From 24985c53d5b04a56ac7c8ae7f74b8cb807e2ed2f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pavel Shilovsky Date: Tue, 18 Sep 2012 16:20:28 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] CIFS: Move r/wsize negotiating to ops struct Signed-off-by: Pavel Shilovsky Signed-off-by: Steve French --- fs/cifs/cifsglob.h | 61 +++++++++++++++++++ fs/cifs/connect.c | 144 +-------------------------------------------- fs/cifs/smb1ops.c | 86 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 149 insertions(+), 142 deletions(-) diff --git a/fs/cifs/cifsglob.h b/fs/cifs/cifsglob.h index abb831019039..e5cb1941e251 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/cifsglob.h +++ b/fs/cifs/cifsglob.h @@ -213,6 +213,10 @@ struct smb_version_operations { bool (*need_neg)(struct TCP_Server_Info *); /* negotiate to the server */ int (*negotiate)(const unsigned int, struct cifs_ses *); + /* set negotiated write size */ + unsigned int (*negotiate_wsize)(struct cifs_tcon *, struct smb_vol *); + /* set negotiated read size */ + unsigned int (*negotiate_rsize)(struct cifs_tcon *, struct smb_vol *); /* setup smb sessionn */ int (*sess_setup)(const unsigned int, struct cifs_ses *, const struct nls_table *); @@ -515,6 +519,63 @@ get_next_mid(struct TCP_Server_Info *server) return server->ops->get_next_mid(server); } +/* + * When the server supports very large reads and writes via POSIX extensions, + * we can allow up to 2^24-1, minus the size of a READ/WRITE_AND_X header, not + * including the RFC1001 length. + * + * Note that this might make for "interesting" allocation problems during + * writeback however as we have to allocate an array of pointers for the + * pages. A 16M write means ~32kb page array with PAGE_CACHE_SIZE == 4096. + * + * For reads, there is a similar problem as we need to allocate an array + * of kvecs to handle the receive, though that should only need to be done + * once. + */ +#define CIFS_MAX_WSIZE ((1<<24) - 1 - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4) +#define CIFS_MAX_RSIZE ((1<<24) - sizeof(READ_RSP) + 4) + +/* + * When the server doesn't allow large posix writes, only allow a rsize/wsize + * of 2^17-1 minus the size of the call header. That allows for a read or + * write up to the maximum size described by RFC1002. + */ +#define CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_WSIZE ((1<<17) - 1 - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4) +#define CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_RSIZE ((1<<17) - 1 - sizeof(READ_RSP) + 4) + +/* + * The default wsize is 1M. find_get_pages seems to return a maximum of 256 + * pages in a single call. With PAGE_CACHE_SIZE == 4k, this means we can fill + * a single wsize request with a single call. + */ +#define CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE (1024 * 1024) + +/* + * Windows only supports a max of 60kb reads and 65535 byte writes. Default to + * those values when posix extensions aren't in force. In actuality here, we + * use 65536 to allow for a write that is a multiple of 4k. Most servers seem + * to be ok with the extra byte even though Windows doesn't send writes that + * are that large. + * + * Citation: + * + * http://blogs.msdn.com/b/openspecification/archive/2009/04/10/smb-maximum-transmit-buffer-size-and-performance-tuning.aspx + */ +#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_RSIZE (60 * 1024) +#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_WSIZE (65536) + +/* + * On hosts with high memory, we can't currently support wsize/rsize that are + * larger than we can kmap at once. Cap the rsize/wsize at + * LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_SIZE. We'll never be able to fill a read or write request + * larger than that anyway. + */ +#ifdef CONFIG_HIGHMEM +#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_CACHE_SIZE) +#else /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */ +#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (1<<24) +#endif /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */ + /* * Macros to allow the TCP_Server_Info->net field and related code to drop out * when CONFIG_NET_NS isn't set. diff --git a/fs/cifs/connect.c b/fs/cifs/connect.c index 6df6fa14cba8..c31b30b572e0 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/connect.c +++ b/fs/cifs/connect.c @@ -3261,146 +3261,6 @@ void cifs_setup_cifs_sb(struct smb_vol *pvolume_info, "mount option supported"); } -/* - * When the server supports very large reads and writes via POSIX extensions, - * we can allow up to 2^24-1, minus the size of a READ/WRITE_AND_X header, not - * including the RFC1001 length. - * - * Note that this might make for "interesting" allocation problems during - * writeback however as we have to allocate an array of pointers for the - * pages. A 16M write means ~32kb page array with PAGE_CACHE_SIZE == 4096. - * - * For reads, there is a similar problem as we need to allocate an array - * of kvecs to handle the receive, though that should only need to be done - * once. - */ -#define CIFS_MAX_WSIZE ((1<<24) - 1 - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4) -#define CIFS_MAX_RSIZE ((1<<24) - sizeof(READ_RSP) + 4) - -/* - * When the server doesn't allow large posix writes, only allow a rsize/wsize - * of 2^17-1 minus the size of the call header. That allows for a read or - * write up to the maximum size described by RFC1002. - */ -#define CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_WSIZE ((1<<17) - 1 - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4) -#define CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_RSIZE ((1<<17) - 1 - sizeof(READ_RSP) + 4) - -/* - * The default wsize is 1M. find_get_pages seems to return a maximum of 256 - * pages in a single call. With PAGE_CACHE_SIZE == 4k, this means we can fill - * a single wsize request with a single call. - */ -#define CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE (1024 * 1024) - -/* - * Windows only supports a max of 60kb reads and 65535 byte writes. Default to - * those values when posix extensions aren't in force. In actuality here, we - * use 65536 to allow for a write that is a multiple of 4k. Most servers seem - * to be ok with the extra byte even though Windows doesn't send writes that - * are that large. - * - * Citation: - * - * http://blogs.msdn.com/b/openspecification/archive/2009/04/10/smb-maximum-transmit-buffer-size-and-performance-tuning.aspx - */ -#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_RSIZE (60 * 1024) -#define CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_WSIZE (65536) - -/* - * On hosts with high memory, we can't currently support wsize/rsize that are - * larger than we can kmap at once. Cap the rsize/wsize at - * LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_SIZE. We'll never be able to fill a read or write request - * larger than that anyway. - */ -#ifdef CONFIG_HIGHMEM -#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (LAST_PKMAP * PAGE_CACHE_SIZE) -#else /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */ -#define CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT (1<<24) -#endif /* CONFIG_HIGHMEM */ - -static unsigned int -cifs_negotiate_wsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *pvolume_info) -{ - __u64 unix_cap = le64_to_cpu(tcon->fsUnixInfo.Capability); - struct TCP_Server_Info *server = tcon->ses->server; - unsigned int wsize; - - /* start with specified wsize, or default */ - if (pvolume_info->wsize) - wsize = pvolume_info->wsize; - else if (tcon->unix_ext && (unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_WRITE_CAP)) - wsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE; - else - wsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_WSIZE; - - /* can server support 24-bit write sizes? (via UNIX extensions) */ - if (!tcon->unix_ext || !(unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_WRITE_CAP)) - wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_WSIZE); - - /* - * no CAP_LARGE_WRITE_X or is signing enabled without CAP_UNIX set? - * Limit it to max buffer offered by the server, minus the size of the - * WRITEX header, not including the 4 byte RFC1001 length. - */ - if (!(server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_WRITE_X) || - (!(server->capabilities & CAP_UNIX) && - (server->sec_mode & (SECMODE_SIGN_ENABLED|SECMODE_SIGN_REQUIRED)))) - wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, - server->maxBuf - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4); - - /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */ - wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT); - - /* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_WSIZE */ - wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_MAX_WSIZE); - - return wsize; -} - -static unsigned int -cifs_negotiate_rsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *pvolume_info) -{ - __u64 unix_cap = le64_to_cpu(tcon->fsUnixInfo.Capability); - struct TCP_Server_Info *server = tcon->ses->server; - unsigned int rsize, defsize; - - /* - * Set default value... - * - * HACK alert! Ancient servers have very small buffers. Even though - * MS-CIFS indicates that servers are only limited by the client's - * bufsize for reads, testing against win98se shows that it throws - * INVALID_PARAMETER errors if you try to request too large a read. - * OS/2 just sends back short reads. - * - * If the server doesn't advertise CAP_LARGE_READ_X, then assume that - * it can't handle a read request larger than its MaxBufferSize either. - */ - if (tcon->unix_ext && (unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_READ_CAP)) - defsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE; - else if (server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_READ_X) - defsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_RSIZE; - else - defsize = server->maxBuf - sizeof(READ_RSP); - - rsize = pvolume_info->rsize ? pvolume_info->rsize : defsize; - - /* - * no CAP_LARGE_READ_X? Then MS-CIFS states that we must limit this to - * the client's MaxBufferSize. - */ - if (!(server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_READ_X)) - rsize = min_t(unsigned int, CIFSMaxBufSize, rsize); - - /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */ - rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT); - - /* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_RSIZE */ - rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_MAX_RSIZE); - - return rsize; -} - static void cleanup_volume_info_contents(struct smb_vol *volume_info) { @@ -3651,8 +3511,8 @@ try_mount_again: if (!tcon->ipc && server->ops->qfs_tcon) server->ops->qfs_tcon(xid, tcon); - cifs_sb->wsize = cifs_negotiate_wsize(tcon, volume_info); - cifs_sb->rsize = cifs_negotiate_rsize(tcon, volume_info); + cifs_sb->wsize = server->ops->negotiate_wsize(tcon, volume_info); + cifs_sb->rsize = server->ops->negotiate_rsize(tcon, volume_info); /* tune readahead according to rsize */ cifs_sb->bdi.ra_pages = cifs_sb->rsize / PAGE_CACHE_SIZE; diff --git a/fs/cifs/smb1ops.c b/fs/cifs/smb1ops.c index df20dd9e64ca..7e8a2bdd69c8 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/smb1ops.c +++ b/fs/cifs/smb1ops.c @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA */ +#include #include "cifsglob.h" #include "cifsproto.h" #include "cifs_debug.h" @@ -410,6 +411,89 @@ cifs_negotiate(const unsigned int xid, struct cifs_ses *ses) return rc; } +static unsigned int +cifs_negotiate_wsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *volume_info) +{ + __u64 unix_cap = le64_to_cpu(tcon->fsUnixInfo.Capability); + struct TCP_Server_Info *server = tcon->ses->server; + unsigned int wsize; + + /* start with specified wsize, or default */ + if (volume_info->wsize) + wsize = volume_info->wsize; + else if (tcon->unix_ext && (unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_WRITE_CAP)) + wsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE; + else + wsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_WSIZE; + + /* can server support 24-bit write sizes? (via UNIX extensions) */ + if (!tcon->unix_ext || !(unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_WRITE_CAP)) + wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_MAX_RFC1002_WSIZE); + + /* + * no CAP_LARGE_WRITE_X or is signing enabled without CAP_UNIX set? + * Limit it to max buffer offered by the server, minus the size of the + * WRITEX header, not including the 4 byte RFC1001 length. + */ + if (!(server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_WRITE_X) || + (!(server->capabilities & CAP_UNIX) && + (server->sec_mode & (SECMODE_SIGN_ENABLED|SECMODE_SIGN_REQUIRED)))) + wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, + server->maxBuf - sizeof(WRITE_REQ) + 4); + + /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */ + wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT); + + /* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_WSIZE */ + wsize = min_t(unsigned int, wsize, CIFS_MAX_WSIZE); + + return wsize; +} + +static unsigned int +cifs_negotiate_rsize(struct cifs_tcon *tcon, struct smb_vol *volume_info) +{ + __u64 unix_cap = le64_to_cpu(tcon->fsUnixInfo.Capability); + struct TCP_Server_Info *server = tcon->ses->server; + unsigned int rsize, defsize; + + /* + * Set default value... + * + * HACK alert! Ancient servers have very small buffers. Even though + * MS-CIFS indicates that servers are only limited by the client's + * bufsize for reads, testing against win98se shows that it throws + * INVALID_PARAMETER errors if you try to request too large a read. + * OS/2 just sends back short reads. + * + * If the server doesn't advertise CAP_LARGE_READ_X, then assume that + * it can't handle a read request larger than its MaxBufferSize either. + */ + if (tcon->unix_ext && (unix_cap & CIFS_UNIX_LARGE_READ_CAP)) + defsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_IOSIZE; + else if (server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_READ_X) + defsize = CIFS_DEFAULT_NON_POSIX_RSIZE; + else + defsize = server->maxBuf - sizeof(READ_RSP); + + rsize = volume_info->rsize ? volume_info->rsize : defsize; + + /* + * no CAP_LARGE_READ_X? Then MS-CIFS states that we must limit this to + * the client's MaxBufferSize. + */ + if (!(server->capabilities & CAP_LARGE_READ_X)) + rsize = min_t(unsigned int, CIFSMaxBufSize, rsize); + + /* limit to the amount that we can kmap at once */ + rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_KMAP_SIZE_LIMIT); + + /* hard limit of CIFS_MAX_RSIZE */ + rsize = min_t(unsigned int, rsize, CIFS_MAX_RSIZE); + + return rsize; +} + static void cifs_qfs_tcon(const unsigned int xid, struct cifs_tcon *tcon) { @@ -678,6 +762,8 @@ struct smb_version_operations smb1_operations = { .check_trans2 = cifs_check_trans2, .need_neg = cifs_need_neg, .negotiate = cifs_negotiate, + .negotiate_wsize = cifs_negotiate_wsize, + .negotiate_rsize = cifs_negotiate_rsize, .sess_setup = CIFS_SessSetup, .logoff = CIFSSMBLogoff, .tree_connect = CIFSTCon, -- 2.20.1