Cristian Falcas posted on Tue, 21 Oct 2014 11:13:48 +0300 as excerpted: > Can I downgrade the kernel from 3.17.1 to latest 3.10 if I have a btrfs > partition formatted and used on 3.17.1? > > I mean, is there something that could go wrong with the fs if suddenly I > use an older kernel? > > I want to downgrade because last night we had some 1200 oops's in 1 hour > on the 3.17 kernel related to "CPU#n stuck" and what seems to be btrfs > work: You definitely don't want to downgrade that far -- there's way too many btrfs fixes since then and you'd be needlessly risking your data. Much more viable would be to downgrade to the latest 3.16.x stable kernel (definitely not 3.16.0 or 3.16.1 as they had an open issue much like 3.17.0 does), and then upgrade to the latest 3.17.x in a couple weeks, as there's some critical stable fixes in the pipeline for it. Or if you must, 3.14.x is the latest long-term-stable series, and is continuing to get btrfs-stable patches along with the other stable patches it gets. But I'd definitely not recommend reverting to older than 3.14.x stable series, because even if it's a stable series and they catch and apply to stable all the patches that ideally need to be applied back that far, if you have problems, what you'd be running is simply too far back in history to get much support on this list for. Also, keep in mind that the btrfs-is-experimental warnings didn't come off until 3.12 or so. Any btrfs older than that was officially experimental when it came out, and even if it's a long-term-stable kernel, no stable series patches are going to remove the still experimental nature of btrfs in a kernel that old. So 3.10, no way if it were /my/ data! Latest 3.14.x stable, I'd consider. But preferably step back to the latest 3.16.x (past 3.16.2 for sure) temporarily, and try latest 3.17.x again in a couple weeks (or 3.18- live-git now) as there's some critical fixes for 3.17-stable now in 3.18 and still making their way to the stable releases. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
