/*! \addtogroup vldb-spec VLDB Server Interface @{ \page title AFS-3 Programmer's Reference: Volume Server/Volume Location Server Interface \author Edward R. Zayas Transarc Corporation \version 1.0 \date 29 August 1991 14:48 Copyright 1991 Transarc Corporation All Rights Reserved FS-00-D165 \page chap1 Chapter 1: Overview \section sec1-1 Section 1.1: Introduction \par This document describes the architecture and interfaces for two of the important agents of the AFS distributed file system, the Volume Server and the Volume Location Server. The Volume Server allows operations affecting entire AFS volumes to be executed, while the Volume Location Server provides a lookup service for volumes, identifying the server or set of servers on which volume instances reside. \section sec1-2 Section 1.2: Volumes \subsection sec1-2-1 Section 1.2.1: Definition \par The underlying concept manipulated by the two AFS servers examined by this document is the volume. Volumes are the basic mechanism for organizing the data stored within the file system. They provide the foundation for addressing, storing, and accessing file data, along with serving as the administrative units for replication, backup, quotas, and data motion between File Servers. \par Specifically, a volume is a container for a hierarchy of files, a connected file system subtree. In this respect, a volume is much like a traditional unix file system partition. Like a partition, a volume can be mounted in the sense that the root directory of the volume can be named within another volume at an AFS mount point. The entire file system hierarchy is built up in this manner, using mount points to glue together the individual subtrees resident within each volume. The root of this hierarchy is then mounted by each AFS client machine using a conventional unix mount point within the workstation's local file system. By convention, this entryway into the AFS domain is mounted on the /afs local directory. From a user's point of view, there is only a single mount point to the system; the internal mount points are generally transparent. \subsection sec1-2-2 Section 1.2.2: Volume Naming \par There are two methods by which volumes may be named. The first is via a human-readable string name, and the second is via a 32-bit numerical identifier. Volume identifiers, whether string or numerical, must be unique within any given cell. AFS mount points may use either representation to specify the volume whose root directory is to be accessed at the given position. Internally, however, AFS agents use the numerical form of identification exclusively, having to translate names to the corresponding 32-bit value. \subsection sec1-2-3 Section 1.2.3: Volume Types \par There are three basic volume types: read-write, read-only, and backup volumes. \li Read-write: The data in this volume may be both read and written by those clients authorized to do so. \li Read-only: It is possible to create one or more read-only snapshots of read-write volumes. The read-write volume serving as the source image is referred to as the parent volume. Each read-only clone, or child, instance must reside on a different unix disk partition than the other clones. Every clone instance generated from the same parent read-write volume has the identical volume name and numerical volume ID. This is the reason why no two clones may appear on the same disk partition, as there would be no way to differentiate the two. AFS clients are allowed to read files and directories from read-only volumes, but cannot overwrite them individually. However, it is possible to make changes to the read-write parent and then release the contents of the entire volume to all the read-only replicas. The release operation fails if it does not reach the appropriate replication sites. \li Backup: A backup volume is a special instance of a read-only volume. While it is also a read-only snapshot of a given read-write volume, only one instance is allowed to exist at any one time. Also, the backup volume must reside on the same partition as the parent read-write volume from which it was created. It is from a backup volume that the AFS backup system writes file system data to tape. In addition, backup volumes may be mounted into the file tree just like the other volume types. In fact, by convention, the backup volume for each user's home directory subtree is typically mounted as OldFiles in that directory. If a user accidentally deletes a file that resides in the backup snapshot, the user may simply copy it out of the backup directly without the assistance of a system administrator, or any kind of tape restore operation. Backup volume are implemented in a copy-on-write fashion. Thus, backup volumes may be envisioned as consisting of a set of pointers to the true data objects in the base read-write volume when they are first created. When a file is overwritten in the read-write version for the first time after the backup volume was created, the original data is physically written to the backup volume, breaking the copyon-write link. With this mechanism, backup volumes maintain the image of the read-write volume at the time the snapshot was taken using the minimum amount of additional disk space. \section sec1-3 Section 1.3: Scope \par This paper is a member of a documentation suite providing specifications of the operation and interfaces offered by the various AFS servers and agents. The scope of this work is to provide readers with a sufficiently detailed description of the Volume Location Server and the Volume Server so that they may construct client applications which call their RPC interface routines. \section sec1-4 Section 1.4: Document Layout \par After this introductory portion of the document, Chapters 2 and 3 examine the architecture and RPC interface of the Volume Location Server and its replicated database. Similarly, Chapters 4 and 5 describe the architecture and RPC interface of the Volume Server. \page chap2 Chapter 2: Volume Location Server Architecture \section sec2-1 Section 2.1: Introduction \par The Volume Location Server allows AFS agents to query the location and basic status of volumes resident within the given cell. Volume Location Server functions may be invoked directly from authorized users via the vos utility. \par This chapter briefly discusses various aspects of the Volume Location Server's architecture. First, the need for volume location is examined, and the specific parties that call the Volume Location Server interface routines are identified. Then, the database maintained to provide volume location service, the Volume Location Database (VLDB), is examined. Finally, the vlserver process which implements the Volume Location Server is considered. \par As with all AFS servers, the Volume Location Server uses the Rx remote procedure call package for communication with its clients. \section sec2-2 Section 2.2: The Need For Volume Location \par The Cache Manager agent is the primary consumer of AFS volume location service, on which it is critically dependent for its own operation. The Cache Manager needs to map volume names or numerical identifiers to the set of File Servers on which its instances reside in order to satisfy the file system requests it is processing on behalf of it clients. Each time a Cache Manager encounters a mount point for which it does not have location information cached, it must acquire this information before the pathname resolution may be successfully completed. Once the File Server set is known for a particular volume, the Cache Manager may then select the proper site among them (e.g. choosing the single home for a read-write volume, or randomly selecting a site from a read-only volume's replication set) and begin addressing its file manipulation operations to that specific server. \par While the Cache Manager consults the volume location service, it is not capable of changing the location of volumes and hence modifying the information contained therein. This capability to perform acts which change volume location is concentrated within the Volume Server. The Volume Server process running on each server machine manages all volume operations affecting that platform, including creations, deletions, and movements between servers. It must update the volume location database every time it performs one of these actions. \par None of the other AFS system agents has a need to access the volume location database for its site. Surprisingly, this also applies to the File Server process. It is only aware of the specific set of volumes that reside on the set of physical disks directly attached to the machine on which they execute. It has no knowlege of the universe of volumes resident on other servers, either within its own cell or in foreign cells. \section sec2-3 Section 2.3: The VLDB \par The Volume Location Database (VLDB) is used to allow AFS application programs to discover the location of any volume within its cell, along with select information about the nature and state of that volume. It is organized in a very straightforward fashion, and uses the ubik [4] [5] facility to to provide replication across multiple server sites. \subsection sec2-3-1 Section 2.3.1: Layout \par The VLDB itself is a very simple structure, and synchronized copies may be maintained at two or more sites. Basically, each copy consists of header information, followed by a linear (yet unbounded) array of entries. There are several associated hash tables used to perform lookups into the VLDB. The first hash table looks up volume location information based on the volume's name. There are three other hash tables used for lookup, based on volume ID/type pairs, one for each possible volume type. \par The VLDB for a large site may grow to contain tens of thousands of entries, so some attempts were made to make each entry as small as possible. For example, server addresses within VLDB entries are represented as single-byte indicies into a table containing the full longword IP addresses. \par A free list is kept for deleted VLDB entries. The VLDB will not grow unless all the entries on the free list have been exhausted, keeping it as compact as possible. \subsection sec2-3-2 Section 2.3.2: Database Replication \par The VLDB, along with other important AFS databases, may be replicated to multiple sites to improve its availability. The ubik replication package is used to implement this functionality for the VLDB. A full description of ubik and of the quorum completion algorithm it implements may be found in [4] and [5]. The basic abstraction provided by ubik is that of a disk file replicated to multiple server locations. One machine is considered to be the synchronization site, handling all write operations on the database file. Read operations may be directed to any of the active members of the quorum, namely a subset of the replication sites large enough to insure integrity across such failures as individual server crashes and network partitions. All of the quorum members participate in regular elections to determine the current synchronization site. The ubik algorithms allow server machines to enter and exit the quorum in an orderly and consistent fashion. All operations to one of these replicated "abstract files" are performed as part of a transaction. If all the related operations performed under a transaction are successful, then the transaction is committed, and the changes are made permanent. Otherwise, the transaction is aborted, and all of the operations for that transaction are undone. \section sec2-4 Section 2.4: The vlserver Process \par The user-space vlserver process is in charge of providing volume location service for AFS clients. This program maintains the VLDB replica at its particular server, and cooperates with all other vlserver processes running in the given cell to propagate updates to the database. It implements the RPC interface defined in the vldbint.xg definition file for the rxgen RPC stub generator program. As part of its startup sequence, it must discover the VLDB version it has on its local disk, move to join the quorum of replication sites for the VLDB, and get the latest version if the one it came up with was out of date. Eventually, it will synchronize with the other VLDB replication sites, and it will begin accepting calls. \par The vlserver program uses at most three Rx worker threads to listen for incoming Volume Location Server calls. It has a single, optional command line argument. If the string "-noauth" appears when the program is invoked, then vlserver will run in an unauthenticated mode where any individual is considered authorized to perform any VLDB operation. This mode is necessary when first bootstrapping an AFS installation. \page chap3 Chapter 3: Volume Location Server Interface \section sec3-1 Section 3.1: Introduction \par This chapter documents the API for the Volume Location Server facility, as defined by the vldbint.xg Rxgen interface file and the vldbint.h include file. Descriptions of all the constants, structures, macros, and interface functions available to the application programmer appear here. \par It is expected that Volume Location Server client programs run in user space, as does the associated vos volume utility. However, the kernel-resident Cache Manager agent also needs to call a subset of the Volume Location Server's RPC interface routines. Thus, a second Volume Location Server interface is available, built exclusively to satisfy the Cache Manager's limited needs. This subset interface is defined by the afsvlint.xg Rxgen interface file, and is examined in the final section of this chapter. \section sec3-2 3.2: Constants \par This section covers the basic constant definitions of interest to the Volume Location Server application programmer. These definitions appear in the vldbint.h file, automatically generated from the vldbint.xg Rxgen interface file, and in vlserver.h. \par Each subsection is devoted to describing the constants falling into the following categories: \li Configuration and boundary quantities \li Update entry bits \li List-by-attribute bits \li Volume type indices \li States for struct vlentry \li States for struct vldbentry \li ReleaseType argument values \li Miscellaneous items \subsection sec3-2-1 Section 3.2.1: Configuration and Boundary Quantities \par These constants define some basic system values, including configuration information. \par Name MAXNAMELEN \par Value 65 \par Description Maximum size of various character strings, including volume name fields in structures and host names. \par Name MAXNSERVERS \par Value 8 \par Description Maximum number of replications sites for a volume. \par Name MAXTYPES \par Value 3 \par Description Maximum number of volume types. \par Name VLDBVERSION \par Value 1 \par Description VLDB database version number \par Name HASHSIZE \par Value 8,191 \par Description Size of internal Volume Location Server volume name and volume ID hash tables. This must always be a prime number. \par Name NULLO \par Value 0 \par Description Specifies a null pointer value. \par Name VLDBALLOCCOUNT \par Value 40 \par Description Value used when allocating memory internally for VLDB entry records. \par Name BADSERVERID \par Value 255 \par Description Illegal Volume Location Server host ID. \par Name MAXSERVERID \par Value 30 \par Description Maximum number of servers appearing in the VLDB. \par Name MAXSERVERFLAG \par Value 0x80 \par Description First unused flag value in such fields as serverFlags in struct vldbentry and RepsitesNewFlags in struct VldbUpdateEntry. \par Name MAXPARTITIONID \par Value 126 \par Description Maximum number of AFS disk partitions for any one server. \par Name MAXBUMPCOUNT \par Value 0x7fffffff \par Description Maximum interval that the current high-watermark value for a volume ID can be increased in one operation. \par Name MAXLOCKTIME \par Value 0x7fffffff \par Description Maximum number of seconds that any VLDB entry can remain locked. \par Name SIZE \par Value 1,024 \par Description Maximum size of the name field within a struct. \subsection sec3-2-2 Section 3.2.2: Update Entry Bits \par These constants define bit values for the Mask field in the struct VldbUpdateEntry. Specifically, setting these bits is equivalent to declaring that the corresponding field within an object of type struct VldbUpdateEntry has been set. For example, setting the VLUPDATE VOLUMENAME flag in Mask indicates that the name field contains a valid value. \par Name VLUPDATE VOLUMENAME \par Value 0x0001 \par Description If set, indicates that the name field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE VOLUMETYPE \par Value 0x0002 \par Description If set, indicates that the volumeType field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE FLAGS \par Value 0x0004 \par Description If set, indicates that the flags field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE READONLYID \par Value 0x0008 \par Description If set, indicates that the ReadOnlyId field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE BACKUPID \par Value 0x0010 \par Description If set, indicates that the BackupId field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE REPSITES \par Value 0x0020 \par Description If set, indicates that the nModifiedRepsites field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE CLONEID \par Value 0x0080 \par Description If set, indicates that the cloneId field is valid. \par Name VLUPDATE REPS DELETE \par Value 0x0100 \par Description Is the replica being deleted? \par Name VLUPDATE REPS ADD \par Value 0x0200 \par Description Is the replica being added? \par Name VLUPDATE REPS MODSERV \par Value 0x0400 \par Description Is the server part of the replica location correct? \par Name VLUPDATE REPS MODPART \par Value 0x0800 \par Description Is the partition part of the replica location correct? \par Name VLUPDATE REPS MODFLAG \par Value 0x1000 \par Description Various modification flag values. \subsection sec3-2-3 Section 3.2.3: List-By-Attribute Bits \par These constants define bit values for the Mask field in the struct VldbListByAttributes is to be used in a match. Specifically, setting these bits is equivalent to declaring that the corresponding field within an object of type struct VldbListByAttributes is set. For example, setting the VLLIST SERVER flag in Mask indicates that the server field contains a valid value. \par Name VLLIST SERVER \par Value 0x1 \par Description If set, indicates that the server field is valid. \par Name VLLIST PARTITION \par Value 0x2 \par Description If set, indicates that the partition field is valid. \par Name VLLIST VOLUMETYPE \par Value 0x4 \par Description If set, indicates that the volumetype field is valid. \par Name VLLIST VOLUMEID \par Value 0x8 \par Description If set, indicates that the volumeid field is valid. \par Name VLLIST FLAG \par Value 0x10 \par Description If set, indicates that that flag field is valid. \subsection sec3-2-4 Section 3.2.4: Volume Type Indices \par These constants specify the order of entries in the volumeid array in an object of type struct vldbentry. They also identify the three different types of volumes in AFS. \par Name RWVOL \par Value 0 \par Description Read-write volume. \par Name ROVOL \par Value 1 \par Description Read-only volume. \par Name BACKVOL \par Value 2 \par Description Backup volume. \subsection sec3-2-5 Section 3.2.5: States for struct vlentry \par The following constants appear in the flags field in objects of type struct vlentry. The first three values listed specify the state of the entry, while all the rest stamp the entry with the type of an ongoing volume operation, such as a move, clone, backup, deletion, and dump. These volume operations are the legal values to provide to the voloper parameter of the VL SetLock() interface routine. \par For convenience, the constant VLOP ALLOPERS is defined as the inclusive OR of the above values from VLOP MOVE through VLOP DUMP. \par Name VLFREE \par Value 0x1 \par Description Entry is in the free list. \par Name VLDELETED \par Value 0x2 \par Description Entry is soft-deleted. \par Name VLLOCKED \par Value 0x4 \par Description Advisory lock held on the entry. \par Name VLOP MOVE \par Value 0x10 \par Description The associated volume is being moved between servers. \par Name VLOP RELEASE \par Value 0x20 \par Description The associated volume is being cloned to its replication sites. \par Name VLOP BACKUP \par Value 0x40 \par Description A backup volume is being created for the associated volume. \par Name VLOP DELETE \par Value 0x80 \par Description The associated volume is being deleted. \par Name VLOP DUMP \par Value 0x100 \par Description A dump is being taken of the associated volume. \subsection sec3-2-6 Section 3.2.6: States for struct vldbentry \par Of the following constants, the first three appear in the flags field within an object of type struct vldbentry, advising of the existence of the basic volume types for the given volume, and hence the validity of the entries in the volumeId array field. The rest of the values provided in this table appear in the serverFlags array field, and apply to the instances of the volume appearing in the various replication sites. \par This structure appears in numerous Volume Location Server interface calls, namely VL CreateEntry(), VL GetEntryByID(), VL GetEntryByName(), VL ReplaceEntry() and VL ListEntry(). \par Name VLF RWEXISTS \par Value 0x1000 \par Description The read-write volume ID is valid. \par Name VLF ROEXISTS \par Value 0x2000 \par Description The read-only volume ID is valid. \par Name VLF BACKEXISTS \par Value 0x4000 \par Description The backup volume ID is valid. \par Name VLSF NEWREPSITE \par Value 0x01 \par Description Not used; originally intended to mark an entry as belonging to a partially-created volume instance. \par Name VLSF ROVOL \par Value 0x02 \par Description A read-only version of the volume appears at this server. \par Name VLSF RWVOL \par Value 0x02 \par Description A read-write version of the volume appears at this server. \par Name VLSF BACKVOL \par Value 0x08 \par Description A backup version of the volume appears at this server. \subsection sec3-2-7 Section 3.2.7: ReleaseType Argument Values \par The following values are used in the ReleaseType argument to various Volume Location Server interface routines, namely VL ReplaceEntry(), VL UpdateEntry() and VL ReleaseLock(). \par Name LOCKREL TIMESTAMP \par Value 1 \par Description Is the LockTimestamp field valid? \par Name LOCKREL OPCODE \par Value 2 \par Description Are any of the bits valid in the flags field? \par Name LOCKREL AFSID \par Value 4 \par Description Is the LockAfsId field valid? \subsection sec3-2-8 Section 3.2.8: Miscellaneous \par Miscellaneous values. \par Name VLREPSITE NEW \par Value 1 \par Description Has a replication site gotten a new release of a volume? \par A synonym for this constant is VLSF NEWREPSITE. \section sec3-3 Section 3.3: Structures and Typedefs \par This section describes the major exported Volume Location Server data structures of interest to application programmers, along with the typedefs based upon those structures. \subsection sec3-3-1 Section 3.3.1: struct vldbentry \par This structure represents an entry in the VLDB as made visible to Volume Location Server clients. It appears in numerous Volume Location Server interface calls, namely VL CreateEntry(), VL GetEntryByID(), VL GetEntryByName(), VL ReplaceEntry() and VL ListEntry(). \n \b Fields \li char name[] - The string name for the volume, with a maximum length of MAXNAMELEN (65) characters, including the trailing null. \li long volumeType - The volume type, one of RWVOL, ROVOL, or BACKVOL. \li long nServers - The number of servers that have an instance of this volume. \li long serverNumber[] - An array of indices into the table of servers, identifying the sites holding an instance of this volume. There are at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of these server sites allowed by the Volume Location Server. \li long serverPartition[] - An array of partition identifiers, corresponding directly to the serverNumber array, specifying the partition on which each of those volume instances is located. As with the serverNumber array, serverPartition has up to MAXNSERVERS (8) entries. \li long serverFlags[] - This array holds one flag value for each of the servers in the previous arrays. Again, there are MAXNSERVERS (8) slots in this array. \li u long volumeId[] - An array of volume IDs, one for each volume type. There are MAXTYPES slots in this array. \li long cloneId - This field is used during a cloning operation. \li long flags - Flags concerning the status of the fields within this structure; see Section 3.2.6 for the bit values that apply. \subsection sec3-3-2 Section 3.3.2: struct vlentry \par This structure is used internally by the Volume Location Server to fully represent a VLDB entry. The client-visible struct vldbentry represents merely a subset of the information contained herein. \n \b Fields \li u long volumeId[] - An array of volume IDs, one for each of the MAXTYPES of volume types. \li long flags - Flags concerning the status of the fields within this structure; see Section 3.2.6 for the bit values that apply. \li long LockAfsId - The individual who locked the entry. This feature has not yet been implemented. \li long LockTimestamp - Time stamp on the entry lock. \li long cloneId - This field is used during a cloning operation. \li long AssociatedChain - Pointer to the linked list of associated VLDB entries. \li long nextIdHash[] - Array of MAXTYPES next pointers for the ID hash table pointer, one for each related volume ID. \li long nextNameHash - Next pointer for the volume name hash table. \li long spares1[] - Two longword spare fields. \li char name[] - The volume's string name, with a maximum of MAXNAMELEN (65) characters, including the trailing null. \li u char volumeType - The volume's type, one of RWVOL, ROVOL, or BACKVOL. \li u char serverNumber[] - An array of indices into the table of servers, identifying the sites holding an instance of this volume. There are at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of these server sites allowed by the Volume Location Server. \li u char serverPartition[] - An array of partition identifiers, corresponding directly to the serverNumber array, specifying the partition on which each of those volume instances is located. As with the serverNumber array, serverPartition has up to MAXNSERVERS (8) entries. \li u char serverFlags[] - This array holds one flag value for each of the servers in the previous arrays. Again, there are MAXNSERVERS (8) slots in this array. \li u char RefCount - Only valid for read-write volumes, this field serves as a reference count, basically the number of dependent children volumes. \li char spares2[] - This field is used for 32-bit alignment. \subsection sec3-3-3 Section 3.3.3: struct vital vlheader \par This structure defines the leading section of the VLDB header, of type struct vlheader. It contains frequently-used global variables and general statistics information. \n \b Fields \li long vldbversion - The VLDB version number. This field must appear first in the structure. \li long headersize - The total number of bytes in the header. \li long freePtr - Pointer to the first free enry in the free list, if any. \li long eofPtr - Pointer to the first free byte in the header file. \li long allocs - The total number of calls to the internal AllocBlock() function directed at this file. \li long frees - The total number of calls to the internal FreeBlock() function directed at this file. \li long MaxVolumeId - The largest volume ID ever granted for this cell. \li long totalEntries[] - The total number of VLDB entries by volume type in the VLDB. This array has MAXTYPES slots, one for each volume type. \subsection sec3-3-4 Section 3.3.4: struct vlheader \par This is the layout of the information stored in the VLDB header. Notice it includes an object of type struct vital vlheader described above (see Section 3.3.3) as the first field. \n \b Fields \li struct vital vlheader vital header - Holds critical VLDB header information. \li u long IpMappedAddr[] - Keeps MAXSERVERID+1 mappings of IP addresses to relative ones. \li long VolnameHash[] - The volume name hash table, with HASHSIZE slots. \li long VolidHash[][] - The volume ID hash table. The first dimension in this array selects which of the MAXTYPES volume types is desired, and the second dimension actually implements the HASHSIZE hash table buckets for the given volume type. \subsection sec3-3-5 Section 3.3.5: struct VldbUpdateEntry \par This structure is used as an argument to the VL UpdateEntry() routine (see Section 3.6.7). Please note that multiple entries can be updated at once by setting the appropriate Mask bits. The bit values for this purpose are defined in Section 3.2.2. \n \b Fields \li u long Mask - Bit values determining which fields are to be affected by the update operation. \li char name[] - The volume name, up to MAXNAMELEN (65) characters including the trailing null. \li long volumeType - The volume type. \li long flags - This field is used in conjuction with Mask (in fact, one of the Mask bits determines if this field is valid) to choose the valid fields in this record. \li u long ReadOnlyId - The read-only ID. \li u long BackupId - The backup ID. \li long cloneId - The clone ID. \li long nModifiedRepsites - Number of replication sites whose entry is to be changed as below. \li u long RepsitesMask[] - Array of bit masks applying to the up to MAXNSERVERS (8) replication sites involved. \li long RepsitesTargetServer[] - Array of target servers for the operation, at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of them. \li long RepsitesTargetPart[] - Array of target server partitions for the operation, at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of them. \li long RepsitesNewServer[] - Array of new server sites, at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of them. \li long RepsitesNewPart[] - Array of new server partitions for the operation, at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of them. \li long RepsitesNewFlags[] - Flags applying to each of the new sites, at most MAXNSERVERS (8) of them. \subsection sec3-3-6 Section 3.3.6: struct VldbListByAttributes \par This structure is used by the VL ListAttributes() routine (see Section 3.6.11). \n \b Fields \li u long Mask - Bit mask used to select the following attribute fields on which to match. \li long server - The server address to match. \li long partition - The partition ID to match. \li long volumetype - The volume type to match. \li long volumeid - The volume ID to match. \li long flag - Flags concerning these values. \subsection sec3-3-7 Section 3.3.7: struct single vldbentry \par This structure is used to construct the vldblist object (See Section 3.3.12), which basically generates a queueable (singly-linked) version of struct vldbentry. \n \b Fields \li vldbentry VldbEntry - The VLDB entry to be queued. \li vldblist next vldb - The next pointer in the list. \subsection sec3-3-8 Section 3.3.8: struct vldb list \par This structure defines the item returned in linked list form from the VL LinkedList() function (see Section 3.6.12). This same object is also returned in bulk form in calls to the VL ListAttributes() routine (see Section 3.6.11). \n \b Fields \li vldblist node - The body of the first object in the linked list. \subsection sec3-3-9 Section 3.3.9: struct vldstats \par This structure defines fields to record statistics on opcode hit frequency. The MAX NUMBER OPCODES constant has been defined as the maximum number of opcodes supported by this structure, and is set to 30. \n \b Fields \li unsigned long start time - Clock time when opcode statistics were last cleared. \li long requests[] - Number of requests received for each of the MAX NUMBER OPCODES opcode types. \li long aborts[] - Number of aborts experienced for each of the MAX NUMBER OPCODES opcode types. \li long reserved[] - These five longword fields are reserved for future use. \subsection sec3-3-10 Section 3.3.10: bulk \code typedef opaque bulk; \endcode \par This typedef may be used to transfer an uninterpreted set of bytes across the Volume Location Server interface. It may carry up to DEFAULTBULK (10,000) bytes. \n \b Fields \li bulk len - The number of bytes contained within the data pointed to by the next field. \li bulk val - A pointer to a sequence of bulk len bytes. \subsection sec3-3-11 Section 3.3.11: bulkentries \code typedef vldbentry bulkentries<>; \endcode \par This typedef is used to transfer an unbounded number of struct vldbentry objects. It appears in the parameter list for the VL ListAttributes() interface function. \n \b Fields \li bulkentries len - The number of vldbentry structures contained within the data pointed to by the next field. \li bulkentries val - A pointer to a sequence of bulkentries len vldbentry structures. \subsection sec3-3-12 Section 3.3.12: vldblist \code typedef struct single_vldbentry *vldblist; \endcode \par This typedef defines a queueable struct vldbentry object, referenced by the single vldbentry typedef as well as struct vldb list. \subsection sec3-3-13 Section 3.3.13: vlheader \code typedef struct vlheader vlheader; \endcode \par This typedef provides a short name for objects of type struct vlheader (see Section 3.3.4). \subsection sec3-3-14 Section 3.3.14: vlentry \code typedef struct vlentry vlentry; \endcode \par This typedef provides a short name for objects of type struct vlentry (see Section 3.3.2). \section sec3-4 Section 3.4: Error Codes \par This section covers the set of error codes exported by the Volume Location Server, displaying the printable phrases with which they are associated. \par Name VL IDEXIST \par Value (363520L) \par Description Volume Id entry exists in vl database. \par Name VL IO \par Value (363521L) \par Description I/O related error. \par Name VL NAMEEXIST \par Value (363522L) \par Description Volume name entry exists in vl database. \par Name VL CREATEFAIL \par Value (363523L) \par Description Internal creation failure. \par Name VL NOENT \par Value (363524L) \par Description No such entry. \par Name VL EMPTY \par Value (363525L) \par Description Vl database is empty. \par Name VL ENTDELETED \par Value (363526L) \par Description Entry is deleted (soft delete). \par Name VL BADNAME \par Value (363527L) \par Description Volume name is illegal. \par Name VL BADINDEX \par Value (363528L) \par Description Index is out of range. \par Name VL BADVOLTYPE \par Value (363529L) \par Description Bad volume range. \par Name VL BADSERVER \par Value (363530L) \par Description Illegal server number (out of range). \par Name VL BADPARTITION \par Value (363531L) \par Description Bad partition number. \par Name VL REPSFULL \par Value (363532L) \par Description Run out of space for Replication sites. \par Name VL NOREPSERVER \par Value (363533L) \par Description No such Replication server site exists. \par Name VL DUPREPSERVER \par Value (363534L) \par Description Replication site already exists. \par Name RL RWNOTFOUND \par Value (363535L) \par Description Parent R/W entry not found. \par Name VL BADREFCOUNT \par Value (363536L) \par Description Illegal Reference Count number. \par Name VL SIZEEXCEEDED \par Value (363537L) \par Description Vl size for attributes exceeded. \par Name VL BADENTRY \par Value (363538L) \par Description Bad incoming vl entry. \par Name VL BADVOLIDBUMP \par Value (363539L) \par Description Illegal max volid increment. \par Name VL IDALREADYHASHED \par Value (363540L) \par Description RO/BACK id already hashed. \par Name VL ENTRYLOCKED \par Value (363541L) \par Description Vl entry is already locked. \par Name VL BADVOLOPER \par Value (363542L) \par Description Bad volume operation code. \par Name VL BADRELLOCKTYPE \par Value (363543L) \par Description Bad release lock type. \par Name VL RERELEASE \par Value (363544L) \par Description Status report: last release was aborted. \par Name VL BADSERVERFLAG \par Value (363545L) \par Description Invalid replication site server flag. \par Name VL PERM \par Value (363546L) \par Description No permission access. \par Name VL NOMEM \par Value (363547L) \par Description malloc(realloc) failed to alloc enough memory. \section sec3-5 Section 3.5: Macros \par The Volume Location Server defines a small number of macros, as described in this section. They are used to update the internal statistics variables and to compute offsets into character strings. All of these macros really refer to internal operations, and strictly speaking should not be exposed in this interface. \subsection sec3-5-1 Section 3.5.1: COUNT REQ() \code #define COUNT_REQ(op) static int this_op = op-VL_LOWEST_OPCODE; dynamic_statistics.requests[this_op]++ \endcode \par Bump the appropriate entry in the variable maintaining opcode usage statistics for the Volume Location Server. Note that a static variable is set up to record this op, namely the index into the opcode monitoring array. This static variable is used by the related COUNT ABO() macro defined below. \subsection sec3-5-2 Section 3.5.2: COUNT ABO() \code #define COUNT_ABO dynamic_statistics.aborts[this_op]++ \endcode \par Bump the appropriate entry in the variable maintaining opcode abort statistics for the Volume Location Server. Note that this macro does not take any arguemnts. It expects to find a this op variable in its environment, and thus depends on its related macro, COUNT REQ() to define that variable. \subsection sec3-5-3 Section 3.5.3: DOFFSET() \code #define DOFFSET(abase, astr, aitem) ((abase)+(((char *)(aitem)) -((char *)(astr)))) \endcode \par Compute the byte offset of charcter object aitem within the enclosing object astr, also expressed as a character-based object, then offset the resulting address by abase. This macro is used ot compute locations within the VLDB when actually writing out information. \section sec3-6 Section 3.6: Functions \par This section covers the Volume Location Server RPC interface routines. The majority of them are generated from the vldbint.xg Rxgen file, and are meant to be used by user-space agents. There is also a subset interface definition provided in the afsvlint.xg Rxgen file. These routines, described in Section 3.7, are meant to be used by a kernel-space agent when dealing with the Volume Location Server; in particular, they are called by the Cache Manager. \subsection sec3-6-1 Section 3.6.1: VL CreateEntry - Create a VLDB entry \code int VL CreateEntry(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN vldbentry *newentry) \endcode \par Description This function creates a new entry in the VLDB, as specified in the newentry argument. Both the name and numerical ID of the new volume must be unique (e.g., it must not already appear in the VLDB). For non-read-write entries, the read-write parent volume is accessed so that its reference count can be updated, and the new entry is added to the parent's chain of associated entries. The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. VL NAMEEXIST The volume name already appears in the VLDB. VL CREATEFAIL Space for the new entry cannot be allocated within the VLDB. VL BADNAME The volume name is invalid. VL BADVOLTYPE The volume type is invalid. VL BADSERVER The indicated server information is invalid. VL BADPARTITION The indicated partition information is invalid. VL BADSERVERFLAG The server flag field is invalid. VL IO An error occurred while writing to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-2 Section 3.6.2: VL DeleteEntry - Delete a VLDB entry \code int VL DeleteEntry(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype) \endcode \par Description Delete the entry matching the given volume identifier and volume type as specified in the Volid and voltype arguments. For a read-write entry whose reference count is greater than 1, the entry is not actually deleted, since at least one child (read-only or backup) volume still depends on it. For cases of non-read-write volumes, the parent's reference count and associated chains are updated. \par If the associated VLDB entry is already marked as deleted (i.e., its flags field has the VLDELETED bit set), then no further action is taken, and VL ENTDELETED is returned. The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. VL ENTDELETED The given VLDB entry has already been marked as deleted. VL IO An error occurred while writing to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-3 Section 3.6.3: VL GetEntryByID - Get VLDB entry by volume ID/type \code int VL GetEntryByID(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype, OUT vldbentry *entry) \endcode \par Description Given a volume's numerical identifier (Volid) and type (voltype), return a pointer to the entry in the VLDB describing the given volume instance. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL ENTDELETED The given VLDB entry has already been marked as deleted. \subsection sec3-6-4 Section 3.6.4: VL GetEntryByName - Get VLDB entry by volume name \code int VL GetEntryByName(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN char *volumename, OUT vldbentry *entry) \endcode \par Description Given the volume name in the volumename parameter, return a pointer to the entry in the VLDB describing the given volume. The name in volumename may be no longer than MAXNAMELEN (65) characters, including the trailing null. Note that it is legal to use the volume's numerical identifier (in string form) as the volume name. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par This function is closely related to the VL GetEntryByID() routine, as might be expected. In fact, the by-ID routine is called if the volume name provided in volumename is the string version of the volume's numerical identifier. \par Error Codes VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL ENTDELETED The given VLDB entry has already been marked as deleted. \n VL BADNAME The volume name is invalid. \subsection sec3-6-5 Section 3.6.5: VL GetNewVolumeId - Generate a new volume ID \code int VL GetNewVolumeId(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long bumpcount, OUT long *newvolumid) \endcode \par Description Acquire bumpcount unused, consecutively-numbered volume identifiers from the Volume Location Server. The lowest-numbered of the newly-acquired set is placed in the newvolumid argument. The largest number of volume IDs that may be generated with any one call is bounded by the MAXBUMPCOUNT constant defined in Section 3.2.1. Currently, there is (effectively) no restriction on the number of volume identifiers that may thus be reserved in a single call. \par The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \n VL BADVOLIDBUMP The value of the bumpcount parameter exceeds the system limit of MAXBUMPCOUNT. \n VL IO An error occurred while writing to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-6 Section 3.6.6: VL ReplaceEntry - Replace entire contents of VLDB entry \code int VL ReplaceEntry(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype, IN vldbentry *newentry, IN long ReleaseType) \endcode \par Description Perform a wholesale replacement of the VLDB entry corresponding to the volume instance whose identifier is Volid and type voltype with the information contained in the newentry argument. Individual VLDB entry fields cannot be selectively changed while the others are preserved; VL UpdateEntry() should be used for this objective. The permissible values for the ReleaseType parameter are defined in Section 3.2.7. \par The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. All of the hash tables impacted are brought up to date to incorporate the new information. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \n VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL BADRELLOCKTYPE An illegal release lock has been specified by the ReleaseType argument. \n VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL BADENTRY An attempt was made to change a read-write volume ID. \n VL IO An error occurred while writing to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-7 Section 3.6.7: VL UpdateEntry - Update contents of VLDB entry \code int VL UpdateEntry(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype, IN VldbUpdateEntry *UpdateEntry, IN long ReleaseType) \endcode \par Description Update the VLDB entry corresponding to the volume instance whose identifier is Volid and type voltype with the information contained in the UpdateEntry argument. Most of the entry's fields can be modified in a single call to VL UpdateEntry(). The Mask field within the UpdateEntry parameter selects the fields to update with the values stored within the other UpdateEntry fields. Permissible values for the ReleaseType parameter are defined in Section 3.2.7. \par The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \n VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL BADRELLOCKTYPE An illegal release lock has been specified by the ReleaseType argument. \n VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL IO An error occurred while writing to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-8 Section 3.6.8: VL SetLock - Lock VLDB entry \code int VL SetLock(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype, IN long voloper) \endcode \par Description Lock the VLDB entry matching the given volume ID (Volid) and type (voltype) for volume operation voloper (e.g., VLOP MOVE and VLOP RELEASE). If the entry is currently unlocked, then its LockTimestamp will be zero. If the lock is obtained, the given voloper is stamped into the flags field, and the LockTimestamp is set to the time of the call. \Note When the caller attempts to lock the entry for a release operation, special care is taken to abort the operation if the entry has already been locked for this operation, and the existing lock has timed out. In this case, VL SetLock() returns VL RERELEASE. \par The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \n VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL BADVOLOPER An illegal volume operation was specified in the voloper argument. Legal values are defined in the latter part of the table in Section 3.2.5. \n VL ENTDELETED The given VLDB entry has already been marked as deleted. \n VL ENTRYLOCKED The given VLDB entry has already been locked (which has not yet timed out). \n VL RERELEASE A VLDB entry locked for release has timed out, and the caller also wanted to perform a release operation on it. \n VL IO An error was experienced while attempting to write to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-9 Section 3.6.9: VL ReleaseLock - Unlock VLDB entry \code int VL ReleaseLock(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long Volid, IN long voltype, IN long ReleaseType) \endcode \par Description Unlock the VLDB entry matching the given volume ID (Volid) and type (voltype). The ReleaseType argument determines which VLDB entry fields from flags and LockAfsId will be cleared along with the lock timestamp in LockTimestamp. Permissible values for the ReleaseType parameter are defined in Section 3.2.7. \par The VLDB is write-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \n VL BADVOLTYPE An illegal volume type has been specified by the voltype argument. \n VL BADRELLOCKTYPE An illegal release lock has been specified by the ReleaseType argument. \n VL NOENT This volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL ENTDELETED The given VLDB entry has already been marked as deleted. \n VL IO An error was experienced while attempting to write to the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-10 Section 3.6.10: VL ListEntry - Get contents of VLDB via index \code int VL ListEntry(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long previous index, OUT long *count, OUT long *next index, OUT vldbentry *entry) \endcode \par Description This function assists in the task of enumerating the contents of the VLDB. Given an index into the database, previous index, this call return the single VLDB entry at that offset, placing it in the entry argument. The number of VLDB entries left to list is placed in count, and the index of the next entry to request is returned in next index. If an illegal index is provided, count is set to -1. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes ---None. \subsection sec3-6-11 Section 3.6.11: VL ListAttributes - List all VLDB entry matching given attributes, single return object \code int VL ListAttributes(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN VldbListByAttributes *attributes, OUT long *nentries, OUT bulkentries *blkentries) \endcode \par Description Retrieve all the VLDB entries that match the attributes listed in the attributes parameter, placing them in the blkentries object. The number of matching entries is placed in nentries. Matching can be done by server number, partition, volume type, flag, or volume ID. The legal values to use in the attributes argument are listed in Section 3.2.3. Note that if the VLLIST VOLUMEID bit is set in attributes, all other bit values are ignored and the volume ID provided is the sole search criterion. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Note that VL ListAttributes() is a potentially expensive function, as sequential search through all of the VLDB entries is performed in most cases. \par Error Codes VL NOMEM Memory for the blkentries object could not be allocated. \n VL NOENT This specified volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL SIZEEXCEEDED Ran out of room in the blkentries object. \n VL IO Error while reading from the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-12 Section 3.6.12: VL LinkedList - List all VLDB entry matching given attributes, linked list return object \code int VL LinkedList(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN VldbListByAttributes *attributes, OUT long *nentries, OUT vldb list *linkedentries) \endcode \par Description Retrieve all the VLDB entries that match the attributes listed in the attributes parameter, creating a linked list of entries based in the linkedentries object. The number of matching entries is placed in nentries. Matching can be done by server number, partition, volume type, flag, or volume ID. The legal values to use in the attributes argument are listed in Section 3.2.3. Note that if the VLLIST VOLUMEID bit is set in attributes, all other bit values are ignored and the volume ID provided is the sole search criterion. \par The VL LinkedList() function is identical to the VL ListAttributes(), except for the method of delivering the VLDB entries to the caller. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL NOMEM Memory for an entry in the list based at linkedentries object could not be allocated. \n VL NOENT This specified volume instance does not appear in the VLDB. \n VL SIZEEXCEEDED Ran out of room in the current list object. \n VL IO Error while reading from the VLDB. \subsection sec3-6-13 Section 3.6.13: VL GetStats - Get Volume Location Server statistics \code int VL GetStats(IN struct rx connection *z conn, OUT vldstats *stats, OUT vital vlheader *vital header) \endcode \par Description Collect the different types of VLDB statistics. Part of the VLDB header is returned in vital header, which includes such information as the number of allocations and frees performed, and the next volume ID to be allocated. The dynamic per-operation stats are returned in the stats argument, reporting the number and types of operations and aborts. \par The VLDB is read-locked for the duration of this operation. \par Error Codes VL PERM The caller is not authorized to execute this function. \subsection sec3-6-14 Section 3.6.14: VL Probe - Verify Volume Location Server connectivity/status \code int VL Probe(IN struct rx connection *z conn) \endcode \par Description This routine serves a 'pinging' function to determine whether the Volume Location Server is still running. If this call succeeds, then the Volume Location Server is shown to be capable of responding to RPCs, thus confirming connectivity and basic operation. \par The VLDB is not locked for this operation. \par Error Codes ---None. \section sec3-7 Section 3.7: Kernel Interface Subset \par The interface described by this document so far applies to user-level clients, such as the vos utility. However, some volume location operations must be performed from within the kernel. Specifically, the Cache Manager must find out where volumes reside and otherwise gather information about them in order to conduct its business with the File Servers holding them. In order to support Volume Location Server interconnection for agents operating within the kernel, the afsvlint.xg Rxgen interface was built. It is a minimal subset of the user-level vldbint.xg definition. Within afsvlint.xg, there are duplicate definitions for such constants as MAXNAMELEN, MAXNSERVERS, MAXTYPES, VLF RWEXISTS, VLF ROEXISTS, VLF BACKEXISTS, VLSF NEWREPSITE, VLSF ROVOL, VLSF RWVOL, and VLSF BACKVOL. Since the only operations the Cache Manager must perform are volume location given a specific volume ID or name, and to find out about unresponsive Volume Location Servers, the following interface routines are duplicated in afsvlint.xg, along with the struct vldbentry declaration: \li VL GetEntryByID() \li VL GetEntryByName() \li VL Probe() \page chap4 Chapter 4: Volume Server Architecture \section sec4-1 Section 4.1: Introduction \par The Volume Server allows administrative tasks and probes to be performed on the set of AFS volumes residing on the machine on which it is running. As described in Chapter 2, a distributed database holding volume location info, the VLDB, is used by client applications to locate these volumes. Volume Server functions are typically invoked either directly from authorized users via the vos utility or by the AFS backup system. \par This chapter briefly discusses various aspects of the Volume Server's architecture. First, the high-level on-disk representation of volumes is covered. Then, the transactions used in conjuction with volume operations are examined. Then, the program implementing the Volume Server, volserver, is considered. The nature and format of the log file kept by the Volume Server rounds out the description. As with all AFS servers, the Volume Server uses the Rx remote procedure call package for communication with its clients. \section sec4-2 Section 4.2: Disk Representation \par For each volume on an AFS partition, there exists a file visible in the unix name space which describes the contents of that volume. By convention, each of these files is named by concatenating a prefix string, "V", the numerical volume ID, and the postfix string ".vol". Thus, file V0536870918.vol describes the volume whose numerical ID is 0536870918. Internally, each per-volume descriptor file has such fields as a version number, the numerical volume ID, and the numerical parent ID (useful for read-only or backup volumes). It also has a list of related inodes, namely files which are not visible from the unix name space (i.e., they do not appear as entries in any unix directory object). The set of important related inodes are: \li Volume info inode: This field identifies the inode which hosts the on-disk representation of the volume's header. It is very similar to the information pointed to by the volume field of the struct volser trans defined in Section 5.4.1, recording important status information for the volume. \li Large vnode index inode: This field identifies the inode which holds the list of vnode identifiers for all directory objects residing within the volume. These are "large" since they must also hold the Access Control List (ACL) information for the given AFS directory. \li Small vnode index inode: This field identifies the inode which holds the list of vnode identifiers for all non-directory objects hosted by the volume. \par All of the actual files and directories residing within an AFS volume, as identified by the contents of the large and small vnode index inodes, are also free-floating inodes, not appearing in the conventional unix name space. This is the reason the vendor-supplied fsck program should not be run on partitions containing AFS volumes. Since the inodes making up AFS files and directories, as well as the inodes serving as volume indices for them, are not mapped to any directory, the standard fsck program would throw away all of these "unreferenced" inodes. Thus, a special version of fsck is provided that recognizes partitions containing AFS volumes as well as standard unix partitions. \section sec4-3 Section 4.3: Transactions \par Each individual volume operation is carried out by the Volume Server as a transaction, but not in the atomic sense of the word. Logically, creating a Volume Server transaction can be equated with performing an "exclusive open" on the given volume before beginning the actual work of the desired volume operation. No other Volume Server (or File Server) operation is allowed on the opened volume until the transaction is terminated. Thus, transactions in the context of the Volume Server serve to provide mutual exclusion without any of the normal atomicity guarantees. Volumes maintain enough internal state to enable recovery from interrupted or failed operations via use of the salvager program. Whenever volume inconsistencies are detected, this salvager program is run, which then attempts to correct the problem. \par Volume transactions have timeouts associated with them. This guarantees that the death of the agent performing a given volume operation cannot result in the volume being permanently removed from circulation. There are actually two timeout periods defined for a volume transaction. The first is the warning time, defined to be 5 minutes. If a transaction lasts for more than this time period without making progress, the Volume Server prints a warning message to its log file (see Section 4.5). The second time value associated with a volume transaction is the hard timeout, defined to occur 10 minutes after any progress has been made on the given operation. After this period, the transaction will be unconditionally deleted, and the volume freed for any other operations. Transactions are reference-counted. Progress will be deemed to have occurred for a transaction, and its internal timeclock field will be updated, when: \li 1 The transaction is first created. \li 2 A reference is made to the transaction, causing the Volume Server to look it up in its internal tables. \li 3 The transaction's reference count is decremented. \section sec4-4 Section 4.4: The volserver Process \par The volserver user-level program is run on every AFS server machine, and implements the Volume Server agent. It is responsible for providing the Volume Server interface as defined by the volint.xg Rxgen file. \par The volserver process defines and launches five threads to perform the bulk of its duties. One thread implements a background daemon whose job it is to garbage-collect timed-out transaction structures. The other four threads are RPC interface listeners, primed to accept remote procedure calls and thus perform the defined set of volume operations. \par Certain non-standard configuration settings are made for the RPC subsystem by the volserver program. For example, it chooses to extend the length of time that an Rx connection may remain idle from the default 12 seconds to 120 seconds. The reasoning here is that certain volume operations may take longer than 12 seconds of processing time on the server, and thus the default setting for the connection timeout value would incorrectly terminate an RPC when in fact it was proceeding normally and correctly. \par The volserver program takes a single, optional command line argument. If a positive integer value is provided on the command line, then it shall be used to set the debugging level within the Volume Server. By default, a value of zero is used, specifying that no special debugging output will be generated and fed to the Volume Server log file described below. \section sec4-5 Section 4.5: Log File \par The Volume Server keeps a log file, recording the set of events of special interest it has encountered. The file is named VolserLog, and is stored in the /usr/afs/logs directory on the local disk of the server machine on which the Volume Server runs. This is a human-readable file, with every entry time-stamped. \par Whenever the volserver program restarts, it renames the current VolserLog file to VolserLog.old, and starts up a fresh log. A properly-authorized individual can easily inspect the log file residing on any given server machine. This is made possible by the BOS Server AFS agent running on the machine, which allows the contents of this file to be fetched and displayed on the caller's machine via the bos getlog command. \par An excerpt from a Volume Server log file follows below. The numbers appearing in square brackets at the beginning of each line have been inserted so that we may reference the individual lines of the log excerpt in the following paragraph. \code [1] Wed May 8 06:03:00 1991 AttachVolume: Error attaching volume /vicepd/V1969547815.vol; volume needs salvage [2] Wed May 8 06:03:01 1991 Volser: ListVolumes: Could not attach volume 1969547815 [3] Wed May 8 07:36:13 1991 Volser: Clone: Cloning volume 1969541499 to new volume 1969541501 [4] Wed May 8 11:25:05 1991 AttachVolume: Cannot read volume header /vicepd/V1969547415.vol [5] Wed May 8 11:25:06 1991 Volser: CreateVolume: volume 1969547415 (bld.dce.s3.dv.pmax_ul3) created \endcode \par Line [1] indicates that the volume whose numerical ID is 1969547815 could not be attached on partition /vicepd. This error is probably the result of an aborted transaction which left the volume in an inconsistent state, or by actual damage to the volume structure or data. In this case, the Volume Server recommends that the salvager program be run on this volume to restore its integrity. Line [2] records the operation which revealed this situation, namely the invocation of an AFSVolListVolumes() RPC. \par Line [4] reveals that the volume header file for a specific volume could not be read. Line [5], as with line [2] in the above paragraph, indicates why this is true. Someone had called the AFSVolCreateVolume() interface function, and as a precaution, the Volume Server first checked to see if such a volume was already present by attempting to read its header. \par Thus verifying that the volume did not previously exist, the Volume Server allowed the AFSVolCreateVolume() call to continue its processing, creating and initializing the proper volume file, V1969547415.vol, and the associated header and index inodes. \page chap5 Chapter 5: Volume Server Interface \section sec5-1 Section 5.1 Introduction \par This chapter documents the API for the Volume Server facility, as defined by the volint.xg Rxgen interface file and the volser.h include file. Descriptions of all the constants, structures, macros, and interface functions available to the application programmer appear here. \section sec5-2 Section 5.2: Constants \par This section covers the basic constant definitions of interest to the Volume Server application programmer. These definitions appear in the volint.h file, automatically generated from the volint.xg Rxgen interface file, and in volser.h. \par Each subsection is devoted to describing the constants falling into the following categories: \li Configuration and boundary values \li Interface routine opcodes \li Transaction Flags \li Volume Types \li LWP State \li States for struct vldbentry \li Validity Checks \li Miscellaneous \subsection sec5-2-1 Section 5.2.1: Configuration and Boundary Values \par These constants define some basic system configuration values, along with such things as maximum sizes of important arrays. MyPort 5,003 The Rx UDP port on which the Volume Server service may be found. \par Name NameLen \par Value 80 \par Description Used by the vos utility to define maximum lengths for internal filename variables. \par Name VLDB MAXSERVERS \par Value 10 \par Description Maximum number of server agents implementing the AFS Volume Location Database (VLDB) for the cell. \par Name VOLSERVICE ID \par Value 4 \par Description The Rx service number on the given UDP port (MyPort) above. \par Name INVALID BID \par Value 0 \par Description Used as an invalid read-only or backup volume ID. \par Name VOLSER MAXVOLNAME \par Value 65 \par Description The number of characters in the longest possible volume name, including the trailing null. Note: this is only used by the vos utility; the Volume Server uses the "old" value below. \par Name VOLSER OLDMAXVOLNAME \par Value 32 \par Description The "old" maximum number of characters in an AFS volume name, including the trailing null. In reality, it is also the current maximum. \par Name VOLSER MAX REPSITES \par Value 7 \par Description The maximum number of replication sites for a volume. \par Name VNAMESIZE \par Value 32 \par Description Size in bytes of the name field in struct volintInfo (see Section 5.4.6). \subsection sec5-2-2 Section 5.2.2: Interface Routine Opcodes \par These constants, appearing in the volint.xg Rxgen interface file for the Volume Server, define the opcodes for the RPC routines. Every Rx call on this interface contains this opcode, and the dispatcher uses it to select the proper code at the server site to carry out the call. \par Name VOLCREATEVOLUME \par Value 100 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolCreateVolume() \par Name VOLDELETEVOLUME \par Value 101 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolDeleteVolume() \par Name VOLRESTORE \par Value 102 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolRestoreVolume() \par Name VOLFORWARD \par Value 103 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolForward() \par Name VOLENDTRANS \par Value 104 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolEndTrans() \par Name VOLCLONE \par Value 105 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolClone() . \par Name VOLSETFLAGS \par Value 106 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolSetFlags() \par Name VOLGETFLAGS \par Value 107 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolGetFlags() \par Name VOLTRANSCREATE \par Value 108 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolTransCreate() \par Name VOLDUMP \par Value 109 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolDump() \par Name VOLGETNTHVOLUME \par Value 110 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolGetNthVolume() \par Name VOLSETFORWARDING \par Value 111 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolSetForwarding() \par Name VOLGETNAME \par Value 112 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolGetName() \par Name VOLGETSTATUS \par Value 113 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolGetStatus() \par Name VOLSIGRESTORE \par Value 114 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolSignalRestore() \par Name VOLLISTPARTITIONS \par Value 115 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolListPartitions() \par Name VOLLISTVOLS \par Value 116 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolListVolumes() \par Name VOLSETIDSTYPES \par Value 117 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolSetIdsTypes() \par Name VOLMONITOR \par Value 118 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolMonitor() \par Name VOLDISKPART \par Value 119 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolPartitionInfo() \par Name VOLRECLONE \par Value 120 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolReClone() \par Name VOLLISTONEVOL \par Value 121 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolListOneVolume() \par Name VOLNUKE \par Value 122 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolNukeVolume() \par Name VOLSETDATE \par Value 123 \par Description Opcode for AFSVolSetDate() \subsection sec5-2-3 Section 5.2.3: Transaction Flags \par These constants define the various flags the Volume Server uses in assocation with volume transactions, keeping track of volumes upon which operations are currently proceeding. There are three sets of flag values, stored in three different fields within a struct volser trans: general volume state, attachment modes, and specific transaction states. \subsubsection sec5-2-3-1: Section 5.2.3.1 vflags \par These values are used to represent the general state of the associated volume. They appear in the vflags field within a struct volser trans. \par Name VTDeleteOnSalvage \par Value 1 \par Description The volume should be deleted on next salvage. \par Name VTOutOfService \par Value 2 \par Description This volume should never be put online. \par Name VTDeleted \par Value 4 \par Description This volume has been deleted (via AFSVolDeleteVol¬ume() ), and thus should not be manipulated. \subsubsection sec5-2-3-2 Section 5.2.3.2: iflags \par These constants represent the desired attachment mode for a volume at the start of a transaction. Once attached, the volume header is marked to reflect this mode. Attachment modes are useful in salvaging partitions, as they indicate whether the operations being performed on individual volumes at the time the crash occured could have introduced inconsistencies in their metadata descriptors. If a volume was attached in a read-only fashion, then the salvager may decide (taking other factors into consideration) that the volume doesn't need attention as a result of the crash. \par These values appear in the iflags field within a struct volser trans. \par Name ITOffline \par Value 0x1 \par Description Volume offline on server (returns VOFFLINE). \par Name ITBusy \par Value 0x2 \par Description Volume busy on server (returns VBUSY). \par Name ITReadOnly \par Value 0x8 \par Description Volume is read-only on client, read-write on server -DO NOT USE. \par Name ITCreate \par Value 0x10 \par Description Volume does not exist correctly yet. \par Name ITCreateVolID \par Value 0x1000 \par Description Create volid. \subsubsection sec5-2-3-3 Section 5.2.3.3: tflags \par This value is used to represent the transaction state of the associated volume, and appears in the tflags field within a struct volser trans. \par Name TTDeleted \par Value 1 \par Description Delete transaction not yet freed due to high reference count. \subsection sec5-2-4 Section 5.2.4: Volume Types \par The following constants may be supplied as values for the type argument to the AFSVol-CreateVolume() interface call. They are just synonyms for the three values RWVOL, ROVOL, \par Name volser RW \par Value 0 \par Description Specifies a read-write volume type. \par Name volser RO \par Value 1 \par Description Specifies a read-only volume type. \par Name volser BACK \par Value 2 \par Description Specifies a backup volume type. \subsection sec5-2-5 Section 5.2.5: LWP State \par This set of exported definitions refers to objects internal to the Volume Server, and strictly speaking should not be visible to other agents. Specifically, a busyFlags array keeps a set of flags referenced by the set of lightweight threads running within the Volume Server. These flags reflect and drive the state of each of these worker LWPs. \par Name VHIdle \par Value 1 \par Description Volume Server LWP is idle, waiting for new work. \par Name VHRequest \par Value 2 \par Description A work item has been queued. \subsection sec5-2-6 Section 5.2.6: States for struct vldbentry \par The Volume Server defines a collection of synonyms for certain values defined by the Volume Location Server. These particular constants are used within the flags field in objects of type struct vldbentry. The equivalent Volume Location Server values are described in Section 3.2.6. \par Name RW EXISTS \par Value 0x1000 \par Description Synonym for VLF RWEXISTS. \par Name RO EXISTS \par Value 0x2000 \par Description Synonym for VLF ROEXISTS. \par Name BACK EXISTS \par Value 0x4000 \par Description Synonym for VLF BACKEXISTS. \par Name NEW REPSITE \par Value 0x01 \par Description Synonym for VLSF NEWREPSITE. \par Name ITSROVOL \par Value 0x02 \par Description Synonym for VLFS ROVOL. \par Name ITSRWVOL \par Value 0x04 \par Description Synonym for VLSF RWVOL. \par Name ITSBACKVOL \par Value 0x08 \par Description Synonym for VLSF BACKVOL. \subsection sec5-2-7 Section 5.2.7: Validity Checks \par These values are used for performing validity checks. The first one appears only within the partFlags field within objects of type partList (see Section 5.4.3). The rest (except VOK and VBUSY) appear in the volFlags field within an object of type struct volDescription. These latter defintions are used within the volFlags field to mark whether the rest of the fields within the struct volDescription are valid. Note that while several constants are defined, only some are actually used internally by the Volume Server code. \par Name PARTVALID \par Value 0x01 \par Description The indicated partition is valid. \par Name CLONEVALID \par Value 0x02 \par Description The indicated clone (field volCloneId) is a valid one. \par Name CLONEZAPPED \par Value 0x04 \par Description The indicated clone volume (field volCloneId) has been deleted. \par Name IDVALID \par Value 0x08 \par Description The indicated volume ID (field volId) is valid. \par Name NAMEVALID \par Value 0x10 \par Description The indicted volume name (field volName) is valid. Not used internally by the Volume Server. \par Name SIZEVALID \par Value 0x20 \par Description The indicated volume size (field volSize) is valid. Not used internally by the Volume Server. \par Name ENTRYVALID \par Value 0x40 \par Description The struct volDescription refers to a valid volume. \par Name REUSECLONEID \par Value 0x80 \par Description The indicated clone ID (field volCloneId) should be reused. \par Name VOK \par Value 0x02 \par Description Used in the status field of struct volintInfo to show that everything is OK. \par Name VBUSY \par Value 110 \par Description Used in the status field of struct volintInfo to show that the volume is currently busy. \subsection sec5-2-8 Section 5.2.8: Miscellaneous \par This section covers the set of exported Volume Server definitions that don't easily fall into the above categories. \par Name SIZE \par Value 1,024 \par Description Not used internally by the Volume Server; used as a maxi¬mum size for internal character arrays. \par Name MAXHELPERS \par Value 10 \par Description Size of an internal Volume Server character array (busyFlags), it marks the maximum number of threads within the server. \par Name STDERR \par Value stderr \par Description Synonym for the unix standard input file descriptor. \par Name STDOUT \par Value stdout \par Description Synonym for the unix standard output file descriptor. \section sec5-3 Section 5.3: Exported Variables \par This section describes the single variable that the Volume Server exports to its applications. \par The QI GlobalWriteTrans exported variable represents a pointer to the head of the global queue of transaction structures for operations being handled by a Volume Server. Each object in this list is of type struct volser trans (see Section 5.4.1 below). \section sec5-4 Section 5.4: Structures and Typedefs \par This section describes the major exported Volume Server data structures of interest to application programmers, along with some of the the typedefs based on those structures. Please note that typedefs in shose definitions angle brackets appear are those fed through the Rxgen RPC stub generator. Rxgen uses these angle brackets to specify an array of indefinite size. \subsection sec5-4-1 Section 5.4.1: struct volser trans \par This structure defines the transaction record for all volumes upon which an active operation is proceeding. \n \b Fields \li struct volser trans *next - Pointer to the next transaction structure in the queue. \li long tid - Transaction ID. \li long time - The time this transaction was last active, for timeout purposes. \li This is the standard unix time format. \li long creationTime - The time a which this transaction started. \li long returnCode - The overall transaction error code. \li struct Volume *volume - Pointer to the low-level object describing the associated volume. This is included here for the use of lower-level support code. \li long volid - The associated volume's numerical ID. \li long partition - The partition on which the given volume resides. \li long dumpTransId - Not used. \li long dumpSeq - Not used. \li short refCount - Reference count on this structure. \li short iflags - Initial attach mode flags. \li char vflags - Current volume status flags. \li char tflags - Transaction flags. \li char incremental - If non-zero, indicates that an incremental restore operation should be performed. \li char lastProcName[] - Name of the last internal Volume Server procedure that used this transaction. This field may be up to 30 characters long, including the trailing null, and is intended for debugging purposes only. \li struct rx call *rxCallPtr - Pointer to latest associated rx call. This field is intended for debugging purposes only. \subsection sec5-4-2 Section 5.4.2: struct volDescription \par This structure is used by the AFS backup system to group certain key fields of volume information. \n \b Fields \li char volName[] -The name of the given volume; maximum length of this string is VOLSER MAXVOLNAME characters, including the trailing null. \li long volId -The volume's numerical ID. \li int volSize -The size of the volume, in bytes. \li long volFlags -Keeps validity information on the given volume and its clones. This field takes on values from the set defined in Section 5.2.7 \li long volCloneId -The volume's current clone ID. \subsection sec5-4-3 Section 5.4.3: struct partList \par This structure is used by the backup system and the vos tool to keep track of the state of the AFS disk partitions on a given server. \n \b Fields \li long partId[] -Set of 26 partition IDs. \li long partFlags[] -Set to PARTVALID if the associated partition slot corresponds to a valid partition. There are 26 entries in this array. \subsection sec5-4-4 Section 5.4.4: struct volser status \par This structure holds the status of a volume as it is known to the Volume Server, and is passed to clients through the AFSVolGetStatus() interface call. \par Two fields appearing in this structure, accessDate and updateDate, deserve a special note. In particular, it is important to observe that these fields are not kept in full synchrony with reality. When a File Server provides one of its client Cache Managers with a chunk of a file on which to operate, it is incapable of determining exactly when the data in that chunk is accessed, or exactly when it is updated. This is because the manipulations occur on the client machine, without any information on these accesses or updates passed back to the server. The only time these fields can be modified is when the chunk of a file resident within the given volume is delivered to a client (in the case of accessDate), or when a client writes back a dirty chunk to the File Server (in the case of updateDate). \n \b Fields \li long volID - The volume's numerical ID, unique within the cell. \li long nextUnique - Next value to use for a vnode uniquifier within this volume. \li int type - Basic volume class, one of RWVOL, ROVOL, or BACKVOL. \li long parentID - Volume ID of the parent, if this volume is of type ROVOL or BACKVOL. \li long cloneID - ID of the latest read-only clone, valid iff the type field is set to RWVOL. \li long backupID - Volume ID of the latest backup of this read-write volume. \li long restoredFromID - The volume ID contained in the dump from which this volume was restored. This field is used to simply make sure that an incremental dump is not restored on top of something inappropriate. Note that this field itself is not dumped. \li long maxQuota - The volume's maximum quota, in 1Kbyte blocks. \li long minQuota - The volume's minimum quota, in 1Kbyte blocks. \li long owner - The user ID of the person responsible for this volume. \li long creationDate - For a volume of type RWVOL, this field marks its creation date. For the original copy of a clone, this field represents the cloning date. \li long accessDate - Last access time by a user for this volume. This value is expressed as a standard unix longword date quantity. \li long updateDate - Last modification time by a user for this volume. This value is expressed as a standard unix longword date quantity. \li long expirationDate - Expiration date for this volume. If the volume never expires, then this field is set to zero. \li long backupDate - The last time a backup clone was created for this volume. \li long copyDate - The time that this copy of this volume was created. \subsection sec5-4-5 Section 5.4.5: struct destServer \par Used to specify the destination server in an AFSVolForward() invocation (see Section 5.7.7). \n \b Fields \li long destHost - The IP address of the destination server. \li long destPort - The UDP port for the Volume Server Rx service there. \li long destSSID - Currently, this field is always set to 1. \subsection sec5-4-6 Section 5.4.6: struct volintInfo \par This structure is used to communicate volume information to the Volume Server's RPC clients. It is used to build the volEntries object, which appears as a parameter to the AFSVolListVolumes() call. \par The comments in Section 5.4.4 concerning the accessDate and updateDate fields are equally valid for the analogue fields in this structure. \n \b Fields \li char name[] - The null-terminated name for the volume, which can be no longer than VNAMESIZE (32) characters, including the trailing null. \li long volid - The volume's numerical ID. \li long type - The volume's basic class, one of RWVOL, ROVOL, or BACKVOL. \li long backupID - The latest backup volume's ID. \li long parentID - The parent volume's ID. \li long cloneID - The latest clone volume's ID. \li long status - Status of the volume; may be one of VOK or VBUSY. \li long copyDate - The time that this copy of this volume was created. \li unsigned char inUse - If non-zero, an indication that this volume is online. \li unsigned char needsSalvaged - If non-zero, an indication that this volume needs to be salvaged. \li unsigned char destroyMe - If non-zero, an indication that this volume should be destroyed. \li long creationDate - Creation date for a read/write volume; cloning date for the original copy of a read-only volume. \li long accessDate - Last access time by a user for this volume. \li long updateDate - Last modification time by a user for this volume. \li long backupDate - Last time a backup copy was made of this volume. \li int dayUse - Number of times this volume was accessed since midnight of the current day. \li int filecount - the number of file system objects contained within the volume. \li int maxquota - The upper limit on the number of 1-Kbyte disk blocks of storage that this volume may obtain. \li int size - Not known. \li long flags - Values used by the backup system are stored here. \li long spare1 -spare3 -Spare fields, reserved for future use. \subsection sec5-4-7 Section 5.4.7: struct transDebugInfo \par This structure is provided for monitoring and debugging purposes. It is used to compose the transDebugEntries variable-sized object, which in turn appears as a parameter to the AFSVolMonitor() interface call. \n \b Fields \li long tid - The transaction ID. \li long time - The time when the transaction was last active, for timeout purposes. \li long creationTime - The time the transaction started. \li long returnCode - The overall transaction error code. \li long volid - The open volume's ID. \li long partition - The open volume's partition. \li short iflags - Initial attach mode flags (IT*). \li char vflags - Current volume status flags (VT*). \li char tflags - Transaction flags (TT*). \li char lastProcName[] - The string name of the last procedure which used transaction. This field may be up to 30 characters long, including the trailing null, and is intended for debugging purposes only. \li int callValid - Flag which determines if the following fields are valid. \li long readNext - Sequence number of the next Rx packet to be read. \li long transmitNext - Sequence number of the next Rx packet to be transmitted. \li int lastSendTime - The last time anything was sent over the wire for this transaction. \li int lastReceiveTime - The last time anything was received over the wire for this transaction. \subsection sec5-4-8 Section 5.4.8: struct pIDs \par Used by the AFSVolListPartitions() interface call, this structure is used to store information on all of the partitions on a given Volume Server. \n \b Fields \li long partIds[] - One per letter of the alphabet (/vicepa through /vicepz). Filled with 0 for "/vicepa", 25 for "/vicepz". Invalid partition slots are filled in with a -1. \subsection sec5-4-9 Section 5.4.9: struct diskPartition \par This structure contains information regarding an individual AFS disk partition. It is returned as a parameter to the AFSVolPartitionInfo() call. \n \b Fields \li char name[] -Mounted partition name, up to 32 characters long including the trailing null. \li char devName[] -Device name on which the partition lives, up to 32 characters long including the trailing null. \li int lock fd -A lock used for mutual exclusion to the named partition. A value of -1 indicates the lock is not currently being held. Otherwise, it has the file descriptor resulting from the unix open() call on the file specified in the name field used to "acquire" the lock. \li int totalUsable - The number of blocks within the partition which are available. \li int free - The number of free blocks in the partition. \li int minFree - The minimum number of blocks that must remain free regardless of allocation requests. \section sec5-4-10 Section 5.4.10: struct restoreCookie \par Used as a parameter to both AFSVolRestore() and AFSVolForward(),a restoreCookie keeps information that must be preserved between various Volume Server operations. \n \b Fields \li char name[] - The volume name, up to 32 characters long including the trailing null. \li long type - The volume type, one of RWVOL, ROVOL, and BACKVOL. \li long clone - The current read-only clone ID for this volume. \li long parent - The parent ID for this volume. \section sec5-4-11 Section 5.4.11: transDebugEntries \code typedef transDebugInfo transDebugEntries<>; \endcode \par This typedef is used to generate a variable-length object which is passed as a parameter to the AFSVolMonitor() interface function. Thus, it may carry any number of descriptors for active transactions on the given Volume Server. Specifi, it causes a C structure of the same name to be defined with the following fields: \n \b Fields \li u int transDebugEntries len - The number of struct transDebugInfo (see Section 5.4.7) objects appearing at the memory location pointed to by the transDebugEntries val field. \li transDebugInfo *transDebugEntries val - A pointer to a region of memory containing an array of transDebugEntries len objects of type struct transDebugInfo. \subsection sec5-4-12 Section 5.4.12: volEntries \code typedef volintInfo volEntries<>; \endcode \par This typedef is used to generate a variable-length object which is passed as a parameter to AFSVolListVolumes(). Thus, it may carry any number of descriptors for volumes on the given Volume Server. Specifically, it causes a C structure of the same name to be defined with the following fields: \n \b Fields \li u int volEntries len - The number of struct volintInfo (see Section 5.4.6) objects appearing at the memory location pointed to by the volEntries val field. \li volintInfo *volEntries val -A pointer to a region of memory containing an array of volEntries len objects of type struct volintInfo. \section sec5-5 Section 5.5: Error Codes \par The Volume Server advertises two groups of error codes. The first set consists of the standard error codes defined by the package. The second is a collection of lower-level return values which are exported here for convenience. \par Name VOLSERTRELE ERROR \par Value 1492325120L \par Description internal error releasing transaction. \par Name VOLSERNO OP \par Value 1492325121L \par Description unknown internal error. \par Name VOLSERREAD DUMPERROR \par Value 1492325122L \par Description badly formatted dump. \par Name VOLSERDUMPERROR \par Value 1492325123L \par Description badly formatted dump(2). \par Name VOLSERATTACH ERROR \par Value 1492325124L \par Description could not attach volume. \par Name VOLSERILLEGAL PARTITION \par Value 1492325125L \par Description illegal partition. \par Name VOLSERDETACH ERROR \par Value 1492325126L \par Description could not detach volume. \par Name VOLSERBAD ACCESS \par Value 1492325127L \par Description insufficient privilege for volume operation. \par Name VOLSERVLDB ERROR \par Value 1492325128L \par Description error from volume location database. \par Name VOLSERBADNAME \par Value 1492325129L \par Description bad volume name. \par Name VOLSERVOLMOVED \par Value 1492325130L \par Description volume moved. \par Name VOLSERBADOP \par Value 1492325131L \par Description illegal volume operation. \par Name VOLSERBADRELEASE \par Value 1492325132L \par Description volume release failed. \par Name VOLSERVOLBUSY \par Value 1492325133L \par Description volume still in use by volserver. \par Name VOLSERNO MEMORY \par Value 1492325134L \par Description out of virtual memory in volserver. \par Name VOLSERNOVOL \par Value 1492325135L \par Description no such volume. \par Name VOLSERMULTIRWVOL \par Value 1492325136L \par Description more than one read/write volume. \par Name VOLSERFAILEDOP \par Value 1492325137L \par Description failed volume server operation. \subsection sec5-5-1 Section 5.5.1: Standard \par The error codes described in this section were defined by the Volume Server to describe exceptional conditions arising in the course of RPC call handling. \subsection sec5-5-2 Section 5.5.2: Low-Level \par These error codes are duplicates of those defined from a package which is internal to the Volume Server. They are re-defined here to make them visible to Volume Server clients. \par Name VSALVAGE \par Value 101 \par Description Volume needs to be salvaged. \par Name VNOVNODE \par Value 102 \par Description Bad vnode number encountered. \par Name VNOVOL \par Value 103 \par Description The given volume is either not attached, doesn't exist, or is not online. \par Name VVOLEXISTS \par Value 104 \par Description The given volume already exists. \par Name VNOSERVICE \par Value 105 \par Description The volume is currently not in service. \par Name VOFFLINE \par Value 106 \par Description The specified volume is offline, for the reason given in the offline message field (a subfield within the volume field in struct volser trans). \par Name VONLINE \par Value 107 \par Description Volume is already online. \par Name VDISKFULL \par Value 108 \par Description The disk partition is full. \par Name VOVERQUOTA \par Value 109 \par Description The given volume's maximum quota, as expressed in the maxQuota field of the struct volintInfo, has been exceeded. \par Name VBUSY \par Value 110 \par Description The named volume is temporarily unavailable, and the client is encouraged to retry the operation shortly. \par Name VMOVED \par Value 111 \par Description The given volume has moved to a new server. \par The VICE SPECIAL ERRORS constant is defined to be the lowest of these error codes. \section sec5-6 Section 5.6: Macros \par The Volume Server defines a small number of macros, as described in this section. \subsection sec5-6-1 Section 5.6.1: THOLD() \code #define THOLD(tt) ((tt)->refCount++) \endcode \par This macro is used to increment the reference count field, refCount, in an object of type struct volser trans. Thus, the associated transaction is effectively "held" insuring it won't be garbage-collected. The counterpart to this operation, TRELE(), is implemented by the Volume Server as a function. \subsection sec5-6-2 Section 5.6.2: ISNAMEVALID() \code #define ISNAMEVALID(name) (strlen(name) < (VOLSER_OLDMAXVOLNAME -9)) \endcode \par This macro checks to see if the given name argument is of legal length. It must be no more than the size of the container, which is at most VOLSER OLDMAXVOLNAME characters, minus the length of the longest standardized volume name postfix known to the system. That postfix is the 9-character .restored string, which is tacked on to the name of a volume that has been restored from a dump. \section sec5-7 Section 5.7: Functions \par This section covers the Volume Server RPC interface routines, defined by and generated from the volint.xg Rxgen file. The following is a summary of the interface functions and their purpose: \par Fcn Name AFSVolCreateVolume \par Description Create a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolDeleteVolume \par Description Delete a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolNukeVolume \par Description Obliterate a volume completely. \par Fcn Name AFSVolDump \par Description Dump (i.e., save) the contents of a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolSignalRestore \par Description Show intention to call AFSVolRestore(). \par Fcn Name AFSVolRestore \par Description Recreate a volume from a dump. \par Fcn Name AFSVolForward \par Description Dump a volume, then restore to a given server and volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolClone \par Description Clone (and optionally purge) a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolReClone \par Description Re-clone a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolSetForwarding \par Description Set forwarding info for a moved volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolTransCreate \par Description Create transaction for a [volume, partition]. \par Fcn Name AFSVolEndTrans \par Description End a transaction. \par Fcn Name AFSVolGetFlags \par Description Get volume flags for a transaction. \par Fcn Name AFSVolSetFlags \par Description Set volume flags for a transaction. \par Fcn Name AFSVolGetName \par Description Get the volume name associated with a transaction. \par Fcn Name AFSVolGetStatus \par Description Get status of a transaction/volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolSetIdsTypes \par Description Set header info for a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolSetDate \par Description Set creation date in a volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolListPartitions \par Description Return a list of AFS partitions on a server. \par Fcn Name AFSVolPartitionInfo \par Description Get partition information. \par Fcn Name AFSVolListVolumes \par Description Return a list of volumes on the server. \par Fcn Name AFSVolListOneVolume \par Description Return header info for a single volume. \par Fcn Name AFSVolGetNthVolume \par Description Get volume header given its index. \par Fcn Name AFSVolMonitor \par Description Collect server transaction state. \par There are two general comments that apply to most of the Volume Server interface routines: \li 1. AFS partitions are identified by integers ranging from 0 to 25, corresponding to the letters "a" through "z". By convention, AFS partitions are named /vicepx, where x is any lower-case letter. \li 2. Legal volume types to pass as parameters are RWVOL, ROVOL, and BACKVOL, as defined in Section 3.2.4. \subsection sec5-7-1 Section 5.7.1: AFSVolCreateVolume - Create a volume \code int AFSVolCreateVolume(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long partition, IN char *name, IN long type, IN long parent, INOUT long *volid, OUT long *trans) \endcode \par Description Create a volume named name, with numerical identifier volid, and of type type. The new volume is to be placed in the specified partition for the server machine as identified by the Rx connection information pointed to by z conn. If a value of 0 is provided for the parent argument, it will be set by the Volume Server to the value of volid itself. The trans parameter is set to the Volume Location Server transaction ID corresponding to the volume created by this call, if successful. The numerical volume identifier supplied in the volid parameter must be generated beforehand by calling VL GetNewVolumeID() (see Section 3.6.5). After AFSVolCreateVolume() completes correctly, the new volume is marked as offline. It must be explicitly brought online through a call to AFSVolSetFlags() (see Section 5.7.14) while passing the trans transaction ID generated by AFSVolCreateVolume(). The "hold" on the new volume guaranteed by the trans transaction may be "released" by calling AFSVolEnd-Trans(). Until then, no other process may operate on the volume. Upon creation, a volume's maximum quota (as specified in the maxquota field of a struct volintInfo) is set to 5,000 1-Kbyte blocks. Note that the AFSVolCreateVolume() routine is the only Volume Server function that manufactures its own transaction. All others must have already acquired a transaction ID via either a previous call to AFSVolCreateVolume() or AFSVolTransCreate(). \par Error Codes VOLSERBADNAME The volume name parameter was longer than 31 characters plus the trailing null. \n VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to create a volume. \n EINVAL The type parameter was illegal. E2BIG A value of 0 was provided in the volid parameter. VOLSERVOLBUSY A transaction could not be created, thus the given volume was busy. \n EIO The new volume entry could not be created. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \n If the partition parameter is unintelligible, this routine will return a low-level unix error. \subsection sec5-7-2 Section 5.7.2: AFSVolDeleteVolume - Delete a volume \code int AFSVolDeleteVolume(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long trans) \endcode \par Description Delete the volume associated with the open transaction ID specified within trans. All of the file system objects contained within the given volume are destroyed, and the on-disk volume metadata structures are reclaimed. In addition, the in-memory volume descriptor's vflags field is set to VTDeleted, indicating that it has been deleted. \par Under some circumstances, a volume should be deleted by calling AFSVolNukeVolume() instead of this routine. See Section 5.7.3 for more details. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to delete a volume. \n ENOENT The trans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-3 Section 5.7.3: AFSVolNukeVolume - Obliterate a volume completely \code int AFSVolNukeVolume(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long partID, IN long volID) \endcode \par Description Completely obliterate the volume living on partition partID whose ID is volID. This involves scanning all inodes on the given partition and removing those marked with the specified volID. If the volume is a read-only clone, only the header inodes are removed, since they are the only ones stamped with the read-only ID. To reclaim the space taken up by the actual data referenced through a read-only clone, this routine should be called on the read-write master. Note that calling AFSVolNukeVolume() on a read-write volume effectively destroys all the read-only volumes cloned from it, since everything except for their indicies to the (now-deleted) data will be gone. \par Under normal circumstances, it is preferable to use AFSVolDeleteVolume() instead of AFSVolNukeVolume() to delete a volume. The former is much more efficient, as it only touches those objects in the partition that belong to the named volume, walking the on-disk volume metadata structures. However, AFSVolNukeVolume() must be used in situations where the volume metadata structures are known to be damaged. Since a complete scan of all inodes in the partition is performed, all disconnected or unreferenced portions of the given volume will be reclaimed. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to call this routine. \n VOLSERNOVOL The partition specified by the partID argument is illegal. \subsection sec5-7-4 Section 5.7.4: AFSVolDump - Dump (i.e., save) the contents of a volume \code int AFSVolDump(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long fromTrans, IN long fromDate) \endcode \par Description Generate a canonical dump of the contents of the volume associated with transaction fromTrans as of calendar time fromDate. If the given fromDate is zero, then a full dump will be carried out. Otherwise, the resulting dump will be an incremental one. \par This is specified as a split function within the volint.xg Rxgen interface file. This specifies that two routines are generated, namely StartAFSVolDump() and EndAFSVolDump(). The former is used to marshall the IN arguments, and the latter is used to unmarshall the return value of the overall operation. The actual dump data appears in the Rx stream for the call (see the section entitled Example Server and Client in the companion AFS-3 Programmer's Reference: Specification for the Rx Remote Procedure Call Facility document). \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to dump a volume. \n ENOENT The fromTrans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-5 Section 5.7.5: AFSVolSignalRestore - Show intention to call AFSVolRestore() \code int AFSVolSignalRestore(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN char *name, IN int type, IN long pid, IN long cloneid) \endcode \par Description Show an intention to the Volume Server that the client will soon call AFSVolRestore(). The parameters, namely the volume name, type, parent ID pid and clone ID cloneid are stored in a well-known set of global variables. These values are used to set the restored volume's header, overriding those values present in the dump from which the volume will be resurrected. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to call this routine. \n VOLSERBADNAME The volume name contained in name was longer than 31 characters plus the trailing null. \subsection sec5-7-6 Section 5.7.6: AFSVolRestore - Recreate a volume from a dump \code int AFSVolRestore(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long toTrans, IN long flags, IN struct restoreCookie *cookie) \endcode \par Description Interpret a canonical volume dump (generated as the result of calling AFSVolDumpVolume()), passing it to the volume specified by the toTrans transaction. Only the low bit in the flags argument is inspected. If this low bit is turned on, the dump will be restored as incremental; otherwise, a full restore will be carried out. \par All callbacks to the restored volume are broken. \par This is specified as a split function within the volint.xg Rxgen interface file. This specifies that two routines are generated, namely StartAFSVolRestore() and EndAFSVolRestore() . The former is used to marshall the IN arguments, and the latter is used to unmarshall the return value of the overall operation. The actual dump data flows over the Rx stream for the call (see the section entitled Example Server and Client in the companion AFS-3 Programmer's Reference: Specification for the Rx Remote Procedure Call Facility document). \par The AFSVolSignalRestore() routine (see Section 5.7.5) should be called before invoking this function in order to signal the intention to restore a particular volume. \par Error Codes VOLSERREAD DUMPERROR Dump data being restored is corrupt. \n VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to restore a volume. \n ENOENT The fromTrans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-7 Section 5.7.7: AFSVolForward - Dump a volume, then restore to given server and volume \code int AFSVolForward(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long fromTrans, IN long fromDate, IN struct destServer *destination, IN long destTrans, IN struct restoreCookie *cookie) \endcode \par Description Dumps the volume associated with transaction fromTrans from the given fromDate. The dump itself is sent to the server described by destination, where it is restored as the volume associated with transaction destTrans. In reality, an Rx connection is set up to the destServer, StartAFSVolRestore() directs writing to the Rx call's stream, and then EndAFSVolRestore() is used to deliver the dump for the volume corresponding to fromTrans. If a non-zero fromDate is provided, then the dump will be incremental from that date. Otherwise, a full dump will be delivered. \par The Rx connection set up for this task is always destroyed before the function returns. The destination volume should exist before carrying out this operation, and the invoking process should have started transactions on both participating volumes. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to forward a volume. \n ENOENT The fromTrans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \n ENOTCONN An Rx connection to the destination server could not be established. \subsection sec5-7-8 Section 5.7.8: AFSVolClone - Clone (and optionally purge) a volume \code int AFSVolClone(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long trans, IN long purgeVol, IN long newType, IN char *newName, INOUT long *newVol) \endcode \par Description Make a clone of the read-write volume associated with transaction trans, giving the cloned volume a name of newName. The newType parameter specifies the type for the new clone, and may be either ROVOL or BACKVOL. If purgeVol is set to a non-zero value, then that volume will be purged during the clone operation. This may be more efficient that separate clone and purge calls when making backup volumes. The newVol parameter sets the new clone's ID. It is illegal to pass a zero in newVol. \par Error Codes VOLSERBADNAME The volume name contained in newName was longer than 31 characters plus the trailing null. \n VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to clone a volume. \n ENOENT The fromTrans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \n VBUSY The given transaction was already in use; indicating that someone else is currently manipulating the specified clone. \n EROFS The volume associated with the given trans is read-only (either ROVOL or BACKVOL). \n EXDEV The volume associated with the trans transaction and the one specified by purgeVol must be on the same disk device, and they must be cloned from the same parent volume. \n EINVAL The purgeVol must be read-only, i.e. either type ROVOL or BACKVOL. \subsection sec5-7-9 Section 5.7.9: AFSVolReClone - Re-clone a volume \code int AFSVolReClone(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tid, IN long cloneID) \endcode \par Description Recreate an existing clone, with identifier cloneID, from the volume associated with transaction tid. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to clone a volume. \n ENOENT The tid transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The tid transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \n VBUSY The given transaction was already in use; indicating that someone else is currently manipulating the specified clone. \n EROFS The volume to be cloned must be read-write (of type RWVOL). \n EXDEV The volume to be cloned and the named clone itself must be on the same device. Also, cloneID must have been cloned from the volume associated with transaction tid. \n EINVAL The target clone must be a read-only volume (i.e., of type ROVOL or BACKVOL). \subsection sec5-7-10 Section 5.7.10: AFSVolSetForwarding - Set forwarding info for a moved volume \code int AFSVolSetForwarding(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tid, IN long newsite) \endcode \par Description Record the IP address specified within newsite as the location of the host which now hosts the volume associated with transaction tid, formerly resident on the current host. This is intended to gently guide Cache Managers who have stale volume location cached to the volume's new site, ensuring the move is transparent to clients using that volume. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to create a forwarding address. \n ENOENT The trans transaction was not found. \subsection sec5-7-11 Section 5.7.11: AFSVolTransCreate - Create transaction for a [volume, partition] \code int AFSVolTransCreate(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long volume, IN long partition, IN long flags, OUT long *trans) \endcode \par Description Create a new Volume Server transaction associated with volume ID volume on partition partition. The type of volume transaction is specified by the flags parameter. The values in flags specify whether the volume should be treated as busy (ITBusy), offline (ITOffline), or in shared read-only mode (ITReadOnly). The identifier for the new transaction built by this function is returned in trans. \par Creating a transaction serves as a signal to other agents that may be interested in accessing a volume that it is unavailable while the Volume Server is manipulating it. This prevents the corruption that could result from multiple simultaneous operations on a volume. \par Error Codes EINVAL Illegal value encountered in flags. \n VOLSERVOLBUSY A transaction could not be created, thus the given [volume, partition] pair was busy. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level after creation. \subsection sec5-7-12 Section 5.7.12: AFSVolEndTrans - End a transaction \code int AFSVolEndTrans(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long trans, OUT long *rcode) \endcode \par Description End the transaction identified by trans, returning its final error code into rcode. This makes the associated [volume, partition] pair eligible for further Volume Server operations. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to create a transaction. \n ENOENT The trans transaction was not found. \subsection sec5-7-13 Section 5.7.13: AFSVolGetFlags - Get volume flags for a transaction \code int AFSVolGetFlags(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long trans, OUT long *flags) \endcode \par Description Return the value of the vflags field of the struct volser trans object describing the transaction identified as trans. The set of values placed in the flags parameter is described in Section 5.2.3.1. Briefly, they indicate whether the volume has been deleted (VTDeleted), out of service (VTOutOfService), or marked delete-on-salvage (VTDeleteOnSalvage). \par Error Codes ENOENT The trans transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-14 Section 5.7.14: AFSVolSetFlags - Set volume flags for a transaction \code int AFSVolSetFlags(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long trans, IN long flags) \endcode \par Description Set the value of the vflags field of the struct volser trans object describing the transaction identified as trans to the contents of flags. The set of legal values for the flags parameter is described in Section 5.2.3.1. Briefly, they indicate whether the volume has been deleted (VTDeleted), out of service (VTOutOfService), or marked delete-onsalvage (VTDeleteOnSalvage). \par Error Codes ENOENT The trans transaction was not found. \n EROFS Updates to this volume are not allowed. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-15 Section 5.7.15: AFSVolGetName - Get the volume name associated with a transaction \code int AFSVolGetName(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tid, OUT char **tname) \endcode \par Description Given a transaction identifier tid, return the name of the volume associated with the given transaction. The tname parameter is set to point to the address of a string buffer of at most 256 chars containing the desired information, which is created for this purpose. Note: the caller is responsible for freeing the buffer pointed to by tname when its information is no longer needed. \par Error Codes ENOENT The tid transaction was not found, or a volume was not associated with it (VSrv internal error). \n E2BIG The volume name was too big (greater than or equal to SIZE (1,024) characters. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The trans transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-16 Section 5.7.16: AFSVolGetStatus - Get status of a transaction/volume \code int AFSVolGetStatus(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tid, OUT struct volser status *status) \endcode \par Description This routine fills the status structure passed as a parameter with status information for the volume identified by the transaction identified by tid, if it exists. Included in this status information are the volume's ID, its type, disk quotas, the IDs of its clones and backup volumes, and several other administrative details. \par Error Codes ENOENT The tid transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The tid transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-17 Section 5.7.17: AFSVolSetIdsTypes - Set header info for a volume \code int AFSVolSetIdsTypes(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tId IN char *name, IN long type, IN long pId, IN long cloneId, IN long backupId) \endcode \par Description The transaction identifed by tId is located, and the values supplied for the volume name, volume type, parent ID pId, clone ID cloneId and backup ID backupId are recorded into the given transaction. \par Error Codes ENOENT The tId transaction was not found. \n VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to call this routine. \n VOLSERBADNAME The volume name contained in name was longer than 31 characters plus the trailing null. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The tId transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-18 Section 5.7.18: AFSVolSetDate - Set creation date in a volume \code int AFSVolSetDate(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long tid, IN long newDate) \endcode \par Description Set the creationDate of the struct volintInfo describing the volume associated with transaction tid to newDate. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to call this routine. \n ENOENT The tId transaction was not found. \n VOLSERTRELE ERROR The tid transaction's reference count could not be dropped to the proper level. \subsection sec5-7-19 Section 5.7.19: AFSVolListPartitions - Return a list of AFS partitions on a server \code int AFSVolListPartitions(IN struct rx connection *z conn, OUT struct pIDs *partIDs) \endcode \par Description Return a list of AFS partitions in use by the server processing this call. The output parameter is the fixed-length partIDs array, with one slot for each of 26 possible partitions. By convention, AFS partitions are named /vicepx, where x is any letter. The /vicepa partition is represented by a zero in this array, /vicepa bya1, andsoon. Unused partitions are represented by slots filled with a -1. \par Error Codes ---None. \subsection sec5-7-20 Section 5.7.20: AFSVolPartitionInfo - Get partition information \code int AFSVolPartitionInfo(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN char *name, OUT struct diskPartition *partition) \endcode \par Description Collect information regarding the partition with the given character string name, and place it into the partition object provided. \par Error Codes VOLSERBAD ACCESS The caller is not authorized to call this routine. \n VOLSERILLEGAL PARTITION An illegal partition was specified by name \subsection sec5-7-21 Section 5.7.21: AFSVolListVolumes - Return a list of volumes on the server \code int AFSVolListVolumes(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long partID, IN long flags, OUT volEntries *resultEntries) \endcode \par Description Sweep through all the volumes on the partition identified by partid, filling in consecutive records in the resultEntries object. If the flags parameter is set to a non-zero value, then full status information is gathered. Otherwise, just the volume ID field is written for each record. The fields for a volEntries object like the one pointed to by resultEntries are described in Section 5.4.6, which covers the struct volintInfo definition. \par Error Codes VOLSERILLEGAL PARTITION An illegal partition was specified by partID \n VOLSERNO MEMORY Not enough memory was available to hold all the required entries within resultEntries. \subsection sec5-7-22 Section 5.7.22: AFSVolListOneVolume - Return header info for a single volume \code int AFSVolListOneVolume(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long partID, IN long volid, OUT volEntries *resultEntries) \endcode \par Description Find the information for the volume living on partition partID whose ID is volid, and place a single struct volintInfo entry within the variable-size resultEntries object. \par This is similar to the AFSVolListVolumes() call, which returns information on all volumes on the specified partition. The full volume information is always written into the returned entry (equivalent to setting the flags argument to AFSVolListVolumes() to a non-zero value). \par Error Codes VOLSERILLEGAL PARTITION An illegal partition was specified by partID \n ENODEV The given volume was not found on the given partition. \subsection sec5-7.23 Section 5.7.23: AFSVolGetNthVolume - Get volume header given its index \code int AFSVolGetNthVolume(IN struct rx connection *z conn, IN long index, OUT long *volume, OUT long *partition) \endcode \par Description Using index as a zero-based index into the set of volumes hosted by the server chosen by the z conn argument, return the volume ID and partition of residence for the given index. \Note This functionality has not yet been implemented. \par Error Codes VOLSERNO OP Not implemented. \subsection sec5-7.24 Section 5.7.24: AFSVolMonitor - Collect server transaction state \code int AFSVolMonitor(IN struct rx connection *z conn, OUT transDebugEntries *result) \endcode \par Description This call allows the transaction state of a Volume Server to be monitored for debugging purposes. Anyone wishing to supervise this Volume Server state may call this routine, causing all active transactions to be recorded in the given result object. \par Error Codes ---None. \page biblio Bibliography \li [1] Transarc Corporation. AFS 3.0 System Administrator's Guide, F-30-0-D102, Pittsburgh, PA, April 1990. \li [2] Transarc Corporation. AFS 3.0 Command Reference Manual, F-30-0-D103, Pittsburgh, PA, April 1990. \li [3] CMU Information Technology Center. Synchronization and Caching Issues in the Andrew File System, USENIX Proceedings, Dallas, TX, Winter 1988. \li [4] Information Technology Center, Carnegie Mellon University. Ubik -A Library For Managing Ubiquitous Data, ITCID, Pittsburgh, PA, Month, 1988. \li [5] Information Technology Center, Carnegie Mellon University. Quorum Completion, ITCID, Pittsburgh, PA, Month, 1988. @} */