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Re: Regression with FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE in 3.5-rc kernel | |
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Dne 1.7.2012 01:10, Hugh Dickins napsal(a):
On Sat, 30 Jun 2012, Zdenek Kabelac wrote:Dne 30.6.2012 21:55, Hugh Dickins napsal(a):On Sat, 30 Jun 2012, Zdenek Kabelac wrote:When I've used 3.5-rc kernels - I've noticed kernel deadlocks. Ooops log included. After some experimenting - reliable way to hit this oops is to run lvm test suite for 10 minutes. Since 3.5 merge window does not included anything related to this oops I've went for bisect.Thanks a lot for reporting, and going to such effort to find a reproducible testcase that you could bisect on.Game result is commit: 3f31d07571eeea18a7d34db9af21d2285b807a17 mm/fs: route MADV_REMOVE to FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLEBut this leaves me very puzzled. Is the "lvm test suite" what I find at git.fedorahosted.org/git/lvm2.git under tests/ ?Yes - that's it - make as root: cd test make check_local (inside test subdirectory should be enough, if not - just report any problem)If you have something else running at the same time, which happens to use madvise(,,MADV_REMOVE) on a filesystem which the commit above now enables it on (I guess ext4 from the =y in your config), then I suppose we should start searching for improper memory freeing or scribbling in its holepunch support: something that might be corrupting the dm_region in your oops.What the test is doing - it creates file in LVM_TEST_DIR (default is /tmp) and using loop device to simulate device (small size - it should fit bellow 200MB) Within this file second layer through virtual DM devices is created and simulates various numbers of PV devices to play with.This sounds much easier to set up than I was expecting: thanks for the info, I'll try it later on today.So since everything now support TRIM - such operations should be passed down to the backend file - which probably triggers the path.What filesystem do you have for /tmp? If tmpfs, then it will make much more sense if we assume your bisection endpoint was off by one. Your bisection log was not quite complete; and even if it did appear to converge on the commit you cite, you might have got (un)lucky when testing the commit before it, and concluded "good" when more attempts would have said "bad". The commit before, 83e4fa9c16e4af7122e31be3eca5d57881d236fe "tmpfs: support fallocate FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE", would be a much more likely first bad commit if your /tmp is on tmpfs: that does indeed wire up loop to pass TRIM down to tmpfs by fallocate - that indeed played a part in my own testing. Whereas if your /tmp is on ext4, loop has been passing TRIM down with fallocate since v3.0. And whichever, madvise(,,MADV_REMOVE) should be completely irrelevant.
While I've been aware of the fact that tmpfs was enhanced with trim support - I've not tried to run on real ext4 filesystem since for my tests I'm using tmpfs for quite some time to safe rewrites of SSD :)
So now I've checked with real ext4 - and the bug is there as well so I've went back - it crashes on 3.4, 3.3 and 3.2 as well. 3.1 is the first kernel which does survive (checked 5 repeated runs) And you are correct, the first commit which causes crash really is83e4fa9c16e4af when I use tmpfs as backend storage - the problem why I've missed to properly identify this commit in my bisect is that crash usually happens on the second pass of the lvm test suite 'make check_local' execution - and I've been running test just once. To be sure I've run 5 run passes on 3.4.0-08568-gec9516f - which is OK, but 3.4.0-08569-g83e4fa9 is crashing usually on second run, with commit 3f31d07571e the crash always happens in the first pass.
I've also checked some rawhide kernel vmlinuz-3.5.0-0.rc2.git0.1.fc18.x86_64 and it's crashing as well - so it's probably not uniqueness of my config.So is there any primary suspect in 3.2 which is worth to check - or I need another day to play another bisect game ?
I'll be surprised if that is the case, but it's something that you can easily check by inserting a WARN_ON(1) in mm/madvise.c madvise_remove(): that should tell us what process is using it.I could try that if that will help.That would help, if you're very sure of your bisection endpoint; but if your /tmp is on tmpfs, then I do think it's more likely that you've actually found a bug in the commit before.
the only thing which could be tricky is udev support (by default it's not enabled ---enable-udev_sync)However Debian based distros are distributing their own rules, which are not 100% compatible with upstream and create some unpredictable issues,
where the slowness is the least problem.)If you have Fedora Rawhide with latest lvm2 installed - you should get pretty well configured system for running test dir (unfortunately there is no way to virtualize udev...)
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