On Mon, Apr 18, 2005 at 04:31:06PM +0400, Artem B. Bityuckiy wrote:
> On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 12:52 +0100, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > Oh, I thought the problem is that JFFS2 thought an inode was freed when
> > it still was in use. So you're problem is actually that it's no in the
> > hash anymore but you don't know yet?
> Yes, exactly. VFS developers may always say "it is your problem -
> redesign JFFS2", but I think it is too late to redesign it.
I don't think it's too late ever ;-)
> > Anyway, please explain in detail why you need all this information, what
> > errors you see, etc so we can find a way to fix it properly.
> Well, I suspect I explained why I need the mutex. If people will find
> the explanation vague, I'll make another attempt.
>
> The error I see is:
>
> Eep. Trying to read_inode #15601 when it's already in state 2!
>
> I debugged this a lot before I've realized the reason. And I believe I
> know JFFS2 very well to claim that redesigning it is very painful.
>
> The erroneous code flow is like this:
>
> kswapd: removes the inode 15601 from the inode hash (inode.c:478).
> kswapd: is preempted at inode.c:485
> JFFS2 writer: awakes, runs GC to reclaim some space.
> JFFS2 writer: picks a JFFS2 node belonging to the inode 15601
> JFFS2 writer: looks at the inode state, realizes it is in state PRESENT,
> i.e. it is in the inode cache (which is wrong).
> JFFS2 writer: runs iget() to acquire a pointer to the struct inode of
> the inode 15601.
> JFFS2 writer: iget() calls ->read_inode(), i.e., jffs2_read_inode().
Why doesn't __wait_on_freeing_inode get called? prune_icache sets I_FREEING
before it's dropping the inode lock.
Any, this sounds like you'd want to use ilookup because you don't want to
read the inode in the cache anyway, right?
> JFFS2 writed: JFFS2 is surprised why read_inode() is called for the
> already built inode 15601.
>
> Or may be VFS is buggy, I'm not sure. May be it shouldn't remove inode
> from the inode hash in that point (inode.c:487). It sets the I_FREENG
> state to the inode being freed, and iget() may wait in find_inode_fast()
> while the inode is actually destroyed (inode.c:562). The inode may be
> removed from the inode hash later, in dispose_list() (inode.c:292).
>
> Or may be this isn't a bug but a feature to make the inode_lock less
> contended. Not sure, I'm not a VFS guru.
Yes, it's a feature.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]