On Wed, 12 Jan 2011, Theodore Tso wrote: > That looks really bogus. /usr/bin/killall is a system binary, and there's > no good reason that hibernation should be trying to write pages to that > binary. > > You said originally that the oops was happening "while going into > hibernation right after resuming with...". So that means you did a > successful suspend/resume, and then the second suspend caused the oops? Yes. I basically did a echo reboot > /sys/power/disk for i in {1..5} ;do echo disk > /sys/power/state ;done and it crashed very early in the second suspend. > It looks like somehow the pages were left marked as dirty, so the > writeback daemons attempted writing back a page to an inode which was > never opened read/write (and in fact as a text page for > /usr/bin/killall, was mapped read/only). > Given that ext4 initializes jinode only when the file is opened > read/write, the fact that it is null, and the fact that it makes no > sense that a program would be modifying /usr/bin/killall as part of a > suspend/resume, it looks very much like we just unmasked a software > suspend bug.... Ah, ok. Thanks for the explanation! Regards, Sebastian -- 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