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authorJan Kara <jack@suse.cz>2010-07-12 21:04:31 +0200
committerJan Kara <jack@suse.cz>2010-07-21 16:04:26 +0200
commitf25f624263445785b94f39739a6339ba9ed3275d (patch)
tree8ec38c718b0af19d6e9cbbc9f368c43d7af14b9b /fs
parent4c4d3901225518ed1a4c938ba15ba09842a00770 (diff)
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ext3: Avoid filesystem corruption after a crash under heavy delete load
It can happen that ext3_free_branches calls ext3_forget() for an indirect block in an earlier transaction than a transaction in which we clear pointer to this indirect block. Thus if we crash before a transaction clearing the block pointer is committed, we will see indirect block pointing to already freed blocks and complain during orphan list cleanup. The fix is simple: Make sure ext3_forget() is called in the transaction doing block pointer clearing. This is a backport of an ext4 fix by Amir G. <amir73il@users.sourceforge.net> Signed-off-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs')
-rw-r--r--fs/ext3/inode.c46
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/fs/ext3/inode.c b/fs/ext3/inode.c
index a786db4..436e5bb 100644
--- a/fs/ext3/inode.c
+++ b/fs/ext3/inode.c
@@ -2270,27 +2270,6 @@ static void ext3_free_branches(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
depth);
/*
- * We've probably journalled the indirect block several
- * times during the truncate. But it's no longer
- * needed and we now drop it from the transaction via
- * journal_revoke().
- *
- * That's easy if it's exclusively part of this
- * transaction. But if it's part of the committing
- * transaction then journal_forget() will simply
- * brelse() it. That means that if the underlying
- * block is reallocated in ext3_get_block(),
- * unmap_underlying_metadata() will find this block
- * and will try to get rid of it. damn, damn.
- *
- * If this block has already been committed to the
- * journal, a revoke record will be written. And
- * revoke records must be emitted *before* clearing
- * this block's bit in the bitmaps.
- */
- ext3_forget(handle, 1, inode, bh, bh->b_blocknr);
-
- /*
* Everything below this this pointer has been
* released. Now let this top-of-subtree go.
*
@@ -2313,6 +2292,31 @@ static void ext3_free_branches(handle_t *handle, struct inode *inode,
truncate_restart_transaction(handle, inode);
}
+ /*
+ * We've probably journalled the indirect block several
+ * times during the truncate. But it's no longer
+ * needed and we now drop it from the transaction via
+ * journal_revoke().
+ *
+ * That's easy if it's exclusively part of this
+ * transaction. But if it's part of the committing
+ * transaction then journal_forget() will simply
+ * brelse() it. That means that if the underlying
+ * block is reallocated in ext3_get_block(),
+ * unmap_underlying_metadata() will find this block
+ * and will try to get rid of it. damn, damn. Thus
+ * we don't allow a block to be reallocated until
+ * a transaction freeing it has fully committed.
+ *
+ * We also have to make sure journal replay after a
+ * crash does not overwrite non-journaled data blocks
+ * with old metadata when the block got reallocated for
+ * data. Thus we have to store a revoke record for a
+ * block in the same transaction in which we free the
+ * block.
+ */
+ ext3_forget(handle, 1, inode, bh, bh->b_blocknr);
+
ext3_free_blocks(handle, inode, nr, 1);
if (parent_bh) {