From: Andrew Morton <akpm@zip.com.au>
To: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: ext3 deadlock?
Date: Sun, 12 May 2002 21:08:20 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3CDF3C34.5F0EB4EE@zip.com.au> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <15582.64211.376045.489317@argo.ozlabs.ibm.com>
Paul Mackerras wrote:
>
> I'm having a problem with 2.5.15 on an old slow powerbook 3400. It
> gets stuck during boot at the point where it starts syslogd. At that
> point show_state() reveals that kjournald and one of the two syslogd
> processes are stuck in D state. The stack trace for kjournald is:
>
> schedule
> __wait_on_buffer
> journal_commit_transaction
> kjournald
kjournald is actually running a commit. So recovery was successful
and the filesystem is up and running.
It's this trace which is the problem. All the other processes
are blocked by kjournald.
kjournald is pretty much write-only. It will perform the
occasional read to load the indirect blocks which describe the
journal location. But that would show a different backtrace.
It appears that kjournald has submitted a block for writeout
(via submit_bh() or ll_rw_block()) and the interrupt which
signifies completion simply hasn't happened.
> ...
>
> Can anyone suggest where I could start looking to work out why
> kjournald is getting stuck in __wait_on_buffer? Where in the code
> does the corresponding wakeup happen?
journal_commit_transaction() writes blocks from several different
places, via ll_rw_block() or submit_bh(). It waits for the
buffers to come unlocked in the end_buffer_io_sync() or
journal_end_buffer_io_sync() completion handlers.
Possibly the device driver has failed to deliver an interrupt.
-
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-05-13 4:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-05-12 23:29 ext3 deadlock? Paul Mackerras
2002-05-13 4:08 ` Andrew Morton [this message]
2002-05-14 2:15 ` Paul Mackerras
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