Re: 3.1-rc10 oops in nameidata_to_filp
From: Jan Kara
Date: Thu Nov 24 2011 - 16:14:06 EST
On Thu 24-11-11 17:38:29, Al Viro wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 24, 2011 at 11:44:06AM -0500, George Spelvin wrote:
>
> > It turned out the machine was quite recoverable and I've been running it without rebooting since then.
> > This includes several suspends to RAM and one to disk.
> >
> > So far, it seems pretty reproducible, but I suppose it could be a kernel bit flip.
> > (F***ing Intel not even *allowing* ECC in "consumer" chipsets...)
> >
> > I should probably add a debugging patch and reboot. Is there a debugging helper
> > for printing a dentry and vfsmount?
>
> d_path(); takes struct path *, pointer to buffer and buffer length, puts
> the pathname into the end of buffer and returns a pointer to the beginning
> of resulting string.
>
> I'd add (hell, maybe start with) printing this:
> file->f_path.dentry->d_inode
> inode
> file->f_mapping
> inode->i_mapping
> inode->i_mapping->host
> just to see whether it's open() callback resetting ->f_mapping to NULL or
> weird inode->i_mapping->host. All in case file->f_mapping->host == NULL
> just before the spot where it oopses.
>
> Getting pathname would be something like
> static char name[4096];
> struct path path = {.mnt = mnt, .dentry = dentry};
> char *p = d_path(&path, name, 4096);
> if (IS_ERR(p))
> printk("[%d]", PTR_ERR(p));
> else
> printk("'%s'", p);
> conditional on the same test.
>
> Said that, I'm not buying the theory of open assigning to ->f_mapping and
> screwing it up; all such assignments end up with ->i_mapping of *some*
> inode, as far as I can see from cursory grep over the tree.
Yeah, after some thought and grepping, setting ->f_mapping to something
bogus does not seem likely. More likely is that i_mapping got somehow
corrupted (use after free?) or something like that.
> Just in case: do you have CONFIG_FS_POSIX_ACL set?
Honza
--
Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx>
SUSE Labs, CR
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