On Tuesday, 8 November 2022 17:55:51 GMT Laurence Perkins wrote:
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Grant Edwards <grant.b.edwa...@gmail.com>
> >Sent: Tuesday, November 8, 2022 6:28 AM
> >To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> >Subject: [gentoo-user] Re: e2fsck -c when bad blocks are in existing file?
> >
> >On 2022-11-08, Michael <confabul...@kintzios.com> wrote:
> >> On Tuesday, 8 November 2022 03:31:07 GMT Grant Edwards wrote:
> >>> I've got an SSD that's failing, and I'd like to know what files
> >>> contain bad blocks so that I don't attempt to copy them to the
> >>> replacement disk.
> >>> 
> >>> According to e2fsck(8):
> >>>        -c     This option causes e2fsck to use badblocks(8)  program  to
> >>>         do
> >>>  
> >>>  a read-only scan of the device in order to find any bad blocks.  If
> >>> 
> >>> any bad blocks are found, they are added to the bad  block  inode to
> >>> prevent them from being allocated to a file or directory.  If this
> >>> option is specified twice, then the bad block scan  will  be done
> >>> using a non-destructive read-write test.
> >>> 
> >>> What happens when the bad block is _already_allocated_ to a file?
> >> 
> >> Previously allocated to a file and now re-allocated or not, my
> >> understanding is with spinning disks the data in a bad block stays
> >> there unless you've dd'ed some zeros over it.  Even then read or write
> >> operations could fail if the block is too far gone.[1]  Some data
> >> recovery applications will try to read data off a bad block in
> >> different patterns to retrieve what's there.  Once the bad block is
> >> categorized as such it won't be used by the filesystem to write new data
> >> to it again.>
> >Thanks. I guess I should have been more specific in my question.
> >
> >What does e2fsck -c do to the filesystem structure when it discovers a bad
> >block that is already allocated to an existing inode?
> >
> >Is the inode's chain of block groups left as is -- still containing the bad
> >block that (according to the man page) "has been added to the bad block
> >inode"?  Presumably not, since a block can't be allocated to two different
> >inodes.
> >
> >Is the "broken" file split into two chunks (before/after the bad
> >block) and moved to the lost-and-found?
> >
> >Is the man page's description only correct when the bad block is currently
> >unallocated?
> >
> >--
> >Grant
> 
> If I recall correctly, it will add any unreadable blocks to its internal
> list of bad sectors, which it will then refuse to allocate in the future.
> 
> I don't believe it will attempt to move the file to elsewhere until it is
> written since: A)  what would you then put in that block?  You don't know
> the contents. B)  Moving the file around would make attempts to recover the
> data from that bad sector significantly more difficult.

As far as I know trying to write raw data directly to a bad block e.g. with dd 
or hdparm will trigger the disk's controller firmware to reallocate the data 
from the bad block to a spare.  I always thought e2fsck won't write data in a 
block unless it is empty.  badblocks -w will write test patterns to blocks and 
also trigger data reallocation on any bad blocks.  badblocks -n, which 
corresponds to e2fsck -cc will only write to empty blocks and it may or may 
not trigger a firmware reallocation.

I'm not sure what happens at a filesystem level, when one bad block within an 
extent is reallocated.  The extent and the previously contiguous blocks will 
no longer be contiguous.  Does the hardware expose some SMART data to inform 
the OS/fs of the reallocated block, to perform a whole extent remapping?


> This is, however, very unlikely to come up on a modern disk since most of
> them automatically remap failed sectors at the hardware level (also on
> write, for the same reasons).  So the only time it would matter is if you
> have a disk that's more than about 20 years old, or one that's used up all
> its spare sectors...
> 
> Unless, of course, you're resurrecting the old trick of marking a section of
> the disk as "bad" so the FS won't touch it, and then using it for raw data
> of some kind...
> 
> You can, of course, test it yourself to be certain with a loopback file and
> a fake "badblocks" that just outputs your chosen list of bad sectors and
> then see if any of the data moves.  I'd say like a 2MB filesystem and write
> a file full of 00DEADBEEF, then make a copy, blacklist some sectors, and
> hit it with your favorite binary diff command and see what moved.  This is
> probably recommended since there could be differences between the behaviour
> of different versions of e2fsck.
> 
> LMP

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.

Reply via email to