Re: 2.6.19 file content corruption on ext3

From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Thu Dec 28 2006 - 17:38:47 EST



Ok,
with the ugly trace capture patch, I've actually captured this corruption
in action, I think.

I did a full trace of all pages involved in one run, and picked one
corruption at random:

Chunk 14465 corrupted (0-75) (01423fb4-01423fff)
Expected 129, got 0
Written as (5126)9509(15017)

That's the first 76 bytes of a chunk missing, and it's the last 76 bytes
on a page. It's page index 01423 in the mapped file, and bytes fb4-fff
within that file.

There were four chunks written to that page:

Writing chunk 14463/15800 (15%) (0142344c) (1)
Writing chunk 14462/15800 (30%) (01422e98) (2) (overflows into 00001423)
Writing chunk 14464/15800 (32%) (01423a00) (3)
Writing chunk 14465/15800 (60%) (01423fb4) (4) <--- LOST!

and the other three chunks checked out all right.

And here's the annotated trace as it concerns that page:

- here we write the first chunk to the page:
** (1) do_no_page: mapping index 00001423 at b7d1f44c (write)
** Setting page 00001423 dirty

- something flushes it out to disk:
** cpd_for_io: index 00001423
** cleaning index 00001423 at b7d1f000

- here we write the second chunk (which was split over the previous page
and the interesting one):
** (2) Setting page 00001422 dirty
** (2) Setting page 00001423 dirty

- and here we do a cleaning event
** cpd_for_io: index 00001423
** cleaning index 00001423 at b7d1f000

- here we write the third chunk:
** (3) Setting page 00001423 dirty

- here we write the fourth chunk:
** (4) NO DIRTY EVENT

- and a third flush to disk:
** cpd_for_io: index 00001423
** cleaning index 00001423 at b7d1f000

- here we unmap and flush:
** Unmapped index 00001423 at b7d1f000
** Removing index 00001423 from page cache

- here we remap to check:
** do_no_page: mapping index 00001423 at b7d1f000 (read)
** Unmapped index 00001423 at b7d1f000

- and finally, here I remove the file after the run:
** Removing index 00001423 from page cache

Now, the important thing to see here is:

- the missing write did not have a "Setting page 00001423 dirty" event
associated with it.

- but I can _see_ where the actual dirty event would be happening in the
logs, because I can see the dirty events of the other chunk writes
around it, so I know exactly where that fourth write happens. And
indeed, it _shouldn't_ get a dirty event, because the page is still
dirty from the write of chunk #3 to that page, which _did_ get a dirty
event.

I can see that, because the testing app writes the log of the pages it
writes, and this is the log around the fourth and final write:

...
Writing chunk 5338/15800 (60%) (0076eb48) PFN: 76e/76f
Writing chunk 960/15800 (60%) (00156300) PFN: 156
Writing chunk 14465/15800 (60%) (01423fb4) <----
Writing chunk 8594/15800 (60%) (00bf74a8) PFN: bf7
Writing chunk 556/15800 (60%) (000c62f0) PFN: c6
Writing chunk 15190/15800 (60%) (01526678) PFN: 1526
...

and I can match this up with the full log from the kernel, which looks
like this:

Setting page 0000076e dirty
Setting page 0000076f dirty
Setting page 00000156 dirty
Setting page 000000c6 dirty
Setting page 00001526 dirty

so I know exactly where the missing writes (to our page at pfn 1423,
and the fpn-bf7 page) happened.

- and the thing is, I can see a "cpd_for_io()" happening AFTER that
fourth write. Quite a long while after, in fact. So all of this looks
very fine indeed. We are not losing any dirty bits.

- EVEN MORE INTERESTING: write 3 makes it onto disk, and it really uses
the SAME dirty bit as write 4 did (which didn't make it out to disk!).
The event that clears the dirty bit that write 3 did happens AFTER
write 4 has happened!

So if we're not losing any dirty bits, what's going on?

I think we have some nasty interaction with the buffer heads. In
particular, I don't think it's the dirty page bits that are broken (I
_see_ that the PageDirty bit was set after write 4 was done to memory in
the kernel traces). So I think that a real writeback just doesn't happen,
because somebody has marked the buffer heads clean _after_ it started IO
on them.

I think "__mpage_writepage()" is buggy in this regard, for example. It
even has a comment about its crapola behaviour:

/*
* Must try to add the page before marking the buffer clean or
* the confused fail path above (OOM) will be very confused when
* it finds all bh marked clean (i.e. it will not write anything)
*/

however, I don't think that particular thing explains it, because I don't
think we use that function for the cases I'm looking at.

Anyway, I'll add tracing for page-writeback setting/cleaning too, in case
I might see anything new there..

Linus
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