/* Copyright (c) 2003, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA */ #include "mysys_priv.h" #include "mysys_err.h" #include ulong my_sync_count; /* Count number of sync calls */ static void (*before_sync_wait)(void)= 0; static void (*after_sync_wait)(void)= 0; void thr_set_sync_wait_callback(void (*before_wait)(void), void (*after_wait)(void)) { before_sync_wait= before_wait; after_sync_wait= after_wait; } /* Sync data in file to disk SYNOPSIS my_sync() fd File descritor to sync my_flags Flags (now only MY_WME is supported) NOTE If file system supports its, only file data is synced, not inode data. MY_IGNORE_BADFD is useful when fd is "volatile" - not protected by a mutex. In this case by the time of fsync(), fd may be already closed by another thread, or even reassigned to a different file. With this flag - MY_IGNORE_BADFD - such a situation will not be considered an error. (which is correct behaviour, if we know that the other thread synced the file before closing) MY_SYNC_FILESIZE is useful when syncing a file after it has been extended. On Linux, fdatasync() on ext3/ext4 file systems does not properly flush to disk the inode data required to preserve the added data across a crash (this looks to be a bug). But when a file is extended, inode data will most likely need flushing in any case, so passing MY_SYNC_FILESIZE as flags is not likely to be any slower, and will be crash safe on Linux ext3/ext4. RETURN 0 ok -1 error */ int my_sync(File fd, myf my_flags) { int res; DBUG_ENTER("my_sync"); DBUG_PRINT("my",("fd: %d my_flags: %d", fd, my_flags)); if (my_disable_sync) DBUG_RETURN(0); statistic_increment(my_sync_count,&THR_LOCK_open); DBUG_PRINT("my",("Fd: %d my_flags: %d", fd, my_flags)); if (before_sync_wait) (*before_sync_wait)(); do { #if defined(F_FULLFSYNC) /* In Mac OS X >= 10.3 this call is safer than fsync() (it forces the disk's cache and guarantees ordered writes). */ if (!(res= fcntl(fd, F_FULLFSYNC, 0))) break; /* ok */ /* Some file systems don't support F_FULLFSYNC and fail above: */ DBUG_PRINT("info",("fcntl(F_FULLFSYNC) failed, falling back")); #endif #if defined(HAVE_FDATASYNC) && HAVE_DECL_FDATASYNC if (!(my_flags & MY_SYNC_FILESIZE)) res= fdatasync(fd); else { #endif #if defined(HAVE_FSYNC) res= fsync(fd); if (res == -1 && errno == ENOLCK) res= 0; /* Result Bug in Old FreeBSD */ #elif defined(_WIN32) res= my_win_fsync(fd); #else #error Cannot find a way to sync a file, durability in danger res= 0; /* No sync (strange OS) */ #endif #if defined(HAVE_FDATASYNC) && HAVE_DECL_FDATASYNC } #endif } while (res == -1 && errno == EINTR); if (res) { int er= errno; if (!(my_errno= er)) my_errno= -1; /* Unknown error */ if (after_sync_wait) (*after_sync_wait)(); if ((my_flags & MY_IGNORE_BADFD) && (er == EBADF || er == EINVAL || er == EROFS)) { DBUG_PRINT("info", ("ignoring errno %d", er)); res= 0; } else if (my_flags & MY_WME) my_error(EE_SYNC, MYF(ME_BELL+ME_WAITTANG), my_filename(fd), my_errno); } else { if (after_sync_wait) (*after_sync_wait)(); } DBUG_RETURN(res); } /* my_sync */ static const char cur_dir_name[]= {FN_CURLIB, 0}; /* Force directory information to disk. SYNOPSIS my_sync_dir() dir_name the name of the directory my_flags flags (MY_WME etc) RETURN 0 if ok, !=0 if error */ int my_sync_dir(const char *dir_name __attribute__((unused)), myf my_flags __attribute__((unused))) { #ifdef NEED_EXPLICIT_SYNC_DIR File dir_fd; int res= 0; const char *correct_dir_name; DBUG_ENTER("my_sync_dir"); DBUG_PRINT("my",("Dir: '%s' my_flags: %d", dir_name, my_flags)); /* Sometimes the path does not contain an explicit directory */ correct_dir_name= (dir_name[0] == 0) ? cur_dir_name : dir_name; /* Syncing a dir may give EINVAL on tmpfs on Linux, which is ok. EIO on the other hand is very important. Hence MY_IGNORE_BADFD. */ if ((dir_fd= my_open(correct_dir_name, O_RDONLY, MYF(my_flags))) >= 0) { if (my_sync(dir_fd, MYF(my_flags | MY_IGNORE_BADFD))) res= 2; if (my_close(dir_fd, MYF(my_flags))) res= 3; } else res= 1; DBUG_RETURN(res); #else return 0; #endif } /* Force directory information to disk. SYNOPSIS my_sync_dir_by_file() file_name the name of a file in the directory my_flags flags (MY_WME etc) RETURN 0 if ok, !=0 if error */ int my_sync_dir_by_file(const char *file_name __attribute__((unused)), myf my_flags __attribute__((unused))) { #ifdef NEED_EXPLICIT_SYNC_DIR char dir_name[FN_REFLEN]; size_t dir_name_length; dirname_part(dir_name, file_name, &dir_name_length); return my_sync_dir(dir_name, my_flags); #else return 0; #endif }