Re: [linux-pm] Massive ext4 filesystem corruption after a failed s2disk/ram cycle
From: Rafael J. Wysocki
Date: Tue Oct 06 2009 - 17:58:21 EST
On Tuesday 06 October 2009, Maxim Levitsky wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just prior to 2.6.32 cycle I tried -next tree and noticed that after a
> failed s2ram (here it works only once, and I test once in a whileto see
> if fixed accidentally) I got a minor filesystem corruption. I am sorry I
> didn't report that back then.
>
> Now I have installed 2.6.32-rc2 (well -rc1...) and things were sort of
> ok, I have even thought that hibernation is once again stable
> (somewhere in the not that distinct past the hibernation which used to
> work, began to fail randomly on resume)
>
> Few days ago, I got a read-only filesystem again, an fsck, few more
> corrupted files..., It should have had rung the bell for me (I have
> still used hibernation, trying to understand why it fails sometimes)
>
> Yesterday, however, I have decided to fix that once and for all, and for
> that I have set up a loop + rtc wakealarm to make it cycle through
> hibernation.
>
> Needless to say I didn't run that loop more that maybe 3 cycles (and no
> failures), but noticed that rtc clock is dead on resume.
>
> I sort of fixed that (this is hpet emulation that strikes again), I will
> post when I test the fix (trivial), because when I had rebooted the
> system into the modified kernel, I got that readonly filesystem again,
> and this time the damage had spread over lots of files.
> (I have even lost most of dpkg database..., many programs,
> libraries,..., settings)
>
> Yet, thanks to Linux flexibility, after a day, and some study of
> nautilus source, I had the system recovered fully.
> (Now am doing backups.....)
>
> But I don't want that to happen again...
>
> Another clue that I have seen was that ext4 driver reported that it
> aborts journal replay.
>
> I know that for now there is not much you can do, but just to let you
> know that something is there...
>
> What is especially interesting is that there were no s2ram'disk faulure
> preceding the corruption, but my theory is that corruption wasn't
> detected for a while from last failure, probably giving such bad
> consequences.
>
> You do sync file-systems before entering the hibernation, don't you?
Yes, a sync is there, but it is not effective on some filesystems.
Thanks,
Rafael
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