On Wed, Jun 03, 2009 at 08:46:47PM +0200, Andi Kleen wrote: > +static int me_pagecache_clean(struct page *p, unsigned long pfn) > +{ > + struct address_space *mapping; > + > + if (!isolate_lru_page(p)) > + page_cache_release(p); > + > + /* > + * Now truncate the page in the page cache. This is really > + * more like a "temporary hole punch" > + * Don't do this for block devices when someone else > + * has a reference, because it could be file system metadata > + * and that's not safe to truncate. > + */ > + mapping = page_mapping(p); > + if (mapping && S_ISBLK(mapping->host->i_mode) && page_count(p) > 1) { > + printk(KERN_ERR > + "MCE %#lx: page looks like a unsupported file system metadata page\n", > + pfn); > + return FAILED; > + } page_count check is racy. Hmm, S_ISBLK should handle xfs's private mapping. AFAIK btrfs has a similar private mapping but a quick grep does not show up S_IFBLK anywhere, so I don't know what the situation is there. Unfortunately though, the linear mapping is not the only metadata mapping a filesystem might have. Many work on directories in seperate mappings (ext2, for example, which is where I first looked and will still oops with your check). Also, others may have other interesting inodes they use for metadata. Do any of them go through the pagecache? I dont know. The ext3 journal, for example? How does that work? Unfortunately I don't know a good way to detect regular data mappings easily. Ccing linux-fsdevel. Until that is worked out, you'd need to use the safe pagecache invalidate rather than unsafe truncate. > + if (mapping) { > + truncate_inode_page(mapping, p); > + if (page_has_private(p) && !try_to_release_page(p, GFP_NOIO)) { > + pr_debug(KERN_ERR "MCE %#lx: failed to release buffers\n", > + pfn); > + return FAILED; > + } > + } > + return RECOVERED; > +} -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html