table of contents
G_BIO(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | G_BIO(9) |
NAME¶
g_new_bio
,
g_clone_bio
, g_destroy_bio
,
g_print_bio
, g_reset_bio
— GEOM bio controlling functions
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/bio.h>
#include <geom/geom.h>
struct bio *
g_new_bio
(void);
struct bio *
g_alloc_bio
(void);
struct bio *
g_clone_bio
(struct
bio *bp);
struct bio *
g_duplicate_bio
(struct
bio *bp);
void
g_destroy_bio
(struct
bio *bp);
void
g_print_bio
(struct
bio *bp);
void
g_reset_bio
(struct
bio *bp);
DESCRIPTION¶
A struct bio is used by GEOM to describe I/O requests, its most important fields are described below:
- bio_cmd
- I/O request command. There are four I/O requests available in GEOM:
BIO_READ
- A read request.
BIO_WRITE
- A write request.
BIO_DELETE
- Indicates that a certain range of data is no longer used and that it can be erased or freed as the underlying technology supports. Technologies like flash adaptation layers can arrange to erase the relevant blocks before they will become reassigned and cryptographic devices may want to fill random bits into the range to reduce the amount of data available for attack.
BIO_GETATTR
- Inspect and manipulate out-of-band attributes on a particular provider or path. Attributes are named by ascii strings and are stored in the bio_attribute field.
BIO_FLUSH
- Tells underlying providers to flush their write caches.
- bio_flags
- Available flags:
- bio_cflags
- Private use by the consumer.
- bio_pflags
- Private use by the provider.
- bio_offset
- Offset into provider.
- bio_data
- Pointer to data buffer.
- bio_error
- Error value when
BIO_ERROR
is set. - bio_done
- Pointer to function which will be called when the request is finished.
- bio_driver1
- Private use by the provider.
- bio_driver2
- Private use by the provider.
- bio_caller1
- Private use by the consumer.
- bio_caller2
- Private use by the consumer.
- bio_attribute
- Attribute string for
BIO_GETATTR
request. - bio_from
- Consumer to use for request (attached to provider stored in bio_to field) (typically read-only for a class).
- bio_to
- Destination provider (typically read-only for a class).
- bio_length
- Request length in bytes.
- bio_completed
- Number of bytes completed, but they may not be completed from the front of the request.
- bio_children
- Number of bio clones (typically read-only for a class).
- bio_inbed
- Number of finished bio clones.
- bio_parent
- Pointer to parent bio.
The
g_new_bio
()
function allocates a new, empty bio structure.
g_alloc_bio
()
- same as g_new_bio
(), but always succeeds
(allocates bio with the M_WAITOK
malloc flag).
The
g_clone_bio
()
function allocates a new bio structure and copies the
following fields from the bio given as an argument to
clone: bio_cmd, bio_length,
bio_offset, bio_data,
bio_attribute. The field
bio_parent in the clone points to the passed
bio and the field bio_children
in the passed bio is incremented.
This function should be used for every request which enters through the provider of a particular geom and needs to be scheduled down. Proper order is:
- Clone the received struct bio.
- Modify the clone.
- Schedule the clone on its own consumer.
g_duplicate_bio
()
- same as g_clone_bio
(), but always succeeds
(allocates bio with the M_WAITOK
malloc flag).
The
g_destroy_bio
()
function deallocates and destroys the given bio
structure.
The
g_print_bio
()
function prints information about the given bio
structure (for debugging purposes).
The
g_reset_bio
()
function resets the given bio structure back to its
initial state. g_reset_bio
() preserves internal data
structures, while setting all user visible fields to their initial values.
When reusing a bio obtained from
g_new_bio
(), g_alloc_bio
(),
g_clone_bio
(), or
g_duplicate_bio
() for multiple transactions,
g_reset_bio
() must be called between the
transactions in lieu of
bzero
().
While not strictly required for a bio structure
created by other means, g_reset_bio
() should be used
to initialize it and between transactions.
RETURN VALUES¶
The g_new_bio
() and
g_clone_bio
() functions return a pointer to the
allocated bio, or NULL
if an
error occurred.
EXAMPLES¶
Implementation of
“NULL
-transformation”, meaning that an
I/O request is cloned and scheduled down without any modifications. Let us
assume that field ex_consumer in structure
example_softc contains a consumer attached to the
provider we want to operate on.
void example_start(struct bio *bp) { struct example_softc *sc; struct bio *cbp; printf("Request received: "); g_print_bio(bp); printf("\n"); sc = bp->bio_to->geom->softc; if (sc == NULL) { g_io_deliver(bp, ENXIO); return; } /* Let's clone our bio request. */ cbp = g_clone_bio(bp); if (cbp == NULL) { g_io_deliver(bp, ENOMEM); return; } cbp->bio_done = g_std_done; /* Standard 'done' function. */ /* Ok, schedule it down. */ /* * The consumer can be obtained from * LIST_FIRST(&bp->bio_to->geom->consumer) as well, * if there is only one in our geom. */ g_io_request(cbp, sc->ex_consumer); }
SEE ALSO¶
geom(4), DECLARE_GEOM_CLASS(9), g_access(9), g_attach(9), g_consumer(9), g_data(9), g_event(9), g_geom(9), g_provider(9), g_provider_by_name(9), g_wither_geom(9)
AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>.
May 17, 2016 | Debian |