work.func = run_one_async_submit;
async->work.flags = 0;
while(atomic_read(&fs_info->async_submit_draining) &&
atomic_read(&fs_info->nr_async_submits)) {
wait_event(fs_info->async_submit_wait,
(atomic_read(&fs_info->nr_async_submits) == 0));
}
atomic_inc(&fs_info->nr_async_submits);
btrfs_queue_worker(&fs_info->workers, &async->work);
@@ -495,11 +502,8 @@ static int __btree_submit_bio_hook(struct inode *inode, int rw, struct bio *bio,
int mirror_num)
{
struct btrfs_root *root = BTRFS_I(inode)->root;
u64 offset;
int ret;
offset = bio->bi_sector << 9;
/*
* when we're called for a write, we're already in the async
* submission context. Just jump into btrfs_map_bio
@@ -1360,6 +1364,7 @@ struct btrfs_root *open_ctree(struct super_block *sb,
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&fs_info->space_info);
btrfs_mapping_init(&fs_info->mapping_tree);
atomic_set(&fs_info->nr_async_submits, 0);
atomic_set(&fs_info->async_submit_draining, 0);
atomic_set(&fs_info->nr_async_bios, 0);
atomic_set(&fs_info->throttles, 0);
atomic_set(&fs_info->throttle_gen, 0);