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From: Ben Collins <bcollins@debian.org>
To: Andrew Morton <akpm@zip.com.au>, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Bug in ext3
Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2001 19:55:51 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20011115195551.Q329@visi.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3BF3F9ED.17D55B35@zip.com.au>, <3BF3F9ED.17D55B35@zip.com.au> <20011115153442.A329@visi.net> <3BF42A1A.5AE96A78@zip.com.au> <20011115160232.H329@visi.net> <20011115145803.R5739@lynx.no> <20011115170628.J329@visi.net> <20011115162149.U5739@lynx.no> <20011115183858.N329@visi.net> <20011115170742.W5739@lynx.no>
In-Reply-To: <20011115170742.W5739@lynx.no>

On Thu, Nov 15, 2001 at 05:07:42PM -0700, Andreas Dilger wrote:
> On Nov 15, 2001  18:38 -0500, Ben Collins wrote:
> > I wont say that I am absolutely 100% sure that ext3 was never tried on
> > this filesystem. I am pretty certain, but I'm guessing it doesn't really
> > make much difference at this point. Your scenario of the corruption
> > makes sense. I'll see if I can test your patch at some point (but I most
> > likely cannot).
> > 
> > Filesystem features:      has_journal filetype sparse_super
> > ...
> > Journal inode:            48
> 
> What I'm thinking happened here is at some point long ago (maybe before
> the server was put into production, who knows) someone tested ext3 on
> it.  When they were done, they deleted the .journal file (inode #48)
> but e2fsck didn't clean up the superblock journal fields, and it went
> unnoticed until now.
> 
> The other alternative is that you have some sort of random single-bit
> data corruption going on (the journal inode is also a single bit set,
> 48 = 0x30, but a different bit than has_journal, = 0x0004).
> 
> In any case, with e2fsprogs 1.18 (and probably _only_ that version)
> it doesn't complain about has_journal, but it also doesn't check if the
> journal is bad and clean it up.  When you try to start with an ext3-aware
> kernel, it conspires to corrupt inode 48 when it tries to unload the
> journal, even when it knows the journal is bad.
> 
> What would be interesting to correlate is what inode 48 is (probably a
> directory, or you wouldn't have noticed it at all), with the corruption
> problems you are having while ext3 is loaded.

48 /usr/lib/perl5/5.005/File/Copy.pm

Since this file is pretty small, I can only assume that it overwrote
some adjacent files. There is some corruption in this file (luckily in
the comment area :) starting at the 25th byte, and extending 12 bytes in
length. Here's the values from hexedit:

	00 00 00 01  00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00



-- 
 .----------=======-=-======-=========-----------=====------------=-=-----.
/                   Ben Collins    --    Debian GNU/Linux                  \
`  bcollins@debian.org  --  bcollins@openldap.org  --  bcollins@linux.com  '
 `---=========------=======-------------=-=-----=-===-======-------=--=---'

  reply	other threads:[~2001-11-16  0:56 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 22+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2001-11-15 14:24 Bug in ext3 Ben Collins
2001-11-15 17:22 ` Andrew Morton
2001-11-15 20:34   ` Ben Collins
2001-11-15 20:48     ` Andrew Morton
2001-11-15 21:02       ` Ben Collins
2001-11-15 21:10         ` Andrew Morton
2001-11-15 22:04           ` Ben Collins
2001-11-15 21:58         ` Andreas Dilger
2001-11-15 22:06           ` Ben Collins
2001-11-15 22:49             ` Mike Fedyk
2001-11-15 22:58               ` Ben Collins
2001-11-15 23:21             ` Andreas Dilger
2001-11-15 23:38               ` Ben Collins
2001-11-16  0:07                 ` Andreas Dilger
2001-11-16  0:55                   ` Ben Collins [this message]
2001-11-16  3:09                     ` Andreas Dilger
2001-11-16  3:20                       ` Ben Collins
2001-11-16  3:37                         ` Mike Fedyk
2001-11-16  4:50                         ` Andreas Dilger
2001-11-16 18:38               ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-11-16 18:44                 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-11-16 14:52         ` Stephen C. Tweedie

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