Re: [PATCH] ocfs2: ratelimit the 'max lookup times reached' notice

From: Joseph Qi
Date: Sun Oct 04 2020 - 00:03:18 EST




On 2020/10/2 06:44, Mauricio Faria de Oliveira wrote:
> Running stress-ng on ocfs2 completely fills the kernel log with
> 'max lookup times reached, filesystem may have nested directories.'
>
> Let's ratelimit this message as done with others in the code.
>
> Test-case:
>
> # mkfs.ocfs2 --mount local $DEV
> # mount $DEV $MNT
> # cd $MNT
>
> # dmesg -C
> # stress-ng --dirdeep 1 --dirdeep-ops 1000
> # dmesg | grep -c 'max lookup times reached'
>
> Before:
>
> # dmesg -C
> # stress-ng --dirdeep 1 --dirdeep-ops 1000
> ...
> stress-ng: info: [11116] successful run completed in 3.03s
>
> # dmesg | grep -c 'max lookup times reached'
> 967
>
> After:
>
> # dmesg -C
> # stress-ng --dirdeep 1 --dirdeep-ops 1000
> ...
> stress-ng: info: [739] successful run completed in 0.96s
>
> # dmesg | grep -c 'max lookup times reached'
> 10
>
> # dmesg
> [ 259.086086] ocfs2_check_if_ancestor: 1990 callbacks suppressed
> [ 259.086092] (stress-ng-dirde,740,1):ocfs2_check_if_ancestor:1091 max lookup times reached, filesystem may have nested directories, src inode: 18007, dest inode: 17940.
> ...
>
> Signed-off-by: Mauricio Faria de Oliveira <mfo@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

Looks good to me.
Reviewed-by: Joseph Qi <joseph.qi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>

> ---
> fs/ocfs2/namei.c | 4 ++--
> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/fs/ocfs2/namei.c b/fs/ocfs2/namei.c
> index 3c908e9416af..0043eddabdb8 100644
> --- a/fs/ocfs2/namei.c
> +++ b/fs/ocfs2/namei.c
> @@ -1095,8 +1095,8 @@ static int ocfs2_check_if_ancestor(struct ocfs2_super *osb,
> child_inode_no = parent_inode_no;
>
> if (++i >= MAX_LOOKUP_TIMES) {
> - mlog(ML_NOTICE, "max lookup times reached, filesystem "
> - "may have nested directories, "
> + mlog_ratelimited(ML_NOTICE, "max lookup times reached, "
> + "filesystem may have nested directories, "
> "src inode: %llu, dest inode: %llu.\n",
> (unsigned long long)src_inode_no,
> (unsigned long long)dest_inode_no);
>