On Mon, 2023-07-17 at 20:43 -0700, Hugh Dickins wrote: > Hi Jeff, > > I've been unable to run my kernel builds on ext4 on loop0 on tmpfs > swapping load on linux-next recently, on one machine: various kinds > of havoc, most common symptoms being ext4_find_dest_de:2107 errors, > systemd-journald errors, segfaults. But no problem observed running > on a more recent installation. > > Bisected yesterday to 979492850abd ("ext4: convert to ctime accessor > functions"). > > I've mostly averted my eyes from the EXT4_INODE macro changes there, > but I think that's where the problem lies. Reading the comment in > fs/ext4/ext4.h above EXT4_FITS_IN_INODE() led me to try "tune2fs -l" > and look at /etc/mke2fs.conf. It's an old installation, its own > inodes are 256, but that old mke2fs.conf does default to 128 for small > FSes, and what I use for the load test is small. Passing -I 256 to the > mkfs makes the problems go away. > Sounds like something is storing timestamp values in the extended part of the inode when it shouldn't be. The macros look sane to me, but I'll go over them again. > (What's most alarming about the corruption is that it appears to extend > beyond just the throwaway test filesystem: segfaults on bash and libc.so > from the root filesystem. But no permanent damage done there.) > > One oddity I noticed in scrutinizing that commit, didn't help with > the issues above, but there's a hunk in ext4_rename() which changes > - old.dir->i_ctime = old.dir->i_mtime = current_time(old.dir); > + old.dir->i_mtime = inode_set_ctime_current(old.inode); > That actually looks fine. We're just setting the in-memory inode timestamp there. The problem you're having sounds more like something is going wrong when storing the values to disk. I'll take a closer look. Thanks! -- Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>