6740a845b2
ceph_con_revoke() is passed both a message and a ceph connection. Now that any message associated with a connection holds a pointer to that connection, there's no need to provide the connection when revoking a message. This has the added benefit of precluding the possibility of the providing the wrong connection pointer. If the message's connection pointer is null, it is not being tracked by any connection, so revoking it is a no-op. This is supported as a convenience for upper layers, so they can revoke a message that is not actually "in flight." Rename the function ceph_msg_revoke() to reflect that it is really an operation on a message, not a connection. Signed-off-by: Alex Elder <elder@inktank.com> Reviewed-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
crush | ||
armor.c | ||
auth_none.c | ||
auth_none.h | ||
auth_x_protocol.h | ||
auth_x.c | ||
auth_x.h | ||
auth.c | ||
buffer.c | ||
ceph_common.c | ||
ceph_fs.c | ||
ceph_hash.c | ||
ceph_strings.c | ||
crypto.c | ||
crypto.h | ||
debugfs.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
Makefile | ||
messenger.c | ||
mon_client.c | ||
msgpool.c | ||
osd_client.c | ||
osdmap.c | ||
pagelist.c | ||
pagevec.c |