On Thu, Feb 24, 2022 at 09:31:28AM -0700, Andreas Dilger wrote: > On Feb 23, 2022, at 22:57, NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > I added this: > > --- a/fs/xfs/xfs_icache.c > > +++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_icache.c > > @@ -87,6 +87,7 @@ xfs_inode_alloc( > > /* VFS doesn't initialise i_mode or i_state! */ > > VFS_I(ip)->i_mode = 0; > > VFS_I(ip)->i_state = 0; > > + VFS_I(ip)->i_flags |= S_PAR_UPDATE; > > mapping_set_large_folios(VFS_I(ip)->i_mapping); > > > > XFS_STATS_INC(mp, vn_active); > > > > and ran my highly sophisticated test in an XFS directory: > > > > for i in {1..70}; do ( for j in {1000..8000}; do touch $j; rm -f $j ; done ) & done I think you want something faster here, like ln to hardlink an existing file into the directory. > > This doesn't crash - which is a good sign. > > While that was going I tried > > while : ; do ls -l ; done > > > > it sometimes reports garbage for the stat info: > > > > total 0 > > -????????? ? ? ? ? ? 1749 > > -????????? ? ? ? ? ? 1764 > > -????????? ? ? ? ? ? 1765 > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 24 16:47 1768 > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 24 16:47 1770 > > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Feb 24 16:47 1772 > > .... > > > > I *think* that is bad - probably the "garbage" that you referred to? > > > > Obviously I gets lots of > > ls: cannot access '1764': No such file or directory > > ls: cannot access '1749': No such file or directory > > ls: cannot access '1780': No such file or directory > > ls: cannot access '1765': No such file or directory > > > > but that is normal and expected when you are creating and deleting > > files during the ls. > > The "ls -l" output with "???" is exactly the case where the filename is > in readdir() but stat() on a file fails due to an unavoidable userspace > race between the two syscalls and the concurrent unlink(). This is > probably visible even without the concurrent dirops patch. > > The list of affected filenames even correlates with the reported errors: > 1764, 1765, 1769 > > It looks like everything is working as expected. Here, yes. A problem that I saw a week or two ago with online fsck is that an evil thread repeatedly link()ing and unlink()ing a file into an otherwise empty directory while racing a thread calling readdir() in a loop will eventually trigger a corruption report on the directory namecheck because the loop in xfs_dir2_sf_getdents that uses sfp->count as a loop counter will race with the unlink decrementing sfp->count and run off the end of the inline directory data buffer. https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/fs/xfs/xfs_dir2_readdir.c#L121 The solution in that case was a forgotten acquisition of the directory IOLOCK, but I don't see why the same principle wouldn't apply here. It's probably not so hard to fix it (rewrite readdir to take the ILOCK once, format the dirents to a buffer until it's full, save cursor, drop ILOCK, copy buffer to userspace) but it's not as easy as setting PAR_UPDATE. (I am also not a fan of "PAR_UPDATE", since 'par' is already an English word that doesn't mean 'parallel'.) --D > > Cheers, Andreas >