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1da177e4 LT |
1 | #ifndef _RAID5_H |
2 | #define _RAID5_H | |
3 | ||
1da177e4 | 4 | #include <linux/raid/xor.h> |
ad283ea4 | 5 | #include <linux/dmaengine.h> |
1da177e4 LT |
6 | |
7 | /* | |
8 | * | |
c4c1663b | 9 | * Each stripe contains one buffer per device. Each buffer can be in |
1da177e4 | 10 | * one of a number of states stored in "flags". Changes between |
c4c1663b N |
11 | * these states happen *almost* exclusively under the protection of the |
12 | * STRIPE_ACTIVE flag. Some very specific changes can happen in bi_end_io, and | |
13 | * these are not protected by STRIPE_ACTIVE. | |
1da177e4 LT |
14 | * |
15 | * The flag bits that are used to represent these states are: | |
16 | * R5_UPTODATE and R5_LOCKED | |
17 | * | |
18 | * State Empty == !UPTODATE, !LOCK | |
19 | * We have no data, and there is no active request | |
20 | * State Want == !UPTODATE, LOCK | |
21 | * A read request is being submitted for this block | |
22 | * State Dirty == UPTODATE, LOCK | |
23 | * Some new data is in this buffer, and it is being written out | |
24 | * State Clean == UPTODATE, !LOCK | |
25 | * We have valid data which is the same as on disc | |
26 | * | |
27 | * The possible state transitions are: | |
28 | * | |
29 | * Empty -> Want - on read or write to get old data for parity calc | |
ede7ee8b | 30 | * Empty -> Dirty - on compute_parity to satisfy write/sync request. |
1da177e4 LT |
31 | * Empty -> Clean - on compute_block when computing a block for failed drive |
32 | * Want -> Empty - on failed read | |
33 | * Want -> Clean - on successful completion of read request | |
34 | * Dirty -> Clean - on successful completion of write request | |
35 | * Dirty -> Clean - on failed write | |
36 | * Clean -> Dirty - on compute_parity to satisfy write/sync (RECONSTRUCT or RMW) | |
37 | * | |
38 | * The Want->Empty, Want->Clean, Dirty->Clean, transitions | |
39 | * all happen in b_end_io at interrupt time. | |
40 | * Each sets the Uptodate bit before releasing the Lock bit. | |
41 | * This leaves one multi-stage transition: | |
42 | * Want->Dirty->Clean | |
43 | * This is safe because thinking that a Clean buffer is actually dirty | |
44 | * will at worst delay some action, and the stripe will be scheduled | |
45 | * for attention after the transition is complete. | |
46 | * | |
47 | * There is one possibility that is not covered by these states. That | |
48 | * is if one drive has failed and there is a spare being rebuilt. We | |
49 | * can't distinguish between a clean block that has been generated | |
50 | * from parity calculations, and a clean block that has been | |
51 | * successfully written to the spare ( or to parity when resyncing). | |
52 | * To distingush these states we have a stripe bit STRIPE_INSYNC that | |
53 | * is set whenever a write is scheduled to the spare, or to the parity | |
54 | * disc if there is no spare. A sync request clears this bit, and | |
55 | * when we find it set with no buffers locked, we know the sync is | |
56 | * complete. | |
57 | * | |
58 | * Buffers for the md device that arrive via make_request are attached | |
59 | * to the appropriate stripe in one of two lists linked on b_reqnext. | |
60 | * One list (bh_read) for read requests, one (bh_write) for write. | |
61 | * There should never be more than one buffer on the two lists | |
62 | * together, but we are not guaranteed of that so we allow for more. | |
63 | * | |
64 | * If a buffer is on the read list when the associated cache buffer is | |
65 | * Uptodate, the data is copied into the read buffer and it's b_end_io | |
66 | * routine is called. This may happen in the end_request routine only | |
67 | * if the buffer has just successfully been read. end_request should | |
68 | * remove the buffers from the list and then set the Uptodate bit on | |
69 | * the buffer. Other threads may do this only if they first check | |
70 | * that the Uptodate bit is set. Once they have checked that they may | |
71 | * take buffers off the read queue. | |
72 | * | |
73 | * When a buffer on the write list is committed for write it is copied | |
74 | * into the cache buffer, which is then marked dirty, and moved onto a | |
75 | * third list, the written list (bh_written). Once both the parity | |
76 | * block and the cached buffer are successfully written, any buffer on | |
77 | * a written list can be returned with b_end_io. | |
78 | * | |
c4c1663b N |
79 | * The write list and read list both act as fifos. The read list, |
80 | * write list and written list are protected by the device_lock. | |
81 | * The device_lock is only for list manipulations and will only be | |
82 | * held for a very short time. It can be claimed from interrupts. | |
1da177e4 LT |
83 | * |
84 | * | |
85 | * Stripes in the stripe cache can be on one of two lists (or on | |
86 | * neither). The "inactive_list" contains stripes which are not | |
87 | * currently being used for any request. They can freely be reused | |
88 | * for another stripe. The "handle_list" contains stripes that need | |
89 | * to be handled in some way. Both of these are fifo queues. Each | |
90 | * stripe is also (potentially) linked to a hash bucket in the hash | |
91 | * table so that it can be found by sector number. Stripes that are | |
92 | * not hashed must be on the inactive_list, and will normally be at | |
93 | * the front. All stripes start life this way. | |
94 | * | |
95 | * The inactive_list, handle_list and hash bucket lists are all protected by the | |
96 | * device_lock. | |
1da177e4 LT |
97 | * - stripes have a reference counter. If count==0, they are on a list. |
98 | * - If a stripe might need handling, STRIPE_HANDLE is set. | |
99 | * - When refcount reaches zero, then if STRIPE_HANDLE it is put on | |
100 | * handle_list else inactive_list | |
101 | * | |
102 | * This, combined with the fact that STRIPE_HANDLE is only ever | |
103 | * cleared while a stripe has a non-zero count means that if the | |
104 | * refcount is 0 and STRIPE_HANDLE is set, then it is on the | |
105 | * handle_list and if recount is 0 and STRIPE_HANDLE is not set, then | |
106 | * the stripe is on inactive_list. | |
107 | * | |
108 | * The possible transitions are: | |
109 | * activate an unhashed/inactive stripe (get_active_stripe()) | |
110 | * lockdev check-hash unlink-stripe cnt++ clean-stripe hash-stripe unlockdev | |
111 | * activate a hashed, possibly active stripe (get_active_stripe()) | |
112 | * lockdev check-hash if(!cnt++)unlink-stripe unlockdev | |
113 | * attach a request to an active stripe (add_stripe_bh()) | |
114 | * lockdev attach-buffer unlockdev | |
115 | * handle a stripe (handle_stripe()) | |
c4c1663b | 116 | * setSTRIPE_ACTIVE, clrSTRIPE_HANDLE ... |
91c00924 DW |
117 | * (lockdev check-buffers unlockdev) .. |
118 | * change-state .. | |
c4c1663b | 119 | * record io/ops needed clearSTRIPE_ACTIVE schedule io/ops |
1da177e4 LT |
120 | * release an active stripe (release_stripe()) |
121 | * lockdev if (!--cnt) { if STRIPE_HANDLE, add to handle_list else add to inactive-list } unlockdev | |
122 | * | |
123 | * The refcount counts each thread that have activated the stripe, | |
124 | * plus raid5d if it is handling it, plus one for each active request | |
91c00924 DW |
125 | * on a cached buffer, and plus one if the stripe is undergoing stripe |
126 | * operations. | |
127 | * | |
c4c1663b | 128 | * The stripe operations are: |
91c00924 DW |
129 | * -copying data between the stripe cache and user application buffers |
130 | * -computing blocks to save a disk access, or to recover a missing block | |
131 | * -updating the parity on a write operation (reconstruct write and | |
132 | * read-modify-write) | |
133 | * -checking parity correctness | |
134 | * -running i/o to disk | |
135 | * These operations are carried out by raid5_run_ops which uses the async_tx | |
136 | * api to (optionally) offload operations to dedicated hardware engines. | |
137 | * When requesting an operation handle_stripe sets the pending bit for the | |
138 | * operation and increments the count. raid5_run_ops is then run whenever | |
139 | * the count is non-zero. | |
140 | * There are some critical dependencies between the operations that prevent some | |
141 | * from being requested while another is in flight. | |
142 | * 1/ Parity check operations destroy the in cache version of the parity block, | |
143 | * so we prevent parity dependent operations like writes and compute_blocks | |
144 | * from starting while a check is in progress. Some dma engines can perform | |
145 | * the check without damaging the parity block, in these cases the parity | |
146 | * block is re-marked up to date (assuming the check was successful) and is | |
147 | * not re-read from disk. | |
148 | * 2/ When a write operation is requested we immediately lock the affected | |
149 | * blocks, and mark them as not up to date. This causes new read requests | |
150 | * to be held off, as well as parity checks and compute block operations. | |
151 | * 3/ Once a compute block operation has been requested handle_stripe treats | |
152 | * that block as if it is up to date. raid5_run_ops guaruntees that any | |
153 | * operation that is dependent on the compute block result is initiated after | |
154 | * the compute block completes. | |
1da177e4 LT |
155 | */ |
156 | ||
ecc65c9b | 157 | /* |
c4c1663b N |
158 | * Operations state - intermediate states that are visible outside of |
159 | * STRIPE_ACTIVE. | |
ecc65c9b DW |
160 | * In general _idle indicates nothing is running, _run indicates a data |
161 | * processing operation is active, and _result means the data processing result | |
162 | * is stable and can be acted upon. For simple operations like biofill and | |
163 | * compute that only have an _idle and _run state they are indicated with | |
164 | * sh->state flags (STRIPE_BIOFILL_RUN and STRIPE_COMPUTE_RUN) | |
165 | */ | |
166 | /** | |
167 | * enum check_states - handles syncing / repairing a stripe | |
168 | * @check_state_idle - check operations are quiesced | |
169 | * @check_state_run - check operation is running | |
170 | * @check_state_result - set outside lock when check result is valid | |
171 | * @check_state_compute_run - check failed and we are repairing | |
172 | * @check_state_compute_result - set outside lock when compute result is valid | |
173 | */ | |
174 | enum check_states { | |
175 | check_state_idle = 0, | |
ac6b53b6 DW |
176 | check_state_run, /* xor parity check */ |
177 | check_state_run_q, /* q-parity check */ | |
178 | check_state_run_pq, /* pq dual parity check */ | |
ecc65c9b DW |
179 | check_state_check_result, |
180 | check_state_compute_run, /* parity repair */ | |
181 | check_state_compute_result, | |
182 | }; | |
183 | ||
184 | /** | |
185 | * enum reconstruct_states - handles writing or expanding a stripe | |
186 | */ | |
187 | enum reconstruct_states { | |
188 | reconstruct_state_idle = 0, | |
d8ee0728 | 189 | reconstruct_state_prexor_drain_run, /* prexor-write */ |
ecc65c9b DW |
190 | reconstruct_state_drain_run, /* write */ |
191 | reconstruct_state_run, /* expand */ | |
d8ee0728 | 192 | reconstruct_state_prexor_drain_result, |
ecc65c9b DW |
193 | reconstruct_state_drain_result, |
194 | reconstruct_state_result, | |
195 | }; | |
196 | ||
1da177e4 | 197 | struct stripe_head { |
fccddba0 | 198 | struct hlist_node hash; |
d0dabf7e | 199 | struct list_head lru; /* inactive_list or handle_list */ |
d1688a6d | 200 | struct r5conf *raid_conf; |
86b42c71 N |
201 | short generation; /* increments with every |
202 | * reshape */ | |
d0dabf7e N |
203 | sector_t sector; /* sector of this row */ |
204 | short pd_idx; /* parity disk index */ | |
205 | short qd_idx; /* 'Q' disk index for raid6 */ | |
67cc2b81 | 206 | short ddf_layout;/* use DDF ordering to calculate Q */ |
d0dabf7e N |
207 | unsigned long state; /* state flags */ |
208 | atomic_t count; /* nr of active thread/requests */ | |
72626685 | 209 | int bm_seq; /* sequence number for bitmap flushes */ |
d0dabf7e | 210 | int disks; /* disks in stripe */ |
ecc65c9b | 211 | enum check_states check_state; |
600aa109 | 212 | enum reconstruct_states reconstruct_state; |
b17459c0 | 213 | spinlock_t stripe_lock; |
417b8d4a DW |
214 | /** |
215 | * struct stripe_operations | |
91c00924 | 216 | * @target - STRIPE_OP_COMPUTE_BLK target |
417b8d4a DW |
217 | * @target2 - 2nd compute target in the raid6 case |
218 | * @zero_sum_result - P and Q verification flags | |
219 | * @request - async service request flags for raid_run_ops | |
91c00924 DW |
220 | */ |
221 | struct stripe_operations { | |
ac6b53b6 | 222 | int target, target2; |
ad283ea4 | 223 | enum sum_check_flags zero_sum_result; |
91c00924 | 224 | } ops; |
1da177e4 | 225 | struct r5dev { |
671488cc N |
226 | /* rreq and rvec are used for the replacement device when |
227 | * writing data to both devices. | |
228 | */ | |
229 | struct bio req, rreq; | |
230 | struct bio_vec vec, rvec; | |
1da177e4 | 231 | struct page *page; |
91c00924 | 232 | struct bio *toread, *read, *towrite, *written; |
1da177e4 LT |
233 | sector_t sector; /* sector of this page */ |
234 | unsigned long flags; | |
235 | } dev[1]; /* allocated with extra space depending of RAID geometry */ | |
236 | }; | |
a4456856 DW |
237 | |
238 | /* stripe_head_state - collects and tracks the dynamic state of a stripe_head | |
c4c1663b | 239 | * for handle_stripe. |
a4456856 DW |
240 | */ |
241 | struct stripe_head_state { | |
9a3e1101 N |
242 | /* 'syncing' means that we need to read all devices, either |
243 | * to check/correct parity, or to reconstruct a missing device. | |
244 | * 'replacing' means we are replacing one or more drives and | |
245 | * the source is valid at this point so we don't need to | |
246 | * read all devices, just the replacement targets. | |
247 | */ | |
248 | int syncing, expanding, expanded, replacing; | |
a4456856 | 249 | int locked, uptodate, to_read, to_write, failed, written; |
b5e98d65 | 250 | int to_fill, compute, req_compute, non_overwrite; |
f2b3b44d | 251 | int failed_num[2]; |
f2b3b44d | 252 | int p_failed, q_failed; |
c5709ef6 N |
253 | int dec_preread_active; |
254 | unsigned long ops_request; | |
255 | ||
256 | struct bio *return_bi; | |
3cb03002 | 257 | struct md_rdev *blocked_rdev; |
bc2607f3 | 258 | int handle_bad_blocks; |
a4456856 DW |
259 | }; |
260 | ||
671488cc N |
261 | /* Flags for struct r5dev.flags */ |
262 | enum r5dev_flags { | |
263 | R5_UPTODATE, /* page contains current data */ | |
264 | R5_LOCKED, /* IO has been submitted on "req" */ | |
977df362 | 265 | R5_DOUBLE_LOCKED,/* Cannot clear R5_LOCKED until 2 writes complete */ |
671488cc | 266 | R5_OVERWRITE, /* towrite covers whole page */ |
1da177e4 | 267 | /* and some that are internal to handle_stripe */ |
671488cc N |
268 | R5_Insync, /* rdev && rdev->in_sync at start */ |
269 | R5_Wantread, /* want to schedule a read */ | |
270 | R5_Wantwrite, | |
271 | R5_Overlap, /* There is a pending overlapping request | |
272 | * on this block */ | |
3f9e7c14 | 273 | R5_ReadNoMerge, /* prevent bio from merging in block-layer */ |
671488cc N |
274 | R5_ReadError, /* seen a read error here recently */ |
275 | R5_ReWrite, /* have tried to over-write the readerror */ | |
1da177e4 | 276 | |
671488cc N |
277 | R5_Expanded, /* This block now has post-expand data */ |
278 | R5_Wantcompute, /* compute_block in progress treat as | |
279 | * uptodate | |
280 | */ | |
281 | R5_Wantfill, /* dev->toread contains a bio that needs | |
282 | * filling | |
283 | */ | |
284 | R5_Wantdrain, /* dev->towrite needs to be drained */ | |
285 | R5_WantFUA, /* Write should be FUA */ | |
bc0934f0 | 286 | R5_SyncIO, /* The IO is sync */ |
671488cc N |
287 | R5_WriteError, /* got a write error - need to record it */ |
288 | R5_MadeGood, /* A bad block has been fixed by writing to it */ | |
289 | R5_ReadRepl, /* Will/did read from replacement rather than orig */ | |
290 | R5_MadeGoodRepl,/* A bad block on the replacement device has been | |
291 | * fixed by writing to it */ | |
9a3e1101 N |
292 | R5_NeedReplace, /* This device has a replacement which is not |
293 | * up-to-date at this stripe. */ | |
294 | R5_WantReplace, /* We need to update the replacement, we have read | |
295 | * data in, and now is a good time to write it out. | |
296 | */ | |
620125f2 | 297 | R5_Discard, /* Discard the stripe */ |
671488cc | 298 | }; |
1da177e4 LT |
299 | |
300 | /* | |
301 | * Stripe state | |
302 | */ | |
83206d66 | 303 | enum { |
c4c1663b | 304 | STRIPE_ACTIVE, |
83206d66 N |
305 | STRIPE_HANDLE, |
306 | STRIPE_SYNC_REQUESTED, | |
307 | STRIPE_SYNCING, | |
308 | STRIPE_INSYNC, | |
f94c0b66 | 309 | STRIPE_REPLACED, |
83206d66 N |
310 | STRIPE_PREREAD_ACTIVE, |
311 | STRIPE_DELAYED, | |
312 | STRIPE_DEGRADED, | |
313 | STRIPE_BIT_DELAY, | |
314 | STRIPE_EXPANDING, | |
315 | STRIPE_EXPAND_SOURCE, | |
316 | STRIPE_EXPAND_READY, | |
317 | STRIPE_IO_STARTED, /* do not count towards 'bypass_count' */ | |
318 | STRIPE_FULL_WRITE, /* all blocks are set to be overwritten */ | |
319 | STRIPE_BIOFILL_RUN, | |
320 | STRIPE_COMPUTE_RUN, | |
321 | STRIPE_OPS_REQ_PENDING, | |
8811b596 | 322 | STRIPE_ON_UNPLUG_LIST, |
f8dfcffd | 323 | STRIPE_DISCARD, |
83206d66 | 324 | }; |
417b8d4a | 325 | |
91c00924 | 326 | /* |
ecc65c9b | 327 | * Operation request flags |
91c00924 | 328 | */ |
ede7ee8b N |
329 | enum { |
330 | STRIPE_OP_BIOFILL, | |
331 | STRIPE_OP_COMPUTE_BLK, | |
332 | STRIPE_OP_PREXOR, | |
333 | STRIPE_OP_BIODRAIN, | |
334 | STRIPE_OP_RECONSTRUCT, | |
335 | STRIPE_OP_CHECK, | |
336 | }; | |
1da177e4 LT |
337 | /* |
338 | * Plugging: | |
339 | * | |
340 | * To improve write throughput, we need to delay the handling of some | |
341 | * stripes until there has been a chance that several write requests | |
342 | * for the one stripe have all been collected. | |
343 | * In particular, any write request that would require pre-reading | |
344 | * is put on a "delayed" queue until there are no stripes currently | |
345 | * in a pre-read phase. Further, if the "delayed" queue is empty when | |
346 | * a stripe is put on it then we "plug" the queue and do not process it | |
347 | * until an unplug call is made. (the unplug_io_fn() is called). | |
348 | * | |
349 | * When preread is initiated on a stripe, we set PREREAD_ACTIVE and add | |
350 | * it to the count of prereading stripes. | |
351 | * When write is initiated, or the stripe refcnt == 0 (just in case) we | |
352 | * clear the PREREAD_ACTIVE flag and decrement the count | |
b5c124af N |
353 | * Whenever the 'handle' queue is empty and the device is not plugged, we |
354 | * move any strips from delayed to handle and clear the DELAYED flag and set | |
355 | * PREREAD_ACTIVE. | |
1da177e4 LT |
356 | * In stripe_handle, if we find pre-reading is necessary, we do it if |
357 | * PREREAD_ACTIVE is set, else we set DELAYED which will send it to the delayed queue. | |
c4c1663b | 358 | * HANDLE gets cleared if stripe_handle leaves nothing locked. |
1da177e4 | 359 | */ |
ef740c37 | 360 | |
1da177e4 LT |
361 | |
362 | struct disk_info { | |
671488cc | 363 | struct md_rdev *rdev, *replacement; |
1da177e4 LT |
364 | }; |
365 | ||
d1688a6d | 366 | struct r5conf { |
fccddba0 | 367 | struct hlist_head *stripe_hashtbl; |
fd01b88c | 368 | struct mddev *mddev; |
09c9e5fa AN |
369 | int chunk_sectors; |
370 | int level, algorithm; | |
16a53ecc | 371 | int max_degraded; |
02c2de8c | 372 | int raid_disks; |
1da177e4 LT |
373 | int max_nr_stripes; |
374 | ||
fef9c61f N |
375 | /* reshape_progress is the leading edge of a 'reshape' |
376 | * It has value MaxSector when no reshape is happening | |
377 | * If delta_disks < 0, it is the last sector we started work on, | |
378 | * else is it the next sector to work on. | |
379 | */ | |
380 | sector_t reshape_progress; | |
381 | /* reshape_safe is the trailing edge of a reshape. We know that | |
382 | * before (or after) this address, all reshape has completed. | |
383 | */ | |
384 | sector_t reshape_safe; | |
7ecaa1e6 | 385 | int previous_raid_disks; |
09c9e5fa AN |
386 | int prev_chunk_sectors; |
387 | int prev_algo; | |
86b42c71 | 388 | short generation; /* increments with every reshape */ |
c8f517c4 N |
389 | unsigned long reshape_checkpoint; /* Time we last updated |
390 | * metadata */ | |
b5254dd5 N |
391 | long long min_offset_diff; /* minimum difference between |
392 | * data_offset and | |
393 | * new_data_offset across all | |
394 | * devices. May be negative, | |
395 | * but is closest to zero. | |
396 | */ | |
7ecaa1e6 | 397 | |
1da177e4 | 398 | struct list_head handle_list; /* stripes needing handling */ |
8b3e6cdc | 399 | struct list_head hold_list; /* preread ready stripes */ |
1da177e4 | 400 | struct list_head delayed_list; /* stripes that have plugged requests */ |
72626685 | 401 | struct list_head bitmap_list; /* stripes delaying awaiting bitmap update */ |
46031f9a RBJ |
402 | struct bio *retry_read_aligned; /* currently retrying aligned bios */ |
403 | struct bio *retry_read_aligned_list; /* aligned bios retry list */ | |
1da177e4 | 404 | atomic_t preread_active_stripes; /* stripes with scheduled io */ |
46031f9a | 405 | atomic_t active_aligned_reads; |
8b3e6cdc DW |
406 | atomic_t pending_full_writes; /* full write backlog */ |
407 | int bypass_count; /* bypassed prereads */ | |
408 | int bypass_threshold; /* preread nice */ | |
409 | struct list_head *last_hold; /* detect hold_list promotions */ | |
1da177e4 | 410 | |
f6705578 | 411 | atomic_t reshape_stripes; /* stripes with pending writes for reshape */ |
ad01c9e3 N |
412 | /* unfortunately we need two cache names as we temporarily have |
413 | * two caches. | |
414 | */ | |
415 | int active_name; | |
f4be6b43 | 416 | char cache_name[2][32]; |
e18b890b | 417 | struct kmem_cache *slab_cache; /* for allocating stripes */ |
72626685 N |
418 | |
419 | int seq_flush, seq_write; | |
420 | int quiesce; | |
421 | ||
422 | int fullsync; /* set to 1 if a full sync is needed, | |
423 | * (fresh device added). | |
424 | * Cleared when a sync completes. | |
425 | */ | |
7f0da59b | 426 | int recovery_disabled; |
36d1c647 DW |
427 | /* per cpu variables */ |
428 | struct raid5_percpu { | |
429 | struct page *spare_page; /* Used when checking P/Q in raid6 */ | |
d6f38f31 DW |
430 | void *scribble; /* space for constructing buffer |
431 | * lists and performing address | |
432 | * conversions | |
433 | */ | |
a29d8b8e | 434 | } __percpu *percpu; |
d6f38f31 DW |
435 | size_t scribble_len; /* size of scribble region must be |
436 | * associated with conf to handle | |
437 | * cpu hotplug while reshaping | |
438 | */ | |
36d1c647 DW |
439 | #ifdef CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU |
440 | struct notifier_block cpu_notify; | |
441 | #endif | |
ca65b73b | 442 | |
1da177e4 LT |
443 | /* |
444 | * Free stripes pool | |
445 | */ | |
446 | atomic_t active_stripes; | |
447 | struct list_head inactive_list; | |
448 | wait_queue_head_t wait_for_stripe; | |
449 | wait_queue_head_t wait_for_overlap; | |
450 | int inactive_blocked; /* release of inactive stripes blocked, | |
451 | * waiting for 25% to be free | |
ad01c9e3 N |
452 | */ |
453 | int pool_size; /* number of disks in stripeheads in pool */ | |
1da177e4 | 454 | spinlock_t device_lock; |
b55e6bfc | 455 | struct disk_info *disks; |
91adb564 N |
456 | |
457 | /* When taking over an array from a different personality, we store | |
458 | * the new thread here until we fully activate the array. | |
459 | */ | |
2b8bf345 | 460 | struct md_thread *thread; |
1da177e4 LT |
461 | }; |
462 | ||
1da177e4 LT |
463 | /* |
464 | * Our supported algorithms | |
465 | */ | |
99c0fb5f N |
466 | #define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC 0 /* Rotating Parity N with Data Restart */ |
467 | #define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC 1 /* Rotating Parity 0 with Data Restart */ | |
468 | #define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC 2 /* Rotating Parity N with Data Continuation */ | |
469 | #define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC 3 /* Rotating Parity 0 with Data Continuation */ | |
1da177e4 | 470 | |
99c0fb5f N |
471 | /* Define non-rotating (raid4) algorithms. These allow |
472 | * conversion of raid4 to raid5. | |
473 | */ | |
474 | #define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0 4 /* P or P,Q are initial devices */ | |
475 | #define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N 5 /* P or P,Q are final devices. */ | |
476 | ||
477 | /* DDF RAID6 layouts differ from md/raid6 layouts in two ways. | |
478 | * Firstly, the exact positioning of the parity block is slightly | |
479 | * different between the 'LEFT_*' modes of md and the "_N_*" modes | |
480 | * of DDF. | |
481 | * Secondly, or order of datablocks over which the Q syndrome is computed | |
482 | * is different. | |
483 | * Consequently we have different layouts for DDF/raid6 than md/raid6. | |
484 | * These layouts are from the DDFv1.2 spec. | |
485 | * Interestingly DDFv1.2-Errata-A does not specify N_CONTINUE but | |
486 | * leaves RLQ=3 as 'Vendor Specific' | |
487 | */ | |
488 | ||
489 | #define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_ZERO_RESTART 8 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=1 */ | |
490 | #define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_RESTART 9 /* DDF PRL=6 RLQ=2 */ | |
491 | #define ALGORITHM_ROTATING_N_CONTINUE 10 /*DDF PRL=6 RLQ=3 */ | |
492 | ||
493 | ||
494 | /* For every RAID5 algorithm we define a RAID6 algorithm | |
495 | * with exactly the same layout for data and parity, and | |
496 | * with the Q block always on the last device (N-1). | |
497 | * This allows trivial conversion from RAID5 to RAID6 | |
498 | */ | |
499 | #define ALGORITHM_LEFT_ASYMMETRIC_6 16 | |
500 | #define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_ASYMMETRIC_6 17 | |
501 | #define ALGORITHM_LEFT_SYMMETRIC_6 18 | |
502 | #define ALGORITHM_RIGHT_SYMMETRIC_6 19 | |
503 | #define ALGORITHM_PARITY_0_6 20 | |
504 | #define ALGORITHM_PARITY_N_6 ALGORITHM_PARITY_N | |
505 | ||
506 | static inline int algorithm_valid_raid5(int layout) | |
507 | { | |
508 | return (layout >= 0) && | |
509 | (layout <= 5); | |
510 | } | |
511 | static inline int algorithm_valid_raid6(int layout) | |
512 | { | |
513 | return (layout >= 0 && layout <= 5) | |
514 | || | |
e4424fee | 515 | (layout >= 8 && layout <= 10) |
99c0fb5f N |
516 | || |
517 | (layout >= 16 && layout <= 20); | |
518 | } | |
519 | ||
520 | static inline int algorithm_is_DDF(int layout) | |
521 | { | |
522 | return layout >= 8 && layout <= 10; | |
523 | } | |
11d8a6e3 | 524 | |
fd01b88c | 525 | extern int md_raid5_congested(struct mddev *mddev, int bits); |
d1688a6d | 526 | extern void md_raid5_kick_device(struct r5conf *conf); |
fd01b88c | 527 | extern int raid5_set_cache_size(struct mddev *mddev, int size); |
1da177e4 | 528 | #endif |