NAME
buffercache
,
bread
, bread_cluster
,
breadn
, bwrite
,
bawrite
, bdwrite
,
getblk
, geteblk
,
incore
, brelse
,
biodone
, biowait
—
buffer cache interfaces
SYNOPSIS
#include
<sys/buf.h>
int
bread
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
blkno, int size,
struct buf **bpp);
int
bread_cluster
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
blkno, int size,
struct buf **bpp);
int
breadn
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
blkno, int size,
daddr_t rablks[],
int rasizes[],
int nrablks,
struct buf **bpp);
int
bwrite
(struct
buf *bp);
void
bawrite
(struct
buf *bp);
void
bdwrite
(struct
buf *bp);
struct buf *
getblk
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
blkno, int size,
int slpflag,
uint64_t slptimeo);
struct buf *
geteblk
(size_t
size);
struct buf *
incore
(struct
vnode *vp, daddr_t
blkno);
void
brelse
(struct
buf *bp);
void
biodone
(struct
buf *bp);
int
biowait
(struct
buf *bp);
DESCRIPTION
The buffercache
interface is used by each
filesystem to improve I/O performance using in-core caches of filesystem
blocks.
The kernel memory used to cache a block is called a buffer and described by a buf structure. In addition to describing a cached block, a buf structure is also used to describe an I/O request as a part of the disk driver interface.
The block size used for logical block numbers depends on the type of the given vnode. For file vnodes, this is f_iosize of the underlying filesystem. For block device vnodes, this will usually be DEV_BSIZE.
FUNCTIONS
bread
(vp, blkno, size, bpp)- Read a block corresponding to vp and
blkno. The buffer is returned via
bpp.
If the buffer is not found (i.e. the block is not cached in memory),
bread
() callsgetblk
() to allocate a buffer with enough pages for size and reads the specified disk block into it.bread
() always returns a buffer, even if it returns an error due to an I/O error.The buffer returned by
bread
() is marked as busy. (TheB_BUSY
flag is set.) After manipulation of the buffer returned frombread
(), the caller should unbusy it so that another thread can get it. If the buffer contents are modified and should be written back to disk, it should be unbusied using one of the variants ofbwrite
(). Otherwise, it should be unbusied usingbrelse
(). breadn
(vp, blkno, size, rablks, rasizes, nrablks, bpp);- Get a buffer as
bread
(). In addition,breadn
() will start read-ahead of blocks specified by rablks, rasizes, and nrablks. The read-ahead blocks aren't returned, but are available in cache for future accesses. bread_cluster
(vp, blkno, size, bpp);- Read a block of size size corresponding to
vp and blkno, with readahead.
If neither the first block nor a part of the next MAXBSIZE bytes is
already in the buffer cache,
bread_cluster
() will perform a read-ahead of MAXBSIZE bytes in a single I/O operation. This is currently more efficient thanbreadn
(). The read-ahead data isn't returned, but is available in cache for future access. bwrite
(bp)- Write a block. Start I/O for write using
VOP_STRATEGY
(). Then, unless theB_ASYNC
flag is set in bp,bwrite
() waits for the I/O to complete. bawrite
(bp)- Write a block asynchronously. Set the
B_ASYNC
flag in bp and simply callVOP_BWRITE
(), which results inbwrite
() for most filesystems. bdwrite
(bp)- Delayed write. Unlike
bawrite
(),bdwrite
() won't start any I/O. It only marks the buffer as dirty (B_DELWRI
) and unbusies it. This routine should be used when the buffer is expected to be modified again soon, typically a small write that partially fills a buffer. getblk
(vp, blkno, size, slpflag, slptimeo)- Get a block of requested size size that is
associated with a given vnode and block offset, specified by
vp and blkno. If it is found
in the block cache, mark it as having been found, make it busy and return
it. Otherwise, return an empty block of the correct size. It is up to the
caller to ensure that the cached blocks are of the correct size.
If
getblk
() needs to sleep, slpflag and slptimeo are used as arguments for tsleep_nsec(9). geteblk
(size)- Allocate an empty, disassociated block of a given size size.
incore
(vp, blkno)- Determine if a block associated with a given vnode and block offset is in
the cache. If it is there, return a pointer to it. Note that
incore
() doesn't mark the buffer as busy unlikegetblk
(). brelse
(bp)- Unlock a buffer by clearing the
B_AGE
,B_ASYNC
,B_BUSY
,B_NOCACHE
, andB_DEFERRED
flags and release it to the free lists. biodone
(bp)- Mark I/O complete on a buffer. If a callback has been requested by
B_CALL
, do so. Otherwise, wake up the waiting processes. biowait
(bp)- Wait for operations on the buffer to complete. When they do, extract and
return the I/O's error value. If the operation on the buffer is being done
via a direct call to a
strategy
() type function, then the buffer must be previously initialized with theB_RAW
flag.
CODE REFERENCES
This section describes places within the OpenBSD source tree where actual code implementing the buffer cache subsystem can be found. All pathnames are relative to /usr/src.
The buffer cache subsystem is implemented within the file sys/kern/vfs_bio.c.
SEE ALSO
intro(9), vnode(9), VOP_STRATEGY(9)
Maurice J. Bach, The Design of the UNIX Operating System, Prentice Hall, 1986.
Marshall Kirk McKusick, Keith Bostic, Michael J. Karels, and John S. Quarterman, The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System, Addison Wesley, 1996.
Leffler, et. al., The Design and Implementation of the 4.3 BSD Unix Operating System, Addison Wesley, 1989.