On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 11:44:45PM -0700, Alexandru Cardaniuc wrote: > Hi All, > > I am having an issue with an XFS filesystem shutting down under high load > with very many small files. > Basically, I have around 3.5 - 4 million files on this filesystem. New > files are being written to the FS all the time, until I get to 9-11 mln > small files (35k on average). > > at some point I get the following in dmesg: > > [2870477.695512] Filesystem "sda5": XFS internal error xfs_trans_cancel at > line 1138 of file fs/xfs/xfs_trans.c. Caller 0xffffffff8826bb7d > [2870477.695558] > [2870477.695559] Call Trace: > [2870477.695611] [<ffffffff88262c28>] :xfs:xfs_trans_cancel+0x5b/0xfe > [2870477.695643] [<ffffffff8826bb7d>] :xfs:xfs_mkdir+0x57c/0x5d7 > [2870477.695673] [<ffffffff8822f3f8>] :xfs:xfs_attr_get+0xbf/0xd2 > [2870477.695707] [<ffffffff88273326>] :xfs:xfs_vn_mknod+0x1e1/0x3bb > [2870477.695726] [<ffffffff80264929>] _spin_lock_irqsave+0x9/0x14 > [2870477.695736] [<ffffffff802230e6>] __up_read+0x19/0x7f > [2870477.695764] [<ffffffff8824f8f4>] :xfs:xfs_iunlock+0x57/0x79 > [2870477.695776] [<ffffffff80264929>] _spin_lock_irqsave+0x9/0x14 > [2870477.695784] [<ffffffff802230e6>] __up_read+0x19/0x7f > [2870477.695791] [<ffffffff80209f4c>] __d_lookup+0xb0/0xff > [2870477.695803] [<ffffffff8020cd4a>] _atomic_dec_and_lock+0x39/0x57 > [2870477.695814] [<ffffffff8022d6db>] mntput_no_expire+0x19/0x89 > [2870477.695829] [<ffffffff80264929>] _spin_lock_irqsave+0x9/0x14 > [2870477.695837] [<ffffffff802230e6>] __up_read+0x19/0x7f > [2870477.695861] [<ffffffff8824f8f4>] :xfs:xfs_iunlock+0x57/0x79 > [2870477.695887] [<ffffffff882680af>] :xfs:xfs_access+0x3d/0x46 > [2870477.695899] [<ffffffff80264929>] _spin_lock_irqsave+0x9/0x14 > [2870477.695923] [<ffffffff802df4a3>] vfs_mkdir+0xe3/0x152 > [2870477.695933] [<ffffffff802dfa79>] sys_mkdirat+0xa3/0xe4 > [2870477.695953] [<ffffffff80260295>] tracesys+0x47/0xb6 > [2870477.695963] [<ffffffff802602f9>] tracesys+0xab/0xb6 > [2870477.695977] > [2870477.695985] xfs_force_shutdown(sda5,0x8) called from line 1139 of file > fs/xfs/xfs_trans.c. Return address = 0xffffffff88262c46 > [2870477.696452] Filesystem "sda5": Corruption of in-memory data detected. > Shutting down filesystem: sda5 > [2870477.696464] Please umount the filesystem, and rectify the problem(s) You've probably fragmented free space to the point where inodes cannot be allocated anymore, and then it's shutdown because it got enospc with a dirty inode allocation transaction. xfs_db -c "freespc -s" <dev> should tell us whether this is the case or not. > Using CentOS 5.9 with kernel 2.6.18-348.el5xen The "enospc with dirty transaction" shutdown bugs have been fixed in more recent kernels than RHEL5. > The problem is reproducible and I don't think it's hardware related. The > problem was reproduced on multiple servers of the same type. So, I doubt > it's a memory issue or something like that. Nope, it's not hardware, it's buggy software that has been fixed in the years since 2.6.18.... > Is that a known issue? Yes. > If it is then what's the fix? If you've fragmented free space, then your ony options are: - dump/mkfs/restore - remove a large number of files from the filesystem so free space defragments. If you simply want to avoid the shutdown, then upgrade to a more recent kernel (3.x of some kind) where all the known issues have been fixed. > I went through the > kernel updates for CentOS 5.10 (newer kernel), but didn't see any xfs > related fixes since CentOS 5.9 That's something you need to talk to your distro maintainers about.... Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs