diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/jbd/checkpoint.c')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/jbd/checkpoint.c | 27 |
1 files changed, 22 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/fs/jbd/checkpoint.c b/fs/jbd/checkpoint.c index 5d1a00a..05f0754 100644 --- a/fs/jbd/checkpoint.c +++ b/fs/jbd/checkpoint.c @@ -453,8 +453,6 @@ out: * * Return <0 on error, 0 on success, 1 if there was nothing to clean up. * - * Called with the journal lock held. - * * This is the only part of the journaling code which really needs to be * aware of transaction aborts. Checkpointing involves writing to the * main filesystem area rather than to the journal, so it can proceed @@ -472,13 +470,14 @@ int cleanup_journal_tail(journal_t *journal) if (is_journal_aborted(journal)) return 1; - /* OK, work out the oldest transaction remaining in the log, and + /* + * OK, work out the oldest transaction remaining in the log, and * the log block it starts at. * * If the log is now empty, we need to work out which is the * next transaction ID we will write, and where it will - * start. */ - + * start. + */ spin_lock(&journal->j_state_lock); spin_lock(&journal->j_list_lock); transaction = journal->j_checkpoint_transactions; @@ -504,7 +503,25 @@ int cleanup_journal_tail(journal_t *journal) spin_unlock(&journal->j_state_lock); return 1; } + spin_unlock(&journal->j_state_lock); + + /* + * We need to make sure that any blocks that were recently written out + * --- perhaps by log_do_checkpoint() --- are flushed out before we + * drop the transactions from the journal. It's unlikely this will be + * necessary, especially with an appropriately sized journal, but we + * need this to guarantee correctness. Fortunately + * cleanup_journal_tail() doesn't get called all that often. + */ + if (journal->j_flags & JFS_BARRIER) + blkdev_issue_flush(journal->j_fs_dev, GFP_KERNEL, NULL); + spin_lock(&journal->j_state_lock); + if (!tid_gt(first_tid, journal->j_tail_sequence)) { + spin_unlock(&journal->j_state_lock); + /* Someone else cleaned up journal so return 0 */ + return 0; + } /* OK, update the superblock to recover the freed space. * Physical blocks come first: have we wrapped beyond the end of * the log? */ |