On Thu, Jun 07, 2007 at 02:59:58PM +0100, David Greaves wrote:
> David Chinner wrote:
> >On Thu, Jun 07, 2007 at 11:30:05AM +0100, David Greaves wrote:
> >>Tejun Heo wrote:
> >>>Hello,
> >>>
> >>>David Greaves wrote:
> >>>>Just to be clear. This problem is where my system won't resume after s2d
> >>>>unless I umount my xfs over raid6 filesystem.
> >>>This is really weird. I don't see how xfs mount can affect this at all.
> >>Indeed.
> >>It does :)
> >
> >Ok, so lets determine if it really is XFS.
> Seems like a good next step...
>
> >Does the lockup happen with a
> >different filesystem on the md device? Or if you can't test that, does
> >any other XFS filesystem you have show the same problem?
> It's a rather full 1.2Tb raid6 array - can't reformat it - sorry :)
I suspected as much :/
> I only noticed the problem when I umounted the fs during tests to prevent
> corruption - and it worked. I'm doing a sync each time it hibernates (see
> below) and a couple of paranoia xfs_repairs haven't shown any problems.
sync just guarantees that metadata changes are logged and data is
on disk - it doesn't stop the filesystem from doing anything after
the sync...
> I do have another xfs filesystem on /dev/hdb2 (mentioned when I noticed the
> md/XFS correlation). It doesn't seem to have/cause any problems.
Ok, so it's not an obvious XFS problem...
> >If it is xfs that is causing the problem, what happens if you
> >remount read-only instead of unmounting before shutting down?
> Yes, I'm happy to try these tests.
> nb, the hibernate script is:
> ethtool -s eth0 wol g
> sync
> echo platform > /sys/power/disk
> echo disk > /sys/power/state
>
> So there has always been a sync before any hibernate.
>
>
> cu:~# mount -oremount,ro /huge
.....
> [this works and resumes]
Ok.
> cu:~# mount -oremount,rw /huge
> cu:~# /usr/net/bin/hibernate
> [this works and resumes too !]
Interesting. That means something in the generic remount code
is affecting this.
> cu:~# touch /huge/tst
> cu:~# /usr/net/bin/hibernate
> [but this doesn't even hibernate]
Ok, so a clean inode is sufficient to prevent hibernate from working.
So, what's different between a sync and a remount?
do_remount_sb() does:
599 shrink_dcache_sb(sb);
600 fsync_super(sb);
of which a sync does neither. sync does what fsync_super() does in
different sort of way, but does not call sync_blockdev() on each
block device. It looks like that is the two main differences between
sync and remount - remount trims the dentry cache and syncs the blockdev,
sync doesn't.
> > What about freezing the filesystem?
> cu:~# xfs_freeze -f /huge
> cu:~# /usr/net/bin/hibernate
> [but this doesn't even hibernate - same as the 'touch']
I suspect that the frozen filesystem might cause other problems
in the hibernate process. However, while a freeze calls sync_blockdev()
it does not trim the dentry cache.....
So, rather than a remount before hibernate, lets see if we can
remove the dentries some other way to determine if removing excess
dentries/inodes from the caches makes a difference. Can you do:
# touch /huge/foo
# sync
# echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
# hibernate
# touch /huge/bar
# sync
# echo 2 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
# hibernate
# touch /huge/baz
# sync
# echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
# hibernate
And see if any of those survive the suspend/resume?
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
Principal Engineer
SGI Australian Software Group
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