Creating many small files in rapid succession on a small filesystem can lead to spurious ENOSPC; on a 104MB filesystem: for i in `seq 1 22500`; do echo -n > $SCRATCH_MNT/$i echo XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX > $SCRATCH_MNT/$i done leads to ENOSPC even though after a sync, 40% of the fs is free again. This is because we reserve worst-case metadata for delalloc writes, and when data is allocated that worst-case reservation is not usually needed. When freespace is low, kicking off an async writeback will start converting that worst-case space usage into something more realistic, almost always freeing up space to continue. This resolves the testcase for me, and survives all 4 generic ENOSPC tests in xfstests. We'll still need a hard synchronous sync to squeeze out the last bit, but this fixes things up to a large degree. Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@xxxxxxxxxx> --- diff --git a/fs/ext4/inode.c b/fs/ext4/inode.c index 5c5bc5d..5b3f468 100644 --- a/fs/ext4/inode.c +++ b/fs/ext4/inode.c @@ -3024,11 +3024,18 @@ static int ext4_nonda_switch(struct super_block *sb) if (2 * free_blocks < 3 * dirty_blocks || free_blocks < (dirty_blocks + EXT4_FREEBLOCKS_WATERMARK)) { /* - * free block count is less that 150% of dirty blocks - * or free blocks is less that watermark + * free block count is less than 150% of dirty blocks + * or free blocks is less than watermark */ return 1; } + /* + * Even if we don't switch but are nearing capacity, + * start pushing delalloc when 1/2 of free blocks are dirty. + */ + if (free_blocks < 2 * dirty_blocks) + writeback_inodes_sb_if_idle(sb); + return 0; } -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html