VOP_GETPAGES(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | VOP_GETPAGES(9) |
VOP_GETPAGES
,
VOP_PUTPAGES
— read or write
VM pages from a file
#include
<sys/param.h>
#include <sys/vnode.h>
#include <vm/vm.h>
int
VOP_GETPAGES
(struct vnode *vp,
vm_page_t *ma, int count,
int *rbehind, int *rahead);
int
VOP_PUTPAGES
(struct vnode *vp,
vm_page_t *ma, int bytecount,
int flags, int *rtvals);
The
VOP_GETPAGES
()
method is called to read in pages of virtual memory which are backed by
ordinary files. If other adjacent pages are backed by adjacent regions of
the same file, VOP_GETPAGES
() is requested to read
those pages as well, although it is not required to do so. The
VOP_PUTPAGES
() method does the converse; that is to
say, it writes out adjacent dirty pages of virtual memory.
On entry, the vnode lock is held but neither the page queue nor VM object locks are held. Both methods return in the same state on both success and error returns.
The arguments are:
VM_PAGER_PUT_SYNC
is set, the write should be
synchronous; control must not be returned to the caller until after the
write is finished. If VM_PAGER_PUT_INVAL
is set,
the pages are to be invalidated after being written. If
VM_PAGER_PUT_NOREUSE
is set, the I/O performed
should set the IO_NOREUSE flag, to indicate to the filesystem that pages
should be marked for fast reuse if needed. This could occur via a call to
vm_page_deactivate_noreuse(9), which puts such pages
onto the head of the inactive queue. If
VM_PAGER_CLUSTER_OK
is set, writes may be
performed asynchronously, so that related writes can be coalesced for
efficiency, e.g., using the clustering mechanism of the buffer cache.VOP_PUTPAGES
().The status of the
VOP_PUTPAGES
()
method is returned on a page-by-page basis in the array
rtvals[]. The possible status values are as
follows:
VM_PAGER_OK
VM_PAGER_PEND
VM_PAGER_BAD
VM_PAGER_ERROR
VM_PAGER_FAIL
VM_PAGER_ERROR
.VM_PAGER_AGAIN
The
VOP_GETPAGES
()
method must populate and validate all requested pages in order to return
success. It is expected to release any pages in ma
that it does not successfully handle, by calling
vm_page_free(9). When it succeeds,
VOP_GETPAGES
() must set the valid bits
appropriately. Upon entry to VOP_GETPAGES
(), all
pages in ma are busied exclusively. Upon successful
return, the pages must all be busied exclusively as well, but pages may be
unbusied during processing. The filesystem is responsible for activating
paged-out pages, but this does not necessarily need to be done within
VOP_GETPAGES
() depending on the architecture of the
particular filesystem.
If it successfully reads all pages in ma,
VOP_GETPAGES
() returns
VM_PAGER_OK
; otherwise, it returns
VM_PAGER_ERROR
. By convention, the return value of
VOP_PUTPAGES
() is
rtvals[0].
vm_object_pip_wakeup(9), vm_page_free(9), vm_page_sunbusy(9), vm_page_undirty(9), vm_page_xunbusy(9), vnode(9)
This manual page was written by Doug
Rabson and then substantially rewritten by
Garrett Wollman.
May 7, 2017 | Debian |