regression: data corruption with ext4 on LUKS on nvme with torvalds master

Mikulas Patocka mpatocka at redhat.com
Fri May 14 02:50:40 PDT 2021



On 5/13/21 7:15 AM, Theodore Ts'o wrote:
> On Thu, May 13, 2021 at 06:42:22PM +0900, Changheun Lee wrote:
>>
>> Problem might be casued by exhausting of memory. And memory exhausting
>> would be caused by setting of small bio_max_size. Actually it was not
>> reproduced in my VM environment at first. But, I reproduced same problem
>> when bio_max_size is set with 8KB forced. Too many bio allocation would
>> be occurred by setting of 8KB bio_max_size.
> 
> Hmm... I'm not sure how to align your diagnosis with the symptoms in
> the bug report.  If we were limited by memory, that should slow down
> the I/O, but we should still be making forward progress, no?  And a
> forced reboot should not result in data corruption, unless maybe there

If you use data=writeback, data writes and journal writes are not 
synchronized. So, it may be possible that a journal write made it through, 
a data write didn't - the end result would be a file containing random 
contents that was on the disk.

Changheun - do you use data=writeback? Did the corruption happen only in 
newly created files? Or did it corrupt existing files?

> was a missing check for a failed memory allocation, causing data to be
> written to the wrong location, a missing error check leading to the
> block or file system layer not noticing that a write had failed
> (although again, memory exhaustion should not lead to failed writes;
> it might slow us down, sure, but if writes are being failed, something
> is Badly Going Wrong --- things like writes to the swap device or
> writes by the page cleaner must succeed, or else Things Would Go Bad
> In A Hurry).

Mikulas




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