combined nfs41_lock_stateid_arg() into nfs41_open_stateid_arg(). if a delegation is present, use the delegation stateid before looking at lock/open stateids. if a delegation recall is in progress, wait on its condition variable before falling back to the open stateid
made nfs41_lock_stateid_arg() static to lock.c because of its special semantics; open_to_lock_owner4 for LOCK won't accept a delegation stateid, so nfs41_delegation_to_open() is called to convert it
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
zero-length ranges: valid on windows, but nfs servers MUST return NFS4ERR_INVAL for LOCK with length=0. use MRxIsLockRealizable() to return STATUS_NOT_SUPPORTED for zero-length ranges (avoiding the lock upcall and rpc)
ranges that extend past UINT64_MAX: not valid on windows. NFS expects length=UINT64_MAX for locking to end-of-file. use length=UINT64_MAX if length >= UINT64_MAX-offset (making lock ranges consistent with linux client)
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
every upcall (except few) pass session and open_state pointer, so
add that to marshal_nfs41_header() in the driver. remove passing
of session and open_state elsewhere in marshal functions.
in the deamon, upcall.c now reads and stores pointers to session
and open_state in nfs41_upcall datastructure instead of having
each individual upcall store their own pointers. setattrl
and readdir args keeping pointer because the rest of the code
uses them a lot.
in upcall_parse() up refcounts on session and open_state if
valid handles were passed in. down refcounts upcall_cleanup() as
before. but need to be careful with count value for mount and open
upcalls. we need to take an extra ref because upcall_cleanup() now
will always decrement it.
if we see NFS4ERR_NO_GRACE from recovery operations, it means we lost our state due to a lease expiration rather than a server reboot. in this case, it's possible that conflicting locks were granted to other clients, so we have to try normal OPEN/LOCK operations to recover our state. because they're sent during recovery, nfs41_open() and nfs41_lock() take a new 'bool_t try_recovery' argument so we can avoid recursion
if these operations fail due to conflicting locks, we have no choice but to return errors to the application. using a stateid that was revoked due to lease expiration results in NFS4ERR_EXPIRED, and we map this error to ERROR_FILE_INVALID: The volume for a file has been externally altered so that the opened file is no longer valid.
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
nfs41_open_state maintains a list of outstanding byte-range locks by calling open_lock_add() and open_lock_remove() in lock.c
during client state recovery, after reclaiming each OPEN stateid, send LOCK requests with reclaim=TRUE for each lock it owns, and update the open's lock stateid with the result
added 'bool_t reclaim' argument to nfs41_lock(); when set, compound_encode_send_decode() is called with try_recovery=FALSE to avoid recursive recovery
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
operations that require a stateid now take stateid_arg for recovery information. these operations include close, setattr, lock/unlock, layoutget, and read/write (including pnfs)
nfs41_open_stateid_arg() locks nfs41_open_state and copies its stateid into a stateid_arg
nfs41_lock_stateid_arg() locks nfs41_open_state.last_lock and copies its stateid into a stateid_arg; if there is no lock state, it falls back to nfs41_open_stateid_arg()
pnfs_read/write() now take nfs41_open_state so they can generate stateid_args
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
very similar to the issue with nfs41_open_state, an abandoned upcall could outlive its mount. to prevent their nfs41_root from being freed, upcalls need to hold a reference until they're finished. this also keeps all of its clients/sessions/rpc connections alive
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
added call to upcall_cleanup() after both upcall_marshall() and upcall_cancel()
individual upcall operations define their nfs41_upcall_op structs locally, instead of putting tons of function prototypes in upcall.c
made the upcall_marshall() function optional; most marshall functions are noops
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
when open parsing fails, we were still returning upcall.status==NO_ERROR, so the driver assumed the open succeeded. other operations then sent up an open_state==NULL, and crashed the daemon. when upcall_parse() returns an error, set upcall.status to notify the driver
upcall_parse() prints a 'parsing of upcall <name> failed with <error>.' message on failure, so i removed redundant messages from the individual upcall parsing functions
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>