Commit d2dc317d authored by Lukas Czerner's avatar Lukas Czerner Committed by Theodore Ts'o

ext4: fix data corruption caused by unwritten and delayed extents

Currently it is possible to lose whole file system block worth of data
when we hit the specific interaction with unwritten and delayed extents
in status extent tree.

The problem is that when we insert delayed extent into extent status
tree the only way to get rid of it is when we write out delayed buffer.
However there is a limitation in the extent status tree implementation
so that when inserting unwritten extent should there be even a single
delayed block the whole unwritten extent would be marked as delayed.

At this point, there is no way to get rid of the delayed extents,
because there are no delayed buffers to write out. So when a we write
into said unwritten extent we will convert it to written, but it still
remains delayed.

When we try to write into that block later ext4_da_map_blocks() will set
the buffer new and delayed and map it to invalid block which causes
the rest of the block to be zeroed loosing already written data.

For now we can fix this by simply not allowing to set delayed status on
written extent in the extent status tree. Also add WARN_ON() to make
sure that we notice if this happens in the future.

This problem can be easily reproduced by running the following xfs_io.

xfs_io -f -c "pwrite -S 0xaa 4096 2048" \
          -c "falloc 0 131072" \
          -c "pwrite -S 0xbb 65536 2048" \
          -c "fsync" /mnt/test/fff

echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches
xfs_io -c "pwrite -S 0xdd 67584 2048" /mnt/test/fff

This can be theoretically also reproduced by at random by running fsx,
but it's not very reliable, though on machines with bigger page size
(like ppc) this can be seen more often (especially xfstest generic/127)
Signed-off-by: default avatarLukas Czerner <lczerner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarTheodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
parent 9402bdca
......@@ -703,6 +703,14 @@ int ext4_es_insert_extent(struct inode *inode, ext4_lblk_t lblk,
BUG_ON(end < lblk);
if ((status & EXTENT_STATUS_DELAYED) &&
(status & EXTENT_STATUS_WRITTEN)) {
ext4_warning(inode->i_sb, "Inserting extent [%u/%u] as "
" delayed and written which can potentially "
" cause data loss.\n", lblk, len);
WARN_ON(1);
}
newes.es_lblk = lblk;
newes.es_len = len;
ext4_es_store_pblock_status(&newes, pblk, status);
......
......@@ -532,6 +532,7 @@ int ext4_map_blocks(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
status = map->m_flags & EXT4_MAP_UNWRITTEN ?
EXTENT_STATUS_UNWRITTEN : EXTENT_STATUS_WRITTEN;
if (!(flags & EXT4_GET_BLOCKS_DELALLOC_RESERVE) &&
!(status & EXTENT_STATUS_WRITTEN) &&
ext4_find_delalloc_range(inode, map->m_lblk,
map->m_lblk + map->m_len - 1))
status |= EXTENT_STATUS_DELAYED;
......@@ -636,6 +637,7 @@ int ext4_map_blocks(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
status = map->m_flags & EXT4_MAP_UNWRITTEN ?
EXTENT_STATUS_UNWRITTEN : EXTENT_STATUS_WRITTEN;
if (!(flags & EXT4_GET_BLOCKS_DELALLOC_RESERVE) &&
!(status & EXTENT_STATUS_WRITTEN) &&
ext4_find_delalloc_range(inode, map->m_lblk,
map->m_lblk + map->m_len - 1))
status |= EXTENT_STATUS_DELAYED;
......
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment