Excerpts from Darrick J. Wong's message of 2011-03-04 16:07:24 -0500: > On Mon, Feb 28, 2011 at 07:54:05AM -0500, Chris Mason wrote: > > Excerpts from Darrick J. Wong's message of 2011-02-24 13:27:32 -0500: > > > On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 12:37:53PM -0500, Chris Mason wrote: > > > > Excerpts from Jan Kara's message of 2011-02-24 11:47:58 -0500: > > > > > On Wed 23-02-11 15:35:11, Chris Mason wrote: > > > > > > Excerpts from Joel Becker's message of 2011-02-23 15:24:47 -0500: > > > > > > > On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 11:45:44AM -0500, Martin K. Petersen wrote: > > > > > > > > Also, DIX is only the tip of the iceberg. Many other impending > > > > > > > > technologies feature checksums and require pages to be stable during I/O > > > > > > > > due to checksumming, encryption and so on. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > The VM is already trying to do the right thing. We just need the > > > > > > > > relevant filesystems to catch up. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ocfs2 handles stable metadata for its checksums when feeding > > > > > > > things to the journal. If we're doing pagecache-based I/O, is the > > > > > > > pagecache going to help here for data? > > > > > > > > > > > > Data is much easier than metadata. All you really need is to wait on > > > > > > writeback in file_write, wait on writeback in page_mkwrite, and make > > > > > > sure you don't free blocks back to the allocator that are actively under > > > > > > IO. > > > > > > > > > > > > I expect the hard part to be jbd and metadata in ext34. > > > > > But JBD already has to do data copy if a buffer is going to be modified > > > > > before/while it is written to the journal. So we should alredy do all that > > > > > is needed for metadata. I don't say there aren't any bugs as they could be > > > > > triggered only by crashing at the wrong moment and observing fs corruption. > > > > > But most of the work should be there... > > > > > > > > Most of it is there, but there are always little bits and pieces. The > > > > ext4 journal csumming code was one semi-recent example where we found > > > > metadata changing in flight. > > > > > > > > A big part of testing this is getting some way to detect the bugs > > > > without dif/dix. With btrfs I have patches to do set_memory_ro on > > > > pages once I've don the crc, hopefully we can generalize that idea or > > > > some up with something smarter. > > > > > > Right now I'm faking it with modprobe scsi_debug ato=1 guard=1 dif=3 dix=199. > > > > > > Hm, would you mind sharing those patches? I've been working on a second patch > > > to do the wait-on-writeback per everyone's suggestions, but I still see the > > > occasional corruption error as soon as I enable the mmap write case and covet > > > some more debugging tools. It does seem to be working for the pure pwrite() > > > case. :) > > > > Here's an ext4 version of the debugging patch. It's a few years old but > > it'll give you the idea. This only covers metadata pages. > > > > Looks like I hacked the btrfs version up and didn't keep the original, > > I'll have to rework it, I was trying to use it for the big corruption I > > fixed recently and made a bunch of changes. > > > > For data if mmap is giving you trouble you need to wait on writeback in > > page_mkwrite, with the page locked. fs/btrfs/inode.c has our > > page_mkwrite, which uses wait_on_page_writeback() and also the btrfs > > ordered write code. But for the other filesystems, waiting on writeback > > should be enough. > > Ok, here's what I have so far. I took everyone's suggestions of where to add > calls to wait_on_page_writeback, which seems to handle the multiple-write case > adequately. Unfortunately, it is still possible to generate checksum errors by > scribbling furiously on a mmap'd region, even after adding the writeback wait > in the ext4 writepage function. Oddly, I couldn't break btrfs with mmap by > removing its wait_for_page_writeback call, so I suspect there's a bit more > going on in btrfs than I've been able to figure out. Hi, thanks for working on this. Btrfs waits for page writeback but then it also waits for its own ordered extents, which is basically tracks writeback and some extra btrfs accounting. If you take out the btrfs_lookup_ordered_extent bits, and the waiting on page writeback, you'll see fireworks. Your patch changes ext4_writepage, but by the time writepage is called we should already have waited for PageWriteback. So that should be BUG_ON(PageWriteback(page)). And ext4_writepage should be called with the page locked...so your extra lock_page call should be deadlocking. Maybe all the writes are going through writepages instead? You really want to be changing ext4_page_mkwrite, that's where all the magic for mmap really happens. The block_page_mkwrite call is a good start, but ext4 doesn't use it. -chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html