/** * ubifs_get_free_space_nolock - return amount of free space. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * * This function calculates amount of free space to report to user-space. * * Because UBIFS may introduce substantial overhead (the index, node headers, * alignment, wastage at the end of LEBs, etc), it cannot report real amount of * free flash space it has (well, because not all dirty space is reclaimable, * UBIFS does not actually know the real amount). If UBIFS did so, it would * bread user expectations about what free space is. Users seem to accustomed * to assume that if the file-system reports N bytes of free space, they would * be able to fit a file of N bytes to the FS. This almost works for * traditional file-systems, because they have way less overhead than UBIFS. * So, to keep users happy, UBIFS tries to take the overhead into account. */ long long ubifs_get_free_space_nolock(struct ubifs_info *c) { int rsvd_idx_lebs, lebs; long long available, outstanding, free; ubifs_assert(c->bi.min_idx_lebs == ubifs_calc_min_idx_lebs(c)); outstanding = c->bi.data_growth + c->bi.dd_growth; available = ubifs_calc_available(c, c->bi.min_idx_lebs); /* * When reporting free space to user-space, UBIFS guarantees that it is * possible to write a file of free space size. This means that for * empty LEBs we may use more precise calculations than * 'ubifs_calc_available()' is using. Namely, we know that in empty * LEBs we would waste only @c->leb_overhead bytes, not @c->dark_wm. * Thus, amend the available space. * * Note, the calculations below are similar to what we have in * 'do_budget_space()', so refer there for comments. */ if (c->bi.min_idx_lebs > c->lst.idx_lebs) rsvd_idx_lebs = c->bi.min_idx_lebs - c->lst.idx_lebs; else rsvd_idx_lebs = 0; lebs = c->lst.empty_lebs + c->freeable_cnt + c->idx_gc_cnt - c->lst.taken_empty_lebs; lebs -= rsvd_idx_lebs; available += lebs * (c->dark_wm - c->leb_overhead); if (available > outstanding) free = ubifs_reported_space(c, available - outstanding); else free = 0; return free; }
/** * do_budget_space - reserve flash space for index and data growth. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * * This function makes sure UBIFS has enough free LEBs for index growth and * data. * * When budgeting index space, UBIFS reserves thrice as many LEBs as the index * would take if it was consolidated and written to the flash. This guarantees * that the "in-the-gaps" commit method always succeeds and UBIFS will always * be able to commit dirty index. So this function basically adds amount of * budgeted index space to the size of the current index, multiplies this by 3, * and makes sure this does not exceed the amount of free LEBs. * * Notes about @c->bi.min_idx_lebs and @c->lst.idx_lebs variables: * o @c->lst.idx_lebs is the number of LEBs the index currently uses. It might * be large, because UBIFS does not do any index consolidation as long as * there is free space. IOW, the index may take a lot of LEBs, but the LEBs * will contain a lot of dirt. * o @c->bi.min_idx_lebs is the number of LEBS the index presumably takes. IOW, * the index may be consolidated to take up to @c->bi.min_idx_lebs LEBs. * * This function returns zero in case of success, and %-ENOSPC in case of * failure. */ static int do_budget_space(struct ubifs_info *c) { long long outstanding, available; int lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs, min_idx_lebs; /* First budget index space */ min_idx_lebs = ubifs_calc_min_idx_lebs(c); /* Now 'min_idx_lebs' contains number of LEBs to reserve */ if (min_idx_lebs > c->lst.idx_lebs) rsvd_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs - c->lst.idx_lebs; else rsvd_idx_lebs = 0; /* * The number of LEBs that are available to be used by the index is: * * @c->lst.empty_lebs + @c->freeable_cnt + @c->idx_gc_cnt - * @c->lst.taken_empty_lebs * * @c->lst.empty_lebs are available because they are empty. * @c->freeable_cnt are available because they contain only free and * dirty space, @c->idx_gc_cnt are available because they are index * LEBs that have been garbage collected and are awaiting the commit * before they can be used. And the in-the-gaps method will grab these * if it needs them. @c->lst.taken_empty_lebs are empty LEBs that have * already been allocated for some purpose. * * Note, @c->idx_gc_cnt is included to both @c->lst.empty_lebs (because * these LEBs are empty) and to @c->lst.taken_empty_lebs (because they * are taken until after the commit). * * Note, @c->lst.taken_empty_lebs may temporarily be higher by one * because of the way we serialize LEB allocations and budgeting. See a * comment in 'ubifs_find_free_space()'. */ lebs = c->lst.empty_lebs + c->freeable_cnt + c->idx_gc_cnt - c->lst.taken_empty_lebs; if (unlikely(rsvd_idx_lebs > lebs)) { dbg_budg("out of indexing space: min_idx_lebs %d (old %d), " "rsvd_idx_lebs %d", min_idx_lebs, c->bi.min_idx_lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs); return -ENOSPC; } available = ubifs_calc_available(c, min_idx_lebs); outstanding = c->bi.data_growth + c->bi.dd_growth; if (unlikely(available < outstanding)) { dbg_budg("out of data space: available %lld, outstanding %lld", available, outstanding); return -ENOSPC; } if (available - outstanding <= c->rp_size && !can_use_rp(c)) return -ENOSPC; c->bi.min_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs; return 0; }
/** * do_budget_space - reserve flash space for index and data growth. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * * This function makes sure UBIFS has enough free eraseblocks for index growth * and data. * * When budgeting index space, UBIFS reserves twice as more LEBs as the index * would take if it was consolidated and written to the flash. This guarantees * that the "in-the-gaps" commit method always succeeds and UBIFS will always * be able to commit dirty index. So this function basically adds amount of * budgeted index space to the size of the current index, multiplies this by 2, * and makes sure this does not exceed the amount of free eraseblocks. * * Notes about @c->min_idx_lebs and @c->lst.idx_lebs variables: * o @c->lst.idx_lebs is the number of LEBs the index currently uses. It might * be large, because UBIFS does not do any index consolidation as long as * there is free space. IOW, the index may take a lot of LEBs, but the LEBs * will contain a lot of dirt. * o @c->min_idx_lebs is the the index presumably takes. IOW, the index may be * consolidated to take up to @c->min_idx_lebs LEBs. * * This function returns zero in case of success, and %-ENOSPC in case of * failure. */ static int do_budget_space(struct ubifs_info *c) { long long outstanding, available; int lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs, min_idx_lebs; /* First budget index space */ min_idx_lebs = ubifs_calc_min_idx_lebs(c); /* Now 'min_idx_lebs' contains number of LEBs to reserve */ if (min_idx_lebs > c->lst.idx_lebs) rsvd_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs - c->lst.idx_lebs; else rsvd_idx_lebs = 0; /* * The number of LEBs that are available to be used by the index is: * * @c->lst.empty_lebs + @c->freeable_cnt + @c->idx_gc_cnt - * @c->lst.taken_empty_lebs * * @empty_lebs are available because they are empty. @freeable_cnt are * available because they contain only free and dirty space and the * index allocation always occurs after wbufs are synch'ed. * @idx_gc_cnt are available because they are index LEBs that have been * garbage collected (including trivial GC) and are awaiting the commit * before they can be unmapped - note that the in-the-gaps method will * grab these if it needs them. @taken_empty_lebs are empty_lebs that * have already been allocated for some purpose (also includes those * LEBs on the @idx_gc list). * * Note, @taken_empty_lebs may temporarily be higher by one because of * the way we serialize LEB allocations and budgeting. See a comment in * 'ubifs_find_free_space()'. */ lebs = c->lst.empty_lebs + c->freeable_cnt + c->idx_gc_cnt - c->lst.taken_empty_lebs; if (unlikely(rsvd_idx_lebs > lebs)) { dbg_budg("out of indexing space: min_idx_lebs %d (old %d), " "rsvd_idx_lebs %d", min_idx_lebs, c->min_idx_lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs); return -ENOSPC; } available = ubifs_calc_available(c, min_idx_lebs); outstanding = c->budg_data_growth + c->budg_dd_growth; if (unlikely(available < outstanding)) { dbg_budg("out of data space: available %lld, outstanding %lld", available, outstanding); return -ENOSPC; } if (available - outstanding <= c->rp_size && !can_use_rp(c)) return -ENOSPC; c->min_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs; return 0; }
/** * ubifs_get_free_space - return amount of free space. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * * This function calculates amount of free space to report to user-space. * * Because UBIFS may introduce substantial overhead (the index, node headers, * alighment, wastage at the end of eraseblocks, etc), it cannot report real * amount of free flash space it has (well, because not all dirty space is * reclamable, UBIFS does not actually know the real amount). If UBIFS did so, * it would bread user expectetion about what free space is. Users seem to * accustomed to assume that if the file-system reports N bytes of free space, * they would be able to fit a file of N bytes to the FS. This almost works for * traditional file-systems, because they have way less overhead than UBIFS. * So, to keep users happy, UBIFS tries to take the overhead into account. */ long long ubifs_get_free_space(struct ubifs_info *c) { int min_idx_lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs, lebs; long long available, outstanding, free; spin_lock(&c->space_lock); min_idx_lebs = ubifs_calc_min_idx_lebs(c); outstanding = c->budg_data_growth + c->budg_dd_growth; /* * Force the amount available to the total size reported if the used * space is zero. */ if (c->lst.total_used <= UBIFS_INO_NODE_SZ && !outstanding) { spin_unlock(&c->space_lock); return (long long)c->block_cnt << UBIFS_BLOCK_SHIFT; } available = ubifs_calc_available(c, min_idx_lebs); /* * When reporting free space to user-space, UBIFS guarantees that it is * possible to write a file of free space size. This means that for * empty LEBs we may use more precise calculations than * 'ubifs_calc_available()' is using. Namely, we know that in empty * LEBs we would waste only @c->leb_overhead bytes, not @c->dark_wm. * Thus, amend the available space. * * Note, the calculations below are similar to what we have in * 'do_budget_space()', so refer there for comments. */ if (min_idx_lebs > c->lst.idx_lebs) rsvd_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs - c->lst.idx_lebs; else rsvd_idx_lebs = 0; lebs = c->lst.empty_lebs + c->freeable_cnt + c->idx_gc_cnt - c->lst.taken_empty_lebs; lebs -= rsvd_idx_lebs; available += lebs * (c->dark_wm - c->leb_overhead); spin_unlock(&c->space_lock); if (available > outstanding) free = ubifs_reported_space(c, available - outstanding); else free = 0; return free; }
/** * ubifs_release_dirty_inode_budget - release dirty inode budget. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * @ui: UBIFS inode to release the budget for * * This function releases budget corresponding to a dirty inode. It is usually * called when after the inode has been written to the media and marked as * clean. */ void ubifs_release_dirty_inode_budget(struct ubifs_info *c, struct ubifs_inode *ui) { struct ubifs_budget_req req = {.dd_growth = c->inode_budget, .dirtied_ino_d = ui->data_len}; ubifs_release_budget(c, &req); } /** * ubifs_budg_get_free_space - return amount of free space. * @c: UBIFS file-system description object * * This function returns amount of free space on the file-system. */ long long ubifs_budg_get_free_space(struct ubifs_info *c) { int min_idx_lebs, rsvd_idx_lebs; long long available, outstanding, free; /* Do exactly the same calculations as in 'do_budget_space()' */ spin_lock(&c->space_lock); min_idx_lebs = ubifs_calc_min_idx_lebs(c); if (min_idx_lebs > c->lst.idx_lebs) rsvd_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs - c->lst.idx_lebs; else rsvd_idx_lebs = 0; if (rsvd_idx_lebs > c->lst.empty_lebs + c->freeable_cnt + c->idx_gc_cnt - c->lst.taken_empty_lebs) { spin_unlock(&c->space_lock); return 0; } available = ubifs_calc_available(c, min_idx_lebs); outstanding = c->budg_data_growth + c->budg_dd_growth; c->min_idx_lebs = min_idx_lebs; spin_unlock(&c->space_lock); if (available > outstanding) free = ubifs_reported_space(c, available - outstanding); else free = 0; return free; }