On Mon, Jul 22, 2013 at 01:07:32PM +0200, Markus Trippelsdorf wrote:
> On 2013.07.22 at 20:18 +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > From: Dave Chinner <dchinner@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > When we made all inode updates transactional, we no longer needed
> > the log recovery detection for inodes being newer on disk than the
> > transaction being replayed - it was redundant as replay of the log
> > would always result in the latest version of the inode woul dbe on
> > disk. It was redundant, but left in place because it wasn't
> > considered to be a problem.
> >
> > However, with the new "don't read inodes on create" optimisation,
> > flushiter has come back to bite us. Essentially, the optimisation
> > made always initialises flushiter to zero in the create transaction,
> > and so if we then crash and run recovery and the inode already on
> > disk has a non-zero flushiter it will skip recovery of that inode.
> > As a result, log recovery does the wrong thing and we end up with a
> > corrupt filesystem.
> >
> > Because we have to support old kernel to new kernl upgrades, we
> > can't just get rid of the flushiter support in log recovery as we
> > might be upgrading from a kernel that doesn't have fully transaction
> > inode updates. Unfortunately, for v4 superblocks there is no way to
> > guarantee that log recovery knows about this fact.
> >
> > We cannot add a new inode format flag to say it's a "special inode
> > create" because it won't be understood by older kernels and so
> > recovery could do the wrong thing on downgrade. We cannot specially
> > detect the combination of zero mode/non-zero flushiter on disk to
> > non-zero mode, zero flushiter in the log item during recovery
> > because wrapping of the flushiter can result in false detection.
> >
> > Hence that makes this "don't use flushiter" optimisation limited to
> > a disk format that guarantees that we don't need it. And that means
> > the only fix here is to limit the "no read IO on create"
> > optimisation to version 5 superblocks....
>
> I think your patch misses the following part:
>
> @@ -1054,17 +1056,15 @@ xfs_iread(
>
> /* shortcut IO on inode allocation if possible */
> if ((iget_flags & XFS_IGET_CREATE) &&
> - !(mp->m_flags & XFS_MOUNT_IKEEP)) {
> + !(mp->m_flags & XFS_MOUNT_IKEEP) &&
> + xfs_sb_version_hascrc(&mp->m_sb)) {
> /* initialise the on-disk inode core */
> memset(&ip->i_d, 0, sizeof(ip->i_d));
> ip->i_d.di_magic = XFS_DINODE_MAGIC;
> ip->i_d.di_gen = prandom_u32();
> - if (xfs_sb_version_hascrc(&mp->m_sb)) {
> - ip->i_d.di_version = 3;
> - ip->i_d.di_ino = ip->i_ino;
> - uuid_copy(&ip->i_d.di_uuid, &mp->m_sb.sb_uuid);
> - } else
> - ip->i_d.di_version = 2;
> + ip->i_d.di_version = 3;
> + ip->i_d.di_ino = ip->i_ino;
> + uuid_copy(&ip->i_d.di_uuid, &mp->m_sb.sb_uuid);
> return 0;
> }
Sure, it's dead code so doesn't affect the behaviour of the patch.
I'll update it, but I need you to reproduce the problem in a simple
manner as Mark did with this patch in place so I can find out what
the real problem you are seeing is....
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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