Re: freeze vs freezer
From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge
Date: Mon Nov 26 2007 - 13:44:33 EST
Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> On Thursday, 22 of November 2007, Jeremy Fitzhardinge wrote:
>
>> It seems that a process blocked in a write to an xfs filesystem due to
>> xfs_freeze cannot be frozen by the freezer.
>>
>
> The freezer doesn't handle tasks in TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE and I don't know how
> to make it handle them without at least partially defeating its purpose.
>
Well, I guess the question is whether an xfs-frozen writer really needs
to be UNINTERRUPTIBLE from the freezer's perspective (clearly it does
from usermode's perspective - filesystem writes just don't return EINTR).
>From a quick poke around, it looks to me like freezing is actually
implemented in the VFS layer rather than in XFS itself: is that right?
Could vfs_check_frozen() be changed to something that is freezer-compatible?
>> I see this if I suspend my laptop while doing something xfs-filesystem
>> intensive, like a kernel build. My suspend scripts freeze the XFS
>> filesystem (as Dave said I should), which presumably blocks some writer,
>> and then the freezer times out and fails to complete.
>>
>> Here's part of the process dump the freezer does when it times out:
>>
>> cc1 D 00000000 0 18138 18137
>> dd5f1e24 00200082 00000002 00000000 ecdeeb00 ecdeec64 c200f280 00000001
>> 009c09a0 dd5f1e0c dd5f1e0c 0000000f 00000000 00000000 00000000 dd5f1e74
>> c7beb480 dd5f1e88 dd5f1ea8 c0228d97 e8889540 dd5f1e38 c015b75d dd5f1e44
>> Call Trace:
>> [<c0228d97>] xfs_write+0xf4/0x6d9
>> [<c0226038>] xfs_file_aio_write+0x53/0x5b
>> [<c0171c15>] do_sync_write+0xae/0xec
>> [<c0172343>] vfs_write+0xa4/0x120
>> [<c01728d7>] sys_write+0x3b/0x60
>> [<c0106fae>] sysenter_past_esp+0x6b/0xa1
>> =======================
>>
>>
>> I haven't looked at how to fix this yet. I only just worked out why I
>> was getting suspend failures.
>>
>
> Well, you can add freezer_do_not_count()/freezer_count() annotations to
> xfs_write() (and whatever else is blocked as a result of the XFS being frozen).
>
What would be the implications of that? Would that just prevent
freezing while there's something blocked there?
> Generally, that would be risky without the freezing of XFS, however, because it
> might leak us filesystem data to a storage device after creating a hibernation
> image which would result in the filesystem corruption after the resume.
>
> Still, if you only suspend to RAM, that should be safe.
>
I specifically added it because I was getting data loss due to crashes
during suspend/resume problems. It's been pretty stable lately, but I
may as well remove the xfs_freeze from my suspend scripts if this is the
solution.
I think the broader issue is that there's no reason in principle why
something blocked due to xfs-freezing (or vfs freezing) should prevent
the freezer from completing.
J
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/