On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 05:14:41AM -0500, Sasha Levin wrote:
On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 09:22:03AM +0100, Greg KH wrote:
>On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 09:40:19AM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
>>I stopped my tests at 5 billion ops yesterday (i.e. 20 billion ops
>>aggregate) to focus on testing the copy_file_range() changes, but
>>Darrick's tests are still ongoing and have passed 40 billion ops in
>>aggregate over the past few days.
>>
>>The reason we are running these so long is that we've seen fsx data
>>corruption failures after 12+ hours of runtime and hundreds of
>>millions of ops. Hence the testing for backported fixes will need to
>>replicate these test runs across multiple configurations for
>>multiple days before we have any confidence that we've actually
>>fixed the data corruptions and not introduced any new ones.
>>
>>If you pull only a small subset of the fixes, the fsx will still
>>fail and we have no real way of actually verifying that there have
>>been no regression introduced by the backport. IOWs, there's a
>>/massive/ amount of QA needed for ensuring that these backports work
>>correctly.
>>
>>Right now the XFS developers don't have the time or resources
>>available to validate stable backports are correct and regression
>>fre because we are focussed on ensuring the upstream fixes we've
>>already made (and are still writing) are solid and reliable.
>
>Ok, that's fine, so users of XFS should wait until the 4.20 release
>before relying on it? :)
It's getting to the point that with the amount of known issues with XFS
on LTS kernels it makes sense to mark it as CONFIG_BROKEN.
Really? Where are the bug reports?