Re: [PATCH V4 2/2] xfs: Fix missing interval for missing_owner in xfs fsmap

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在 2024/8/20 2:44, Darrick J. Wong 写道:
On Mon, Aug 19, 2024 at 08:53:20AM +0800, Zizhi Wo wrote:
In the fsmap query of xfs, there is an interval missing problem:
[root@fedora ~]# xfs_io -c 'fsmap -vvvv' /mnt
  EXT: DEV    BLOCK-RANGE           OWNER              FILE-OFFSET      AG AG-OFFSET             TOTAL
    0: 253:16 [0..7]:               static fs metadata                  0  (0..7)                    8
    1: 253:16 [8..23]:              per-AG metadata                     0  (8..23)                  16
    2: 253:16 [24..39]:             inode btree                         0  (24..39)                 16
    3: 253:16 [40..47]:             per-AG metadata                     0  (40..47)                  8
    4: 253:16 [48..55]:             refcount btree                      0  (48..55)                  8
    5: 253:16 [56..103]:            per-AG metadata                     0  (56..103)                48
    6: 253:16 [104..127]:           free space                          0  (104..127)               24
    ......

BUG:
[root@fedora ~]# xfs_io -c 'fsmap -vvvv -d 104 107' /mnt
[root@fedora ~]#
Normally, we should be able to get [104, 107), but we got nothing.

The problem is caused by shifting. The query for the problem-triggered
scenario is for the missing_owner interval (e.g. freespace in rmapbt/
unknown space in bnobt), which is obtained by subtraction (gap). For this
scenario, the interval is obtained by info->last. However, rec_daddr is
calculated based on the start_block recorded in key[1], which is converted
by calling XFS_BB_TO_FSBT. Then if rec_daddr does not exceed
info->next_daddr, which means keys[1].fmr_physical >> (mp)->m_blkbb_log
<= info->next_daddr, no records will be displayed. In the above example,
104 >> (mp)->m_blkbb_log = 12 and 107 >> (mp)->m_blkbb_log = 12, so the two
are reduced to 0 and the gap is ignored:

  before calculate ----------------> after shifting
  104(st)  107(ed)		      12(st/ed)
   |---------|				  |
   sector size			      block size

Resolve this issue by introducing the "end_daddr" field in
xfs_getfsmap_info. This records key[1].fmr_physical at the granularity of
sector. If the current query is the last, the rec_daddr is end_daddr to
prevent missing interval problems caused by shifting. We only need to focus
on the last query, because xfs disks are internally aligned with disk
blocksize that are powers of two and minimum 512, so there is no problem
with shifting in previous queries.

After applying this patch, the above problem have been solved:
[root@fedora ~]# xfs_io -c 'fsmap -vvvv -d 104 107' /mnt
  EXT: DEV    BLOCK-RANGE      OWNER            FILE-OFFSET      AG AG-OFFSET        TOTAL
    0: 253:16 [104..106]:      free space                        0  (104..106)           3

Fixes: e89c041338ed ("xfs: implement the GETFSMAP ioctl")
Signed-off-by: Zizhi Wo <wozizhi@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
  fs/xfs/xfs_fsmap.c | 19 ++++++++++++++++++-
  1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/fs/xfs/xfs_fsmap.c b/fs/xfs/xfs_fsmap.c
index 3a30b36779db..4734f8d6303c 100644
--- a/fs/xfs/xfs_fsmap.c
+++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_fsmap.c
@@ -162,6 +162,7 @@ struct xfs_getfsmap_info {
  	xfs_daddr_t		next_daddr;	/* next daddr we expect */
  	/* daddr of low fsmap key when we're using the rtbitmap */
  	xfs_daddr_t		low_daddr;
+	xfs_daddr_t		end_daddr;	/* daddr of high fsmap key */
  	u64			missing_owner;	/* owner of holes */
  	u32			dev;		/* device id */
  	/*
@@ -294,6 +295,19 @@ xfs_getfsmap_helper(
  		return 0;
  	}
+ /*
+	 * For an info->last query, we're looking for a gap between the
+	 * last mapping emitted and the high key specified by userspace.
+	 * If the user's query spans less than 1 fsblock, then
+	 * info->high and info->low will have the same rm_startblock,
+	 * which causes rec_daddr and next_daddr to be the same.
+	 * Therefore, use the end_daddr that we calculated from
+	 * userspace's high key to synthesize the record.  Note that if
+	 * the btree query found a mapping, there won't be a gap.
+	 */
+	if (info->last && info->end_daddr != LLONG_MAX)
+		rec_daddr = info->end_daddr;
+
  	/* Are we just counting mappings? */
  	if (info->head->fmh_count == 0) {
  		if (info->head->fmh_entries == UINT_MAX)
@@ -946,6 +960,7 @@ xfs_getfsmap(
info.next_daddr = head->fmh_keys[0].fmr_physical +
  			  head->fmh_keys[0].fmr_length;
+	info.end_daddr = LLONG_MAX;
  	info.fsmap_recs = fsmap_recs;
  	info.head = head;
@@ -966,8 +981,10 @@ xfs_getfsmap(
  		 * low key, zero out the low key so that we get
  		 * everything from the beginning.
  		 */
-		if (handlers[i].dev == head->fmh_keys[1].fmr_device)
+		if (handlers[i].dev == head->fmh_keys[1].fmr_device) {
  			dkeys[1] = head->fmh_keys[1];
+			info.end_daddr = dkeys[1].fmr_physical;

Another problem that I found while testing this out is that if
dkeys[1].fmr_physical extends a little bit beyond the end of what the
filesystem thinks is the device size, this change results in fsmap
reporting an "unknown" extent between that end point and whatever the
user specified as fmr_physical.

IOWs, let's say that the filesystem has 67G of space and 16G AGs.  This
results in 4x 16G AGs, and a runt AG 4 that is 3G long.  If you initiate
an fsmap query for [64G, 80G), it'll report "unknown" space between 67G
and 80G, whereas previously it did not report that.  I noticed this due
to a regression in xfs/566 with the rtgroups patchset applied, though it
also seems to happen with that same test if the underlying device has a
raid stripe configuration that causes runt AGs.

I think this can be fixed by constraining end_daddr to the minimum of
fmr_physical and XFS_FSB_TO_BB(dblocks/rblocks/logblocks).

--D


Oh yeah, I missed that boundary condition. I will fix as soon as
possible, and send the next version of the patch, thanks for reminding!

Thanks,
Zizhi Wo

+		}
  		if (handlers[i].dev > head->fmh_keys[0].fmr_device)
  			memset(&dkeys[0], 0, sizeof(struct xfs_fsmap));
--
2.39.2






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