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From: "Theodore Y. Ts'o" <tytso@mit.edu>
To: Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org>
Cc: Paul Menzel <pmenzel@molgen.mpg.de>,
	Andreas Dilger <adilger.kernel@dilger.ca>,
	linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org, Dimitri John Ledkov <xnox@ubuntu.com>
Subject: Re: ext4: Funny characters appended to file names
Date: Sun, 6 Dec 2020 10:15:27 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20201206151527.GE577125@mit.edu> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20201206144416.GM13361@riva.ucam.org>

On Sun, Dec 06, 2020 at 02:44:16PM +0000, Colin Watson wrote:
> > Colin, the modules in `/boot/grub/i386-pc` look funny, and can’t be loaded
> > by GRUB anymore.
> > 
> > ```
> > $ ls -lt /boot/grub/i386-pc/
> > insgesamt 2085
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 root root    512 13. Aug 23:00 'boot.img-'$'\205\300''u'$'
> > \023\211''鍓]'$'\206\371\377\211\360\350''f'$'\376\377\377\205

I think Colin theory makes sense.  Note the hypthen after "boot.img".
That corresponds with the 'i' in the code below:

> Now that I look at it more closely, some of the changes to
> clean_grub_dir_real look suspicious:
> 
> +         char *srcf = grub_util_path_concat (2, di, de->d_name);
> +
> +         if (mode == CREATE_BACKUP)
> +           {
> +             char *dstf = grub_util_path_concat_ext (2, di, de->d_name, "-");
> +             if (grub_util_rename (srcf, dstf) < 0)
> +               grub_util_error (_("cannot backup `%s': %s"), srcf,
> +                                grub_util_fd_strerror ());
> +             free (dstf);
> +           }

... however, if I'm understanding the code correctly, this is the
codepath used to create the backup file (e.g., the previous version of
boot.img).  So shouldn't there be a "boot.img" file in
/boot/grub/i386-pc which would be the newly installed version of that
file, and so the system would actually be booting correctly?

Or am I misunderstanding what is going on?  Paul, I thought you said
your system wasn't able to boot because the needed files in
/boot/grub/i386-pc had apparently been corrupted?

Essentially, there are three possibilities:

1)  A hardware corruption which corrupted the directory.

2)  A kernel bug which corrupted the directory.

3) The file system isn't actually corrupted, but the filename with the
random garbage in the filename was created because a userspace
application so requested it.

The fact that all of the filenames have the a similar pattern of
corruption to them would tend to rule out #1.  And the fact that
e2fsck didn't notice any other corruptions would tend to argue against
#1 and #2.  So #3 does seem to be the most likely.

       	       	       	       	      	   - Ted

  reply	other threads:[~2020-12-06 15:16 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2020-12-04 14:30 ext4: Funny characters appended to file names Paul Menzel
2020-12-04 15:28 ` Theodore Y. Ts'o
2020-12-04 15:39   ` Paul Menzel
2020-12-04 18:05     ` Theodore Y. Ts'o
2020-12-05 19:34       ` Paul Menzel
2020-12-06 14:44         ` Colin Watson
2020-12-06 15:15           ` Theodore Y. Ts'o [this message]
2020-12-06 17:37             ` Colin Watson
2020-12-06 17:44               ` Colin Watson
2020-12-06 18:27           ` Colin Watson
2020-12-07  2:00             ` Dimitri John Ledkov
2020-12-04 20:02 ` Andreas Dilger

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