Document the FAN_FS_ERROR event for user administrators and user space developers. Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Changes since v1: - Drop references to location record - Explain that the inode field is optional - Explain we are reporting only the first error --- .../admin-guide/filesystem-monitoring.rst | 70 +++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/admin-guide/index.rst | 1 + 2 files changed, 71 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/filesystem-monitoring.rst diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/filesystem-monitoring.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/filesystem-monitoring.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..c0ab1ad268b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/filesystem-monitoring.rst @@ -0,0 +1,70 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +==================================== +File system Monitoring with fanotify +==================================== + +fanotify supports the FAN_FS_ERROR mark for file system-wide error +reporting. It is meant to be used by file system health monitoring +daemons who listen on that interface and take actions (notify sysadmin, +start recovery) when a file system problem is detected by the kernel. + +By design, A FAN_FS_ERROR notification exposes sufficient information for a +monitoring tool to know a problem in the file system has happened. It +doesn't necessarily provide a user space application with semantics to +verify an IO operation was successfully executed. That is outside of +scope of this feature. Instead, it is only meant as a framework for +early file system problem detection and reporting recovery tools. + +When a file system operation fails, it is common for dozens of kernel +errors to cascade after the initial failure, hiding the original failure +log, which is usually the most useful debug data to troubleshoot the +problem. For this reason, FAN_FS_ERROR only reports the first error that +occurred since the last notification, and it simply counts addition +errors. This ensures that the most important piece of error information +is never lost. + +FAN_FS_ERROR requires the fanotify group to be setup with the +FAN_REPORT_FID flag. + +At the time of this writing, the only file system that emits FAN_FS_ERROR +notifications is Ext4. + +A user space example code is provided at ``samples/fanotify/fs-monitor.c``. + +Notification structure +====================== + +A FAN_FS_ERROR Notification has the following format:: + + [ Notification Metadata (Mandatory) ] + [ Generic Error Record (Mandatory) ] + [ FID record (Mandatory) ] + +Generic error record +-------------------- + +The generic error record provides enough information for a file system +agnostic tool to learn about a problem in the file system, without +providing any additional details about the problem. This record is +identified by ``struct fanotify_event_info_header.info_type`` being set +to FAN_EVENT_INFO_TYPE_ERROR. + + struct fanotify_event_info_error { + struct fanotify_event_info_header hdr; + __s32 error; + __u32 error_count; + }; + +The `error` field identifies the type of error. `error_count` count +tracks the number of errors that occurred and were suppressed to +preserve the original error, since the last notification. + +FID record +---------- + +The FID record can be used to uniquely identify the inode that triggered +the error through the combination of fsid and file handler. A +filesystem specific handler can use that information to attempt a +recovery procedure. Errors that are not related to an inode are +reported against the root inode. diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/index.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/index.rst index dc00afcabb95..1bedab498104 100644 --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/index.rst @@ -82,6 +82,7 @@ configure specific aspects of kernel behavior to your liking. edid efi-stub ext4 + filesystem-monitoring nfs/index gpio/index highuid -- 2.32.0