This adds a function (currently the only use is during mapping
of already allocated blocks, but watch this space) which iterates
over a number of pointers in a block and returns the extent length.
If the initial pointer is 0 (i.e. unallocated) it will return the
number of unallocated blocks in the extent. If the initial pointer
is allocated, then it returns the number of contiguously allocated
blocks in the extent.
Signed-off-by: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com>
+/**
+ * gfs2_extent_length - Returns length of an extent of blocks
+ * @start: Start of the buffer
+ * @len: Length of the buffer in bytes
+ * @ptr: Current position in the buffer
+ * @limit: Max extent length to return (0 = unlimited)
+ * @eob: Set to 1 if we hit "end of block"
+ *
+ * If the first block is zero (unallocated) it will return the number of
+ * unallocated blocks in the extent, otherwise it will return the number
+ * of contiguous blocks in the extent.
+ *
+ * Returns: The length of the extent (minimum of one block)
+ */
+
+static inline unsigned int gfs2_extent_length(void *start, unsigned int len, __be64 *ptr, unsigned limit, int *eob)
+{
+ const __be64 *end = (start + len);
+ const __be64 *first = ptr;
+ u64 d = be64_to_cpu(*ptr);
+
+ *eob = 0;
+ do {
+ ptr++;
+ if (ptr >= end)
+ break;
+ if (limit && --limit == 0)
+ break;
+ if (d)
+ d++;
+ } while(be64_to_cpu(*ptr) == d);
+ if (ptr >= end)
+ *eob = 1;
+ return (ptr - first);
+}
+
static inline void bmap_lock(struct inode *inode, int create)
{
struct gfs2_inode *ip = GFS2_I(inode);
@@ -499,26 +535,26 @@ int gfs2_block_map(struct inode *inode, sector_t lblock,
goto out_fail;
boundary = error;