On Wed, 31 May 2017 17:31:49 -0400 Jeff Layton <jlay...@redhat.com> wrote:
> On Wed, 2017-05-31 at 13:27 -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > > On Wed, 31 May 2017 08:45:23 -0400 Jeff Layton <jlay...@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > > This is v5 of the patchset to improve how we're tracking and reporting > > > errors that occur during pagecache writeback. > > > > I'm curious to know how you've been testing this? > > > Is that testing > > strong enough for us to be confident that all nature of I/O errors > > will be reported to userspace? > > > > That's a tall order. This is a difficult thing to test as these sorts of > errors are pretty rare by nature. > > I have an xfstest that I posted just after this set that demonstrates > that it works correctly, at least on ext2/3/4 when run by the ext4 > driver (ext2 legacy driver reports too many errors currently). I had > btrfs and xfs working on that test too in an earlier incarnation of this > set, so I think we can fix this in them as well without too much > difficulty. > > I'm happy to run other tests if someone wants to suggest them. > > Now, all that said, I don't think this will make things any worse than > they are today as far as reporting errors properly to userland goes. > It's rather easy for an incidental synchronous writeback request from an > internal caller to clear the AS_* flags today. This will at least ensure > that we're reporting errors since a well-defined point in time when you > call fsync. Were you using error injection of some form? If so, how was that all set up? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html