* btrfs send/receive freezes a system @ 2015-08-20 17:11 MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-08-21 9:54 ` Duncan 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-08-20 17:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-btrfs Hi, I want to "soft" mirroring between two remote btrfs volumes. I tried to use btrfs send/receive instead of rsync (because rsync to btrfs volume freeze btrfs http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-btrfs/msg44695.html) But it failed everytime. 1st ) Pipe with SSH, to fresh filesystem. sender was flozen after transfared 2.79TiB. 2nd ) Delete snapshots and try again. sender was flozen after transfared 1.34TiB. 3rd ) Delete snapshots and try again. sender was flozen after transfared 22.23GiB. 4th ) Pipe with SSH, to fresh filesystem. sender was flozen after transfared 2.79TiB. 5th ) Redirect with SSH to fresh filesystem. btrfs send process stalled after transfared 1803363706900 Bytes. 6th ) Pipe with nc, to fresh filesystem. btrfs send process stalled after transfared 179.54GiB When froze sender system. I Couldn't see live signal in sender system. ssh process was dead but btrfs receive process was alive. When stalled btrfs send/receive processes. I could stop process in the receiver and sender. But receiver coudn't shutdown because btrfs filesystem was busy. What is wrong? Thanks in Advance. [Environment] (Sender) Manjaro 0.8.13 Linux 4.1.5-1-MANJARO AMD A10-K7700 Processor 16GB RAM (Receiver) CentOS 7 Linux 3.10.0-229.11.1.el7.x86_64 Turion II NEO N54L Processor 4GB RAM Sending snapshot size: 3.8TiB. Connection: Link local GbE. Sending snapshot is readonly. ****************************** * +++ ENABLE YOUR HEART +++ ****************************** * MASAKI Yuhsuke. * yek@reasonset.net * Website: http://reasonset.net/ * GitHub : https://github.com/reasonset/ * Twitter: @reasonset ****************************** ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system 2015-08-20 17:11 btrfs send/receive freezes a system MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-08-21 9:54 ` Duncan 2015-08-26 12:04 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Duncan @ 2015-08-21 9:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-btrfs MASAKI Yuhsuke posted on Fri, 21 Aug 2015 02:11:46 +0900 as excerpted: > I want to "soft" mirroring between two remote btrfs volumes. > I tried to use btrfs send/receive [but] it failed everytime. > > 1st ) Pipe with SSH, to fresh filesystem. sender was flozen after > transfared 2.79TiB. > 2nd ) Delete snapshots and try again. sender was flozen after transfared > 1.34TiB. [...] > (Sender) ... Linux 4.1.5-1-MANJARO ... > (Receiver) ... Linux 3.10.0-229.11.1.el7.x86_64 ... On this list current kernels are strongly recommended, as btrfs remains in heavy development and is still not entirely stable yet. Now redhat (and presumably centos) does port many of the btrfs stability patches and some of the functionality back, such that the btrfs above is probably newer than the 3.10 would suggest, but there's still a rather large gap between the 4.1 on the sender side and the 3.10 on the receiver, and a lot of send/receive bugs have been found and fixed in the eleven intervening kernel cycles... about two years worth of development on a filesystem that as I said is under "heavy development"... between the two. In fact, given that the "experimental" labels didn't even come off until 3.12, IIRC, a 3.10 kernel is still officially experimental btrfs where even *more* stress was placed on keeping current as stable-patch backports weren't yet routine and thus should be *WELL* out of service more than two years and eleven kernel cycles later! So I'd suggest trying a relatively new kernel, closer to the 4.1 on the receiver side, on the sender side as well, at least to test if it makes a difference in your send/receive results. If possible, I'd recommend testing with the same kernel version, perhaps the latest longterm-stable series 3.18 (with 3.18.20 now current according to kernel.org), or the latest stable 4.1, on both. You can try syncing up userspace versions as well (4.1.2 being latest stable last I checked a week or so ago). Again, for testing, at least. That way, you eliminate version differences as a possible problem. If it works then, I'd suggest filing a bug with RH/CentOS, since their supposedly stable-backported version isn't compatible with a newer version, and that'd be a bug, due either to lack of appropriate backporting or lack of keeping reasonably current versions with a still in heavy development filesystem, one of the two. If it doesn't work with send/receive versions synced and either current stable 4.1 series or latest current LTS 3.18 series, then it's a more current bug and this is the right place to report it, updated with the synced-current-version test results. Because I know that quite a few send/receive fixes actually did go in over the last couple years, and while your distro may well have backported them, this is the upstream list, not your distro list, and that version number still says to us that you're using a more than two years outdated kernel, where btrfs was in fact still experimental, and for all we know, it's still lacking all those send/receive patches that have been applied in the mean time, and is thus still crawling with bugs that have long been exterminated in current stable. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system 2015-08-21 9:54 ` Duncan @ 2015-08-26 12:04 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-08-26 13:06 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn 2015-09-01 10:42 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-08-26 12:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-btrfs Hi Duncan, thank you for your reply. I understood it is guessed from development between 3.10 and 4.1. I will try to replace CentOS 7 Receiver with Manjaro (same as sender) and sync. I will report the result here anyway. If it doesn't work, I report it Kernel BTS. I searched distro for server use with later kernel. But I couldn't find. I wonder Arch Linux is better if I desire btrfs stability. After on previous post, it completed on 8th try with nc and piped btrfs receive. But the unstability make me nervous. I hope that latest kernel makes good. Thank you. You wrote: > MASAKI Yuhsuke posted on Fri, 21 Aug 2015 02:11:46 +0900 as excerpted: > > > I want to "soft" mirroring between two remote btrfs volumes. > > I tried to use btrfs send/receive [but] it failed everytime. > > > > 1st ) Pipe with SSH, to fresh filesystem. sender was flozen after > > transfared 2.79TiB. > > 2nd ) Delete snapshots and try again. sender was flozen after transfared > > 1.34TiB. > > [...] > > > (Sender) ... Linux 4.1.5-1-MANJARO ... > > (Receiver) ... Linux 3.10.0-229.11.1.el7.x86_64 ... > > On this list current kernels are strongly recommended, as btrfs remains > in heavy development and is still not entirely stable yet. Now redhat > (and presumably centos) does port many of the btrfs stability patches and > some of the functionality back, such that the btrfs above is probably > newer than the 3.10 would suggest, but there's still a rather large gap > between the 4.1 on the sender side and the 3.10 on the receiver, and a > lot of send/receive bugs have been found and fixed in the eleven > intervening kernel cycles... about two years worth of development on a > filesystem that as I said is under "heavy development"... between the two. > > In fact, given that the "experimental" labels didn't even come off until > 3.12, IIRC, a 3.10 kernel is still officially experimental btrfs where > even *more* stress was placed on keeping current as stable-patch backports > weren't yet routine and thus should be *WELL* out of service more than > two years and eleven kernel cycles later! > > So I'd suggest trying a relatively new kernel, closer to the 4.1 on the > receiver side, on the sender side as well, at least to test if it makes a > difference in your send/receive results. If possible, I'd recommend > testing with the same kernel version, perhaps the latest longterm-stable > series 3.18 (with 3.18.20 now current according to kernel.org), or the > latest stable 4.1, on both. You can try syncing up userspace versions as > well (4.1.2 being latest stable last I checked a week or so ago). > > Again, for testing, at least. That way, you eliminate version > differences as a possible problem. > > If it works then, I'd suggest filing a bug with RH/CentOS, since their > supposedly stable-backported version isn't compatible with a newer > version, and that'd be a bug, due either to lack of appropriate > backporting or lack of keeping reasonably current versions with a still > in heavy development filesystem, one of the two. > > If it doesn't work with send/receive versions synced and either current > stable 4.1 series or latest current LTS 3.18 series, then it's a more > current bug and this is the right place to report it, updated with the > synced-current-version test results. > > Because I know that quite a few send/receive fixes actually did go in > over the last couple years, and while your distro may well have backported > them, this is the upstream list, not your distro list, and that version > number still says to us that you're using a more than two years outdated > kernel, where btrfs was in fact still experimental, and for all we know, > it's still lacking all those send/receive patches that have been applied > in the mean time, and is thus still crawling with bugs that have long > been exterminated in current stable. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system 2015-08-26 12:04 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-08-26 13:06 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn 2015-09-01 8:19 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-09-01 10:42 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Austin S Hemmelgarn @ 2015-08-26 13:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: MASAKI Yuhsuke, linux-btrfs [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1478 bytes --] On 2015-08-26 08:04, MASAKI Yuhsuke wrote: > Hi Duncan, thank you for your reply. > > I understood it is guessed from development between 3.10 and 4.1. > > I will try to replace CentOS 7 Receiver with Manjaro (same as sender) and sync. > I will report the result here anyway. > If it doesn't work, I report it Kernel BTS. > > > I searched distro for server use with later kernel. > But I couldn't find. > I wonder Arch Linux is better if I desire btrfs stability. If you want the latest kernel and userspace, then Arch is definitely one of the two best options, the other being Gentoo. For someone who is used to Manjaro or CentOS, Arch will be a lot easier to adapt to than Gentoo however. Both Gentoo and Arch work very well for server systems, and make it a lot easier to keep up to date on security patches and bugfixes than most of the other popular distributions. > > > After on previous post, it completed on 8th try with nc and piped btrfs receive. > But the unstability make me nervous. > I hope that latest kernel makes good. I actually just recently tested send/recieve over the network myself using ssh (along the lines of 'btrfs send snapshot | ssh user@remotehost btrfs recieve /target'), and only about 1 out of 3 attempts actually worked. At the time, I was on kernel 4.0. I'm thinking that something about recieve is timing dependent, as I got lower success rates as I artificially increased the network latency. [-- Attachment #2: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature --] [-- Type: application/pkcs7-signature, Size: 3019 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system 2015-08-26 13:06 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn @ 2015-09-01 8:19 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-09-01 8:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-btrfs Hi Austin, Thank you for your reply. You wrote: > On 2015-08-26 08:04, MASAKI Yuhsuke wrote: > > Hi Duncan, thank you for your reply. > > > > I understood it is guessed from development between 3.10 and 4.1. > > > > I will try to replace CentOS 7 Receiver with Manjaro (same as sender) and sync. > > I will report the result here anyway. > > If it doesn't work, I report it Kernel BTS. > > > > > > I searched distro for server use with later kernel. > > But I couldn't find. > > I wonder Arch Linux is better if I desire btrfs stability. > If you want the latest kernel and userspace, then Arch is definitely one > of the two best options, the other being Gentoo. For someone who is > used to Manjaro or CentOS, Arch will be a lot easier to adapt to than > Gentoo however. Both Gentoo and Arch work very well for server systems, > and make it a lot easier to keep up to date on security patches and > bugfixes than most of the other popular distributions. I need complex storage (encrypt, network storage devices, bonding storages and btrfs,) so I expect newer kernel solves some problem. I hesitated because some prople say server os should use matured technology. But I was certain of Arch Linux is best for my case. > > After on previous post, it completed on 8th try with nc and piped btrfs receive. > > But the unstability make me nervous. > > I hope that latest kernel makes good. > I actually just recently tested send/recieve over the network myself > using ssh (along the lines of 'btrfs send snapshot | ssh user@remotehost > btrfs recieve /target'), and only about 1 out of 3 attempts actually > worked. At the time, I was on kernel 4.0. I'm thinking that something > about recieve is timing dependent, as I got lower success rates as I > artificially increased the network latency. Finally, the problem is reappeared between kernel 4.2rc8 at transfared 2.79 TiB. They are connected with generic GbE. 2.79TiB transfarred In approximately sixteen hours. Thank you. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system 2015-08-26 12:04 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-08-26 13:06 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn @ 2015-09-01 10:42 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: MASAKI Yuhsuke @ 2015-09-01 10:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-btrfs From: MASAKI Yuhsuke <aki@reasonset.net> To: MASAKI Yuhsuke <yek@reasonset.net> Subject: Re: btrfs send/receive freezes a system Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2015 17:41:38 +0900 Organization: HARUKA Sound X-Mailer: Sylpheed 3.4.3 (GTK+ 2.24.28; x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu) I report result of a trying between latest kernel. (I'm late bacause of some difficulties no relative btrfs.) [Result] FAILED (same as previous try) [Kernel] Sender/Receiver : 4.2rc8 (Manjaro Linux) [Network] Generic 1000BASE-T wired network, onboard NIC with a hub. [Command] sudo btrfs send -v ~/share/snapshots/syncsnap-new | ssh root@daisy.local btrfs receive -v /MirrorSlave [Passed] Approximately sixteen hours. [Transfared] 2.79TiB of 3.47TiB. This is same as every trying just after created new btrfs filesystem. (It succeeded at eighth try with nc.) [Detail] Sender freezed up. Didn't response. Receiver's network and storage access light turned off. -- Silenced after transfared 2.79TiB. [jrh@daisy ~]$ LANG=C sudo btrfs filesystem df /MirrorSlave/ Data, single: total=2.79TiB, used=2.79TiB System, RAID1: total=8.00MiB, used=320.00KiB System, single: total=4.00MiB, used=0.00B Metadata, RAID1: total=8.00GiB, used=6.03GiB Metadata, single: total=8.00MiB, used=0.00B GlobalReserve, single: total=512.00MiB, used=0.00B --- ssh process died. [jrh@daisy ~]$ ps aux | grep ssh root 533 0.0 0.1 40420 4152 ? Ss Aug31 0:00 /usr/bin/sshd -D root 1217 0.0 0.1 99904 5268 ? Ss 00:45 0:00 sshd: jrh [priv] jrh 1219 0.0 0.0 99904 2956 ? S 00:45 0:00 sshd: jrh@pts/0 root 1276 55.0 0.2 104020 9464 ? Ss 00:47 527:21 sshd: root@notty --- btrfs receive process lived. [jrh@daisy ~]$ ps aux | grep btrfs root 1077 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-worker] root 1080 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-worker-hi] root 1081 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-delalloc] root 1082 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-flush_del] root 1083 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-cache] root 1084 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-submit] root 1085 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-fixup] root 1086 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio] root 1087 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio-met] root 1088 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio-met] root 1089 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio-rai] root 1090 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio-rep] root 1091 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-rmw] root 1092 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-endio-wri] root 1093 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-freespace] root 1094 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-delayed-m] root 1095 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-readahead] root 1096 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-qgroup-re] root 1097 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S< Aug31 0:00 [btrfs-extent-re] root 1098 0.0 0.0 0 0 ? S Aug31 0:29 [btrfs-cleaner] root 1099 0.1 0.0 0 0 ? S Aug31 1:53 [btrfs-transacti] root 1282 32.1 0.0 15636 1548 ? Ss 00:47 308:25 btrfs receive -v /MirrorSlave jrh 1957 0.0 0.0 9008 880 pts/1 S+ 16:46 0:00 grep --colour=auto btrfs --- Sender didn't response mdns request. [jrh@daisy ~]$ sudo ping hydrangea.local ping: unknown host hydrangea.local --- Shoud I report this as a bug? > Hi Duncan, thank you for your reply. > > I understood it is guessed from development between 3.10 and 4.1. > > I will try to replace CentOS 7 Receiver with Manjaro (same as sender) and sync. > I will report the result here anyway. > If it doesn't work, I report it Kernel BTS. > > > I searched distro for server use with later kernel. > But I couldn't find. > I wonder Arch Linux is better if I desire btrfs stability. > > > After on previous post, it completed on 8th try with nc and piped btrfs receive. > But the unstability make me nervous. > I hope that latest kernel makes good. > > > Thank you. > > You wrote: > > MASAKI Yuhsuke posted on Fri, 21 Aug 2015 02:11:46 +0900 as excerpted: > > > > > I want to "soft" mirroring between two remote btrfs volumes. > > > I tried to use btrfs send/receive [but] it failed everytime. > > > > > > 1st ) Pipe with SSH, to fresh filesystem. sender was flozen after > > > transfared 2.79TiB. > > > 2nd ) Delete snapshots and try again. sender was flozen after transfared > > > 1.34TiB. > > > > [...] > > > > > (Sender) ... Linux 4.1.5-1-MANJARO ... > > > (Receiver) ... Linux 3.10.0-229.11.1.el7.x86_64 ... > > > > On this list current kernels are strongly recommended, as btrfs remains > > in heavy development and is still not entirely stable yet. Now redhat > > (and presumably centos) does port many of the btrfs stability patches and > > some of the functionality back, such that the btrfs above is probably > > newer than the 3.10 would suggest, but there's still a rather large gap > > between the 4.1 on the sender side and the 3.10 on the receiver, and a > > lot of send/receive bugs have been found and fixed in the eleven > > intervening kernel cycles... about two years worth of development on a > > filesystem that as I said is under "heavy development"... between the two. > > > > In fact, given that the "experimental" labels didn't even come off until > > 3.12, IIRC, a 3.10 kernel is still officially experimental btrfs where > > even *more* stress was placed on keeping current as stable-patch backports > > weren't yet routine and thus should be *WELL* out of service more than > > two years and eleven kernel cycles later! > > > > So I'd suggest trying a relatively new kernel, closer to the 4.1 on the > > receiver side, on the sender side as well, at least to test if it makes a > > difference in your send/receive results. If possible, I'd recommend > > testing with the same kernel version, perhaps the latest longterm-stable > > series 3.18 (with 3.18.20 now current according to kernel.org), or the > > latest stable 4.1, on both. You can try syncing up userspace versions as > > well (4.1.2 being latest stable last I checked a week or so ago). > > > > Again, for testing, at least. That way, you eliminate version > > differences as a possible problem. > > > > If it works then, I'd suggest filing a bug with RH/CentOS, since their > > supposedly stable-backported version isn't compatible with a newer > > version, and that'd be a bug, due either to lack of appropriate > > backporting or lack of keeping reasonably current versions with a still > > in heavy development filesystem, one of the two. > > > > If it doesn't work with send/receive versions synced and either current > > stable 4.1 series or latest current LTS 3.18 series, then it's a more > > current bug and this is the right place to report it, updated with the > > synced-current-version test results. > > > > Because I know that quite a few send/receive fixes actually did go in > > over the last couple years, and while your distro may well have backported > > them, this is the upstream list, not your distro list, and that version > > number still says to us that you're using a more than two years outdated > > kernel, where btrfs was in fact still experimental, and for all we know, > > it's still lacking all those send/receive patches that have been applied > > in the mean time, and is thus still crawling with bugs that have long > > been exterminated in current stable. > > > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2015-09-01 10:43 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2015-08-20 17:11 btrfs send/receive freezes a system MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-08-21 9:54 ` Duncan 2015-08-26 12:04 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-08-26 13:06 ` Austin S Hemmelgarn 2015-09-01 8:19 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke 2015-09-01 10:42 ` MASAKI Yuhsuke
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