On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 07:44:17PM -0500, Theodore Tso wrote: > > You said originally that the oops was happening "while going into > hibernation right after resuming with...". So that means you did a > successful suspend/resume, and then the second suspend caused the > oops? It looks like somehow the pages were left marked as dirty, so > the writeback daemons attempted writing back a page to an inode > which was never opened read/write (and in fact as a text page for > /usr/bin/killall, was mapped read/only). Given that ext4 > initializes jinode only when the file is opened read/write, the fact > that it is null, and the fact that it makes no sense that a program > would be modifying /usr/bin/killall as part of a suspend/resume, it > looks very much like we just unmasked a software suspend bug.... ... and I think I've found the problem. In kernel/power/block_io.c, in the function submit(), we see this: if (bio_chain == NULL) { submit_bio(bio_rw, bio); wait_on_page_locked(page); if (rw == READ) bio_set_pages_dirty(bio); <==== bio_put(bio); So when we read in pages from the software suspend device, we end up marking the pages as dirty(!). I'm guessing this was caused by a copy and paste from the only other caller of bio_set_pages_dirty(), which is the direct I/O code, which needs this when we are writing from a file into a user-provided buffer. But for restoring from a software suspend case, this is as far as I can tell wholely inappropriate. This causes needless writes, which is bad even before ext4 unmasked the problem. I will send a patch under separate cover; could you give it a try and see if it fixes your crash? I will look into bulletproofing ext4 by adding checks for this case and printing warning messages, but neverthe less, I think the root cause is actually in the hibernation's bio code. - Ted _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm