Re: xfs file system in process of becoming corrupt; though xfs_repair thinks it's fine! ; -/ (was xfs_dump problem...)

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Dave Chinner wrote:
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 05:01:12PM -0700, Linda A. Walsh wrote:

Dave Chinner wrote:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ishtar:/Torrents> 'ls' -ni bad*     ls: cannot access bad/30-Omoide
to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Reinaʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
ls: cannot access bad/31-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Tomoeʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
ls: cannot access bad/32-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Nanualʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
bad:
total 0
2359101 ?????????? ? ? ? ?                ? 30-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Reinaʼs Ver.).mp3
2354946 ?????????? ? ? ? ?                ? 31-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Tomoeʼs Ver.).mp3
2354949 ?????????? ? ? ? ?                ? 32-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Nanualʼs Ver.).mp3
ls: cannot access bad2/30-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Reinaʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
ls: cannot access bad2/31-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Tomoeʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
ls: cannot access bad2/32-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Nanualʼs Ver.).mp3: No such file or directory
Those file names have a weird character in them - are you sure that
the terminal supports that character set and is not mangling it and
hence not matching what is actually stored on disk?
-----
Those files were 'fine' before today.

I know it is not a terminal problem --
I told ls to list all files in the directory -- then it says "no such file".

Can you say that "*" shouldn't match everything?

Those question marks are in the place for the size!

There are no weird characters in those file names.

I beg to differ ;)
----
	They are standard UTF-8 characters!  What's weird about
them?!?   Next you'll be complaining about my hair style... ;).



Here are the same files in another directory:
mp3> ll 3*
-rwx------ 1 3255702 2010-06-14 10:54 30-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Reinaʼs Ver.).mp3*
-rwx------ 1 3272004 2010-06-14 10:54 31-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Tomoeʼs Ver.).mp3*
-rwx------ 1 3234876 2010-06-14 10:54 32-Omoide to Yakusoku (TV saizu|Nanualʼs Ver.).mp3*
                                                                       ^^^
That character is a non-ascii character, which is why I was
wondering about terminals and character sets.  It does not display
correctly in mutt (a bold vertical bar) or Vim (a dotted, double
character width square) using LANG=en_AU.UTF-8 here....
----
you don't have the right font for your Vim. :-)
 I use vim here and it displays
in the TTY version, the X version and even the windows version!

Anyway -- as you can see above, the files display fine in another directory with the
same character.  IT's not the vertical bar char.  I use UTF-8 characters all over
the place -- I created that file manually.  Go get 'Bablemap'.  It's free (well donation
requested) from http://www.babelstone.co.uk/Software/BabelMap.html.  My systems handle
them 'fine'. That's not the problem here. I have 3 directories that all have copies of files 30-32 in them that are corrupt.

I have another directory "Shakugan no Shana II OST", that I can't cd into or ls.
Just says 'not found'.

This all happened today.  They were accessible before today.  I'm not sure what changed,
other than new files were added.




How can file size, time and date be in unprintable characters that "ls" can't display?

They aren't. They are printed as ??? because the stat failed and
hence they are unknown.
----
Ok, why would the stat fail?
	There's nothing magical about a 2TB limit?  (sigh...)

	Ideas?

Linda

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