1 /* 2 * This file and its contents are supplied under the terms of the 3 * Common Development and Distribution License ("CDDL"), version 1.0. 4 * You may only use this file in accordance with the terms of version 5 * 1.0 of the CDDL. 6 * 7 * A full copy of the text of the CDDL should have accompanied this 8 * source. A copy of the CDDL is also available via the Internet at 9 * http://www.illumos.org/license/CDDL. 10 */ 11 12 /* 13 * Copyright 2019 Nexenta by DDN, Inc. All rights reserved. 14 */ 15 16 /* 17 * (SMB1/SMB2) Server-level Oplock support. 18 * 19 * Conceptually, this is a separate layer on top of the 20 * file system (FS) layer oplock code in smb_cmn_oplock.c. 21 * If these layers were more distinct, the FS layer would 22 * need to use call-back functions (installed from here) 23 * to "indicate an oplock break to the server" (see below). 24 * As these layers are all in the same kernel module, the 25 * delivery of these break indications just uses a direct 26 * function call to smb_oplock_ind_break() below. 27 * 28 * This layer is responsible for handling the break indication, 29 * which often requires scheduling a taskq job in the server, 30 * and sending an oplock break mesage to the client using 31 * the appropriate protocol for the open handle affected. 32 * 33 * The details of composing an oplock break message, the 34 * protocol-specific details of requesting an oplock, and 35 * returning that oplock to the client are in the files: 36 * smb_oplock.c, smb2_oplock.c, smb2_lease.c 37 */ 38 39 #include <smbsrv/smb2_kproto.h> 40 #include <smbsrv/smb_oplock.h> 41 42 /* 43 * Verify relationship between BREAK_TO_... and CACHE bits, 44 * used when setting the BREAK_TO_... below. 45 */ 46 #if BREAK_TO_READ_CACHING != (READ_CACHING << BREAK_SHIFT) 47 #error "BREAK_TO_READ_CACHING" 48 #endif 49 #if BREAK_TO_HANDLE_CACHING != (HANDLE_CACHING << BREAK_SHIFT) 50 #error "BREAK_TO_HANDLE_CACHING" 51 #endif 52 #if BREAK_TO_WRITE_CACHING != (WRITE_CACHING << BREAK_SHIFT) 53 #error "BREAK_TO_WRITE_CACHING" 54 #endif 55 #define CACHE_RWH (READ_CACHING | WRITE_CACHING | HANDLE_CACHING) 56 57 /* 58 * This is the timeout used in the thread that sends an 59 * oplock break and waits for the client to respond 60 * before it breaks the oplock locally. 61 */ 62 int smb_oplock_timeout_ack = 30000; /* mSec. */ 63 64 /* 65 * This is the timeout used in threads that have just 66 * finished some sort of oplock request and now must 67 * wait for (possibly multiple) breaks to complete. 68 * This value must be at least a couple seconds LONGER 69 * than the ack timeout above so that I/O callers won't 70 * give up waiting before the local ack timeout. 71 */ 72 int smb_oplock_timeout_def = 45000; /* mSec. */ 73 74 static void smb_oplock_async_break(void *); 75 static void smb_oplock_hdl_clear(smb_ofile_t *); 76 77 78 /* 79 * 2.1.5.17.3 Indicating an Oplock Break to the Server 80 * 81 * The inputs for indicating an oplock break to the server are: 82 * 83 * BreakingOplockOpen: The Open used to request the oplock 84 * that is now breaking. 85 * NewOplockLevel: The type of oplock the requested oplock 86 * has been broken to. Valid values are as follows: 87 * LEVEL_NONE (that is, no oplock) 88 * LEVEL_TWO 89 * A combination of one or more of the following flags: 90 * READ_CACHING 91 * HANDLE_CACHING 92 * WRITE_CACHING 93 * AcknowledgeRequired: A Boolean value; TRUE if the server 94 * MUST acknowledge the oplock break, FALSE if not, 95 * as specified in section 2.1.5.18. 96 * OplockCompletionStatus: The NTSTATUS code to return to the server. 97 * 98 * This algorithm simply represents the completion of an oplock request, 99 * as specified in section 2.1.5.17.1 or section 2.1.5.17.2. The server 100 * is expected to associate the return status from this algorithm with 101 * BreakingOplockOpen, which is the Open passed in when it requested 102 * the oplock that is now breaking. 103 * 104 * It is important to note that because several oplocks can be outstanding 105 * in parallel, although this algorithm represents the completion of an 106 * oplock request, it might not result in the completion of the algorithm 107 * that called it. In particular, calling this algorithm will result in 108 * completion of the caller only if BreakingOplockOpen is the same as the 109 * Open with which the calling algorithm was itself called. To mitigate 110 * confusion, each algorithm that refers to this section will specify 111 * whether that algorithm's operation terminates at that point or not. 112 * 113 * The object store MUST return OplockCompletionStatus, 114 * AcknowledgeRequired, and NewOplockLevel to the server (the algorithm is 115 * as specified in section 2.1.5.17.1 and section 2.1.5.17.2). 116 * 117 * Implementation: 118 * 119 * We use two versions of this function: 120 * smb_oplock_ind_break_in_ack 121 * smb_oplock_ind_break 122 * 123 * The first is used when we're handling an Oplock Break Ack. 124 * The second is used when other operations cause a break, 125 * generally in one of the smb_oplock_break_... functions. 126 * 127 * Note that these are call-back functions that may be called with the 128 * node ofile list rwlock held and the node oplock mutex entered, so 129 * these should ONLY schedule oplock break work, and MUST NOT attempt 130 * any actions that might require either of those locks. 131 */ 132 133 /* 134 * smb_oplock_ind_break_in_ack 135 * 136 * Variant of smb_oplock_ind_break() for the oplock Ack handler. 137 * When we need to indicate another oplock break from within the 138 * Ack handler (during the Ack. of some previous oplock break) 139 * we need to make sure this new break indication goes out only 140 * AFTER the reply to the current break ack. is sent out. 141 * 142 * In this case, we always have an SR (the break ack) so we can 143 * append the "ind break" work to the current SR and let the 144 * request hander thread do this work after the reply is sent. 145 * Note: this is always an SMB2 or later request, because this 146 * only happens for "granular" oplocks, which are SMB2-only. 147 * 148 * This is mostly the same as smb_oplock_ind_break() except: 149 * - The only CompletionStatus possible is STATUS_CANT_GRANT. 150 * - Instead of taskq_dispatch this appends the new SR to 151 * the "post work" queue on the current SR. 152 * 153 * Note called with the node ofile list rwlock held and 154 * the oplock mutex entered. 155 */ 156 void 157 smb_oplock_ind_break_in_ack(smb_request_t *ack_sr, smb_ofile_t *ofile, 158 uint32_t NewLevel, boolean_t AckRequired) 159 { 160 smb_request_t *new_sr; 161 162 /* 163 * This should happen only with SMB2 or later, 164 * but in case that ever changes... 165 */ 166 if (ack_sr->session->dialect < SMB_VERS_2_BASE) { 167 smb_oplock_ind_break(ofile, NewLevel, 168 AckRequired, STATUS_CANT_GRANT); 169 return; 170 } 171 172 /* 173 * We're going to schedule a request that will have a 174 * reference to this ofile. Get the hold first. 175 */ 176 if (!smb_ofile_hold_olbrk(ofile)) { 177 /* It's closing (or whatever). Nothing to do. */ 178 return; 179 } 180 181 /* 182 * When called from Ack processing, we want to use a 183 * request on the session doing the ack. If we can't 184 * allocate a request on that session (because it's 185 * now disconnecting) just fall-back to the normal 186 * oplock break code path which deals with that. 187 * Once we have a request on the ack session, that 188 * session won't go away until the request is done. 189 */ 190 new_sr = smb_request_alloc(ack_sr->session, 0); 191 if (new_sr == NULL) { 192 smb_oplock_ind_break(ofile, NewLevel, 193 AckRequired, STATUS_CANT_GRANT); 194 smb_ofile_release(ofile); 195 return; 196 } 197 198 new_sr->sr_state = SMB_REQ_STATE_SUBMITTED; 199 new_sr->smb2_async = B_TRUE; 200 new_sr->user_cr = zone_kcred(); 201 new_sr->fid_ofile = ofile; 202 if (ofile->f_tree != NULL) { 203 new_sr->tid_tree = ofile->f_tree; 204 smb_tree_hold_internal(ofile->f_tree); 205 } 206 if (ofile->f_user != NULL) { 207 new_sr->uid_user = ofile->f_user; 208 smb_user_hold_internal(ofile->f_user); 209 } 210 new_sr->arg.olbrk.NewLevel = NewLevel; 211 new_sr->arg.olbrk.AckRequired = AckRequired; 212 213 /* 214 * Using smb2_cmd_code to indicate what to call. 215 * work func. will call smb_oplock_send_brk 216 */ 217 new_sr->smb2_cmd_code = SMB2_OPLOCK_BREAK; 218 smb2sr_append_postwork(ack_sr, new_sr); 219 } 220 221 /* 222 * smb_oplock_ind_break 223 * 224 * This is the function described in [MS-FSA] 2.1.5.17.3 225 * which is called many places in the oplock break code. 226 * 227 * Schedule a request & taskq job to do oplock break work 228 * as requested by the FS-level code (smb_cmn_oplock.c). 229 * 230 * Note called with the node ofile list rwlock held and 231 * the oplock mutex entered. 232 */ 233 void 234 smb_oplock_ind_break(smb_ofile_t *ofile, uint32_t NewLevel, 235 boolean_t AckRequired, uint32_t CompletionStatus) 236 { 237 smb_server_t *sv = ofile->f_server; 238 smb_request_t *sr = NULL; 239 240 /* 241 * See notes at smb_oplock_async_break re. CompletionStatus 242 * Check for any invalid codes here, so assert happens in 243 * the thread passing an unexpected value. 244 * The real work happens in a taskq job. 245 */ 246 switch (CompletionStatus) { 247 248 case NT_STATUS_SUCCESS: 249 case STATUS_CANT_GRANT: 250 /* Send break via taskq job. */ 251 break; 252 253 case STATUS_NEW_HANDLE: 254 case NT_STATUS_OPLOCK_HANDLE_CLOSED: 255 smb_oplock_hdl_clear(ofile); 256 return; 257 258 default: 259 ASSERT(0); 260 return; 261 } 262 263 /* 264 * We're going to schedule a request that will have a 265 * reference to this ofile. Get the hold first. 266 */ 267 if (!smb_ofile_hold_olbrk(ofile)) { 268 /* It's closing (or whatever). Nothing to do. */ 269 return; 270 } 271 272 /* 273 * We need a request allocated on the session that owns 274 * this ofile in order to safely send on that session. 275 * 276 * Note that while we hold a ref. on the ofile, it's 277 * f_session will not change. An ofile in state 278 * _ORPHANED will have f_session == NULL, but the 279 * f_session won't _change_ while we have a ref, 280 * and won't be torn down under our feet. 281 * Same for f_tree and f_user 282 * 283 * If f_session is NULL, or it's in a state that doesn't 284 * allow new requests, use the special "server" session. 285 */ 286 if (ofile->f_session != NULL) 287 sr = smb_request_alloc(ofile->f_session, 0); 288 if (sr == NULL) 289 sr = smb_request_alloc(sv->sv_session, 0); 290 291 sr->sr_state = SMB_REQ_STATE_SUBMITTED; 292 sr->smb2_async = B_TRUE; 293 sr->user_cr = zone_kcred(); 294 sr->fid_ofile = ofile; 295 if (ofile->f_tree != NULL) { 296 sr->tid_tree = ofile->f_tree; 297 smb_tree_hold_internal(sr->tid_tree); 298 } 299 if (ofile->f_user != NULL) { 300 sr->uid_user = ofile->f_user; 301 smb_user_hold_internal(sr->uid_user); 302 } 303 sr->arg.olbrk.NewLevel = NewLevel; 304 sr->arg.olbrk.AckRequired = AckRequired; 305 sr->smb2_status = CompletionStatus; 306 307 (void) taskq_dispatch( 308 sv->sv_worker_pool, 309 smb_oplock_async_break, sr, TQ_SLEEP); 310 } 311 312 /* 313 * smb_oplock_async_break 314 * 315 * Called via the taskq to handle an asynchronous oplock break. 316 * We have a hold on the ofile, which will be released in 317 * smb_request_free (via sr->fid_ofile) 318 * 319 * Note we have: sr->uid_user == NULL, sr->tid_tree == NULL. 320 * Nothing called here needs those. 321 * 322 * Note that NewLevel as provided by the FS up-call does NOT 323 * include the GRANULAR flag. The SMB level is expected to 324 * keep track of how each oplock was acquired (by lease or 325 * traditional oplock request) and put the GRANULAR flag 326 * back into the oplock state when calling down to the 327 * FS-level code. Also note that the lease break message 328 * carries only the cache flags, not the GRANULAR flag. 329 */ 330 static void 331 smb_oplock_async_break(void *arg) 332 { 333 smb_request_t *sr = arg; 334 uint32_t CompletionStatus; 335 336 SMB_REQ_VALID(sr); 337 338 CompletionStatus = sr->smb2_status; 339 sr->smb2_status = NT_STATUS_SUCCESS; 340 341 mutex_enter(&sr->sr_mutex); 342 sr->sr_worker = curthread; 343 sr->sr_state = SMB_REQ_STATE_ACTIVE; 344 mutex_exit(&sr->sr_mutex); 345 346 /* 347 * Note that the CompletionStatus from the FS level 348 * (smb_cmn_oplock.c) encodes what kind of action we 349 * need to take at the SMB level. 350 */ 351 switch (CompletionStatus) { 352 353 case STATUS_CANT_GRANT: 354 case NT_STATUS_SUCCESS: 355 smb_oplock_send_brk(sr); 356 break; 357 358 default: 359 /* Checked by caller. */ 360 ASSERT(0); 361 break; 362 } 363 364 if (sr->dh_nvl_dirty) { 365 sr->dh_nvl_dirty = B_FALSE; 366 smb2_dh_update_nvfile(sr); 367 } 368 369 sr->sr_state = SMB_REQ_STATE_COMPLETED; 370 smb_request_free(sr); 371 } 372 373 #ifdef DEBUG 374 int smb_oplock_debug_wait = 0; 375 #endif 376 377 /* 378 * Send an oplock break over the wire, or if we can't, 379 * then process the oplock break locally. 380 * 381 * Note that we have sr->fid_ofile here but all the other 382 * normal sr members may be NULL: uid_user, tid_tree. 383 * Also sr->session may or may not be the same session as 384 * the ofile came from (ofile->f_session) depending on 385 * whether this is a "live" open or an orphaned DH, 386 * where ofile->f_session will be NULL. 387 * 388 * Given that we don't always have a session, we determine 389 * the oplock type (lease etc) from f_oplock.og_dialect. 390 */ 391 void 392 smb_oplock_send_brk(smb_request_t *sr) 393 { 394 smb_ofile_t *ofile; 395 smb_lease_t *lease; 396 uint32_t NewLevel; 397 boolean_t AckReq; 398 uint32_t status; 399 int rc; 400 401 ofile = sr->fid_ofile; 402 NewLevel = sr->arg.olbrk.NewLevel; 403 AckReq = sr->arg.olbrk.AckRequired; 404 lease = ofile->f_lease; 405 406 /* 407 * Build the break message in sr->reply. 408 * It's free'd in smb_request_free(). 409 * Also updates the lease and NewLevel. 410 */ 411 sr->reply.max_bytes = MLEN; 412 if (ofile->f_oplock.og_dialect >= SMB_VERS_2_BASE) { 413 if (lease != NULL) { 414 /* 415 * Oplock state has changed, so 416 * update the epoch. 417 */ 418 mutex_enter(&lease->ls_mutex); 419 lease->ls_epoch++; 420 mutex_exit(&lease->ls_mutex); 421 422 /* Note, needs "old" state in og_state */ 423 smb2_lease_break_notification(sr, 424 (NewLevel & CACHE_RWH), AckReq); 425 NewLevel |= OPLOCK_LEVEL_GRANULAR; 426 } else { 427 smb2_oplock_break_notification(sr, NewLevel); 428 } 429 } else { 430 /* 431 * SMB1 clients should only get Level II oplocks if they 432 * set the capability indicating they know about them. 433 */ 434 if (NewLevel == OPLOCK_LEVEL_TWO && 435 ofile->f_oplock.og_dialect < NT_LM_0_12) 436 NewLevel = OPLOCK_LEVEL_NONE; 437 smb1_oplock_break_notification(sr, NewLevel); 438 } 439 440 /* 441 * Keep track of what we last sent to the client, 442 * preserving the GRANULAR flag (if a lease). 443 * If we're expecting an ACK, set og_breaking 444 * (and maybe lease->ls_breaking) so we can 445 * later find the ofile with breaks pending. 446 */ 447 if (AckReq) { 448 uint32_t BreakTo; 449 450 if (lease != NULL) { 451 BreakTo = (NewLevel & CACHE_RWH) << BREAK_SHIFT; 452 if (BreakTo == 0) 453 BreakTo = BREAK_TO_NO_CACHING; 454 lease->ls_breaking = BreakTo; 455 } else { 456 if ((NewLevel & LEVEL_TWO_OPLOCK) != 0) 457 BreakTo = BREAK_TO_TWO; 458 else 459 BreakTo = BREAK_TO_NONE; 460 } 461 /* Will update og_state in ack. */ 462 ofile->f_oplock.og_breaking = BreakTo; 463 } else { 464 if (lease != NULL) 465 lease->ls_state = NewLevel & CACHE_RWH; 466 ofile->f_oplock.og_state = NewLevel; 467 468 if (ofile->dh_persist) { 469 smb2_dh_update_oplock(sr, ofile); 470 } 471 } 472 473 /* 474 * Try to send the break message to the client. 475 * When we get to multi-channel, this is supposed to 476 * try to send on every channel before giving up. 477 */ 478 if (sr->session == ofile->f_session) 479 rc = smb_session_send(sr->session, 0, &sr->reply); 480 else 481 rc = ENOTCONN; 482 483 if (rc == 0) { 484 /* 485 * OK, we were able to send the break message. 486 * If no ack. required, we're done. 487 */ 488 if (!AckReq) 489 return; 490 491 /* 492 * We're expecting an ACK. Wait in this thread 493 * so we can log clients that don't respond. 494 * 495 * If debugging, may want to break after a 496 * short wait to look into why we might be 497 * holding up progress. (i.e. locks?) 498 */ 499 #ifdef DEBUG 500 if (smb_oplock_debug_wait > 0) { 501 status = smb_oplock_wait_break(ofile->f_node, 502 smb_oplock_debug_wait); 503 if (status == 0) 504 return; 505 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "clnt %s oplock break wait debug", 506 sr->session->ip_addr_str); 507 debug_enter("oplock_wait"); 508 } 509 #endif 510 status = smb_oplock_wait_break(ofile->f_node, 511 smb_oplock_timeout_ack); 512 if (status == 0) 513 return; 514 515 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "clnt %s oplock break timeout", 516 sr->session->ip_addr_str); 517 DTRACE_PROBE1(break_timeout, smb_ofile_t, ofile); 518 519 /* 520 * Will do local ack below. Note, after timeout, 521 * do a break to none or "no caching" regardless 522 * of what the passed in cache level was. 523 * That means: clear all except GRANULAR. 524 */ 525 NewLevel &= OPLOCK_LEVEL_GRANULAR; 526 } else { 527 /* 528 * We were unable to send the oplock break request. 529 * Generally, that means we have no connection to this 530 * client right now, and this ofile will have state 531 * SMB_OFILE_STATE_ORPHANED. We either close the handle 532 * or break the oplock locally, in which case the client 533 * gets the updated oplock state when they reconnect. 534 * Decide whether to keep or close. 535 * 536 * Relevant [MS-SMB2] sections: 537 * 538 * 3.3.4.6 Object Store Indicates an Oplock Break 539 * If Open.Connection is NULL, Open.IsResilient is FALSE, 540 * Open.IsDurable is FALSE and Open.IsPersistent is FALSE, 541 * the server SHOULD close the Open as specified in... 542 * 543 * 3.3.4.7 Object Store Indicates a Lease Break 544 * If Open.Connection is NULL, the server MUST close the 545 * Open as specified in ... for the following cases: 546 * - Open.IsResilient is FALSE, Open.IsDurable is FALSE, 547 * and Open.IsPersistent is FALSE. 548 * - Lease.BreakToLeaseState does not contain 549 * ...HANDLE_CACHING and Open.IsDurable is TRUE. 550 * If Lease.LeaseOpens is empty, (... local ack to "none"). 551 */ 552 553 /* 554 * See similar logic in smb_dh_should_save 555 */ 556 switch (ofile->dh_vers) { 557 case SMB2_RESILIENT: 558 break; /* keep DH */ 559 560 case SMB2_DURABLE_V2: 561 if (ofile->dh_persist) 562 break; /* keep DH */ 563 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 564 case SMB2_DURABLE_V1: 565 /* IS durable (v1 or v2) */ 566 if ((NewLevel & (OPLOCK_LEVEL_BATCH | 567 OPLOCK_LEVEL_CACHE_HANDLE)) != 0) 568 break; /* keep DH */ 569 /* FALLTHROUGH */ 570 case SMB2_NOT_DURABLE: 571 default: 572 smb_ofile_close(ofile, 0); 573 return; 574 } 575 /* Keep this ofile (durable handle). */ 576 577 if (!AckReq) { 578 /* Nothing more to do. */ 579 return; 580 } 581 } 582 583 /* 584 * We get here after either an oplock break ack timeout, 585 * or a send failure for a durable handle type that we 586 * preserve rather than just close. Do local ack. 587 */ 588 ofile->f_oplock.og_breaking = 0; 589 if (lease != NULL) 590 lease->ls_breaking = 0; 591 592 status = smb_oplock_ack_break(sr, ofile, &NewLevel); 593 if (status == NT_STATUS_OPLOCK_BREAK_IN_PROGRESS) { 594 /* Not expecting this status return. */ 595 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "clnt local oplock ack wait?"); 596 (void) smb_oplock_wait_break(ofile->f_node, 597 smb_oplock_timeout_ack); 598 status = 0; 599 } 600 if (status != 0) { 601 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "clnt local oplock ack, " 602 "status=0x%x", status); 603 } 604 605 /* Update og_state as if we heard from the client. */ 606 ofile->f_oplock.og_state = NewLevel; 607 if (lease != NULL) { 608 lease->ls_state = NewLevel & CACHE_RWH; 609 } 610 611 if (ofile->dh_persist) { 612 smb2_dh_update_oplock(sr, ofile); 613 } 614 } 615 616 /* 617 * See: NT_STATUS_OPLOCK_HANDLE_CLOSED above, 618 * and: STATUS_NEW_HANDLE 619 * 620 * The FS-level oplock layer calls this to update the 621 * SMB-level state when a handle loses its oplock. 622 */ 623 static void 624 smb_oplock_hdl_clear(smb_ofile_t *ofile) 625 { 626 smb_lease_t *lease = ofile->f_lease; 627 628 if (lease != NULL) { 629 if (lease->ls_oplock_ofile == ofile) { 630 /* Last close on the lease. */ 631 lease->ls_oplock_ofile = NULL; 632 } 633 } 634 ofile->f_oplock.og_state = 0; 635 ofile->f_oplock.og_breaking = 0; 636 } 637 638 /* 639 * Wait up to "timeout" mSec. for the current oplock "breaking" flags 640 * to be cleared (by smb_oplock_ack_break or smb_oplock_break_CLOSE). 641 * 642 * Callers of the above public oplock functions: 643 * smb_oplock_request() 644 * smb_oplock_ack_break() 645 * smb_oplock_break_OPEN() ... 646 * check for return status == NT_STATUS_OPLOCK_BREAK_IN_PROGRESS 647 * and call this function to wait for the break to complete. 648 * 649 * Most callers should use this default timeout, which they get 650 * by passing zero as the timeout arg. This include places where 651 * we're about to do something that invalidates some cache. 652 */ 653 uint32_t 654 smb_oplock_wait_break(smb_node_t *node, int timeout) /* mSec. */ 655 { 656 smb_oplock_t *ol; 657 clock_t time, rv; 658 uint32_t status = 0; 659 660 if (timeout == 0) 661 timeout = smb_oplock_timeout_def; 662 663 SMB_NODE_VALID(node); 664 ol = &node->n_oplock; 665 666 mutex_enter(&ol->ol_mutex); 667 time = MSEC_TO_TICK(timeout) + ddi_get_lbolt(); 668 669 while ((ol->ol_state & BREAK_ANY) != 0) { 670 ol->waiters++; 671 rv = cv_timedwait(&ol->WaitingOpenCV, 672 &ol->ol_mutex, time); 673 ol->waiters--; 674 if (rv < 0) { 675 status = NT_STATUS_CANNOT_BREAK_OPLOCK; 676 break; 677 } 678 } 679 680 mutex_exit(&ol->ol_mutex); 681 682 return (status); 683 } 684