Hello Ojaswin, On Thu 14-09-23 17:24:52, Ojaswin Mujoo wrote: > On Tue, Sep 05, 2023 at 03:56:29PM +0200, Jan Kara wrote: > > On Tue 05-09-23 15:58:01, Ojaswin Mujoo wrote: > > > ** Short Version ** > > > > > > In ext4 with dioread_nolock, we could have a scenario where the bh returned by > > > get_blocks (ext4_get_block_unwritten()) in __block_write_begin_int() has > > > UNWRITTEN and MAPPED flag set. Since such a bh does not have NEW flag set we > > > never zero out the range of bh that is not under write, causing whatever stale > > > data is present in the folio at that time to be written out to disk. To fix this > > > mark the buffer as new in _ext4_get_block(), in case it is unwritten. > > > > > > ----- > > > ** Long Version ** > > > > > > The issue mentioned above was resulting in two different bugs: > > > > > > 1. On block size < page size case in ext4, generic/269 was reliably > > > failing with dioread_nolock. The state of the write was as follows: > > > > > > * The write was extending i_size. > > > * The last block of the file was fallocated and had an unwritten extent > > > * We were near ENOSPC and hence we were switching to non-delayed alloc > > > allocation. > > > > > > In this case, the back trace that triggers the bug is as follows: > > > > > > ext4_da_write_begin() > > > /* switch to nodelalloc due to low space */ > > > ext4_write_begin() > > > ext4_should_dioread_nolock() // true since mount flags still have delalloc > > > __block_write_begin(..., ext4_get_block_unwritten) > > > __block_write_begin_int() > > > for(each buffer head in page) { > > > /* first iteration, this is bh1 which contains i_size */ > > > if (!buffer_mapped) > > > get_block() /* returns bh with only UNWRITTEN and MAPPED */ > > > /* second iteration, bh2 */ > > > if (!buffer_mapped) > > > get_block() /* we fail here, could be ENOSPC */ > > > } > > > if (err) > > > /* > > > * this would zero out all new buffers and mark them uptodate. > > > * Since bh1 was never marked new, we skip it here which causes > > > * the bug later. > > > */ > > > folio_zero_new_buffers(); > > > /* ext4_wrte_begin() error handling */ > > > ext4_truncate_failed_write() > > > ext4_truncate() > > > ext4_block_truncate_page() > > > __ext4_block_zero_page_range() > > > if(!buffer_uptodate()) > > > ext4_read_bh_lock() > > > ext4_read_bh() -> ... ext4_submit_bh_wbc() > > > BUG_ON(buffer_unwritten(bh)); /* !!! */ > > > > > > 2. The second issue is stale data exposure with page size >= blocksize > > > with dioread_nolock. The conditions needed for it to happen are same as > > > the previous issue ie dioread_nolock around ENOSPC condition. The issue > > > is also similar where in __block_write_begin_int() when we call > > > ext4_get_block_unwritten() on the buffer_head and the underlying extent > > > is unwritten, we get an unwritten and mapped buffer head. Since it is > > > not new, we never zero out the partial range which is not under write, > > > thus writing stale data to disk. This can be easily observed with the > > > following reporducer: > > > > > > fallocate -l 4k testfile > > > xfs_io -c "pwrite 2k 2k" testfile > > > # hexdump output will have stale data in from byte 0 to 2k in testfile > > > hexdump -C testfile > > > > > > NOTE: To trigger this, we need dioread_nolock enabled and write > > > happening via ext4_write_begin(), which is usually used when we have -o > > > nodealloc. Since dioread_nolock is disabled with nodelalloc, the only > > > alternate way to call ext4_write_begin() is to fill make sure dellayed > > > alloc switches to nodelalloc (ext4_da_write_begin() calls > > > ext4_write_begin()). This will usually happen when FS is almost full > > > like the way generic/269 was triggering it in Issue 1 above. This might > > > make this issue harder to replicate hence for reliable replicate, I used > > > the below patch to temporarily allow dioread_nolock with nodelalloc and > > > then mount the disk with -o nodealloc,dioread_nolock. With this you can > > > hit the stale data issue 100% of times: > > > > > > @@ -508,8 +508,8 @@ static inline int ext4_should_dioread_nolock(struct inode *inode) > > > if (ext4_should_journal_data(inode)) > > > return 0; > > > /* temporary fix to prevent generic/422 test failures */ > > > - if (!test_opt(inode->i_sb, DELALLOC)) > > > - return 0; > > > + // if (!test_opt(inode->i_sb, DELALLOC)) > > > + // return 0; > > > return 1; > > > } > > > > > > ------- > > > > > > After applying this patch to mark buffer as NEW, both the above issues are > > > fixed. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Ojaswin Mujoo <ojaswin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Good catch! But I'm wondering whether this is really the right fix. For > > example in ext4_block_truncate_page() shouldn't we rather be checking > > whether the buffer isn't unwritten and if yes then bail because there's > > nothing to zero out in the block? That would seem like a more logical > > and robust solution of the first problem to me. > > So I was looking into this to understand the code paths and it seems > like ext4_truncate doesn't really impose that a unwritten buffer does > not have any data in its corresponding folio, which might sometimes be > the case. > > For example, imagine a case where we get the last block of a file via > ext4_da_get_block_prep() which returns a bh that is unwritten, mapped > and new. During the write, we'll copy data in this folio and then > adjust i_size in write_end, release the folio lock and ultimately the > inode_lock(). > > In this intermediate state, before writeback happens, the buffer is > unwritten but has data which will be written. At this point, if we call > ext4_block_truncate_page() and have the logic to exit early for bh_unwritten, the > we will never actually zero out the folio which might cause stale data to be > written during writeback (?) Actually we will. truncate_inode_pages_range() ends up calling truncate_inode_partial_folio() which zeros out the tail of the partial page. I think you are confusing two different things. One is zeroing of partial page cache pages - that is generally handled by the generic truncate code - and another one is zeroing of on-disk partial blocks - that is handled by the filesystem itself. The contents on on-disk blocks does not matter as long as they are marked as unwritten in the extent tree (their contents is random anyway) and therefore __ext4_block_zero_page_range() has nothing to do in that case. > Now, most of the calls to ext4_block_truncate_page() happen via ext4_truncate ( like via ext4_setattr, > ext4_truncate_failed_write() etc) call truncate_inode_pages() which > seems to handle zeroing the partial folio beyond i_size. However, if we > add the logic to skip unwritten blocks in this function then: > > 1. We create an implicit dependency in ext4_block_truncate_page() that > the folio needs to not have any data if its unwritten ie some other > function has taken care of by some other function called before it. Yes, this dependency already exists today because when blocksize < pagesize the zeroing happening in __ext4_block_zero_page_range() may be a subset of what gets zeroed by truncate_inode_partial_folio(). Still we zero the page in __ext4_block_zero_page_range() for the case when the page was not cached at all and we've just loaded it from the disk. > 2. Additionally, that other function will also need to mark the relevant > buffer dirty, which is done in this function. AFAICT there's no need to mark the buffer dirty - the whole point is we don't need to touch the on-disk contents if the block is unwritten... > 3. There are some other paths that call ext4_block_truncate_page() > without turncating the pagecache like ext4_zero_range(). Im not sure if > this will cause any issues as I've not gone through the function > completely though but yes, other functions that later call truncate > in future might need to keep this implicit dependency in mind. Indeed, this is a good catch. So we either need to make both sites calling ext4_zero_partial_blocks() to use truncate_pagecache_range() for the whole range including partial blocks or we need to zero out the page cache (without bringing the page uptodate or marking it dirty) in ext4_zero_partial_blocks() even if the buffer is unwritten. I don't have a strong preference either way. Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR