From: Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@cox.net>
To: Austin S Hemmelgarn <ahferroin7@gmail.com>
Cc: linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: What is the vision for btrfs fs repair?
Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2014 05:34:02 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20141009053402.7dc286f0@ws> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <107Y1p00G0wm9Bl0107vjZ>
On Thu, 09 Oct 2014 08:07:51 -0400
Austin S Hemmelgarn <ahferroin7@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 2014-10-09 07:53, Duncan wrote:
> > Austin S Hemmelgarn posted on Thu, 09 Oct 2014 07:29:23 -0400 as
> > excerpted:
> >
> >> Also, you should be running btrfs scrub regularly to correct
> >> bit-rot and force remapping of blocks with read errors. While
> >> BTRFS technically handles both transparently on reads, it only
> >> corrects thing on disk when you do a scrub.
> >
> > AFAIK that isn't quite correct. Currently, the number of copies is
> > limited to two, meaning if one of the two is bad, there's a 50%
> > chance of btrfs reading the good one on first try.
> >
> > If btrfs reads the good copy, it simply uses it. If btrfs reads
> > the bad one, it checks the other one and assuming it's good,
> > replaces the bad one with the good one both for the read (which
> > otherwise errors out), and by overwriting the bad one.
> >
> > But here's the rub. The chances of detecting that bad block are
> > relatively low in most cases. First, the system must try reading
> > it for some reason, but even then, chances are 50% it'll pick the
> > good one and won't even notice the bad one.
> >
> > Thus, while btrfs may randomly bump into a bad block and rewrite it
> > with the good copy, scrub is the only way to systematically detect
> > and (if there's a good copy) fix these checksum errors. It's not
> > that btrfs doesn't do it if it finds them, it's that the chances of
> > finding them are relatively low, unless you do a scrub, which
> > systematically checks the entire filesystem (well, other than files
> > marked nocsum, or nocow, which implies nocsum, or files written
> > when mounted with nodatacow or nodatasum).
> >
> > At least that's the way it /should/ work. I guess it's possible
> > that btrfs isn't doing those routine "bump-into-it-and-fix-it"
> > fixes yet, but if so, that's the first /I/ remember reading of it.
>
> I'm not 100% certain, but I believe it doesn't actually fix things on
> disk when it detects an error during a read, I know it doesn't it the
> fs is mounted ro (even if the media is writable), because I did some
> testing to see how 'read-only' mounting a btrfs filesystem really is.
Definitely it won't with a read-only mount. But then scrub shouldn't
be able to write to a read-only mount either. The only way a read-only
mount should be writable is if it's mounted (bind-mounted or
btrfs-subvolume-mounted) read-write elsewhere, and the write occurs to
that mount, not the read-only mounted location.
There's even debate about replaying the journal or doing orphan-delete
on read-only mounts (at least on-media, the change could, and arguably
should, occur in RAM and be cached, marking the cache "dirty" at the
same time so it's appropriately flushed if/when the filesystem goes
writable), with some arguing read-only means just that, don't
write /anything/ to it until it's read-write mounted.
But writable-mounted, detected checksum errors (with a good copy
available) should be rewritten as far as I know. If not, I'd call it
a bug. The problem is in the detection, not in the rewriting. Scrub's
the only way to reliably detect these errors since it's the only thing
that systematically checks /everything/.
> Also, that's a much better description of how multiple copies work
> than I could probably have ever given.
Thanks. =:^)
--
Duncan - No HTML messages please, as they are filtered as spam.
"Every nonfree program has a lord, a master --
and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-10-09 12:34 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 33+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-10-08 19:11 What is the vision for btrfs fs repair? Eric Sandeen
2014-10-09 11:29 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-09 11:53 ` Duncan
2014-10-09 11:55 ` Hugo Mills
2014-10-09 12:07 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-09 12:12 ` Hugo Mills
2014-10-09 12:32 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
[not found] ` <107Y1p00G0wm9Bl0107vjZ>
2014-10-09 12:34 ` Duncan [this message]
2014-10-09 13:18 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-09 13:49 ` Duncan
2014-10-09 15:44 ` Eric Sandeen
[not found] ` <0zvr1p0162Q6ekd01zvtN0>
2014-10-09 12:42 ` Duncan
2014-10-10 1:58 ` Chris Murphy
2014-10-10 3:20 ` Duncan
2014-10-10 10:53 ` Bob Marley
2014-10-10 10:59 ` Roman Mamedov
2014-10-10 11:12 ` Bob Marley
2014-10-10 15:18 ` cwillu
2014-10-10 14:37 ` Chris Murphy
2014-10-10 17:43 ` Bob Marley
2014-10-10 17:53 ` Bardur Arantsson
2014-10-10 19:35 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-10 22:05 ` Eric Sandeen
2014-10-13 11:26 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-12 10:14 ` Martin Steigerwald
2014-10-12 23:59 ` Duncan
2014-10-13 11:37 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn
2014-10-13 11:48 ` Rich Freeman
2014-10-11 7:29 ` Goffredo Baroncelli
2014-11-17 20:55 ` Phillip Susi
2014-10-12 10:06 ` Martin Steigerwald
2014-10-12 10:17 ` Martin Steigerwald
2014-10-13 21:09 ` Josef Bacik
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