1 =============================== 2 FS-CACHE NETWORK FILESYSTEM API 3 =============================== 4 5There's an API by which a network filesystem can make use of the FS-Cache 6facilities. This is based around a number of principles: 7 8 (1) Caches can store a number of different object types. There are two main 9 object types: indices and files. The first is a special type used by 10 FS-Cache to make finding objects faster and to make retiring of groups of 11 objects easier. 12 13 (2) Every index, file or other object is represented by a cookie. This cookie 14 may or may not have anything associated with it, but the netfs doesn't 15 need to care. 16 17 (3) Barring the top-level index (one entry per cached netfs), the index 18 hierarchy for each netfs is structured according the whim of the netfs. 19 20This API is declared in <linux/fscache.h>. 21 22This document contains the following sections: 23 24 (1) Network filesystem definition 25 (2) Index definition 26 (3) Object definition 27 (4) Network filesystem (un)registration 28 (5) Cache tag lookup 29 (6) Index registration 30 (7) Data file registration 31 (8) Miscellaneous object registration 32 (9) Setting the data file size 33 (10) Page alloc/read/write 34 (11) Page uncaching 35 (12) Index and data file consistency 36 (13) Cookie enablement 37 (14) Miscellaneous cookie operations 38 (15) Cookie unregistration 39 (16) Index invalidation 40 (17) Data file invalidation 41 (18) FS-Cache specific page flags. 42 43 44============================= 45NETWORK FILESYSTEM DEFINITION 46============================= 47 48FS-Cache needs a description of the network filesystem. This is specified 49using a record of the following structure: 50 51 struct fscache_netfs { 52 uint32_t version; 53 const char *name; 54 struct fscache_cookie *primary_index; 55 ... 56 }; 57 58This first two fields should be filled in before registration, and the third 59will be filled in by the registration function; any other fields should just be 60ignored and are for internal use only. 61 62The fields are: 63 64 (1) The name of the netfs (used as the key in the toplevel index). 65 66 (2) The version of the netfs (if the name matches but the version doesn't, the 67 entire in-cache hierarchy for this netfs will be scrapped and begun 68 afresh). 69 70 (3) The cookie representing the primary index will be allocated according to 71 another parameter passed into the registration function. 72 73For example, kAFS (linux/fs/afs/) uses the following definitions to describe 74itself: 75 76 struct fscache_netfs afs_cache_netfs = { 77 .version = 0, 78 .name = "afs", 79 }; 80 81 82================ 83INDEX DEFINITION 84================ 85 86Indices are used for two purposes: 87 88 (1) To aid the finding of a file based on a series of keys (such as AFS's 89 "cell", "volume ID", "vnode ID"). 90 91 (2) To make it easier to discard a subset of all the files cached based around 92 a particular key - for instance to mirror the removal of an AFS volume. 93 94However, since it's unlikely that any two netfs's are going to want to define 95their index hierarchies in quite the same way, FS-Cache tries to impose as few 96restraints as possible on how an index is structured and where it is placed in 97the tree. The netfs can even mix indices and data files at the same level, but 98it's not recommended. 99 100Each index entry consists of a key of indeterminate length plus some auxiliary 101data, also of indeterminate length. 102 103There are some limits on indices: 104 105 (1) Any index containing non-index objects should be restricted to a single 106 cache. Any such objects created within an index will be created in the 107 first cache only. The cache in which an index is created can be 108 controlled by cache tags (see below). 109 110 (2) The entry data must be atomically journallable, so it is limited to about 111 400 bytes at present. At least 400 bytes will be available. 112 113 (3) The depth of the index tree should be judged with care as the search 114 function is recursive. Too many layers will run the kernel out of stack. 115 116 117================= 118OBJECT DEFINITION 119================= 120 121To define an object, a structure of the following type should be filled out: 122 123 struct fscache_cookie_def 124 { 125 uint8_t name[16]; 126 uint8_t type; 127 128 struct fscache_cache_tag *(*select_cache)( 129 const void *parent_netfs_data, 130 const void *cookie_netfs_data); 131 132 enum fscache_checkaux (*check_aux)(void *cookie_netfs_data, 133 const void *data, 134 uint16_t datalen, 135 loff_t object_size); 136 137 void (*get_context)(void *cookie_netfs_data, void *context); 138 139 void (*put_context)(void *cookie_netfs_data, void *context); 140 141 void (*mark_pages_cached)(void *cookie_netfs_data, 142 struct address_space *mapping, 143 struct pagevec *cached_pvec); 144 }; 145 146This has the following fields: 147 148 (1) The type of the object [mandatory]. 149 150 This is one of the following values: 151 152 (*) FSCACHE_COOKIE_TYPE_INDEX 153 154 This defines an index, which is a special FS-Cache type. 155 156 (*) FSCACHE_COOKIE_TYPE_DATAFILE 157 158 This defines an ordinary data file. 159 160 (*) Any other value between 2 and 255 161 162 This defines an extraordinary object such as an XATTR. 163 164 (2) The name of the object type (NUL terminated unless all 16 chars are used) 165 [optional]. 166 167 (3) A function to select the cache in which to store an index [optional]. 168 169 This function is invoked when an index needs to be instantiated in a cache 170 during the instantiation of a non-index object. Only the immediate index 171 parent for the non-index object will be queried. Any indices above that 172 in the hierarchy may be stored in multiple caches. This function does not 173 need to be supplied for any non-index object or any index that will only 174 have index children. 175 176 If this function is not supplied or if it returns NULL then the first 177 cache in the parent's list will be chosen, or failing that, the first 178 cache in the master list. 179 180 (4) A function to check the auxiliary data [optional]. 181 182 This function will be called to check that a match found in the cache for 183 this object is valid. For instance with AFS it could check the auxiliary 184 data against the data version number returned by the server to determine 185 whether the index entry in a cache is still valid. 186 187 If this function is absent, it will be assumed that matching objects in a 188 cache are always valid. 189 190 The function is also passed the cache's idea of the object size and may 191 use this to manage coherency also. 192 193 If present, the function should return one of the following values: 194 195 (*) FSCACHE_CHECKAUX_OKAY - the entry is okay as is 196 (*) FSCACHE_CHECKAUX_NEEDS_UPDATE - the entry requires update 197 (*) FSCACHE_CHECKAUX_OBSOLETE - the entry should be deleted 198 199 This function can also be used to extract data from the auxiliary data in 200 the cache and copy it into the netfs's structures. 201 202 (5) A pair of functions to manage contexts for the completion callback 203 [optional]. 204 205 The cache read/write functions are passed a context which is then passed 206 to the I/O completion callback function. To ensure this context remains 207 valid until after the I/O completion is called, two functions may be 208 provided: one to get an extra reference on the context, and one to drop a 209 reference to it. 210 211 If the context is not used or is a type of object that won't go out of 212 scope, then these functions are not required. These functions are not 213 required for indices as indices may not contain data. These functions may 214 be called in interrupt context and so may not sleep. 215 216 (6) A function to mark a page as retaining cache metadata [optional]. 217 218 This is called by the cache to indicate that it is retaining in-memory 219 information for this page and that the netfs should uncache the page when 220 it has finished. This does not indicate whether there's data on the disk 221 or not. Note that several pages at once may be presented for marking. 222 223 The PG_fscache bit is set on the pages before this function would be 224 called, so the function need not be provided if this is sufficient. 225 226 This function is not required for indices as they're not permitted data. 227 228 (7) A function to unmark all the pages retaining cache metadata [mandatory]. 229 230 This is called by FS-Cache to indicate that a backing store is being 231 unbound from a cookie and that all the marks on the pages should be 232 cleared to prevent confusion. Note that the cache will have torn down all 233 its tracking information so that the pages don't need to be explicitly 234 uncached. 235 236 This function is not required for indices as they're not permitted data. 237 238 239=================================== 240NETWORK FILESYSTEM (UN)REGISTRATION 241=================================== 242 243The first step is to declare the network filesystem to the cache. This also 244involves specifying the layout of the primary index (for AFS, this would be the 245"cell" level). 246 247The registration function is: 248 249 int fscache_register_netfs(struct fscache_netfs *netfs); 250 251It just takes a pointer to the netfs definition. It returns 0 or an error as 252appropriate. 253 254For kAFS, registration is done as follows: 255 256 ret = fscache_register_netfs(&afs_cache_netfs); 257 258The last step is, of course, unregistration: 259 260 void fscache_unregister_netfs(struct fscache_netfs *netfs); 261 262 263================ 264CACHE TAG LOOKUP 265================ 266 267FS-Cache permits the use of more than one cache. To permit particular index 268subtrees to be bound to particular caches, the second step is to look up cache 269representation tags. This step is optional; it can be left entirely up to 270FS-Cache as to which cache should be used. The problem with doing that is that 271FS-Cache will always pick the first cache that was registered. 272 273To get the representation for a named tag: 274 275 struct fscache_cache_tag *fscache_lookup_cache_tag(const char *name); 276 277This takes a text string as the name and returns a representation of a tag. It 278will never return an error. It may return a dummy tag, however, if it runs out 279of memory; this will inhibit caching with this tag. 280 281Any representation so obtained must be released by passing it to this function: 282 283 void fscache_release_cache_tag(struct fscache_cache_tag *tag); 284 285The tag will be retrieved by FS-Cache when it calls the object definition 286operation select_cache(). 287 288 289================== 290INDEX REGISTRATION 291================== 292 293The third step is to inform FS-Cache about part of an index hierarchy that can 294be used to locate files. This is done by requesting a cookie for each index in 295the path to the file: 296 297 struct fscache_cookie * 298 fscache_acquire_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *parent, 299 const struct fscache_object_def *def, 300 const void *index_key, 301 size_t index_key_len, 302 const void *aux_data, 303 size_t aux_data_len, 304 void *netfs_data, 305 loff_t object_size, 306 bool enable); 307 308This function creates an index entry in the index represented by parent, 309filling in the index entry by calling the operations pointed to by def. 310 311A unique key that represents the object within the parent must be pointed to by 312index_key and is of length index_key_len. 313 314An optional blob of auxiliary data that is to be stored within the cache can be 315pointed to with aux_data and should be of length aux_data_len. This would 316typically be used for storing coherency data. 317 318The netfs may pass an arbitrary value in netfs_data and this will be presented 319to it in the event of any calling back. This may also be used in tracing or 320logging of messages. 321 322The cache tracks the size of the data attached to an object and this set to be 323object_size. For indices, this should be 0. This value will be passed to the 324->check_aux() callback. 325 326Note that this function never returns an error - all errors are handled 327internally. It may, however, return NULL to indicate no cookie. It is quite 328acceptable to pass this token back to this function as the parent to another 329acquisition (or even to the relinquish cookie, read page and write page 330functions - see below). 331 332Note also that no indices are actually created in a cache until a non-index 333object needs to be created somewhere down the hierarchy. Furthermore, an index 334may be created in several different caches independently at different times. 335This is all handled transparently, and the netfs doesn't see any of it. 336 337A cookie will be created in the disabled state if enabled is false. A cookie 338must be enabled to do anything with it. A disabled cookie can be enabled by 339calling fscache_enable_cookie() (see below). 340 341For example, with AFS, a cell would be added to the primary index. This index 342entry would have a dependent inode containing volume mappings within this cell: 343 344 cell->cache = 345 fscache_acquire_cookie(afs_cache_netfs.primary_index, 346 &afs_cell_cache_index_def, 347 cell->name, strlen(cell->name), 348 NULL, 0, 349 cell, 0, true); 350 351And then a particular volume could be added to that index by ID, creating 352another index for vnodes (AFS inode equivalents): 353 354 volume->cache = 355 fscache_acquire_cookie(volume->cell->cache, 356 &afs_volume_cache_index_def, 357 &volume->vid, sizeof(volume->vid), 358 NULL, 0, 359 volume, 0, true); 360 361 362====================== 363DATA FILE REGISTRATION 364====================== 365 366The fourth step is to request a data file be created in the cache. This is 367identical to index cookie acquisition. The only difference is that the type in 368the object definition should be something other than index type. 369 370 vnode->cache = 371 fscache_acquire_cookie(volume->cache, 372 &afs_vnode_cache_object_def, 373 &key, sizeof(key), 374 &aux, sizeof(aux), 375 vnode, vnode->status.size, true); 376 377 378================================= 379MISCELLANEOUS OBJECT REGISTRATION 380================================= 381 382An optional step is to request an object of miscellaneous type be created in 383the cache. This is almost identical to index cookie acquisition. The only 384difference is that the type in the object definition should be something other 385than index type. Whilst the parent object could be an index, it's more likely 386it would be some other type of object such as a data file. 387 388 xattr->cache = 389 fscache_acquire_cookie(vnode->cache, 390 &afs_xattr_cache_object_def, 391 &xattr->name, strlen(xattr->name), 392 NULL, 0, 393 xattr, strlen(xattr->val), true); 394 395Miscellaneous objects might be used to store extended attributes or directory 396entries for example. 397 398 399========================== 400SETTING THE DATA FILE SIZE 401========================== 402 403The fifth step is to set the physical attributes of the file, such as its size. 404This doesn't automatically reserve any space in the cache, but permits the 405cache to adjust its metadata for data tracking appropriately: 406 407 int fscache_attr_changed(struct fscache_cookie *cookie); 408 409The cache will return -ENOBUFS if there is no backing cache or if there is no 410space to allocate any extra metadata required in the cache. 411 412Note that attempts to read or write data pages in the cache over this size may 413be rebuffed with -ENOBUFS. 414 415This operation schedules an attribute adjustment to happen asynchronously at 416some point in the future, and as such, it may happen after the function returns 417to the caller. The attribute adjustment excludes read and write operations. 418 419 420===================== 421PAGE ALLOC/READ/WRITE 422===================== 423 424And the sixth step is to store and retrieve pages in the cache. There are 425three functions that are used to do this. 426 427Note: 428 429 (1) A page should not be re-read or re-allocated without uncaching it first. 430 431 (2) A read or allocated page must be uncached when the netfs page is released 432 from the pagecache. 433 434 (3) A page should only be written to the cache if previous read or allocated. 435 436This permits the cache to maintain its page tracking in proper order. 437 438 439PAGE READ 440--------- 441 442Firstly, the netfs should ask FS-Cache to examine the caches and read the 443contents cached for a particular page of a particular file if present, or else 444allocate space to store the contents if not: 445 446 typedef 447 void (*fscache_rw_complete_t)(struct page *page, 448 void *context, 449 int error); 450 451 int fscache_read_or_alloc_page(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 452 struct page *page, 453 fscache_rw_complete_t end_io_func, 454 void *context, 455 gfp_t gfp); 456 457The cookie argument must specify a cookie for an object that isn't an index, 458the page specified will have the data loaded into it (and is also used to 459specify the page number), and the gfp argument is used to control how any 460memory allocations made are satisfied. 461 462If the cookie indicates the inode is not cached: 463 464 (1) The function will return -ENOBUFS. 465 466Else if there's a copy of the page resident in the cache: 467 468 (1) The mark_pages_cached() cookie operation will be called on that page. 469 470 (2) The function will submit a request to read the data from the cache's 471 backing device directly into the page specified. 472 473 (3) The function will return 0. 474 475 (4) When the read is complete, end_io_func() will be invoked with: 476 477 (*) The netfs data supplied when the cookie was created. 478 479 (*) The page descriptor. 480 481 (*) The context argument passed to the above function. This will be 482 maintained with the get_context/put_context functions mentioned above. 483 484 (*) An argument that's 0 on success or negative for an error code. 485 486 If an error occurs, it should be assumed that the page contains no usable 487 data. fscache_readpages_cancel() may need to be called. 488 489 end_io_func() will be called in process context if the read is results in 490 an error, but it might be called in interrupt context if the read is 491 successful. 492 493Otherwise, if there's not a copy available in cache, but the cache may be able 494to store the page: 495 496 (1) The mark_pages_cached() cookie operation will be called on that page. 497 498 (2) A block may be reserved in the cache and attached to the object at the 499 appropriate place. 500 501 (3) The function will return -ENODATA. 502 503This function may also return -ENOMEM or -EINTR, in which case it won't have 504read any data from the cache. 505 506 507PAGE ALLOCATE 508------------- 509 510Alternatively, if there's not expected to be any data in the cache for a page 511because the file has been extended, a block can simply be allocated instead: 512 513 int fscache_alloc_page(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 514 struct page *page, 515 gfp_t gfp); 516 517This is similar to the fscache_read_or_alloc_page() function, except that it 518never reads from the cache. It will return 0 if a block has been allocated, 519rather than -ENODATA as the other would. One or the other must be performed 520before writing to the cache. 521 522The mark_pages_cached() cookie operation will be called on the page if 523successful. 524 525 526PAGE WRITE 527---------- 528 529Secondly, if the netfs changes the contents of the page (either due to an 530initial download or if a user performs a write), then the page should be 531written back to the cache: 532 533 int fscache_write_page(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 534 struct page *page, 535 loff_t object_size, 536 gfp_t gfp); 537 538The cookie argument must specify a data file cookie, the page specified should 539contain the data to be written (and is also used to specify the page number), 540object_size is the revised size of the object and the gfp argument is used to 541control how any memory allocations made are satisfied. 542 543The page must have first been read or allocated successfully and must not have 544been uncached before writing is performed. 545 546If the cookie indicates the inode is not cached then: 547 548 (1) The function will return -ENOBUFS. 549 550Else if space can be allocated in the cache to hold this page: 551 552 (1) PG_fscache_write will be set on the page. 553 554 (2) The function will submit a request to write the data to cache's backing 555 device directly from the page specified. 556 557 (3) The function will return 0. 558 559 (4) When the write is complete PG_fscache_write is cleared on the page and 560 anyone waiting for that bit will be woken up. 561 562Else if there's no space available in the cache, -ENOBUFS will be returned. It 563is also possible for the PG_fscache_write bit to be cleared when no write took 564place if unforeseen circumstances arose (such as a disk error). 565 566Writing takes place asynchronously. 567 568 569MULTIPLE PAGE READ 570------------------ 571 572A facility is provided to read several pages at once, as requested by the 573readpages() address space operation: 574 575 int fscache_read_or_alloc_pages(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 576 struct address_space *mapping, 577 struct list_head *pages, 578 int *nr_pages, 579 fscache_rw_complete_t end_io_func, 580 void *context, 581 gfp_t gfp); 582 583This works in a similar way to fscache_read_or_alloc_page(), except: 584 585 (1) Any page it can retrieve data for is removed from pages and nr_pages and 586 dispatched for reading to the disk. Reads of adjacent pages on disk may 587 be merged for greater efficiency. 588 589 (2) The mark_pages_cached() cookie operation will be called on several pages 590 at once if they're being read or allocated. 591 592 (3) If there was an general error, then that error will be returned. 593 594 Else if some pages couldn't be allocated or read, then -ENOBUFS will be 595 returned. 596 597 Else if some pages couldn't be read but were allocated, then -ENODATA will 598 be returned. 599 600 Otherwise, if all pages had reads dispatched, then 0 will be returned, the 601 list will be empty and *nr_pages will be 0. 602 603 (4) end_io_func will be called once for each page being read as the reads 604 complete. It will be called in process context if error != 0, but it may 605 be called in interrupt context if there is no error. 606 607Note that a return of -ENODATA, -ENOBUFS or any other error does not preclude 608some of the pages being read and some being allocated. Those pages will have 609been marked appropriately and will need uncaching. 610 611 612CANCELLATION OF UNREAD PAGES 613---------------------------- 614 615If one or more pages are passed to fscache_read_or_alloc_pages() but not then 616read from the cache and also not read from the underlying filesystem then 617those pages will need to have any marks and reservations removed. This can be 618done by calling: 619 620 void fscache_readpages_cancel(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 621 struct list_head *pages); 622 623prior to returning to the caller. The cookie argument should be as passed to 624fscache_read_or_alloc_pages(). Every page in the pages list will be examined 625and any that have PG_fscache set will be uncached. 626 627 628============== 629PAGE UNCACHING 630============== 631 632To uncache a page, this function should be called: 633 634 void fscache_uncache_page(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 635 struct page *page); 636 637This function permits the cache to release any in-memory representation it 638might be holding for this netfs page. This function must be called once for 639each page on which the read or write page functions above have been called to 640make sure the cache's in-memory tracking information gets torn down. 641 642Note that pages can't be explicitly deleted from the a data file. The whole 643data file must be retired (see the relinquish cookie function below). 644 645Furthermore, note that this does not cancel the asynchronous read or write 646operation started by the read/alloc and write functions, so the page 647invalidation functions must use: 648 649 bool fscache_check_page_write(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 650 struct page *page); 651 652to see if a page is being written to the cache, and: 653 654 void fscache_wait_on_page_write(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 655 struct page *page); 656 657to wait for it to finish if it is. 658 659 660When releasepage() is being implemented, a special FS-Cache function exists to 661manage the heuristics of coping with vmscan trying to eject pages, which may 662conflict with the cache trying to write pages to the cache (which may itself 663need to allocate memory): 664 665 bool fscache_maybe_release_page(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 666 struct page *page, 667 gfp_t gfp); 668 669This takes the netfs cookie, and the page and gfp arguments as supplied to 670releasepage(). It will return false if the page cannot be released yet for 671some reason and if it returns true, the page has been uncached and can now be 672released. 673 674To make a page available for release, this function may wait for an outstanding 675storage request to complete, or it may attempt to cancel the storage request - 676in which case the page will not be stored in the cache this time. 677 678 679BULK INODE PAGE UNCACHE 680----------------------- 681 682A convenience routine is provided to perform an uncache on all the pages 683attached to an inode. This assumes that the pages on the inode correspond on a 6841:1 basis with the pages in the cache. 685 686 void fscache_uncache_all_inode_pages(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 687 struct inode *inode); 688 689This takes the netfs cookie that the pages were cached with and the inode that 690the pages are attached to. This function will wait for pages to finish being 691written to the cache and for the cache to finish with the page generally. No 692error is returned. 693 694 695=============================== 696INDEX AND DATA FILE CONSISTENCY 697=============================== 698 699To find out whether auxiliary data for an object is up to data within the 700cache, the following function can be called: 701 702 int fscache_check_consistency(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 703 const void *aux_data); 704 705This will call back to the netfs to check whether the auxiliary data associated 706with a cookie is correct; if aux_data is non-NULL, it will update the auxiliary 707data buffer first. It returns 0 if it is and -ESTALE if it isn't; it may also 708return -ENOMEM and -ERESTARTSYS. 709 710To request an update of the index data for an index or other object, the 711following function should be called: 712 713 void fscache_update_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 714 const void *aux_data); 715 716This function will update the cookie's auxiliary data buffer from aux_data if 717that is non-NULL and then schedule this to be stored on disk. The update 718method in the parent index definition will be called to transfer the data. 719 720Note that partial updates may happen automatically at other times, such as when 721data blocks are added to a data file object. 722 723 724================= 725COOKIE ENABLEMENT 726================= 727 728Cookies exist in one of two states: enabled and disabled. If a cookie is 729disabled, it ignores all attempts to acquire child cookies; check, update or 730invalidate its state; allocate, read or write backing pages - though it is 731still possible to uncache pages and relinquish the cookie. 732 733The initial enablement state is set by fscache_acquire_cookie(), but the cookie 734can be enabled or disabled later. To disable a cookie, call: 735 736 void fscache_disable_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 737 const void *aux_data, 738 bool invalidate); 739 740If the cookie is not already disabled, this locks the cookie against other 741enable and disable ops, marks the cookie as being disabled, discards or 742invalidates any backing objects and waits for cessation of activity on any 743associated object before unlocking the cookie. 744 745All possible failures are handled internally. The caller should consider 746calling fscache_uncache_all_inode_pages() afterwards to make sure all page 747markings are cleared up. 748 749Cookies can be enabled or reenabled with: 750 751 void fscache_enable_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 752 const void *aux_data, 753 loff_t object_size, 754 bool (*can_enable)(void *data), 755 void *data) 756 757If the cookie is not already enabled, this locks the cookie against other 758enable and disable ops, invokes can_enable() and, if the cookie is not an index 759cookie, will begin the procedure of acquiring backing objects. 760 761The optional can_enable() function is passed the data argument and returns a 762ruling as to whether or not enablement should actually be permitted to begin. 763 764All possible failures are handled internally. The cookie will only be marked 765as enabled if provisional backing objects are allocated. 766 767The object's data size is updated from object_size and is passed to the 768->check_aux() function. 769 770In both cases, the cookie's auxiliary data buffer is updated from aux_data if 771that is non-NULL inside the enablement lock before proceeding. 772 773 774=============================== 775MISCELLANEOUS COOKIE OPERATIONS 776=============================== 777 778There are a number of operations that can be used to control cookies: 779 780 (*) Cookie pinning: 781 782 int fscache_pin_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie); 783 void fscache_unpin_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie); 784 785 These operations permit data cookies to be pinned into the cache and to 786 have the pinning removed. They are not permitted on index cookies. 787 788 The pinning function will return 0 if successful, -ENOBUFS in the cookie 789 isn't backed by a cache, -EOPNOTSUPP if the cache doesn't support pinning, 790 -ENOSPC if there isn't enough space to honour the operation, -ENOMEM or 791 -EIO if there's any other problem. 792 793 (*) Data space reservation: 794 795 int fscache_reserve_space(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, loff_t size); 796 797 This permits a netfs to request cache space be reserved to store up to the 798 given amount of a file. It is permitted to ask for more than the current 799 size of the file to allow for future file expansion. 800 801 If size is given as zero then the reservation will be cancelled. 802 803 The function will return 0 if successful, -ENOBUFS in the cookie isn't 804 backed by a cache, -EOPNOTSUPP if the cache doesn't support reservations, 805 -ENOSPC if there isn't enough space to honour the operation, -ENOMEM or 806 -EIO if there's any other problem. 807 808 Note that this doesn't pin an object in a cache; it can still be culled to 809 make space if it's not in use. 810 811 812===================== 813COOKIE UNREGISTRATION 814===================== 815 816To get rid of a cookie, this function should be called. 817 818 void fscache_relinquish_cookie(struct fscache_cookie *cookie, 819 const void *aux_data, 820 bool retire); 821 822If retire is non-zero, then the object will be marked for recycling, and all 823copies of it will be removed from all active caches in which it is present. 824Not only that but all child objects will also be retired. 825 826If retire is zero, then the object may be available again when next the 827acquisition function is called. Retirement here will overrule the pinning on a 828cookie. 829 830The cookie's auxiliary data will be updated from aux_data if that is non-NULL 831so that the cache can lazily update it on disk. 832 833One very important note - relinquish must NOT be called for a cookie unless all 834the cookies for "child" indices, objects and pages have been relinquished 835first. 836 837 838================== 839INDEX INVALIDATION 840================== 841 842There is no direct way to invalidate an index subtree. To do this, the caller 843should relinquish and retire the cookie they have, and then acquire a new one. 844 845 846====================== 847DATA FILE INVALIDATION 848====================== 849 850Sometimes it will be necessary to invalidate an object that contains data. 851Typically this will be necessary when the server tells the netfs of a foreign 852change - at which point the netfs has to throw away all the state it had for an 853inode and reload from the server. 854 855To indicate that a cache object should be invalidated, the following function 856can be called: 857 858 void fscache_invalidate(struct fscache_cookie *cookie); 859 860This can be called with spinlocks held as it defers the work to a thread pool. 861All extant storage, retrieval and attribute change ops at this point are 862cancelled and discarded. Some future operations will be rejected until the 863cache has had a chance to insert a barrier in the operations queue. After 864that, operations will be queued again behind the invalidation operation. 865 866The invalidation operation will perform an attribute change operation and an 867auxiliary data update operation as it is very likely these will have changed. 868 869Using the following function, the netfs can wait for the invalidation operation 870to have reached a point at which it can start submitting ordinary operations 871once again: 872 873 void fscache_wait_on_invalidate(struct fscache_cookie *cookie); 874 875 876=========================== 877FS-CACHE SPECIFIC PAGE FLAG 878=========================== 879 880FS-Cache makes use of a page flag, PG_private_2, for its own purpose. This is 881given the alternative name PG_fscache. 882 883PG_fscache is used to indicate that the page is known by the cache, and that 884the cache must be informed if the page is going to go away. It's an indication 885to the netfs that the cache has an interest in this page, where an interest may 886be a pointer to it, resources allocated or reserved for it, or I/O in progress 887upon it. 888 889The netfs can use this information in methods such as releasepage() to 890determine whether it needs to uncache a page or update it. 891 892Furthermore, if this bit is set, releasepage() and invalidatepage() operations 893will be called on a page to get rid of it, even if PG_private is not set. This 894allows caching to attempted on a page before read_cache_pages() to be called 895after fscache_read_or_alloc_pages() as the former will try and release pages it 896was given under certain circumstances. 897 898This bit does not overlap with such as PG_private. This means that FS-Cache 899can be used with a filesystem that uses the block buffering code. 900 901There are a number of operations defined on this flag: 902 903 int PageFsCache(struct page *page); 904 void SetPageFsCache(struct page *page) 905 void ClearPageFsCache(struct page *page) 906 int TestSetPageFsCache(struct page *page) 907 int TestClearPageFsCache(struct page *page) 908 909These functions are bit test, bit set, bit clear, bit test and set and bit 910test and clear operations on PG_fscache. 911