#
# CDDL HEADER START
#
# The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
# Common Development and Distribution License (the "License").
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#
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#
#
# Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
# Use is subject to license terms.
#
#
# Copyright (c) 2013, 2016 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
#
#
# DESCRIPTION:
#
# Setting a reservation reserves a defined minimum amount of space for
# a dataset, and prevents other datasets using that space. Verify that
# reducing the reservation on a filesystem allows other datasets in
# the pool to use that space.
#
# STRATEGY:
# 1) Create multiple filesystems
# 2) Set reservations on all bar one of the filesystems
# 3) Fill up the one non-reserved filesystem
# 4) Reduce one of the reservations and verify can write more
# data into the non-reserved filesystem
#
verify_runnable "both"
log_assert "Verify reducing reservation allows other datasets to use space"
function cleanup
{
typeset -i loop=0
datasetexists $TESTPOOL/${TESTFS}$loop && \
done
}
#
# To make sure this test doesn't take too long to execute on
# large pools, we calculate a reservation setting which when
# applied to all bar one of the filesystems (RESV_NUM_FS-1) will
# ensure we have RESV_FREE_SPACE left free in the pool, which we will
# be able to quickly fill.
#
#
# We set the reservations now, rather than when we created the filesystems
# to allow us to take into account space used by the filsystem metadata
#
# Note we don't set a reservation on the first filesystem we created,
# hence num=1 rather than zero below.
#
typeset -i num=1
done
# Now fill up the first filesystem (which doesn't have a reservation set
# and thus will use up whatever free space is left in the pool).
num=0
log_note "Writing to $TESTDIR$num/$TESTFILE1"
-c $write_count -d 0
ret=$?
fi
# Remove the reservation on one of the other filesystems and verify
# can write more data to the original non-reservation filesystem.
num=1
num=0
-c 1000 -d 0
log_pass "reducing reservation allows other datasets to use space"