On Tue 11-12-12 16:01:51, Li Zefan wrote: > >>> We have already dump of the data by debugfs. The data is very good > >>> without error. But we just did it before fsck, even the fsck is not > >>> giving any error. I want to know whether fsck will modify disk data > >>> without reporting any error or not ? > >> Ah, OK. So it seems that directory block is OK, just f_pos gets corrupted > >> somehow. There are guards in ext3_readdir() to rescan dir block when > >> directory is modified but maybe that's not working correctly. I don't want > >> to burn too much time on this since this is so ancient kernel but I'd be > >> looking in that direction... > >> > > > > I've added some debug code into ext3, which does these things: > > - dump the dir block > > - print the current and last f_pos and offset > > - dump_stack() to see which process triggers the bug > > > > Hope we can trigger the bug in our labs (We did see this happened twice this week > > in a lab), though we can't patch the kernel in the products. > > > > I compared ext3_readdir() with latest ext3, and saw no difference except some > > API changes. I'll dig deeper. Thansks for the suggestion! > > > > We've managed to trigger the bug once, and collected some debug information. We > found the buffer head wasn't corrupted, but f_pos was set to 4024 and then ext3 > reported error. > > EXT3-fs error (device sda7): ext3_readdir: bad entry in directory #12747345: rec_len is smaller than minimal - offset=4024, inode=0, rec_len=0, name_len=0 > Aborting journal on device sda7. > ext3_abort called. > EXT3-fs error (device sda7): ext3_journal_start_sb: Detected aborted journal > Remounting filesystem read-only > > 00000000: 51 82 c2 00 0c 00 01 02 2e 00 00 00 04 80 c2 00 Q............... > 00000010: 0c 00 02 02 2e 2e 00 00 d6 80 c2 00 10 00 06 02 ................ > 00000020: 62 61 63 6b 75 70 00 00 bb 82 c2 00 1c 00 11 01 backup.......... > 00000030: 4d 6f 6e 69 74 6f 72 53 65 72 76 69 63 65 2e 6f MonitorService.o > 00000040: 70 00 00 00 be 82 c2 00 1c 00 13 01 43 6f 6d 70 p...........Comp > 00000050: 6c 61 69 6e 74 50 72 6f 63 65 73 73 2e 6f 70 00 laintProcess.op. > 00000060: c2 82 c2 00 20 00 15 01 4c 6f 63 61 74 69 6f 6e .... ...Location > 00000070: 50 72 65 50 72 6f 63 65 73 73 2e 6f 70 00 00 00 PreProcess.op... > 00000080: c9 82 c2 00 18 00 0f 01 4e 6f 72 74 68 50 72 6f ........NorthPro > 00000090: 63 65 73 73 2e 6f 70 00 d4 82 c2 00 18 00 0d 01 cess.op......... > 000000a0: 53 79 73 4d 6f 6e 69 74 6f 72 2e 6f 70 00 00 00 SysMonitor.op... > 000000b0: db 82 c2 00 1c 00 13 01 56 56 49 50 4e 6f 72 74 ........VVIPNort > 000000c0: 68 50 72 6f 63 65 73 73 2e 6f 70 00 e1 82 c2 00 hProcess.op..... > 000000d0: 34 0f 09 01 72 61 6e 73 61 75 2e 6f 70 00 00 00 4...ransau.op... > 000000e0: 4f 83 c2 00 20 0f 1e 01 72 61 6e 73 61 75 2e 6f O... ...ransau.o > 000000f0: 70 2e 32 30 31 32 31 32 31 30 30 32 30 39 32 34 p.20121210020924 > 00000100: 34 35 31 33 39 34 00 00 79 83 c2 00 f8 0e 18 01 451394..y....... > 00000110: 72 61 6e 73 61 75 2e 6f 70 2e 32 30 31 32 31 32 ransau.op.201212 > 00000120: 31 30 30 32 30 39 32 34 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 10020924........ > ... > 00000ff0: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................ > > last_offset=-1, last_fpos=-1, f_pos=4024 > > -1 means we hit the bug in the first iteration in the insde while in > ext3_readdir(). > > I've checked how ext3_readdir() works and how f_pos, f_version and i_version > get initialized and modified. Now I'm lost. I really can't see how f_pos got > corrupted. :( Hum, it looks really curious. So f_pos has been 4024 when we entered ext3_readdir()? Do you know what it was when we last left ext3_readdir() for that filp? You can store that value in some debug entry added to struct file... Also any chance we ever hit: if (version != filp->f_version) goto revalidate; I don't think it can ever happen since we hold i_mutex and generic_file_llseek() takes i_mutex as well. But better be sure. Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR -- 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