adding -o timeout=value (in sec) mount option to override a default
timeout value for the upcalls for non-io upcalls. Default timeout is
at least the lease_time seconds of an established mount or 20secs.
read/write upcall also take into account number of bytes for the request
and 100MB/s network speed and 100MB/s disk speed
added 2011 year to the copyright line
added authors info to the license
added UofM license to libtirpc files that we modified
(but i probably missed some)
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.
changed goto out -> out_err, so the root is freed on buffer overflow
updated error messages for nfs41_root_create() and nfs41_root_mount_addrs()
if the root lookup fails, return ERROR_BAD_NETPATH instead of ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
to determine that the daemon has restarted -- rather that daemon is receiving upcalls from the kernel that were processed by the old instance of the daemon -- add a version to the upcall mechanism.
when daemon starts up it generates a version number (just a timestamp). it passes this value to the driver on start up via "start_ioctl" downcall. the driver saves that value in its device extensions. it uses that value in the mount and shtudown upcalls.
when daemon replies to the mount command it again sends its version as a part of the reply. this reply is stored in driver;s netroot extensions. the driver uses netroot's value in each upcall to the daemon.
if the daemon receives an upcall for an operation where the included version does not equal to the its current version, it fails the upcall (error_code=116).
a restart of the daemon would change driver's device extension value which the driver will then use in the new mount upcalls that would establish new sessions. then the correct daemon version would be returned as a part of the mount downcalled and saved in the netroot.
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>
in handle_mount(), the call to nfs41_lookup() requires a mutable nfs41_abs_path because it can change on referrals, so make a copy for it
removed unused fields in struct nfs41_root and related arguments to nfs41_root_create()
Signed-off-by: Casey Bodley <cbodley@citi.umich.edu>
because we no longer have to convert strings from unicode, we can avoid copying them out of the upcall buffer
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>