Hey there, everyone! I've been using and admiring mdadm for over a decade; thanks for all the awesome work. I recently put together a new build, and wanted to try out the --write-journal capability of recent Linux md. My write journal is a Samsung SSD 840 PRO SSD, atop a RAID6 of 8 4TB spinning disks. All 9 SATA3 devices are plugged into the onboard SATA3 ports of my ASUS X-99 Deluxe II motherboard. Summary description: md126 : active raid6 sde1[4] sdg1[6] sdd1[3] sdc1[2] sdf1[5] sdi1[8] sdh1[7] sdb1[1] sda1[0](J) 23441316864 blocks super 1.2 level 6, 512k chunk, algorithm 2 [8/8] [UUUUUUUU] bitmap: 0/30 pages [0KB], 65536KB chunk All filesystems are ext4. ~14TB of ~22TB are in use on the filesystem built directly atop md126: /dev/md126 22T 14T 7.4T 65% /media/trap Kernel version is 4.8.3 (the array was built under 4.7.5), and mdadm reports v3.4. Distro is debian unstable, running a custom (but fairly orthodox) kernel. I moved a ~20GB tarball from my home directory (located on another device, a NVMe md RAID1) to /media/trap/backups. The mv completed successfully. A short time after that, I hard rebooted the machine due to X lockup (I'm experimenting with compiz). By "short time", I mean "possibly within the time window before 20GB could be written out to the backing store, but I'm unsure about that". Upon restart, the machine engaged in minutes of disk activity, spat out some fsck inode recovery messages (I'm trying to find these in my logs), and finally mounted the filesystem. The moved file is nowhere to be found. It's no big loss to me -- I can recreate that data -- but I thought I'd report this. As said, I'm looking for logs or other hard details, but not seeing them in journalctl output. I can probably reproduce the problem if someone needs me to, though otherwise I will likely disable the write journal for now (I've not yet done so). Please let me know how I might help you track this problem down, if a problem does indeed exist. Thanks! -- nick black -=- http://www.nick-black.com to make an apple pie from scratch, you need first invent a universe.
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