+Cc: Baokun, the author of the patch. On Fri, Oct 20, 2023 at 05:51:59PM +0300, Andy Shevchenko wrote: > On Thu, Oct 19, 2023 at 11:43:47AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Thu, 19 Oct 2023 at 11:16, Andy Shevchenko > > <andriy.shevchenko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > Meanwhile a wild idea, can it be some git (automatic) conflict resolution that > > > makes that merge affect another (not related to the main contents of the merge) > > > files? Like upstream has one base, the merge has another which is older/newer > > > in the history? > > > > I already looked at any obvious case of that. > > > > The only quota-related issue on the other side is an obvious > > one-liner: commit 86be6b8bd834 ("quota: Check presence of quota > > operation structures instead of ->quota_read and ->quota_write > > callbacks"). > > > > It didn't affect the merge, because it was not related to any of the > > changes that came in from the quota branch (it was physically close to > > the change that used lockdep_assert_held_write() instead of a > > WARN_ON_ONCE(down_read_trylock()) sequence, but it is unrelated to > > it). > > > > I guess you could try reverting that one-liner after the merge, but I > > _really_ don't think it is at all relevant. > > > > What *would* probably be interesting is to start at the pre-merge > > state, and rebase the code that got merged in. And then bisect *that* > > series. > > > > IOW, with the merge that triggers your bisection being commit > > 1500e7e0726e, do perhaps something like this: > > > > # Name the states before the merge > > git branch pre-merge 1500e7e0726e^ > > git branch jan-state 1500e7e0726e^2 > > > > # Now double-check that this works for you, of course. > > # Just to be safe... > > git checkout pre-merge > > .. test-build and test-boot this with the bad config .. > > That's I have checked already [4], but okay, let me double check. > [5] is the same as [4] according to `git diff`. > > It boots. > > > # Then, let's create a new branch that is > > # the rebased version of Jan's state: > > git checkout -b jan-rebased jan-state > > git rebase pre-merge > > [6] is created. > > > # Verify that the tree is the same as the merge > > git diff 1500e7e0726e > > Yes, nothing in output. > > And it does not boot. > > > # Ok, that was empty, so do a bisect on this > > # rebased history > > git bisect start > > git bisect bad > > git bisect good pre-merge > > > > .. and see what commit it *now* claims is the bad commit. > > git bisect start > # status: waiting for both good and bad commits > # good: [63580f669d7ff5aa5a1fa2e3994114770a491722] Merge tag 'ovl-update-6.6' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/overlayfs/vfs > git bisect good 63580f669d7ff5aa5a1fa2e3994114770a491722 > # status: waiting for bad commit, 1 good commit known > # bad: [2447ff4196091e41d385635f9b6d003119f24199] ext2: Fix kernel-doc warnings > git bisect bad 2447ff4196091e41d385635f9b6d003119f24199 > # bad: [a7c4109a1fa7f9f8cfa9aa93e7aae52d0df820f6] MAINTAINERS: change reiserfs status to obsolete > git bisect bad a7c4109a1fa7f9f8cfa9aa93e7aae52d0df820f6 > # bad: [74fdc82e4a4302bf8a519101a40691b78d9beb6c] quota: add new helper dquot_active() > git bisect bad 74fdc82e4a4302bf8a519101a40691b78d9beb6c > # bad: [e64db1c50eb5d3be2187b56d32ec39e56b739845] quota: factor out dquot_write_dquot() > git bisect bad e64db1c50eb5d3be2187b56d32ec39e56b739845 > # good: [eea7e964642984753768ddbb710e2eefd32c7a89] ext2: remove redundant assignment to variable desc and variable best_desc > git bisect good eea7e964642984753768ddbb710e2eefd32c7a89 > # first bad commit: [e64db1c50eb5d3be2187b56d32ec39e56b739845] quota: factor out dquot_write_dquot() > > > Would you be willing to do this? It should be only a few bisects, > > since Jan's branch only brought in 17 commits that the above rebases > > into this test branch. So four or five bisections should pinpoint the > > exact point where it goes bad. > > See above. > > I even rebuilt again with just rebased on top of e64db1c50eb5 and it doesn't > boot, so we found the culprit that triggers this issue. > > > Of course, since this is apparently about some "random code generation > > issue", that exact point still may not be very interesting. > > On top of the above I have tried the following: > 1) dropping inline, replacing it to __always_inline -- no help; > 2) commenting out the error message -- helps! > > --- a/fs/quota/dquot.c > +++ b/fs/quota/dquot.c > @@ -632,8 +632,10 @@ static inline int dquot_write_dquot(struct dquot *dquot) > { > int ret = dquot->dq_sb->dq_op->write_dquot(dquot); > if (ret < 0) { > +#if 0 > quota_error(dquot->dq_sb, "Can't write quota structure " > "(error %d). Quota may get out of sync!", ret); > +#endif > /* Clear dirty bit anyway to avoid infinite loop. */ > clear_dquot_dirty(dquot); > } > > If it's a timing issue it's related to that error message, as the new helper is > run outside of the spinlock. > > What's is fishy there besides the error message being available only in one > case, is the pointer that is used for dp_op. I'm not at all familiar with the > code, but can it be that these superblocks are different for those two cases? > > [4]: https://bitbucket.org/andy-shev/linux/src/test-mrfld-before-merge/ > [5]: https://bitbucket.org/andy-shev/linux/src/test-mrfld-pre-merge/ > [6]: https://bitbucket.org/andy-shev/linux/src/test-mrfld-jan-rebased/ > > > -- > With Best Regards, > Andy Shevchenko > > -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko