On 19.03.19 г. 12:58 ч., Nikolay Borisov wrote:
> When a device is deleted/removed from a btrfs filesystem the kernel
> ensures all superblocks on said device are zeroed out. Test for this
> behavior. Since btrfs inspect-internal dump-super always return success
> I cannot test for the return value of the command. Instead there are 2
> cases to handle:
>
> 1. When the device is smaller than the requested super block copy, i.e.
> super block copy 2 resides at 256GB. In such cases btrfs command just
> returns blank screen
>
> 2. When the device is removed and a valid offset of the super block is
> queried btrfs command returns a textual error to stderr.
>
> Signed-off-by: Nikolay Borisov <nbori...@suse.com>
> ---
Disregard this version and check v2.
> tests/btrfs/003 | 7 +++++++
> 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+)
>
> diff --git a/tests/btrfs/003 b/tests/btrfs/003
> index 22aa57aad0b9..938030ef4c65 100755
> --- a/tests/btrfs/003
> +++ b/tests/btrfs/003
> @@ -161,6 +161,13 @@ _test_remove()
> dev_del=`echo ${SCRATCH_DEV_POOL} | awk '{print $NF}'`
> $BTRFS_UTIL_PROG device delete $dev_del $SCRATCH_MNT || _fail "btrfs
> device delete failed"
> $BTRFS_UTIL_PROG filesystem show $SCRATCH_DEV 2>&1 | grep $dev_del >>
> $seqres.full && _fail "btrfs still shows the deleted dev"
> + for i in {0..2}; do
> + local output=$($BTRFS_UTIL_PROG inspect-internal dump-super -s
> $i $dev_del 2>&1)
> + $BTRFS_UTIL_PROG inspect-internal dump-super -s $i $dev_del
> 2>&1 | grep -q "bad magic"
> + if [[ "$output" != "" && $ret -eq 1 ]]; then
> + _fail "Delete dev superblocks not scratched"
> + fi
> + done
> _scratch_unmount
> }
>
>