Re: mkfs.xfs fails with raid5 and smaller chunk sizes

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On 09/16/2014 03:17 PM, Dave Chinner wrote:
On Tue, Sep 16, 2014 at 03:03:08PM -0700, Brian Hemme wrote:
Hello all,

I am having some odd problems with mkfs.xfs when used on a raid 5
array.  The array is built from 6 960GB SSDs all connected to SATA
ports on the MB and created with mdadm.  If I use a chunk size any
smaller then 512K mkfs.xfs just hangs forever.  It continues to use
CPU and so does the raid array but never completes.  If the system
is just left running for an extended length of time the whole OS
eventually locks up.  I have tried this on three different systems
with the same results.   I have searched all over for someone with
similar issues without success.  I am hoping I am just doing
something clearly wrong and you all can set me straight quickly.

Some specifics:
     Arch linux with 3.14.1 kernel
     mkfs.xfs version 3.1.11
     mdadm - v3.3 - 3rd September 2013

Commands:
mdadm --create /dev/md0 --chunk=64K --level=5 --raid-devices=6
/dev/sd[a-f]
mkfs.xfs /dev/md0
   ** This command fails and locks up

I have tried specifying the arguments to mkfs.xfs with the same
results.  Building a 4 drive array seems to require a chunk size of
1M or greater to work.  Same results if I make a partition on the
array and make the fs there.
mkfs.xfs really should only take a couple of seconds to complete.
Seeing as you are using SSDs, my first suspicion is that md or the
SSDs are having problems with discard. Hence you should first
try 'mkfs.xfs -K /dev/md0' and see if that completes quickly.

Otherwise, output of 'echo w>  sysrq-trigger' from dmesg would be a
good start, as would a 'perf top -G -U' snapshot (run for 30s at
least a minute after mkfs.xfs starts) to tell us what is burning
CPU.

Cheers,

Dave.

Thanks for the quick response!

Adding the -K seemed to do the trick. However, for my education, why is this needed in this case? It seems to work without it for larger chunk sizes or for raid 0 instead of 5. It also worked on our old install with a 3.1.6 kernel. Any why would not using the -K cause enough of a problem that the whole machine hangs? Just trying to understand this enough to make sure I don't run into problems down the road.

Thanks again,
Brian

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