xref: /linux/block/blk-core.c (revision 363c55cae53742f3f685a1814912c6d4fda245b4)
1 /*
2  * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds
3  * Copyright (C) 1994,      Karl Keyte: Added support for disk statistics
4  * Elevator latency, (C) 2000  Andrea Arcangeli <andrea@suse.de> SuSE
5  * Queue request tables / lock, selectable elevator, Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de>
6  * kernel-doc documentation started by NeilBrown <neilb@cse.unsw.edu.au>
7  *	-  July2000
8  * bio rewrite, highmem i/o, etc, Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de> - may 2001
9  */
10 
11 /*
12  * This handles all read/write requests to block devices
13  */
14 #include <linux/kernel.h>
15 #include <linux/module.h>
16 #include <linux/backing-dev.h>
17 #include <linux/bio.h>
18 #include <linux/blkdev.h>
19 #include <linux/highmem.h>
20 #include <linux/mm.h>
21 #include <linux/kernel_stat.h>
22 #include <linux/string.h>
23 #include <linux/init.h>
24 #include <linux/completion.h>
25 #include <linux/slab.h>
26 #include <linux/swap.h>
27 #include <linux/writeback.h>
28 #include <linux/task_io_accounting_ops.h>
29 #include <linux/fault-inject.h>
30 
31 #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS
32 #include <trace/events/block.h>
33 
34 #include "blk.h"
35 
36 EXPORT_TRACEPOINT_SYMBOL_GPL(block_remap);
37 EXPORT_TRACEPOINT_SYMBOL_GPL(block_bio_complete);
38 
39 static int __make_request(struct request_queue *q, struct bio *bio);
40 
41 /*
42  * For the allocated request tables
43  */
44 static struct kmem_cache *request_cachep;
45 
46 /*
47  * For queue allocation
48  */
49 struct kmem_cache *blk_requestq_cachep;
50 
51 /*
52  * Controlling structure to kblockd
53  */
54 static struct workqueue_struct *kblockd_workqueue;
55 
56 static void drive_stat_acct(struct request *rq, int new_io)
57 {
58 	struct hd_struct *part;
59 	int rw = rq_data_dir(rq);
60 	int cpu;
61 
62 	if (!blk_do_io_stat(rq))
63 		return;
64 
65 	cpu = part_stat_lock();
66 	part = disk_map_sector_rcu(rq->rq_disk, blk_rq_pos(rq));
67 
68 	if (!new_io)
69 		part_stat_inc(cpu, part, merges[rw]);
70 	else {
71 		part_round_stats(cpu, part);
72 		part_inc_in_flight(part);
73 	}
74 
75 	part_stat_unlock();
76 }
77 
78 void blk_queue_congestion_threshold(struct request_queue *q)
79 {
80 	int nr;
81 
82 	nr = q->nr_requests - (q->nr_requests / 8) + 1;
83 	if (nr > q->nr_requests)
84 		nr = q->nr_requests;
85 	q->nr_congestion_on = nr;
86 
87 	nr = q->nr_requests - (q->nr_requests / 8) - (q->nr_requests / 16) - 1;
88 	if (nr < 1)
89 		nr = 1;
90 	q->nr_congestion_off = nr;
91 }
92 
93 /**
94  * blk_get_backing_dev_info - get the address of a queue's backing_dev_info
95  * @bdev:	device
96  *
97  * Locates the passed device's request queue and returns the address of its
98  * backing_dev_info
99  *
100  * Will return NULL if the request queue cannot be located.
101  */
102 struct backing_dev_info *blk_get_backing_dev_info(struct block_device *bdev)
103 {
104 	struct backing_dev_info *ret = NULL;
105 	struct request_queue *q = bdev_get_queue(bdev);
106 
107 	if (q)
108 		ret = &q->backing_dev_info;
109 	return ret;
110 }
111 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_get_backing_dev_info);
112 
113 void blk_rq_init(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
114 {
115 	memset(rq, 0, sizeof(*rq));
116 
117 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&rq->queuelist);
118 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&rq->timeout_list);
119 	rq->cpu = -1;
120 	rq->q = q;
121 	rq->__sector = (sector_t) -1;
122 	INIT_HLIST_NODE(&rq->hash);
123 	RB_CLEAR_NODE(&rq->rb_node);
124 	rq->cmd = rq->__cmd;
125 	rq->cmd_len = BLK_MAX_CDB;
126 	rq->tag = -1;
127 	rq->ref_count = 1;
128 	rq->start_time = jiffies;
129 }
130 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_rq_init);
131 
132 static void req_bio_endio(struct request *rq, struct bio *bio,
133 			  unsigned int nbytes, int error)
134 {
135 	struct request_queue *q = rq->q;
136 
137 	if (&q->bar_rq != rq) {
138 		if (error)
139 			clear_bit(BIO_UPTODATE, &bio->bi_flags);
140 		else if (!test_bit(BIO_UPTODATE, &bio->bi_flags))
141 			error = -EIO;
142 
143 		if (unlikely(nbytes > bio->bi_size)) {
144 			printk(KERN_ERR "%s: want %u bytes done, %u left\n",
145 			       __func__, nbytes, bio->bi_size);
146 			nbytes = bio->bi_size;
147 		}
148 
149 		if (unlikely(rq->cmd_flags & REQ_QUIET))
150 			set_bit(BIO_QUIET, &bio->bi_flags);
151 
152 		bio->bi_size -= nbytes;
153 		bio->bi_sector += (nbytes >> 9);
154 
155 		if (bio_integrity(bio))
156 			bio_integrity_advance(bio, nbytes);
157 
158 		if (bio->bi_size == 0)
159 			bio_endio(bio, error);
160 	} else {
161 
162 		/*
163 		 * Okay, this is the barrier request in progress, just
164 		 * record the error;
165 		 */
166 		if (error && !q->orderr)
167 			q->orderr = error;
168 	}
169 }
170 
171 void blk_dump_rq_flags(struct request *rq, char *msg)
172 {
173 	int bit;
174 
175 	printk(KERN_INFO "%s: dev %s: type=%x, flags=%x\n", msg,
176 		rq->rq_disk ? rq->rq_disk->disk_name : "?", rq->cmd_type,
177 		rq->cmd_flags);
178 
179 	printk(KERN_INFO "  sector %llu, nr/cnr %u/%u\n",
180 	       (unsigned long long)blk_rq_pos(rq),
181 	       blk_rq_sectors(rq), blk_rq_cur_sectors(rq));
182 	printk(KERN_INFO "  bio %p, biotail %p, buffer %p, len %u\n",
183 	       rq->bio, rq->biotail, rq->buffer, blk_rq_bytes(rq));
184 
185 	if (blk_pc_request(rq)) {
186 		printk(KERN_INFO "  cdb: ");
187 		for (bit = 0; bit < BLK_MAX_CDB; bit++)
188 			printk("%02x ", rq->cmd[bit]);
189 		printk("\n");
190 	}
191 }
192 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_dump_rq_flags);
193 
194 /*
195  * "plug" the device if there are no outstanding requests: this will
196  * force the transfer to start only after we have put all the requests
197  * on the list.
198  *
199  * This is called with interrupts off and no requests on the queue and
200  * with the queue lock held.
201  */
202 void blk_plug_device(struct request_queue *q)
203 {
204 	WARN_ON(!irqs_disabled());
205 
206 	/*
207 	 * don't plug a stopped queue, it must be paired with blk_start_queue()
208 	 * which will restart the queueing
209 	 */
210 	if (blk_queue_stopped(q))
211 		return;
212 
213 	if (!queue_flag_test_and_set(QUEUE_FLAG_PLUGGED, q)) {
214 		mod_timer(&q->unplug_timer, jiffies + q->unplug_delay);
215 		trace_block_plug(q);
216 	}
217 }
218 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_plug_device);
219 
220 /**
221  * blk_plug_device_unlocked - plug a device without queue lock held
222  * @q:    The &struct request_queue to plug
223  *
224  * Description:
225  *   Like @blk_plug_device(), but grabs the queue lock and disables
226  *   interrupts.
227  **/
228 void blk_plug_device_unlocked(struct request_queue *q)
229 {
230 	unsigned long flags;
231 
232 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
233 	blk_plug_device(q);
234 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
235 }
236 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_plug_device_unlocked);
237 
238 /*
239  * remove the queue from the plugged list, if present. called with
240  * queue lock held and interrupts disabled.
241  */
242 int blk_remove_plug(struct request_queue *q)
243 {
244 	WARN_ON(!irqs_disabled());
245 
246 	if (!queue_flag_test_and_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_PLUGGED, q))
247 		return 0;
248 
249 	del_timer(&q->unplug_timer);
250 	return 1;
251 }
252 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_remove_plug);
253 
254 /*
255  * remove the plug and let it rip..
256  */
257 void __generic_unplug_device(struct request_queue *q)
258 {
259 	if (unlikely(blk_queue_stopped(q)))
260 		return;
261 	if (!blk_remove_plug(q) && !blk_queue_nonrot(q))
262 		return;
263 
264 	q->request_fn(q);
265 }
266 
267 /**
268  * generic_unplug_device - fire a request queue
269  * @q:    The &struct request_queue in question
270  *
271  * Description:
272  *   Linux uses plugging to build bigger requests queues before letting
273  *   the device have at them. If a queue is plugged, the I/O scheduler
274  *   is still adding and merging requests on the queue. Once the queue
275  *   gets unplugged, the request_fn defined for the queue is invoked and
276  *   transfers started.
277  **/
278 void generic_unplug_device(struct request_queue *q)
279 {
280 	if (blk_queue_plugged(q)) {
281 		spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
282 		__generic_unplug_device(q);
283 		spin_unlock_irq(q->queue_lock);
284 	}
285 }
286 EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_unplug_device);
287 
288 static void blk_backing_dev_unplug(struct backing_dev_info *bdi,
289 				   struct page *page)
290 {
291 	struct request_queue *q = bdi->unplug_io_data;
292 
293 	blk_unplug(q);
294 }
295 
296 void blk_unplug_work(struct work_struct *work)
297 {
298 	struct request_queue *q =
299 		container_of(work, struct request_queue, unplug_work);
300 
301 	trace_block_unplug_io(q);
302 	q->unplug_fn(q);
303 }
304 
305 void blk_unplug_timeout(unsigned long data)
306 {
307 	struct request_queue *q = (struct request_queue *)data;
308 
309 	trace_block_unplug_timer(q);
310 	kblockd_schedule_work(q, &q->unplug_work);
311 }
312 
313 void blk_unplug(struct request_queue *q)
314 {
315 	/*
316 	 * devices don't necessarily have an ->unplug_fn defined
317 	 */
318 	if (q->unplug_fn) {
319 		trace_block_unplug_io(q);
320 		q->unplug_fn(q);
321 	}
322 }
323 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_unplug);
324 
325 /**
326  * blk_start_queue - restart a previously stopped queue
327  * @q:    The &struct request_queue in question
328  *
329  * Description:
330  *   blk_start_queue() will clear the stop flag on the queue, and call
331  *   the request_fn for the queue if it was in a stopped state when
332  *   entered. Also see blk_stop_queue(). Queue lock must be held.
333  **/
334 void blk_start_queue(struct request_queue *q)
335 {
336 	WARN_ON(!irqs_disabled());
337 
338 	queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_STOPPED, q);
339 	__blk_run_queue(q);
340 }
341 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_start_queue);
342 
343 /**
344  * blk_stop_queue - stop a queue
345  * @q:    The &struct request_queue in question
346  *
347  * Description:
348  *   The Linux block layer assumes that a block driver will consume all
349  *   entries on the request queue when the request_fn strategy is called.
350  *   Often this will not happen, because of hardware limitations (queue
351  *   depth settings). If a device driver gets a 'queue full' response,
352  *   or if it simply chooses not to queue more I/O at one point, it can
353  *   call this function to prevent the request_fn from being called until
354  *   the driver has signalled it's ready to go again. This happens by calling
355  *   blk_start_queue() to restart queue operations. Queue lock must be held.
356  **/
357 void blk_stop_queue(struct request_queue *q)
358 {
359 	blk_remove_plug(q);
360 	queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_STOPPED, q);
361 }
362 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_stop_queue);
363 
364 /**
365  * blk_sync_queue - cancel any pending callbacks on a queue
366  * @q: the queue
367  *
368  * Description:
369  *     The block layer may perform asynchronous callback activity
370  *     on a queue, such as calling the unplug function after a timeout.
371  *     A block device may call blk_sync_queue to ensure that any
372  *     such activity is cancelled, thus allowing it to release resources
373  *     that the callbacks might use. The caller must already have made sure
374  *     that its ->make_request_fn will not re-add plugging prior to calling
375  *     this function.
376  *
377  */
378 void blk_sync_queue(struct request_queue *q)
379 {
380 	del_timer_sync(&q->unplug_timer);
381 	del_timer_sync(&q->timeout);
382 	cancel_work_sync(&q->unplug_work);
383 }
384 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_sync_queue);
385 
386 /**
387  * __blk_run_queue - run a single device queue
388  * @q:	The queue to run
389  *
390  * Description:
391  *    See @blk_run_queue. This variant must be called with the queue lock
392  *    held and interrupts disabled.
393  *
394  */
395 void __blk_run_queue(struct request_queue *q)
396 {
397 	blk_remove_plug(q);
398 
399 	if (unlikely(blk_queue_stopped(q)))
400 		return;
401 
402 	if (elv_queue_empty(q))
403 		return;
404 
405 	/*
406 	 * Only recurse once to avoid overrunning the stack, let the unplug
407 	 * handling reinvoke the handler shortly if we already got there.
408 	 */
409 	if (!queue_flag_test_and_set(QUEUE_FLAG_REENTER, q)) {
410 		q->request_fn(q);
411 		queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_REENTER, q);
412 	} else {
413 		queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_PLUGGED, q);
414 		kblockd_schedule_work(q, &q->unplug_work);
415 	}
416 }
417 EXPORT_SYMBOL(__blk_run_queue);
418 
419 /**
420  * blk_run_queue - run a single device queue
421  * @q: The queue to run
422  *
423  * Description:
424  *    Invoke request handling on this queue, if it has pending work to do.
425  *    May be used to restart queueing when a request has completed.
426  */
427 void blk_run_queue(struct request_queue *q)
428 {
429 	unsigned long flags;
430 
431 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
432 	__blk_run_queue(q);
433 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
434 }
435 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_run_queue);
436 
437 void blk_put_queue(struct request_queue *q)
438 {
439 	kobject_put(&q->kobj);
440 }
441 
442 void blk_cleanup_queue(struct request_queue *q)
443 {
444 	/*
445 	 * We know we have process context here, so we can be a little
446 	 * cautious and ensure that pending block actions on this device
447 	 * are done before moving on. Going into this function, we should
448 	 * not have processes doing IO to this device.
449 	 */
450 	blk_sync_queue(q);
451 
452 	mutex_lock(&q->sysfs_lock);
453 	queue_flag_set_unlocked(QUEUE_FLAG_DEAD, q);
454 	mutex_unlock(&q->sysfs_lock);
455 
456 	if (q->elevator)
457 		elevator_exit(q->elevator);
458 
459 	blk_put_queue(q);
460 }
461 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_cleanup_queue);
462 
463 static int blk_init_free_list(struct request_queue *q)
464 {
465 	struct request_list *rl = &q->rq;
466 
467 	rl->count[BLK_RW_SYNC] = rl->count[BLK_RW_ASYNC] = 0;
468 	rl->starved[BLK_RW_SYNC] = rl->starved[BLK_RW_ASYNC] = 0;
469 	rl->elvpriv = 0;
470 	init_waitqueue_head(&rl->wait[BLK_RW_SYNC]);
471 	init_waitqueue_head(&rl->wait[BLK_RW_ASYNC]);
472 
473 	rl->rq_pool = mempool_create_node(BLKDEV_MIN_RQ, mempool_alloc_slab,
474 				mempool_free_slab, request_cachep, q->node);
475 
476 	if (!rl->rq_pool)
477 		return -ENOMEM;
478 
479 	return 0;
480 }
481 
482 struct request_queue *blk_alloc_queue(gfp_t gfp_mask)
483 {
484 	return blk_alloc_queue_node(gfp_mask, -1);
485 }
486 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_alloc_queue);
487 
488 struct request_queue *blk_alloc_queue_node(gfp_t gfp_mask, int node_id)
489 {
490 	struct request_queue *q;
491 	int err;
492 
493 	q = kmem_cache_alloc_node(blk_requestq_cachep,
494 				gfp_mask | __GFP_ZERO, node_id);
495 	if (!q)
496 		return NULL;
497 
498 	q->backing_dev_info.unplug_io_fn = blk_backing_dev_unplug;
499 	q->backing_dev_info.unplug_io_data = q;
500 	q->backing_dev_info.ra_pages =
501 			(VM_MAX_READAHEAD * 1024) / PAGE_CACHE_SIZE;
502 	q->backing_dev_info.state = 0;
503 	q->backing_dev_info.capabilities = BDI_CAP_MAP_COPY;
504 
505 	err = bdi_init(&q->backing_dev_info);
506 	if (err) {
507 		kmem_cache_free(blk_requestq_cachep, q);
508 		return NULL;
509 	}
510 
511 	init_timer(&q->unplug_timer);
512 	setup_timer(&q->timeout, blk_rq_timed_out_timer, (unsigned long) q);
513 	INIT_LIST_HEAD(&q->timeout_list);
514 	INIT_WORK(&q->unplug_work, blk_unplug_work);
515 
516 	kobject_init(&q->kobj, &blk_queue_ktype);
517 
518 	mutex_init(&q->sysfs_lock);
519 	spin_lock_init(&q->__queue_lock);
520 
521 	return q;
522 }
523 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_alloc_queue_node);
524 
525 /**
526  * blk_init_queue  - prepare a request queue for use with a block device
527  * @rfn:  The function to be called to process requests that have been
528  *        placed on the queue.
529  * @lock: Request queue spin lock
530  *
531  * Description:
532  *    If a block device wishes to use the standard request handling procedures,
533  *    which sorts requests and coalesces adjacent requests, then it must
534  *    call blk_init_queue().  The function @rfn will be called when there
535  *    are requests on the queue that need to be processed.  If the device
536  *    supports plugging, then @rfn may not be called immediately when requests
537  *    are available on the queue, but may be called at some time later instead.
538  *    Plugged queues are generally unplugged when a buffer belonging to one
539  *    of the requests on the queue is needed, or due to memory pressure.
540  *
541  *    @rfn is not required, or even expected, to remove all requests off the
542  *    queue, but only as many as it can handle at a time.  If it does leave
543  *    requests on the queue, it is responsible for arranging that the requests
544  *    get dealt with eventually.
545  *
546  *    The queue spin lock must be held while manipulating the requests on the
547  *    request queue; this lock will be taken also from interrupt context, so irq
548  *    disabling is needed for it.
549  *
550  *    Function returns a pointer to the initialized request queue, or %NULL if
551  *    it didn't succeed.
552  *
553  * Note:
554  *    blk_init_queue() must be paired with a blk_cleanup_queue() call
555  *    when the block device is deactivated (such as at module unload).
556  **/
557 
558 struct request_queue *blk_init_queue(request_fn_proc *rfn, spinlock_t *lock)
559 {
560 	return blk_init_queue_node(rfn, lock, -1);
561 }
562 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_init_queue);
563 
564 struct request_queue *
565 blk_init_queue_node(request_fn_proc *rfn, spinlock_t *lock, int node_id)
566 {
567 	struct request_queue *q = blk_alloc_queue_node(GFP_KERNEL, node_id);
568 
569 	if (!q)
570 		return NULL;
571 
572 	q->node = node_id;
573 	if (blk_init_free_list(q)) {
574 		kmem_cache_free(blk_requestq_cachep, q);
575 		return NULL;
576 	}
577 
578 	/*
579 	 * if caller didn't supply a lock, they get per-queue locking with
580 	 * our embedded lock
581 	 */
582 	if (!lock)
583 		lock = &q->__queue_lock;
584 
585 	q->request_fn		= rfn;
586 	q->prep_rq_fn		= NULL;
587 	q->unplug_fn		= generic_unplug_device;
588 	q->queue_flags		= QUEUE_FLAG_DEFAULT;
589 	q->queue_lock		= lock;
590 
591 	/*
592 	 * This also sets hw/phys segments, boundary and size
593 	 */
594 	blk_queue_make_request(q, __make_request);
595 
596 	q->sg_reserved_size = INT_MAX;
597 
598 	blk_set_cmd_filter_defaults(&q->cmd_filter);
599 
600 	/*
601 	 * all done
602 	 */
603 	if (!elevator_init(q, NULL)) {
604 		blk_queue_congestion_threshold(q);
605 		return q;
606 	}
607 
608 	blk_put_queue(q);
609 	return NULL;
610 }
611 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_init_queue_node);
612 
613 int blk_get_queue(struct request_queue *q)
614 {
615 	if (likely(!test_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_DEAD, &q->queue_flags))) {
616 		kobject_get(&q->kobj);
617 		return 0;
618 	}
619 
620 	return 1;
621 }
622 
623 static inline void blk_free_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
624 {
625 	if (rq->cmd_flags & REQ_ELVPRIV)
626 		elv_put_request(q, rq);
627 	mempool_free(rq, q->rq.rq_pool);
628 }
629 
630 static struct request *
631 blk_alloc_request(struct request_queue *q, int flags, int priv, gfp_t gfp_mask)
632 {
633 	struct request *rq = mempool_alloc(q->rq.rq_pool, gfp_mask);
634 
635 	if (!rq)
636 		return NULL;
637 
638 	blk_rq_init(q, rq);
639 
640 	rq->cmd_flags = flags | REQ_ALLOCED;
641 
642 	if (priv) {
643 		if (unlikely(elv_set_request(q, rq, gfp_mask))) {
644 			mempool_free(rq, q->rq.rq_pool);
645 			return NULL;
646 		}
647 		rq->cmd_flags |= REQ_ELVPRIV;
648 	}
649 
650 	return rq;
651 }
652 
653 /*
654  * ioc_batching returns true if the ioc is a valid batching request and
655  * should be given priority access to a request.
656  */
657 static inline int ioc_batching(struct request_queue *q, struct io_context *ioc)
658 {
659 	if (!ioc)
660 		return 0;
661 
662 	/*
663 	 * Make sure the process is able to allocate at least 1 request
664 	 * even if the batch times out, otherwise we could theoretically
665 	 * lose wakeups.
666 	 */
667 	return ioc->nr_batch_requests == q->nr_batching ||
668 		(ioc->nr_batch_requests > 0
669 		&& time_before(jiffies, ioc->last_waited + BLK_BATCH_TIME));
670 }
671 
672 /*
673  * ioc_set_batching sets ioc to be a new "batcher" if it is not one. This
674  * will cause the process to be a "batcher" on all queues in the system. This
675  * is the behaviour we want though - once it gets a wakeup it should be given
676  * a nice run.
677  */
678 static void ioc_set_batching(struct request_queue *q, struct io_context *ioc)
679 {
680 	if (!ioc || ioc_batching(q, ioc))
681 		return;
682 
683 	ioc->nr_batch_requests = q->nr_batching;
684 	ioc->last_waited = jiffies;
685 }
686 
687 static void __freed_request(struct request_queue *q, int sync)
688 {
689 	struct request_list *rl = &q->rq;
690 
691 	if (rl->count[sync] < queue_congestion_off_threshold(q))
692 		blk_clear_queue_congested(q, sync);
693 
694 	if (rl->count[sync] + 1 <= q->nr_requests) {
695 		if (waitqueue_active(&rl->wait[sync]))
696 			wake_up(&rl->wait[sync]);
697 
698 		blk_clear_queue_full(q, sync);
699 	}
700 }
701 
702 /*
703  * A request has just been released.  Account for it, update the full and
704  * congestion status, wake up any waiters.   Called under q->queue_lock.
705  */
706 static void freed_request(struct request_queue *q, int sync, int priv)
707 {
708 	struct request_list *rl = &q->rq;
709 
710 	rl->count[sync]--;
711 	if (priv)
712 		rl->elvpriv--;
713 
714 	__freed_request(q, sync);
715 
716 	if (unlikely(rl->starved[sync ^ 1]))
717 		__freed_request(q, sync ^ 1);
718 }
719 
720 /*
721  * Get a free request, queue_lock must be held.
722  * Returns NULL on failure, with queue_lock held.
723  * Returns !NULL on success, with queue_lock *not held*.
724  */
725 static struct request *get_request(struct request_queue *q, int rw_flags,
726 				   struct bio *bio, gfp_t gfp_mask)
727 {
728 	struct request *rq = NULL;
729 	struct request_list *rl = &q->rq;
730 	struct io_context *ioc = NULL;
731 	const bool is_sync = rw_is_sync(rw_flags) != 0;
732 	int may_queue, priv;
733 
734 	may_queue = elv_may_queue(q, rw_flags);
735 	if (may_queue == ELV_MQUEUE_NO)
736 		goto rq_starved;
737 
738 	if (rl->count[is_sync]+1 >= queue_congestion_on_threshold(q)) {
739 		if (rl->count[is_sync]+1 >= q->nr_requests) {
740 			ioc = current_io_context(GFP_ATOMIC, q->node);
741 			/*
742 			 * The queue will fill after this allocation, so set
743 			 * it as full, and mark this process as "batching".
744 			 * This process will be allowed to complete a batch of
745 			 * requests, others will be blocked.
746 			 */
747 			if (!blk_queue_full(q, is_sync)) {
748 				ioc_set_batching(q, ioc);
749 				blk_set_queue_full(q, is_sync);
750 			} else {
751 				if (may_queue != ELV_MQUEUE_MUST
752 						&& !ioc_batching(q, ioc)) {
753 					/*
754 					 * The queue is full and the allocating
755 					 * process is not a "batcher", and not
756 					 * exempted by the IO scheduler
757 					 */
758 					goto out;
759 				}
760 			}
761 		}
762 		blk_set_queue_congested(q, is_sync);
763 	}
764 
765 	/*
766 	 * Only allow batching queuers to allocate up to 50% over the defined
767 	 * limit of requests, otherwise we could have thousands of requests
768 	 * allocated with any setting of ->nr_requests
769 	 */
770 	if (rl->count[is_sync] >= (3 * q->nr_requests / 2))
771 		goto out;
772 
773 	rl->count[is_sync]++;
774 	rl->starved[is_sync] = 0;
775 
776 	priv = !test_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_ELVSWITCH, &q->queue_flags);
777 	if (priv)
778 		rl->elvpriv++;
779 
780 	if (blk_queue_io_stat(q))
781 		rw_flags |= REQ_IO_STAT;
782 	spin_unlock_irq(q->queue_lock);
783 
784 	rq = blk_alloc_request(q, rw_flags, priv, gfp_mask);
785 	if (unlikely(!rq)) {
786 		/*
787 		 * Allocation failed presumably due to memory. Undo anything
788 		 * we might have messed up.
789 		 *
790 		 * Allocating task should really be put onto the front of the
791 		 * wait queue, but this is pretty rare.
792 		 */
793 		spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
794 		freed_request(q, is_sync, priv);
795 
796 		/*
797 		 * in the very unlikely event that allocation failed and no
798 		 * requests for this direction was pending, mark us starved
799 		 * so that freeing of a request in the other direction will
800 		 * notice us. another possible fix would be to split the
801 		 * rq mempool into READ and WRITE
802 		 */
803 rq_starved:
804 		if (unlikely(rl->count[is_sync] == 0))
805 			rl->starved[is_sync] = 1;
806 
807 		goto out;
808 	}
809 
810 	/*
811 	 * ioc may be NULL here, and ioc_batching will be false. That's
812 	 * OK, if the queue is under the request limit then requests need
813 	 * not count toward the nr_batch_requests limit. There will always
814 	 * be some limit enforced by BLK_BATCH_TIME.
815 	 */
816 	if (ioc_batching(q, ioc))
817 		ioc->nr_batch_requests--;
818 
819 	trace_block_getrq(q, bio, rw_flags & 1);
820 out:
821 	return rq;
822 }
823 
824 /*
825  * No available requests for this queue, unplug the device and wait for some
826  * requests to become available.
827  *
828  * Called with q->queue_lock held, and returns with it unlocked.
829  */
830 static struct request *get_request_wait(struct request_queue *q, int rw_flags,
831 					struct bio *bio)
832 {
833 	const bool is_sync = rw_is_sync(rw_flags) != 0;
834 	struct request *rq;
835 
836 	rq = get_request(q, rw_flags, bio, GFP_NOIO);
837 	while (!rq) {
838 		DEFINE_WAIT(wait);
839 		struct io_context *ioc;
840 		struct request_list *rl = &q->rq;
841 
842 		prepare_to_wait_exclusive(&rl->wait[is_sync], &wait,
843 				TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
844 
845 		trace_block_sleeprq(q, bio, rw_flags & 1);
846 
847 		__generic_unplug_device(q);
848 		spin_unlock_irq(q->queue_lock);
849 		io_schedule();
850 
851 		/*
852 		 * After sleeping, we become a "batching" process and
853 		 * will be able to allocate at least one request, and
854 		 * up to a big batch of them for a small period time.
855 		 * See ioc_batching, ioc_set_batching
856 		 */
857 		ioc = current_io_context(GFP_NOIO, q->node);
858 		ioc_set_batching(q, ioc);
859 
860 		spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
861 		finish_wait(&rl->wait[is_sync], &wait);
862 
863 		rq = get_request(q, rw_flags, bio, GFP_NOIO);
864 	};
865 
866 	return rq;
867 }
868 
869 struct request *blk_get_request(struct request_queue *q, int rw, gfp_t gfp_mask)
870 {
871 	struct request *rq;
872 
873 	BUG_ON(rw != READ && rw != WRITE);
874 
875 	spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
876 	if (gfp_mask & __GFP_WAIT) {
877 		rq = get_request_wait(q, rw, NULL);
878 	} else {
879 		rq = get_request(q, rw, NULL, gfp_mask);
880 		if (!rq)
881 			spin_unlock_irq(q->queue_lock);
882 	}
883 	/* q->queue_lock is unlocked at this point */
884 
885 	return rq;
886 }
887 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_get_request);
888 
889 /**
890  * blk_make_request - given a bio, allocate a corresponding struct request.
891  * @q: target request queue
892  * @bio:  The bio describing the memory mappings that will be submitted for IO.
893  *        It may be a chained-bio properly constructed by block/bio layer.
894  * @gfp_mask: gfp flags to be used for memory allocation
895  *
896  * blk_make_request is the parallel of generic_make_request for BLOCK_PC
897  * type commands. Where the struct request needs to be farther initialized by
898  * the caller. It is passed a &struct bio, which describes the memory info of
899  * the I/O transfer.
900  *
901  * The caller of blk_make_request must make sure that bi_io_vec
902  * are set to describe the memory buffers. That bio_data_dir() will return
903  * the needed direction of the request. (And all bio's in the passed bio-chain
904  * are properly set accordingly)
905  *
906  * If called under none-sleepable conditions, mapped bio buffers must not
907  * need bouncing, by calling the appropriate masked or flagged allocator,
908  * suitable for the target device. Otherwise the call to blk_queue_bounce will
909  * BUG.
910  *
911  * WARNING: When allocating/cloning a bio-chain, careful consideration should be
912  * given to how you allocate bios. In particular, you cannot use __GFP_WAIT for
913  * anything but the first bio in the chain. Otherwise you risk waiting for IO
914  * completion of a bio that hasn't been submitted yet, thus resulting in a
915  * deadlock. Alternatively bios should be allocated using bio_kmalloc() instead
916  * of bio_alloc(), as that avoids the mempool deadlock.
917  * If possible a big IO should be split into smaller parts when allocation
918  * fails. Partial allocation should not be an error, or you risk a live-lock.
919  */
920 struct request *blk_make_request(struct request_queue *q, struct bio *bio,
921 				 gfp_t gfp_mask)
922 {
923 	struct request *rq = blk_get_request(q, bio_data_dir(bio), gfp_mask);
924 
925 	if (unlikely(!rq))
926 		return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
927 
928 	for_each_bio(bio) {
929 		struct bio *bounce_bio = bio;
930 		int ret;
931 
932 		blk_queue_bounce(q, &bounce_bio);
933 		ret = blk_rq_append_bio(q, rq, bounce_bio);
934 		if (unlikely(ret)) {
935 			blk_put_request(rq);
936 			return ERR_PTR(ret);
937 		}
938 	}
939 
940 	return rq;
941 }
942 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_make_request);
943 
944 /**
945  * blk_requeue_request - put a request back on queue
946  * @q:		request queue where request should be inserted
947  * @rq:		request to be inserted
948  *
949  * Description:
950  *    Drivers often keep queueing requests until the hardware cannot accept
951  *    more, when that condition happens we need to put the request back
952  *    on the queue. Must be called with queue lock held.
953  */
954 void blk_requeue_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
955 {
956 	blk_delete_timer(rq);
957 	blk_clear_rq_complete(rq);
958 	trace_block_rq_requeue(q, rq);
959 
960 	if (blk_rq_tagged(rq))
961 		blk_queue_end_tag(q, rq);
962 
963 	BUG_ON(blk_queued_rq(rq));
964 
965 	elv_requeue_request(q, rq);
966 }
967 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_requeue_request);
968 
969 /**
970  * blk_insert_request - insert a special request into a request queue
971  * @q:		request queue where request should be inserted
972  * @rq:		request to be inserted
973  * @at_head:	insert request at head or tail of queue
974  * @data:	private data
975  *
976  * Description:
977  *    Many block devices need to execute commands asynchronously, so they don't
978  *    block the whole kernel from preemption during request execution.  This is
979  *    accomplished normally by inserting aritficial requests tagged as
980  *    REQ_TYPE_SPECIAL in to the corresponding request queue, and letting them
981  *    be scheduled for actual execution by the request queue.
982  *
983  *    We have the option of inserting the head or the tail of the queue.
984  *    Typically we use the tail for new ioctls and so forth.  We use the head
985  *    of the queue for things like a QUEUE_FULL message from a device, or a
986  *    host that is unable to accept a particular command.
987  */
988 void blk_insert_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq,
989 			int at_head, void *data)
990 {
991 	int where = at_head ? ELEVATOR_INSERT_FRONT : ELEVATOR_INSERT_BACK;
992 	unsigned long flags;
993 
994 	/*
995 	 * tell I/O scheduler that this isn't a regular read/write (ie it
996 	 * must not attempt merges on this) and that it acts as a soft
997 	 * barrier
998 	 */
999 	rq->cmd_type = REQ_TYPE_SPECIAL;
1000 
1001 	rq->special = data;
1002 
1003 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
1004 
1005 	/*
1006 	 * If command is tagged, release the tag
1007 	 */
1008 	if (blk_rq_tagged(rq))
1009 		blk_queue_end_tag(q, rq);
1010 
1011 	drive_stat_acct(rq, 1);
1012 	__elv_add_request(q, rq, where, 0);
1013 	__blk_run_queue(q);
1014 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
1015 }
1016 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_insert_request);
1017 
1018 /*
1019  * add-request adds a request to the linked list.
1020  * queue lock is held and interrupts disabled, as we muck with the
1021  * request queue list.
1022  */
1023 static inline void add_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *req)
1024 {
1025 	drive_stat_acct(req, 1);
1026 
1027 	/*
1028 	 * elevator indicated where it wants this request to be
1029 	 * inserted at elevator_merge time
1030 	 */
1031 	__elv_add_request(q, req, ELEVATOR_INSERT_SORT, 0);
1032 }
1033 
1034 static void part_round_stats_single(int cpu, struct hd_struct *part,
1035 				    unsigned long now)
1036 {
1037 	if (now == part->stamp)
1038 		return;
1039 
1040 	if (part->in_flight) {
1041 		__part_stat_add(cpu, part, time_in_queue,
1042 				part->in_flight * (now - part->stamp));
1043 		__part_stat_add(cpu, part, io_ticks, (now - part->stamp));
1044 	}
1045 	part->stamp = now;
1046 }
1047 
1048 /**
1049  * part_round_stats() - Round off the performance stats on a struct disk_stats.
1050  * @cpu: cpu number for stats access
1051  * @part: target partition
1052  *
1053  * The average IO queue length and utilisation statistics are maintained
1054  * by observing the current state of the queue length and the amount of
1055  * time it has been in this state for.
1056  *
1057  * Normally, that accounting is done on IO completion, but that can result
1058  * in more than a second's worth of IO being accounted for within any one
1059  * second, leading to >100% utilisation.  To deal with that, we call this
1060  * function to do a round-off before returning the results when reading
1061  * /proc/diskstats.  This accounts immediately for all queue usage up to
1062  * the current jiffies and restarts the counters again.
1063  */
1064 void part_round_stats(int cpu, struct hd_struct *part)
1065 {
1066 	unsigned long now = jiffies;
1067 
1068 	if (part->partno)
1069 		part_round_stats_single(cpu, &part_to_disk(part)->part0, now);
1070 	part_round_stats_single(cpu, part, now);
1071 }
1072 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(part_round_stats);
1073 
1074 /*
1075  * queue lock must be held
1076  */
1077 void __blk_put_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *req)
1078 {
1079 	if (unlikely(!q))
1080 		return;
1081 	if (unlikely(--req->ref_count))
1082 		return;
1083 
1084 	elv_completed_request(q, req);
1085 
1086 	/* this is a bio leak */
1087 	WARN_ON(req->bio != NULL);
1088 
1089 	/*
1090 	 * Request may not have originated from ll_rw_blk. if not,
1091 	 * it didn't come out of our reserved rq pools
1092 	 */
1093 	if (req->cmd_flags & REQ_ALLOCED) {
1094 		int is_sync = rq_is_sync(req) != 0;
1095 		int priv = req->cmd_flags & REQ_ELVPRIV;
1096 
1097 		BUG_ON(!list_empty(&req->queuelist));
1098 		BUG_ON(!hlist_unhashed(&req->hash));
1099 
1100 		blk_free_request(q, req);
1101 		freed_request(q, is_sync, priv);
1102 	}
1103 }
1104 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__blk_put_request);
1105 
1106 void blk_put_request(struct request *req)
1107 {
1108 	unsigned long flags;
1109 	struct request_queue *q = req->q;
1110 
1111 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
1112 	__blk_put_request(q, req);
1113 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
1114 }
1115 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_put_request);
1116 
1117 void init_request_from_bio(struct request *req, struct bio *bio)
1118 {
1119 	req->cpu = bio->bi_comp_cpu;
1120 	req->cmd_type = REQ_TYPE_FS;
1121 
1122 	/*
1123 	 * inherit FAILFAST from bio (for read-ahead, and explicit FAILFAST)
1124 	 */
1125 	if (bio_rw_ahead(bio))
1126 		req->cmd_flags |= (REQ_FAILFAST_DEV | REQ_FAILFAST_TRANSPORT |
1127 				   REQ_FAILFAST_DRIVER);
1128 	if (bio_failfast_dev(bio))
1129 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_FAILFAST_DEV;
1130 	if (bio_failfast_transport(bio))
1131 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_FAILFAST_TRANSPORT;
1132 	if (bio_failfast_driver(bio))
1133 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_FAILFAST_DRIVER;
1134 
1135 	if (unlikely(bio_discard(bio))) {
1136 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_DISCARD;
1137 		if (bio_barrier(bio))
1138 			req->cmd_flags |= REQ_SOFTBARRIER;
1139 		req->q->prepare_discard_fn(req->q, req);
1140 	} else if (unlikely(bio_barrier(bio)))
1141 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_HARDBARRIER;
1142 
1143 	if (bio_sync(bio))
1144 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_RW_SYNC;
1145 	if (bio_rw_meta(bio))
1146 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_RW_META;
1147 	if (bio_noidle(bio))
1148 		req->cmd_flags |= REQ_NOIDLE;
1149 
1150 	req->errors = 0;
1151 	req->__sector = bio->bi_sector;
1152 	req->ioprio = bio_prio(bio);
1153 	blk_rq_bio_prep(req->q, req, bio);
1154 }
1155 
1156 /*
1157  * Only disabling plugging for non-rotational devices if it does tagging
1158  * as well, otherwise we do need the proper merging
1159  */
1160 static inline bool queue_should_plug(struct request_queue *q)
1161 {
1162 	return !(blk_queue_nonrot(q) && blk_queue_tagged(q));
1163 }
1164 
1165 static int __make_request(struct request_queue *q, struct bio *bio)
1166 {
1167 	struct request *req;
1168 	int el_ret;
1169 	unsigned int bytes = bio->bi_size;
1170 	const unsigned short prio = bio_prio(bio);
1171 	const int sync = bio_sync(bio);
1172 	const int unplug = bio_unplug(bio);
1173 	int rw_flags;
1174 
1175 	/*
1176 	 * low level driver can indicate that it wants pages above a
1177 	 * certain limit bounced to low memory (ie for highmem, or even
1178 	 * ISA dma in theory)
1179 	 */
1180 	blk_queue_bounce(q, &bio);
1181 
1182 	spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
1183 
1184 	if (unlikely(bio_barrier(bio)) || elv_queue_empty(q))
1185 		goto get_rq;
1186 
1187 	el_ret = elv_merge(q, &req, bio);
1188 	switch (el_ret) {
1189 	case ELEVATOR_BACK_MERGE:
1190 		BUG_ON(!rq_mergeable(req));
1191 
1192 		if (!ll_back_merge_fn(q, req, bio))
1193 			break;
1194 
1195 		trace_block_bio_backmerge(q, bio);
1196 
1197 		req->biotail->bi_next = bio;
1198 		req->biotail = bio;
1199 		req->__data_len += bytes;
1200 		req->ioprio = ioprio_best(req->ioprio, prio);
1201 		if (!blk_rq_cpu_valid(req))
1202 			req->cpu = bio->bi_comp_cpu;
1203 		drive_stat_acct(req, 0);
1204 		if (!attempt_back_merge(q, req))
1205 			elv_merged_request(q, req, el_ret);
1206 		goto out;
1207 
1208 	case ELEVATOR_FRONT_MERGE:
1209 		BUG_ON(!rq_mergeable(req));
1210 
1211 		if (!ll_front_merge_fn(q, req, bio))
1212 			break;
1213 
1214 		trace_block_bio_frontmerge(q, bio);
1215 
1216 		bio->bi_next = req->bio;
1217 		req->bio = bio;
1218 
1219 		/*
1220 		 * may not be valid. if the low level driver said
1221 		 * it didn't need a bounce buffer then it better
1222 		 * not touch req->buffer either...
1223 		 */
1224 		req->buffer = bio_data(bio);
1225 		req->__sector = bio->bi_sector;
1226 		req->__data_len += bytes;
1227 		req->ioprio = ioprio_best(req->ioprio, prio);
1228 		if (!blk_rq_cpu_valid(req))
1229 			req->cpu = bio->bi_comp_cpu;
1230 		drive_stat_acct(req, 0);
1231 		if (!attempt_front_merge(q, req))
1232 			elv_merged_request(q, req, el_ret);
1233 		goto out;
1234 
1235 	/* ELV_NO_MERGE: elevator says don't/can't merge. */
1236 	default:
1237 		;
1238 	}
1239 
1240 get_rq:
1241 	/*
1242 	 * This sync check and mask will be re-done in init_request_from_bio(),
1243 	 * but we need to set it earlier to expose the sync flag to the
1244 	 * rq allocator and io schedulers.
1245 	 */
1246 	rw_flags = bio_data_dir(bio);
1247 	if (sync)
1248 		rw_flags |= REQ_RW_SYNC;
1249 
1250 	/*
1251 	 * Grab a free request. This is might sleep but can not fail.
1252 	 * Returns with the queue unlocked.
1253 	 */
1254 	req = get_request_wait(q, rw_flags, bio);
1255 
1256 	/*
1257 	 * After dropping the lock and possibly sleeping here, our request
1258 	 * may now be mergeable after it had proven unmergeable (above).
1259 	 * We don't worry about that case for efficiency. It won't happen
1260 	 * often, and the elevators are able to handle it.
1261 	 */
1262 	init_request_from_bio(req, bio);
1263 
1264 	spin_lock_irq(q->queue_lock);
1265 	if (test_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_SAME_COMP, &q->queue_flags) ||
1266 	    bio_flagged(bio, BIO_CPU_AFFINE))
1267 		req->cpu = blk_cpu_to_group(smp_processor_id());
1268 	if (queue_should_plug(q) && elv_queue_empty(q))
1269 		blk_plug_device(q);
1270 	add_request(q, req);
1271 out:
1272 	if (unplug || !queue_should_plug(q))
1273 		__generic_unplug_device(q);
1274 	spin_unlock_irq(q->queue_lock);
1275 	return 0;
1276 }
1277 
1278 /*
1279  * If bio->bi_dev is a partition, remap the location
1280  */
1281 static inline void blk_partition_remap(struct bio *bio)
1282 {
1283 	struct block_device *bdev = bio->bi_bdev;
1284 
1285 	if (bio_sectors(bio) && bdev != bdev->bd_contains) {
1286 		struct hd_struct *p = bdev->bd_part;
1287 
1288 		bio->bi_sector += p->start_sect;
1289 		bio->bi_bdev = bdev->bd_contains;
1290 
1291 		trace_block_remap(bdev_get_queue(bio->bi_bdev), bio,
1292 				    bdev->bd_dev,
1293 				    bio->bi_sector - p->start_sect);
1294 	}
1295 }
1296 
1297 static void handle_bad_sector(struct bio *bio)
1298 {
1299 	char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE];
1300 
1301 	printk(KERN_INFO "attempt to access beyond end of device\n");
1302 	printk(KERN_INFO "%s: rw=%ld, want=%Lu, limit=%Lu\n",
1303 			bdevname(bio->bi_bdev, b),
1304 			bio->bi_rw,
1305 			(unsigned long long)bio->bi_sector + bio_sectors(bio),
1306 			(long long)(bio->bi_bdev->bd_inode->i_size >> 9));
1307 
1308 	set_bit(BIO_EOF, &bio->bi_flags);
1309 }
1310 
1311 #ifdef CONFIG_FAIL_MAKE_REQUEST
1312 
1313 static DECLARE_FAULT_ATTR(fail_make_request);
1314 
1315 static int __init setup_fail_make_request(char *str)
1316 {
1317 	return setup_fault_attr(&fail_make_request, str);
1318 }
1319 __setup("fail_make_request=", setup_fail_make_request);
1320 
1321 static int should_fail_request(struct bio *bio)
1322 {
1323 	struct hd_struct *part = bio->bi_bdev->bd_part;
1324 
1325 	if (part_to_disk(part)->part0.make_it_fail || part->make_it_fail)
1326 		return should_fail(&fail_make_request, bio->bi_size);
1327 
1328 	return 0;
1329 }
1330 
1331 static int __init fail_make_request_debugfs(void)
1332 {
1333 	return init_fault_attr_dentries(&fail_make_request,
1334 					"fail_make_request");
1335 }
1336 
1337 late_initcall(fail_make_request_debugfs);
1338 
1339 #else /* CONFIG_FAIL_MAKE_REQUEST */
1340 
1341 static inline int should_fail_request(struct bio *bio)
1342 {
1343 	return 0;
1344 }
1345 
1346 #endif /* CONFIG_FAIL_MAKE_REQUEST */
1347 
1348 /*
1349  * Check whether this bio extends beyond the end of the device.
1350  */
1351 static inline int bio_check_eod(struct bio *bio, unsigned int nr_sectors)
1352 {
1353 	sector_t maxsector;
1354 
1355 	if (!nr_sectors)
1356 		return 0;
1357 
1358 	/* Test device or partition size, when known. */
1359 	maxsector = bio->bi_bdev->bd_inode->i_size >> 9;
1360 	if (maxsector) {
1361 		sector_t sector = bio->bi_sector;
1362 
1363 		if (maxsector < nr_sectors || maxsector - nr_sectors < sector) {
1364 			/*
1365 			 * This may well happen - the kernel calls bread()
1366 			 * without checking the size of the device, e.g., when
1367 			 * mounting a device.
1368 			 */
1369 			handle_bad_sector(bio);
1370 			return 1;
1371 		}
1372 	}
1373 
1374 	return 0;
1375 }
1376 
1377 /**
1378  * generic_make_request - hand a buffer to its device driver for I/O
1379  * @bio:  The bio describing the location in memory and on the device.
1380  *
1381  * generic_make_request() is used to make I/O requests of block
1382  * devices. It is passed a &struct bio, which describes the I/O that needs
1383  * to be done.
1384  *
1385  * generic_make_request() does not return any status.  The
1386  * success/failure status of the request, along with notification of
1387  * completion, is delivered asynchronously through the bio->bi_end_io
1388  * function described (one day) else where.
1389  *
1390  * The caller of generic_make_request must make sure that bi_io_vec
1391  * are set to describe the memory buffer, and that bi_dev and bi_sector are
1392  * set to describe the device address, and the
1393  * bi_end_io and optionally bi_private are set to describe how
1394  * completion notification should be signaled.
1395  *
1396  * generic_make_request and the drivers it calls may use bi_next if this
1397  * bio happens to be merged with someone else, and may change bi_dev and
1398  * bi_sector for remaps as it sees fit.  So the values of these fields
1399  * should NOT be depended on after the call to generic_make_request.
1400  */
1401 static inline void __generic_make_request(struct bio *bio)
1402 {
1403 	struct request_queue *q;
1404 	sector_t old_sector;
1405 	int ret, nr_sectors = bio_sectors(bio);
1406 	dev_t old_dev;
1407 	int err = -EIO;
1408 
1409 	might_sleep();
1410 
1411 	if (bio_check_eod(bio, nr_sectors))
1412 		goto end_io;
1413 
1414 	/*
1415 	 * Resolve the mapping until finished. (drivers are
1416 	 * still free to implement/resolve their own stacking
1417 	 * by explicitly returning 0)
1418 	 *
1419 	 * NOTE: we don't repeat the blk_size check for each new device.
1420 	 * Stacking drivers are expected to know what they are doing.
1421 	 */
1422 	old_sector = -1;
1423 	old_dev = 0;
1424 	do {
1425 		char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE];
1426 
1427 		q = bdev_get_queue(bio->bi_bdev);
1428 		if (unlikely(!q)) {
1429 			printk(KERN_ERR
1430 			       "generic_make_request: Trying to access "
1431 				"nonexistent block-device %s (%Lu)\n",
1432 				bdevname(bio->bi_bdev, b),
1433 				(long long) bio->bi_sector);
1434 			goto end_io;
1435 		}
1436 
1437 		if (unlikely(nr_sectors > queue_max_hw_sectors(q))) {
1438 			printk(KERN_ERR "bio too big device %s (%u > %u)\n",
1439 			       bdevname(bio->bi_bdev, b),
1440 			       bio_sectors(bio),
1441 			       queue_max_hw_sectors(q));
1442 			goto end_io;
1443 		}
1444 
1445 		if (unlikely(test_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_DEAD, &q->queue_flags)))
1446 			goto end_io;
1447 
1448 		if (should_fail_request(bio))
1449 			goto end_io;
1450 
1451 		/*
1452 		 * If this device has partitions, remap block n
1453 		 * of partition p to block n+start(p) of the disk.
1454 		 */
1455 		blk_partition_remap(bio);
1456 
1457 		if (bio_integrity_enabled(bio) && bio_integrity_prep(bio))
1458 			goto end_io;
1459 
1460 		if (old_sector != -1)
1461 			trace_block_remap(q, bio, old_dev, old_sector);
1462 
1463 		trace_block_bio_queue(q, bio);
1464 
1465 		old_sector = bio->bi_sector;
1466 		old_dev = bio->bi_bdev->bd_dev;
1467 
1468 		if (bio_check_eod(bio, nr_sectors))
1469 			goto end_io;
1470 
1471 		if (bio_discard(bio) && !q->prepare_discard_fn) {
1472 			err = -EOPNOTSUPP;
1473 			goto end_io;
1474 		}
1475 		if (bio_barrier(bio) && bio_has_data(bio) &&
1476 		    (q->next_ordered == QUEUE_ORDERED_NONE)) {
1477 			err = -EOPNOTSUPP;
1478 			goto end_io;
1479 		}
1480 
1481 		ret = q->make_request_fn(q, bio);
1482 	} while (ret);
1483 
1484 	return;
1485 
1486 end_io:
1487 	bio_endio(bio, err);
1488 }
1489 
1490 /*
1491  * We only want one ->make_request_fn to be active at a time,
1492  * else stack usage with stacked devices could be a problem.
1493  * So use current->bio_{list,tail} to keep a list of requests
1494  * submited by a make_request_fn function.
1495  * current->bio_tail is also used as a flag to say if
1496  * generic_make_request is currently active in this task or not.
1497  * If it is NULL, then no make_request is active.  If it is non-NULL,
1498  * then a make_request is active, and new requests should be added
1499  * at the tail
1500  */
1501 void generic_make_request(struct bio *bio)
1502 {
1503 	if (current->bio_tail) {
1504 		/* make_request is active */
1505 		*(current->bio_tail) = bio;
1506 		bio->bi_next = NULL;
1507 		current->bio_tail = &bio->bi_next;
1508 		return;
1509 	}
1510 	/* following loop may be a bit non-obvious, and so deserves some
1511 	 * explanation.
1512 	 * Before entering the loop, bio->bi_next is NULL (as all callers
1513 	 * ensure that) so we have a list with a single bio.
1514 	 * We pretend that we have just taken it off a longer list, so
1515 	 * we assign bio_list to the next (which is NULL) and bio_tail
1516 	 * to &bio_list, thus initialising the bio_list of new bios to be
1517 	 * added.  __generic_make_request may indeed add some more bios
1518 	 * through a recursive call to generic_make_request.  If it
1519 	 * did, we find a non-NULL value in bio_list and re-enter the loop
1520 	 * from the top.  In this case we really did just take the bio
1521 	 * of the top of the list (no pretending) and so fixup bio_list and
1522 	 * bio_tail or bi_next, and call into __generic_make_request again.
1523 	 *
1524 	 * The loop was structured like this to make only one call to
1525 	 * __generic_make_request (which is important as it is large and
1526 	 * inlined) and to keep the structure simple.
1527 	 */
1528 	BUG_ON(bio->bi_next);
1529 	do {
1530 		current->bio_list = bio->bi_next;
1531 		if (bio->bi_next == NULL)
1532 			current->bio_tail = &current->bio_list;
1533 		else
1534 			bio->bi_next = NULL;
1535 		__generic_make_request(bio);
1536 		bio = current->bio_list;
1537 	} while (bio);
1538 	current->bio_tail = NULL; /* deactivate */
1539 }
1540 EXPORT_SYMBOL(generic_make_request);
1541 
1542 /**
1543  * submit_bio - submit a bio to the block device layer for I/O
1544  * @rw: whether to %READ or %WRITE, or maybe to %READA (read ahead)
1545  * @bio: The &struct bio which describes the I/O
1546  *
1547  * submit_bio() is very similar in purpose to generic_make_request(), and
1548  * uses that function to do most of the work. Both are fairly rough
1549  * interfaces; @bio must be presetup and ready for I/O.
1550  *
1551  */
1552 void submit_bio(int rw, struct bio *bio)
1553 {
1554 	int count = bio_sectors(bio);
1555 
1556 	bio->bi_rw |= rw;
1557 
1558 	/*
1559 	 * If it's a regular read/write or a barrier with data attached,
1560 	 * go through the normal accounting stuff before submission.
1561 	 */
1562 	if (bio_has_data(bio)) {
1563 		if (rw & WRITE) {
1564 			count_vm_events(PGPGOUT, count);
1565 		} else {
1566 			task_io_account_read(bio->bi_size);
1567 			count_vm_events(PGPGIN, count);
1568 		}
1569 
1570 		if (unlikely(block_dump)) {
1571 			char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE];
1572 			printk(KERN_DEBUG "%s(%d): %s block %Lu on %s\n",
1573 			current->comm, task_pid_nr(current),
1574 				(rw & WRITE) ? "WRITE" : "READ",
1575 				(unsigned long long)bio->bi_sector,
1576 				bdevname(bio->bi_bdev, b));
1577 		}
1578 	}
1579 
1580 	generic_make_request(bio);
1581 }
1582 EXPORT_SYMBOL(submit_bio);
1583 
1584 /**
1585  * blk_rq_check_limits - Helper function to check a request for the queue limit
1586  * @q:  the queue
1587  * @rq: the request being checked
1588  *
1589  * Description:
1590  *    @rq may have been made based on weaker limitations of upper-level queues
1591  *    in request stacking drivers, and it may violate the limitation of @q.
1592  *    Since the block layer and the underlying device driver trust @rq
1593  *    after it is inserted to @q, it should be checked against @q before
1594  *    the insertion using this generic function.
1595  *
1596  *    This function should also be useful for request stacking drivers
1597  *    in some cases below, so export this fuction.
1598  *    Request stacking drivers like request-based dm may change the queue
1599  *    limits while requests are in the queue (e.g. dm's table swapping).
1600  *    Such request stacking drivers should check those requests agaist
1601  *    the new queue limits again when they dispatch those requests,
1602  *    although such checkings are also done against the old queue limits
1603  *    when submitting requests.
1604  */
1605 int blk_rq_check_limits(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
1606 {
1607 	if (blk_rq_sectors(rq) > queue_max_sectors(q) ||
1608 	    blk_rq_bytes(rq) > queue_max_hw_sectors(q) << 9) {
1609 		printk(KERN_ERR "%s: over max size limit.\n", __func__);
1610 		return -EIO;
1611 	}
1612 
1613 	/*
1614 	 * queue's settings related to segment counting like q->bounce_pfn
1615 	 * may differ from that of other stacking queues.
1616 	 * Recalculate it to check the request correctly on this queue's
1617 	 * limitation.
1618 	 */
1619 	blk_recalc_rq_segments(rq);
1620 	if (rq->nr_phys_segments > queue_max_phys_segments(q) ||
1621 	    rq->nr_phys_segments > queue_max_hw_segments(q)) {
1622 		printk(KERN_ERR "%s: over max segments limit.\n", __func__);
1623 		return -EIO;
1624 	}
1625 
1626 	return 0;
1627 }
1628 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_rq_check_limits);
1629 
1630 /**
1631  * blk_insert_cloned_request - Helper for stacking drivers to submit a request
1632  * @q:  the queue to submit the request
1633  * @rq: the request being queued
1634  */
1635 int blk_insert_cloned_request(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq)
1636 {
1637 	unsigned long flags;
1638 
1639 	if (blk_rq_check_limits(q, rq))
1640 		return -EIO;
1641 
1642 #ifdef CONFIG_FAIL_MAKE_REQUEST
1643 	if (rq->rq_disk && rq->rq_disk->part0.make_it_fail &&
1644 	    should_fail(&fail_make_request, blk_rq_bytes(rq)))
1645 		return -EIO;
1646 #endif
1647 
1648 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
1649 
1650 	/*
1651 	 * Submitting request must be dequeued before calling this function
1652 	 * because it will be linked to another request_queue
1653 	 */
1654 	BUG_ON(blk_queued_rq(rq));
1655 
1656 	drive_stat_acct(rq, 1);
1657 	__elv_add_request(q, rq, ELEVATOR_INSERT_BACK, 0);
1658 
1659 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
1660 
1661 	return 0;
1662 }
1663 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_insert_cloned_request);
1664 
1665 static void blk_account_io_completion(struct request *req, unsigned int bytes)
1666 {
1667 	if (blk_do_io_stat(req)) {
1668 		const int rw = rq_data_dir(req);
1669 		struct hd_struct *part;
1670 		int cpu;
1671 
1672 		cpu = part_stat_lock();
1673 		part = disk_map_sector_rcu(req->rq_disk, blk_rq_pos(req));
1674 		part_stat_add(cpu, part, sectors[rw], bytes >> 9);
1675 		part_stat_unlock();
1676 	}
1677 }
1678 
1679 static void blk_account_io_done(struct request *req)
1680 {
1681 	/*
1682 	 * Account IO completion.  bar_rq isn't accounted as a normal
1683 	 * IO on queueing nor completion.  Accounting the containing
1684 	 * request is enough.
1685 	 */
1686 	if (blk_do_io_stat(req) && req != &req->q->bar_rq) {
1687 		unsigned long duration = jiffies - req->start_time;
1688 		const int rw = rq_data_dir(req);
1689 		struct hd_struct *part;
1690 		int cpu;
1691 
1692 		cpu = part_stat_lock();
1693 		part = disk_map_sector_rcu(req->rq_disk, blk_rq_pos(req));
1694 
1695 		part_stat_inc(cpu, part, ios[rw]);
1696 		part_stat_add(cpu, part, ticks[rw], duration);
1697 		part_round_stats(cpu, part);
1698 		part_dec_in_flight(part);
1699 
1700 		part_stat_unlock();
1701 	}
1702 }
1703 
1704 /**
1705  * blk_peek_request - peek at the top of a request queue
1706  * @q: request queue to peek at
1707  *
1708  * Description:
1709  *     Return the request at the top of @q.  The returned request
1710  *     should be started using blk_start_request() before LLD starts
1711  *     processing it.
1712  *
1713  * Return:
1714  *     Pointer to the request at the top of @q if available.  Null
1715  *     otherwise.
1716  *
1717  * Context:
1718  *     queue_lock must be held.
1719  */
1720 struct request *blk_peek_request(struct request_queue *q)
1721 {
1722 	struct request *rq;
1723 	int ret;
1724 
1725 	while ((rq = __elv_next_request(q)) != NULL) {
1726 		if (!(rq->cmd_flags & REQ_STARTED)) {
1727 			/*
1728 			 * This is the first time the device driver
1729 			 * sees this request (possibly after
1730 			 * requeueing).  Notify IO scheduler.
1731 			 */
1732 			if (blk_sorted_rq(rq))
1733 				elv_activate_rq(q, rq);
1734 
1735 			/*
1736 			 * just mark as started even if we don't start
1737 			 * it, a request that has been delayed should
1738 			 * not be passed by new incoming requests
1739 			 */
1740 			rq->cmd_flags |= REQ_STARTED;
1741 			trace_block_rq_issue(q, rq);
1742 		}
1743 
1744 		if (!q->boundary_rq || q->boundary_rq == rq) {
1745 			q->end_sector = rq_end_sector(rq);
1746 			q->boundary_rq = NULL;
1747 		}
1748 
1749 		if (rq->cmd_flags & REQ_DONTPREP)
1750 			break;
1751 
1752 		if (q->dma_drain_size && blk_rq_bytes(rq)) {
1753 			/*
1754 			 * make sure space for the drain appears we
1755 			 * know we can do this because max_hw_segments
1756 			 * has been adjusted to be one fewer than the
1757 			 * device can handle
1758 			 */
1759 			rq->nr_phys_segments++;
1760 		}
1761 
1762 		if (!q->prep_rq_fn)
1763 			break;
1764 
1765 		ret = q->prep_rq_fn(q, rq);
1766 		if (ret == BLKPREP_OK) {
1767 			break;
1768 		} else if (ret == BLKPREP_DEFER) {
1769 			/*
1770 			 * the request may have been (partially) prepped.
1771 			 * we need to keep this request in the front to
1772 			 * avoid resource deadlock.  REQ_STARTED will
1773 			 * prevent other fs requests from passing this one.
1774 			 */
1775 			if (q->dma_drain_size && blk_rq_bytes(rq) &&
1776 			    !(rq->cmd_flags & REQ_DONTPREP)) {
1777 				/*
1778 				 * remove the space for the drain we added
1779 				 * so that we don't add it again
1780 				 */
1781 				--rq->nr_phys_segments;
1782 			}
1783 
1784 			rq = NULL;
1785 			break;
1786 		} else if (ret == BLKPREP_KILL) {
1787 			rq->cmd_flags |= REQ_QUIET;
1788 			/*
1789 			 * Mark this request as started so we don't trigger
1790 			 * any debug logic in the end I/O path.
1791 			 */
1792 			blk_start_request(rq);
1793 			__blk_end_request_all(rq, -EIO);
1794 		} else {
1795 			printk(KERN_ERR "%s: bad return=%d\n", __func__, ret);
1796 			break;
1797 		}
1798 	}
1799 
1800 	return rq;
1801 }
1802 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_peek_request);
1803 
1804 void blk_dequeue_request(struct request *rq)
1805 {
1806 	struct request_queue *q = rq->q;
1807 
1808 	BUG_ON(list_empty(&rq->queuelist));
1809 	BUG_ON(ELV_ON_HASH(rq));
1810 
1811 	list_del_init(&rq->queuelist);
1812 
1813 	/*
1814 	 * the time frame between a request being removed from the lists
1815 	 * and to it is freed is accounted as io that is in progress at
1816 	 * the driver side.
1817 	 */
1818 	if (blk_account_rq(rq))
1819 		q->in_flight[rq_is_sync(rq)]++;
1820 }
1821 
1822 /**
1823  * blk_start_request - start request processing on the driver
1824  * @req: request to dequeue
1825  *
1826  * Description:
1827  *     Dequeue @req and start timeout timer on it.  This hands off the
1828  *     request to the driver.
1829  *
1830  *     Block internal functions which don't want to start timer should
1831  *     call blk_dequeue_request().
1832  *
1833  * Context:
1834  *     queue_lock must be held.
1835  */
1836 void blk_start_request(struct request *req)
1837 {
1838 	blk_dequeue_request(req);
1839 
1840 	/*
1841 	 * We are now handing the request to the hardware, initialize
1842 	 * resid_len to full count and add the timeout handler.
1843 	 */
1844 	req->resid_len = blk_rq_bytes(req);
1845 	if (unlikely(blk_bidi_rq(req)))
1846 		req->next_rq->resid_len = blk_rq_bytes(req->next_rq);
1847 
1848 	blk_add_timer(req);
1849 }
1850 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_start_request);
1851 
1852 /**
1853  * blk_fetch_request - fetch a request from a request queue
1854  * @q: request queue to fetch a request from
1855  *
1856  * Description:
1857  *     Return the request at the top of @q.  The request is started on
1858  *     return and LLD can start processing it immediately.
1859  *
1860  * Return:
1861  *     Pointer to the request at the top of @q if available.  Null
1862  *     otherwise.
1863  *
1864  * Context:
1865  *     queue_lock must be held.
1866  */
1867 struct request *blk_fetch_request(struct request_queue *q)
1868 {
1869 	struct request *rq;
1870 
1871 	rq = blk_peek_request(q);
1872 	if (rq)
1873 		blk_start_request(rq);
1874 	return rq;
1875 }
1876 EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_fetch_request);
1877 
1878 /**
1879  * blk_update_request - Special helper function for request stacking drivers
1880  * @req:      the request being processed
1881  * @error:    %0 for success, < %0 for error
1882  * @nr_bytes: number of bytes to complete @req
1883  *
1884  * Description:
1885  *     Ends I/O on a number of bytes attached to @req, but doesn't complete
1886  *     the request structure even if @req doesn't have leftover.
1887  *     If @req has leftover, sets it up for the next range of segments.
1888  *
1889  *     This special helper function is only for request stacking drivers
1890  *     (e.g. request-based dm) so that they can handle partial completion.
1891  *     Actual device drivers should use blk_end_request instead.
1892  *
1893  *     Passing the result of blk_rq_bytes() as @nr_bytes guarantees
1894  *     %false return from this function.
1895  *
1896  * Return:
1897  *     %false - this request doesn't have any more data
1898  *     %true  - this request has more data
1899  **/
1900 bool blk_update_request(struct request *req, int error, unsigned int nr_bytes)
1901 {
1902 	int total_bytes, bio_nbytes, next_idx = 0;
1903 	struct bio *bio;
1904 
1905 	if (!req->bio)
1906 		return false;
1907 
1908 	trace_block_rq_complete(req->q, req);
1909 
1910 	/*
1911 	 * For fs requests, rq is just carrier of independent bio's
1912 	 * and each partial completion should be handled separately.
1913 	 * Reset per-request error on each partial completion.
1914 	 *
1915 	 * TODO: tj: This is too subtle.  It would be better to let
1916 	 * low level drivers do what they see fit.
1917 	 */
1918 	if (blk_fs_request(req))
1919 		req->errors = 0;
1920 
1921 	if (error && (blk_fs_request(req) && !(req->cmd_flags & REQ_QUIET))) {
1922 		printk(KERN_ERR "end_request: I/O error, dev %s, sector %llu\n",
1923 				req->rq_disk ? req->rq_disk->disk_name : "?",
1924 				(unsigned long long)blk_rq_pos(req));
1925 	}
1926 
1927 	blk_account_io_completion(req, nr_bytes);
1928 
1929 	total_bytes = bio_nbytes = 0;
1930 	while ((bio = req->bio) != NULL) {
1931 		int nbytes;
1932 
1933 		if (nr_bytes >= bio->bi_size) {
1934 			req->bio = bio->bi_next;
1935 			nbytes = bio->bi_size;
1936 			req_bio_endio(req, bio, nbytes, error);
1937 			next_idx = 0;
1938 			bio_nbytes = 0;
1939 		} else {
1940 			int idx = bio->bi_idx + next_idx;
1941 
1942 			if (unlikely(idx >= bio->bi_vcnt)) {
1943 				blk_dump_rq_flags(req, "__end_that");
1944 				printk(KERN_ERR "%s: bio idx %d >= vcnt %d\n",
1945 				       __func__, idx, bio->bi_vcnt);
1946 				break;
1947 			}
1948 
1949 			nbytes = bio_iovec_idx(bio, idx)->bv_len;
1950 			BIO_BUG_ON(nbytes > bio->bi_size);
1951 
1952 			/*
1953 			 * not a complete bvec done
1954 			 */
1955 			if (unlikely(nbytes > nr_bytes)) {
1956 				bio_nbytes += nr_bytes;
1957 				total_bytes += nr_bytes;
1958 				break;
1959 			}
1960 
1961 			/*
1962 			 * advance to the next vector
1963 			 */
1964 			next_idx++;
1965 			bio_nbytes += nbytes;
1966 		}
1967 
1968 		total_bytes += nbytes;
1969 		nr_bytes -= nbytes;
1970 
1971 		bio = req->bio;
1972 		if (bio) {
1973 			/*
1974 			 * end more in this run, or just return 'not-done'
1975 			 */
1976 			if (unlikely(nr_bytes <= 0))
1977 				break;
1978 		}
1979 	}
1980 
1981 	/*
1982 	 * completely done
1983 	 */
1984 	if (!req->bio) {
1985 		/*
1986 		 * Reset counters so that the request stacking driver
1987 		 * can find how many bytes remain in the request
1988 		 * later.
1989 		 */
1990 		req->__data_len = 0;
1991 		return false;
1992 	}
1993 
1994 	/*
1995 	 * if the request wasn't completed, update state
1996 	 */
1997 	if (bio_nbytes) {
1998 		req_bio_endio(req, bio, bio_nbytes, error);
1999 		bio->bi_idx += next_idx;
2000 		bio_iovec(bio)->bv_offset += nr_bytes;
2001 		bio_iovec(bio)->bv_len -= nr_bytes;
2002 	}
2003 
2004 	req->__data_len -= total_bytes;
2005 	req->buffer = bio_data(req->bio);
2006 
2007 	/* update sector only for requests with clear definition of sector */
2008 	if (blk_fs_request(req) || blk_discard_rq(req))
2009 		req->__sector += total_bytes >> 9;
2010 
2011 	/*
2012 	 * If total number of sectors is less than the first segment
2013 	 * size, something has gone terribly wrong.
2014 	 */
2015 	if (blk_rq_bytes(req) < blk_rq_cur_bytes(req)) {
2016 		printk(KERN_ERR "blk: request botched\n");
2017 		req->__data_len = blk_rq_cur_bytes(req);
2018 	}
2019 
2020 	/* recalculate the number of segments */
2021 	blk_recalc_rq_segments(req);
2022 
2023 	return true;
2024 }
2025 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_update_request);
2026 
2027 static bool blk_update_bidi_request(struct request *rq, int error,
2028 				    unsigned int nr_bytes,
2029 				    unsigned int bidi_bytes)
2030 {
2031 	if (blk_update_request(rq, error, nr_bytes))
2032 		return true;
2033 
2034 	/* Bidi request must be completed as a whole */
2035 	if (unlikely(blk_bidi_rq(rq)) &&
2036 	    blk_update_request(rq->next_rq, error, bidi_bytes))
2037 		return true;
2038 
2039 	add_disk_randomness(rq->rq_disk);
2040 
2041 	return false;
2042 }
2043 
2044 /*
2045  * queue lock must be held
2046  */
2047 static void blk_finish_request(struct request *req, int error)
2048 {
2049 	if (blk_rq_tagged(req))
2050 		blk_queue_end_tag(req->q, req);
2051 
2052 	BUG_ON(blk_queued_rq(req));
2053 
2054 	if (unlikely(laptop_mode) && blk_fs_request(req))
2055 		laptop_io_completion();
2056 
2057 	blk_delete_timer(req);
2058 
2059 	blk_account_io_done(req);
2060 
2061 	if (req->end_io)
2062 		req->end_io(req, error);
2063 	else {
2064 		if (blk_bidi_rq(req))
2065 			__blk_put_request(req->next_rq->q, req->next_rq);
2066 
2067 		__blk_put_request(req->q, req);
2068 	}
2069 }
2070 
2071 /**
2072  * blk_end_bidi_request - Complete a bidi request
2073  * @rq:         the request to complete
2074  * @error:      %0 for success, < %0 for error
2075  * @nr_bytes:   number of bytes to complete @rq
2076  * @bidi_bytes: number of bytes to complete @rq->next_rq
2077  *
2078  * Description:
2079  *     Ends I/O on a number of bytes attached to @rq and @rq->next_rq.
2080  *     Drivers that supports bidi can safely call this member for any
2081  *     type of request, bidi or uni.  In the later case @bidi_bytes is
2082  *     just ignored.
2083  *
2084  * Return:
2085  *     %false - we are done with this request
2086  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2087  **/
2088 static bool blk_end_bidi_request(struct request *rq, int error,
2089 				 unsigned int nr_bytes, unsigned int bidi_bytes)
2090 {
2091 	struct request_queue *q = rq->q;
2092 	unsigned long flags;
2093 
2094 	if (blk_update_bidi_request(rq, error, nr_bytes, bidi_bytes))
2095 		return true;
2096 
2097 	spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
2098 	blk_finish_request(rq, error);
2099 	spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
2100 
2101 	return false;
2102 }
2103 
2104 /**
2105  * __blk_end_bidi_request - Complete a bidi request with queue lock held
2106  * @rq:         the request to complete
2107  * @error:      %0 for success, < %0 for error
2108  * @nr_bytes:   number of bytes to complete @rq
2109  * @bidi_bytes: number of bytes to complete @rq->next_rq
2110  *
2111  * Description:
2112  *     Identical to blk_end_bidi_request() except that queue lock is
2113  *     assumed to be locked on entry and remains so on return.
2114  *
2115  * Return:
2116  *     %false - we are done with this request
2117  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2118  **/
2119 static bool __blk_end_bidi_request(struct request *rq, int error,
2120 				   unsigned int nr_bytes, unsigned int bidi_bytes)
2121 {
2122 	if (blk_update_bidi_request(rq, error, nr_bytes, bidi_bytes))
2123 		return true;
2124 
2125 	blk_finish_request(rq, error);
2126 
2127 	return false;
2128 }
2129 
2130 /**
2131  * blk_end_request - Helper function for drivers to complete the request.
2132  * @rq:       the request being processed
2133  * @error:    %0 for success, < %0 for error
2134  * @nr_bytes: number of bytes to complete
2135  *
2136  * Description:
2137  *     Ends I/O on a number of bytes attached to @rq.
2138  *     If @rq has leftover, sets it up for the next range of segments.
2139  *
2140  * Return:
2141  *     %false - we are done with this request
2142  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2143  **/
2144 bool blk_end_request(struct request *rq, int error, unsigned int nr_bytes)
2145 {
2146 	return blk_end_bidi_request(rq, error, nr_bytes, 0);
2147 }
2148 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_end_request);
2149 
2150 /**
2151  * blk_end_request_all - Helper function for drives to finish the request.
2152  * @rq: the request to finish
2153  * @error: %0 for success, < %0 for error
2154  *
2155  * Description:
2156  *     Completely finish @rq.
2157  */
2158 void blk_end_request_all(struct request *rq, int error)
2159 {
2160 	bool pending;
2161 	unsigned int bidi_bytes = 0;
2162 
2163 	if (unlikely(blk_bidi_rq(rq)))
2164 		bidi_bytes = blk_rq_bytes(rq->next_rq);
2165 
2166 	pending = blk_end_bidi_request(rq, error, blk_rq_bytes(rq), bidi_bytes);
2167 	BUG_ON(pending);
2168 }
2169 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_end_request_all);
2170 
2171 /**
2172  * blk_end_request_cur - Helper function to finish the current request chunk.
2173  * @rq: the request to finish the current chunk for
2174  * @error: %0 for success, < %0 for error
2175  *
2176  * Description:
2177  *     Complete the current consecutively mapped chunk from @rq.
2178  *
2179  * Return:
2180  *     %false - we are done with this request
2181  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2182  */
2183 bool blk_end_request_cur(struct request *rq, int error)
2184 {
2185 	return blk_end_request(rq, error, blk_rq_cur_bytes(rq));
2186 }
2187 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_end_request_cur);
2188 
2189 /**
2190  * __blk_end_request - Helper function for drivers to complete the request.
2191  * @rq:       the request being processed
2192  * @error:    %0 for success, < %0 for error
2193  * @nr_bytes: number of bytes to complete
2194  *
2195  * Description:
2196  *     Must be called with queue lock held unlike blk_end_request().
2197  *
2198  * Return:
2199  *     %false - we are done with this request
2200  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2201  **/
2202 bool __blk_end_request(struct request *rq, int error, unsigned int nr_bytes)
2203 {
2204 	return __blk_end_bidi_request(rq, error, nr_bytes, 0);
2205 }
2206 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__blk_end_request);
2207 
2208 /**
2209  * __blk_end_request_all - Helper function for drives to finish the request.
2210  * @rq: the request to finish
2211  * @error: %0 for success, < %0 for error
2212  *
2213  * Description:
2214  *     Completely finish @rq.  Must be called with queue lock held.
2215  */
2216 void __blk_end_request_all(struct request *rq, int error)
2217 {
2218 	bool pending;
2219 	unsigned int bidi_bytes = 0;
2220 
2221 	if (unlikely(blk_bidi_rq(rq)))
2222 		bidi_bytes = blk_rq_bytes(rq->next_rq);
2223 
2224 	pending = __blk_end_bidi_request(rq, error, blk_rq_bytes(rq), bidi_bytes);
2225 	BUG_ON(pending);
2226 }
2227 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__blk_end_request_all);
2228 
2229 /**
2230  * __blk_end_request_cur - Helper function to finish the current request chunk.
2231  * @rq: the request to finish the current chunk for
2232  * @error: %0 for success, < %0 for error
2233  *
2234  * Description:
2235  *     Complete the current consecutively mapped chunk from @rq.  Must
2236  *     be called with queue lock held.
2237  *
2238  * Return:
2239  *     %false - we are done with this request
2240  *     %true  - still buffers pending for this request
2241  */
2242 bool __blk_end_request_cur(struct request *rq, int error)
2243 {
2244 	return __blk_end_request(rq, error, blk_rq_cur_bytes(rq));
2245 }
2246 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__blk_end_request_cur);
2247 
2248 void blk_rq_bio_prep(struct request_queue *q, struct request *rq,
2249 		     struct bio *bio)
2250 {
2251 	/* Bit 0 (R/W) is identical in rq->cmd_flags and bio->bi_rw, and
2252 	   we want BIO_RW_AHEAD (bit 1) to imply REQ_FAILFAST (bit 1). */
2253 	rq->cmd_flags |= (bio->bi_rw & 3);
2254 
2255 	if (bio_has_data(bio)) {
2256 		rq->nr_phys_segments = bio_phys_segments(q, bio);
2257 		rq->buffer = bio_data(bio);
2258 	}
2259 	rq->__data_len = bio->bi_size;
2260 	rq->bio = rq->biotail = bio;
2261 
2262 	if (bio->bi_bdev)
2263 		rq->rq_disk = bio->bi_bdev->bd_disk;
2264 }
2265 
2266 /**
2267  * blk_lld_busy - Check if underlying low-level drivers of a device are busy
2268  * @q : the queue of the device being checked
2269  *
2270  * Description:
2271  *    Check if underlying low-level drivers of a device are busy.
2272  *    If the drivers want to export their busy state, they must set own
2273  *    exporting function using blk_queue_lld_busy() first.
2274  *
2275  *    Basically, this function is used only by request stacking drivers
2276  *    to stop dispatching requests to underlying devices when underlying
2277  *    devices are busy.  This behavior helps more I/O merging on the queue
2278  *    of the request stacking driver and prevents I/O throughput regression
2279  *    on burst I/O load.
2280  *
2281  * Return:
2282  *    0 - Not busy (The request stacking driver should dispatch request)
2283  *    1 - Busy (The request stacking driver should stop dispatching request)
2284  */
2285 int blk_lld_busy(struct request_queue *q)
2286 {
2287 	if (q->lld_busy_fn)
2288 		return q->lld_busy_fn(q);
2289 
2290 	return 0;
2291 }
2292 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_lld_busy);
2293 
2294 /**
2295  * blk_rq_unprep_clone - Helper function to free all bios in a cloned request
2296  * @rq: the clone request to be cleaned up
2297  *
2298  * Description:
2299  *     Free all bios in @rq for a cloned request.
2300  */
2301 void blk_rq_unprep_clone(struct request *rq)
2302 {
2303 	struct bio *bio;
2304 
2305 	while ((bio = rq->bio) != NULL) {
2306 		rq->bio = bio->bi_next;
2307 
2308 		bio_put(bio);
2309 	}
2310 }
2311 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_rq_unprep_clone);
2312 
2313 /*
2314  * Copy attributes of the original request to the clone request.
2315  * The actual data parts (e.g. ->cmd, ->buffer, ->sense) are not copied.
2316  */
2317 static void __blk_rq_prep_clone(struct request *dst, struct request *src)
2318 {
2319 	dst->cpu = src->cpu;
2320 	dst->cmd_flags = (rq_data_dir(src) | REQ_NOMERGE);
2321 	dst->cmd_type = src->cmd_type;
2322 	dst->__sector = blk_rq_pos(src);
2323 	dst->__data_len = blk_rq_bytes(src);
2324 	dst->nr_phys_segments = src->nr_phys_segments;
2325 	dst->ioprio = src->ioprio;
2326 	dst->extra_len = src->extra_len;
2327 }
2328 
2329 /**
2330  * blk_rq_prep_clone - Helper function to setup clone request
2331  * @rq: the request to be setup
2332  * @rq_src: original request to be cloned
2333  * @bs: bio_set that bios for clone are allocated from
2334  * @gfp_mask: memory allocation mask for bio
2335  * @bio_ctr: setup function to be called for each clone bio.
2336  *           Returns %0 for success, non %0 for failure.
2337  * @data: private data to be passed to @bio_ctr
2338  *
2339  * Description:
2340  *     Clones bios in @rq_src to @rq, and copies attributes of @rq_src to @rq.
2341  *     The actual data parts of @rq_src (e.g. ->cmd, ->buffer, ->sense)
2342  *     are not copied, and copying such parts is the caller's responsibility.
2343  *     Also, pages which the original bios are pointing to are not copied
2344  *     and the cloned bios just point same pages.
2345  *     So cloned bios must be completed before original bios, which means
2346  *     the caller must complete @rq before @rq_src.
2347  */
2348 int blk_rq_prep_clone(struct request *rq, struct request *rq_src,
2349 		      struct bio_set *bs, gfp_t gfp_mask,
2350 		      int (*bio_ctr)(struct bio *, struct bio *, void *),
2351 		      void *data)
2352 {
2353 	struct bio *bio, *bio_src;
2354 
2355 	if (!bs)
2356 		bs = fs_bio_set;
2357 
2358 	blk_rq_init(NULL, rq);
2359 
2360 	__rq_for_each_bio(bio_src, rq_src) {
2361 		bio = bio_alloc_bioset(gfp_mask, bio_src->bi_max_vecs, bs);
2362 		if (!bio)
2363 			goto free_and_out;
2364 
2365 		__bio_clone(bio, bio_src);
2366 
2367 		if (bio_integrity(bio_src) &&
2368 		    bio_integrity_clone(bio, bio_src, gfp_mask))
2369 			goto free_and_out;
2370 
2371 		if (bio_ctr && bio_ctr(bio, bio_src, data))
2372 			goto free_and_out;
2373 
2374 		if (rq->bio) {
2375 			rq->biotail->bi_next = bio;
2376 			rq->biotail = bio;
2377 		} else
2378 			rq->bio = rq->biotail = bio;
2379 	}
2380 
2381 	__blk_rq_prep_clone(rq, rq_src);
2382 
2383 	return 0;
2384 
2385 free_and_out:
2386 	if (bio)
2387 		bio_free(bio, bs);
2388 	blk_rq_unprep_clone(rq);
2389 
2390 	return -ENOMEM;
2391 }
2392 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(blk_rq_prep_clone);
2393 
2394 int kblockd_schedule_work(struct request_queue *q, struct work_struct *work)
2395 {
2396 	return queue_work(kblockd_workqueue, work);
2397 }
2398 EXPORT_SYMBOL(kblockd_schedule_work);
2399 
2400 int __init blk_dev_init(void)
2401 {
2402 	BUILD_BUG_ON(__REQ_NR_BITS > 8 *
2403 			sizeof(((struct request *)0)->cmd_flags));
2404 
2405 	kblockd_workqueue = create_workqueue("kblockd");
2406 	if (!kblockd_workqueue)
2407 		panic("Failed to create kblockd\n");
2408 
2409 	request_cachep = kmem_cache_create("blkdev_requests",
2410 			sizeof(struct request), 0, SLAB_PANIC, NULL);
2411 
2412 	blk_requestq_cachep = kmem_cache_create("blkdev_queue",
2413 			sizeof(struct request_queue), 0, SLAB_PANIC, NULL);
2414 
2415 	return 0;
2416 }
2417 
2418