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If we fail to create the thread, technically we should leave the
offline_state as OFFLINE_JOINED, not OFFLINE_SYNCING.
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When we rotate journals, we must set offline and close the current one,
but don't generally need to wait for this to complete.
Instead, we'll initiate an asynchronous offline via
journal_file_set_offline(oldfile, false), and add the file to a
per-server set of deferred closes to be closed later when they
won't block.
There's one complication however; journal_file_open() via
journal_file_verify_header() assumes that any writable journal in the
online state is the product of an unclean shutdown or other form of
corruption.
Thus there's a need for journal_file_open() to be aware of deferred
closes and synchronize with their completion when opening preexisting
journals for writing. To facilitate this the deferred closes set is
supplied to the journal_file_open() function where the deferred closes
may be closed synchronously before verifying the header in such
circumstances.
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This adds a wait flag to journal_file_set_offline(), when false the offline is
performed asynchronously in a separate thread.
When wait is true, if an asynchronous offline is already in-progress it is
restarted and waited for. Otherwise the offline is performed synchronously
without the use of a thread.
journal_file_set_online() cancels or waits for the asynchronous offline to
complete if in-flight, depending on where in the offline process the thread
happens to be. If the thread is in the fsync() phase, it is cancelled and
waiting is unnecessary. Otherwise, the thread is joined before proceeding.
A new offline_state member is added to JournalFile which is used via
atomic operations for communicating between the offline thread and the
journal_file_set_{offline,online}() functions.
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Better support of OPENPGPKEY, CAA, TLSA packets and tests
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ISO/IEC 9899:1999 §7.21.1/2 says:
Where an argument declared as size_t n specifies the length of the array
for a function, n can have the value zero on a call to that
function. Unless explicitly stated otherwise in the description of a
particular function in this subclause, pointer arguments on such a call
shall still have valid values, as described in 7.1.4.
In base64_append_width memcpy was called as memcpy(x, NULL, 0). GCC 4.9
started making use of this and assumes This worked fine under -O0, but
does something strange under -O3.
This patch fixes a bug in base64_append_width(), fixes a possible bug in
journal_file_append_entry_internal(), and makes use of the new function
to simplify the code in other places.
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This should be handled fine now by .dir-locals.el, so need to carry that
stuff in every file.
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Remove the check that triggers rotation of the journal file when the arriving log entry had a monotonic timestamp smaller that the previous log entry. This check causes unnecessary rotations when journal-remote was receiving from multiple senders, therefore monotonicity can not be guaranteed. Also, it does not offer any useful functionality for systemd-journald.
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Functions dereferencing these members should assert their non-NULL state.
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Just some additional asserts in functions dereferencing f->header.
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This primarily contains some minor coding style fixups for 7a24f3bf2fb181243a1957a0cdd54cd919396793 and earlier changes. Specifically:
* Don't log at log levels above LOG_DEBUG from "library" code like journal-file.c
* Don't negate errno values before passing them to log_debug_errno(), as the call can handle this fine anyway
* Cast some calls we knowingly ignore the return values of to (void)
* Don't clobber function call-by-ref return values on failure
* Don't mix function calls and variable declarations in one line
There's also one more relevant change: when failing to enqueue a journal change fs event, we'll run it immediately.
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journal: coalesce ftruncate()s in 250ms windows
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Prior to this change every journal append causes an ftruncate() for the
sake of inotify propagation of the mmap-based writes.
With this change the notification is deferred up to ~250ms, coalescing
any repeated journal writes during the deferred period into a single
ftruncate(). The ftruncate() call isn't free and doing it on every
append adds unnecessary overhead and latency in the journald event loop.
Introduces journal_file_enable_post_change_timer() which manages a
timer on the provided sd-event instance for scheduling coalesced
ftruncates. The ftruncate() behavior is unchanged unless
journal_file_enable_post_change_timer() is called on the JournalFile.
While not a tremendous improvement, profiling systemd-journald event loop
latencies using instrumentation as introduced by 34b8751 it was observed that
coalescing the ftruncates was low-hanging fruit worth pursuing.
Note orders 12 and 13 shifting left into order 11 and order 6 dipping into
order 5:
Unmodified:
log2(us) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
-----------------------------------------------------------
[10685.414572] 0 0 0 0 38 602 61 2 290 60 1643 2554 13 1 4 1 0 0 1
[10690.415114] 0 0 0 0 0 646 54 7 309 44 2073 2148 17 1 3 0 0 0 1
[10695.415509] 0 0 0 0 1 650 73 3 324 37 2071 2270 9 0 0 1 0 1 0
[10700.416297] 0 0 0 0 0 659 50 4 318 38 2111 2152 6 0 1 0 0 1 1
[10705.417136] 0 0 0 0 2 660 48 4 320 38 2129 2146 12 1 1 0 0 1 1
[10710.489114] 0 0 0 0 0 673 38 3 321 37 1925 2339 7 0 0 0 0 1 1
[10715.489613] 0 0 0 0 3 656 64 8 317 48 2365 2007 7 0 0 0 0 0 1
Coalesced:
log2(us) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
-----------------------------------------------------------
[ 6169.161360] 0 0 0 1 24 786 54 11 389 24 4192 771 6 4 0 0 1 0 1
[ 6174.161705] 0 0 0 1 18 800 35 6 380 27 3977 893 3 1 0 0 1 0 1
[ 6179.162741] 0 0 0 1 28 768 51 4 391 16 3998 831 5 3 0 0 0 0 2
[ 6184.162856] 0 0 0 0 19 770 60 2 376 26 3795 1004 9 5 1 0 1 0 1
[ 6189.163279] 0 0 0 0 28 761 49 7 372 27 3729 1056 3 2 0 0 1 0 1
[ 6194.164255] 0 0 0 0 25 785 49 7 394 19 3996 908 6 3 2 0 0 0 1
[ 6199.164658] 0 0 0 0 29 797 35 5 389 18 3995 898 3 4 1 1 1 0 1
The remaining high-order delays are a result of the synchronous fsyncs in
systemd-journald, beyond the scope of this commit.
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Journal decompression fixes
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compress_blob took src, src_size, dst and *dst_size, but dst_size
wasn't used as an input parameter with the size of dst, but only as an
output parameter. dst was implicitly assumed to be at least src_size-1.
This code wasn't *wrong*, because the only real caller in
journal-file.c got it right. But it was misleading, and the tests in
test-compress.c got it wrong, and worked only because the output
buffer happened to be the same size as input buffer. So add a seperate
dst_allocated_size parameter to make it explicit what the size of the
buffer is, and to allow test to proceed with different output buffer
sizes.
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destructors
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For low end embedded systems 4 MiB for each journal file is a lot of
memory. Journald will use at least 512 KiB even if JOURNAL_FILE_SIZE_MIN is
set to less than that so just use 512 KiB.
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When reading stuff, we should only return EIO when an actual read error
occured, not when we don't like the data for whatever reason.
We already return ENODATA for all other kinds of file truncation, hence
do the same for the most obvious kind, so that callers know what ENODATA
means.
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Various changes to src/basic/
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There are more than enough to deserve their own .c file, hence move them
over.
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string-util.[ch]
There are more than enough calls doing string manipulations to deserve
its own files, hence do something about it.
This patch also sorts the #include blocks of all files that needed to be
updated, according to the sorting suggestions from CODING_STYLE. Since
pretty much every file needs our string manipulation functions this
effectively means that most files have sorted #include blocks now.
Also touches a few unrelated include files.
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Let's make sure we handle compression errors properly, and don't
misunderstand an error for success.
Also, let's actually compress things if lz4 is enabled.
Fixes #1662.
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Implement a maximum limit on number of journal files to keep around.
Enforcing a limit is useful on this since our performance when viewing
pays a heavy penalty for each journal file to interleve. This setting is
turned on now by default, and set to 100.
Also, actully implement what 348ced909724a1331b85d57aede80a102a00e428
promised: use whatever we find on disk at startup as lower bound on how
much disk space we can use. That commit introduced some provisions to
implement this, but actually never did.
This also adds "journalctl --vacuum-files=" to vacuum files on disk by
their number explicitly.
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Indicate that we are ignoring errors, when we ignore them, and log that
at LOG_WARNING level.
Use the right error code for the log message.
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The way it is customary everywhere else in our sources.
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off_t is a really weird type as it is usually 64bit these days (at least
in sane programs), but could theoretically be 32bit. We don't support
off_t as 32bit builds though, but still constantly deal with safely
converting from off_t to other types and back for no point.
Hence, never use the type anymore. Always use uint64_t instead. This has
various benefits, including that we can expose these values directly as
D-Bus properties, and also that the values parse the same in all cases.
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The function "free" is documented in the way that no action shall occur for
a passed null pointer. It is therefore not needed that a function caller
repeats a corresponding check.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18775608/free-a-null-pointer-anyway-or-check-first
This issue was fixed by using the software Coccinelle 1.0.1.
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When a new journal file is created we write the header first, then sync
and only then create the data and field hash tables in them. That means
to other processes it might appear that the files have a valid header
but not data and field hash tables. Our reader code should be able to
deal with this.
With this change we'll not map the two hash tables right-away after
opening a file for reading anymore (because that will of course fail if
the objects are missing), but delay this until the first time we access
them. On top of that, when we want to look something up in the hash
tables and we notice they aren't initialized yet, we consider them
empty.
This improves handling of some journal files reported in #487.
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This way users have the freedom to set or unset the FS_NOCOW_FL flag on
their journal files by setting it on the journal directory. Since our
default tmpfiles configuration now sets this flag on the directory the
flag is set by default on new files, however people can opt-out of this
by masking the tmpfiles file for it.
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like:
src/shared/install.c: In function ‘unit_file_lookup_state’:
src/shared/install.c:1861:16: warning: ‘r’ may be used uninitialized in
this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
return r < 0 ? r : state;
^
src/shared/install.c:1796:13: note: ‘r’ was declared here
int r;
^
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Introduced in fa6ac76083b8ff.
Might be related to CID #1261724, but I don't know if coverity can
recurse this deep.
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Logs constantly show
systemd-journald[395]: Failed to set file attributes: Inappropriate ioctl for device
This is because ext4 does not support FS_NOCOW_FL.
[zj: fold into one conditional as suggested on the ML and
fix (preexisting) r/errno confusion in error message.]
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Commit 668c965af "journal: skipping of exhausted journal files is bad if
direction changed" fixed a correctness issue, but it also significantly
limited the cases where the optimization that skips exhausted journal
files could apply.
As a result, some journalctl queries are much slower in v219 than in v218.
(e.g. queries where a "--since" cutoff should have quickly eliminated
older journal files from consideration, but didn't.)
If already in the initial iteration find_location_with_matches() finds
no entry, the journal file's location is not updated. This is fine,
except that:
- We must update at least f->last_direction. The optimization relies on
it. Let's separate that from journal_file_save_location() and update
it immediately after the direction checks.
- The optimization was conditional on "f->current_offset > 0", but it
would always be 0 in this scenario. This check is unnecessary for the
optimization.
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This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
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Leave it to the compiler to figure out whether it shall inline stuff or
not.
Only place where using static inline is OK to use is in in header
files, really.
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fd_setcrtime()
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btrfs' COW logic results in heavily fragment journal files, which is
detrimental for perfomance. Hence, turn off COW for journal files as we
create them.
Turning off COW comes at the cost of data integrity guarantees, but this
should be acceptable, given that we do our own checksumming, and
generally have a pretty conservative write pattern.
Also see discussion on linux-btrfs:
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-btrfs/msg41001.html
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