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authorDavid Teigland <teigland@redhat.com>2006-11-27 13:19:28 -0600
committerSteven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>2006-11-30 10:37:14 -0500
commit98f176fb32f33795b6d0f83856008b932123ab38 (patch)
tree0565bd70a23546469a985b93c34509f7938fbd5b /fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h
parent1babdb453138f17b8ed3d1d5711089c4e2fa5ace (diff)
downloadop-kernel-dev-98f176fb32f33795b6d0f83856008b932123ab38.zip
op-kernel-dev-98f176fb32f33795b6d0f83856008b932123ab38.tar.gz
[DLM] don't accept replies to old recovery messages
We often abort a recovery after sending a status request to a remote node. We want to ignore any potential status reply we get from the remote node. If we get one of these unwanted replies, we've often moved on to the next recovery message and incremented the message sequence counter, so the reply will be ignored due to the seq number. In some cases, we've not moved on to the next message so the seq number of the reply we want to ignore is still correct, causing the reply to be accepted. The next recovery message will then mistake this old reply as a new one. To fix this, we add the flag RCOM_WAIT to indicate when we can accept a new reply. We clear this flag if we abort recovery while waiting for a reply. Before the flag is set again (to allow new replies) we know that any old replies will be rejected due to their sequence number. We also initialize the recovery-message sequence number to a random value when a lockspace is first created. This makes it clear when messages are being rejected from an old instance of a lockspace that has since been recreated. Signed-off-by: David Teigland <teigland@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h')
-rw-r--r--fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h4
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h b/fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h
index 1e5cd67..1ee8195 100644
--- a/fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h
+++ b/fs/dlm/dlm_internal.h
@@ -471,6 +471,7 @@ struct dlm_ls {
char *ls_recover_buf;
int ls_recover_nodeid; /* for debugging */
uint64_t ls_rcom_seq;
+ spinlock_t ls_rcom_spin;
struct list_head ls_recover_list;
spinlock_t ls_recover_list_lock;
int ls_recover_list_count;
@@ -488,7 +489,8 @@ struct dlm_ls {
#define LSFL_RUNNING 1
#define LSFL_RECOVERY_STOP 2
#define LSFL_RCOM_READY 3
-#define LSFL_UEVENT_WAIT 4
+#define LSFL_RCOM_WAIT 4
+#define LSFL_UEVENT_WAIT 5
/* much of this is just saving user space pointers associated with the
lock that we pass back to the user lib with an ast */
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