Files
u-boot/fs/ext4l/truncate.h
Simon Glass f04cd9dbc2 ext4l: Add extents.c compilation support
Add extents.c (extent handling) to the build and provide stubs.

Changes to extents.c:
- Replace Linux includes with ext4_uboot.h

Changes to ext4_uboot.h:
- Add __GFP_MOVABLE, __GFP_FS memory allocation flags
- Add FIEMAP_EXTENT_* flags for fiemap operations
- Add FALLOC_FL_* flags for fallocate operations
- Add O_SYNC flag and struct file with f_mapping
- Add struct iomap and iomap_ops for I/O mapping
- Add IOMAP_* type constants
- Add struct fiemap_extent_info and FIEMAP_FLAG_* constants
- Add i_blkbits member to inode struct

Co-developed-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <simon.glass@canonical.com>
2025-12-18 12:34:17 -07:00

53 lines
1.5 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* linux/fs/ext4/truncate.h
*
* Common inline functions needed for truncate support
*/
/*
* Truncate blocks that were not used by write. We have to truncate the
* pagecache as well so that corresponding buffers get properly unmapped.
*/
static inline void ext4_truncate_failed_write(struct inode *inode)
{
struct address_space *mapping __maybe_unused = inode->i_mapping;
/*
* We don't need to call ext4_break_layouts() because the blocks we
* are truncating were never visible to userspace.
*/
filemap_invalidate_lock(mapping);
truncate_inode_pages(mapping, inode->i_size);
ext4_truncate(inode);
filemap_invalidate_unlock(mapping);
}
/*
* Work out how many blocks we need to proceed with the next chunk of a
* truncate transaction.
*/
static inline unsigned long ext4_blocks_for_truncate(struct inode *inode)
{
ext4_lblk_t needed;
needed = inode->i_blocks >> (inode->i_sb->s_blocksize_bits - 9);
/* Give ourselves just enough room to cope with inodes in which
* i_blocks is corrupt: we've seen disk corruptions in the past
* which resulted in random data in an inode which looked enough
* like a regular file for ext4 to try to delete it. Things
* will go a bit crazy if that happens, but at least we should
* try not to panic the whole kernel. */
if (needed < 2)
needed = 2;
/* But we need to bound the transaction so we don't overflow the
* journal. */
if (needed > EXT4_MAX_TRANS_DATA)
needed = EXT4_MAX_TRANS_DATA;
return EXT4_DATA_TRANS_BLOCKS(inode->i_sb) + needed;
}