"s_name" was a thread_local variable, not static, and did not require a
mutex to protect access. A deadlock is possible if a thread triggers an
exception with a handler that attempts to log a message (as the top-level
exception handler in bees does).
Remove multiple unnecessary mutex locks. Rename the thread_local variables
to make their scope clearer.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
This fixes a bug where bees tries to process itself as a btrfs filesystem.
This is a species of bug that I only notice *after* pushing to a public
git repo.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
Every git commit was causing bees.cc and bees-hash.cc to be rebuilt,
which was expensive and unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
btrfs provides a flush on rename when the rename target exists, so the
fsync is not necessary. In the initialization case (when the rename
target does not exist and the implicit flush does not occur), the file
may be empty or a hole after a crash. Bees treats this case the same
as if the file did not exist. Since this condition occurs for only the
first 15 minutes of the lifetime of a bees installation, it's not worth
bothering to fix.
If we attempt to fsync the file ourselves, on a crash with log replay,
btrfs will end up with a directory entry pointing to a non-existent inode.
This directory entry cannot be deleted or renamed except by deleting
the entire subvol. On large filesystems this bug is triggered by nearly
every crash (verified on kernels up to 4.5.7).
Remove the fsync to avoid the btrfs bug, and accept the failure mode
that occurs in the first 15 minutes after a bees install.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>