On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 07:53:36AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > Hi Al, > > One of my xfstest rigs tripped over this last night when running > xfs/301 on a pair of 4G ramdisks during an auto group run: > > BUG: Dentry ffff8803c14fc870{i=0,n=dir} still in use (-127) [unmount of xfs ram1] Umm... -127 == "already got past the beginning of __dentry_kill()". And if it had been seen by d_walk() callback, it must have gotten past the point where __dentry_kill() unlocks that sucker. Very interesting... I don't see how that could happen, TBH - __dentry_kill() is called with parent and victim locked; it sets DCACHE_DENTRY_KILLED and removes the victim from parent's ->d_subdirs before dropping either lock. Moreover, the victim can't have any children at that point - it must have had the last reference held by called of __dentry_kill() and each child would've contributed to refcount. And d_walk() goes through the list of children with parent kept locked. It does unlock the parent after walking one level deeper, but on the way back it * checks that there had been no renames * checks that child isn't marked with DCACHE_DENTRY_KILLED after relocking the parent. In case of anything fishy it restarts the whole thing with renames excluded. If those tests succeed, we are guaranteed that we'll continue walking the parent's list of children with parent locked, AFAICS, not that there could legitimately be anything playing with the dentry tree modifications in parallel with fs shutdown... It might be interesting to slap WARN_ON(dentry->d_flags & DCACHE_DENTRY_KILLED) for dentry and target in __d_move() and for anon in __d_materialise_dentry(), after dentry_lock_for_move() in both functions. And see if it triggers. IOW, whether it's possible for doomed dentry to be readded to someone's ->d_subdirs after it has entered __dentry_kill(). _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs