On Sun, Jun 30, 2013 at 07:22:00AM -0400, Josef Bacik wrote: > On Sun, Jun 30, 2013 at 10:25:05AM +0200, Jan Schmidt wrote: > > On 30.06.2013 05:17, Josef Bacik wrote: > > > We need to hold the tree mod log lock in __tree_mod_log_rewind since we > > > walk > > > forward in the tree mod entries, otherwise we'll end up with random > > > entries and > > > trip the BUG_ON() at the front of __tree_mod_log_rewind. This fixes the > > > panics > > > people were seeing when running > > > > > > find /whatever -type f -exec btrfs fi defrag {} \; > > > > This patch cannot help to solve the problem, as far as I've understood > > what is going on. It does change timing, though, which presumably makes > > it pass the current reproducer we're having. > > > > On rewinding, iteration through the tree mod log rb-tree goes backwards > > in time, which means that once we've found our staring point we cannot > > be trapped by later additions. The old items we're rewinding towards > > cannot be freed, because we've allocated a blocker element within the > > tree and rewinding never goes beyond the allocated blocker. The blocker > > element is allocated by btrfs_get_tree_mod_seq and mostly referred to as > > time_seq within the other tree mod log functions in ctree.c. To sum up, > > the added lock is not required. > > > > The debug output I've analyzed so far shows that after we've rewinded > > all REMOVE_WHILE_FREEING operations on a buffer, ordered consecutively > > as expected, there comes another REMOVE_WHILE_FREEING with a sequence > > number much further in the past for the same buffer (but that sequence > > number is still higher than out time_seq rewind barrier at that point). > > This must be a logical problem I've not completely understood so far, > > but locking doesn't seem to be the right track. > > > > So I've seen 2 scenarios with my debug output, once with my printk() which > seemed to be unreliable and then again with trace_printk() which was much more > reliable. > > With the printk() output I saw what you described, however I was also printing > out every mod we added and I never saw the sequence number allocated that we > had > suddenly tripped over, so I assumed that the printk() just got lost between > the > boxes (I was using netconsole to capture the output). However if it was never > actually allocated then it would make sense that we just pointed into some > random peice of memory. > > The second bit I saw which is when I was convinced this was the problem had us > processing the keys, and suddenly we'd try to process the key again. So I saw > something like this (I lost the output because I was capturing the output into > the same file again when I tried to reproduce with this patch so I don't have > the exact output) > > processing op 3, seq 10 slot 0 > processing op 3, seq 9 slot 1 > processing op 3, seq 8 slot 2 > processing op 3, seq 7 slot 3 > processing op 3, seq 6 slot 4 > processing op 3, seq 5 slot 5 > processing op 3, seq 8 slot 2 > > so we got an entry we had already processed, which is completely in line with > the rb_tree pointing to something random when we do rb_next. > > Now I had another theory early on, but I haven't seen output to confirm this. > We can re-allocate a block if we've allocated it in the same transaction, and > it > appears this would completely screw up the tree mod log. So say we allocate > block 5, we add keys to it, and then we free it, so we get this > MOVE_WHILE_FREEING thing done on the entire block, but then we re-allocate the > same block and start doing normal operations to it. Then we go to replay back > and we will replay all the normal operations, but then we will walk into the > REMOVE_WHILE_FREEING entries from when the block was free'd last and this will > trigger the BUG_ON(). Now I hadn't actually had this happen so either it > can't > happen some how and I've missed the reasoning for it, or what I saw was just > the > rb_tree messup because we aren't locking it and what you are seeing is this > particular case. Either way I'm going to back my patch out and re-run a few > more times with my trace_printk()'s so I can have several runs to look at and > verify what I'm seeing. Thanks,
I doubt the theory here, if we free a block, it's marked as pinned and will then be marked as free only when we commit the transaction, isn't it? - liubo -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html