* Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour [not found] <CA+qGm=-0w+gTh6=ZJhns_=4LKksJueiaYF0gxogmj=TmFN7yQg@mail.gmail.com> @ 2013-09-12 16:39 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:43 ` Alexander Harrowell ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-ext4 I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during a resize operation, the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the resize. however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there dropped into grub rescue. going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the damaged volume. the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of multiply-claimed blocks. and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without this helping. It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug involving it before. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 16:39 ` Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 16:43 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:44 ` Fwd: " Eric Sandeen 2013-09-12 17:35 ` Theodore Ts'o 2 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-ext4 To be clearer, I meant 24 bits. On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:39 PM, Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: > I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during > a resize operation, the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb > stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, > unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called > from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the > resize. > > however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free > space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than > 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there > dropped into grub rescue. > > going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode > issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but > file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed > the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the > wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my > ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the > damaged volume. > > the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck > -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, > and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of > multiply-claimed blocks. > > and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 > starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, > until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in > fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block > 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) > > I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without > this helping. > > It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit > address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug > involving it before. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 16:39 ` Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:43 ` Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 16:44 ` Eric Sandeen [not found] ` <CA+qGm=-jHzxFmb1yHqoB9UC8c7nvJN-WVP2Bb67=G63OKE3_2Q@mail.gmail.com> 2013-09-12 17:35 ` Theodore Ts'o 2 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Eric Sandeen @ 2013-09-12 16:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alexander Harrowell; +Cc: linux-ext4 On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: > I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during > a resize operation, from what size to what size? On what kernel? > the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb > stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, > unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called > from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the > resize. hmmm... perhaps. > however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free > space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than > 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there > dropped into grub rescue. > > going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode > issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but > file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed > the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the > wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my > ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the > damaged volume. > > the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck > -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, > and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of > multiply-claimed blocks. > > and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 > starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, > until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in > fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block > 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) = 111111111111111111111111 binary. Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... -Eric > I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without > this helping. > > It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit > address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug > involving it before. > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <CA+qGm=-jHzxFmb1yHqoB9UC8c7nvJN-WVP2Bb67=G63OKE3_2Q@mail.gmail.com>]
* Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour [not found] ` <CA+qGm=-jHzxFmb1yHqoB9UC8c7nvJN-WVP2Bb67=G63OKE3_2Q@mail.gmail.com> @ 2013-09-12 16:56 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 18:59 ` Eric Sandeen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 16:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-ext4 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my Windows partition... The fstab is as follows /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G unallocated 1M that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. thanks for your help. On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: > On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >> a resize operation, > > from what size to what size? On what kernel? > >> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >> resize. > > hmmm... perhaps. > >> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >> dropped into grub rescue. >> >> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >> damaged volume. >> >> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >> multiply-claimed blocks. >> >> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) > > = 111111111111111111111111 binary. > > Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? > > Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just > been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... > > -Eric > >> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >> this helping. >> >> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >> involving it before. >> -- >> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 16:56 ` Fwd: " Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 18:59 ` Eric Sandeen 2013-09-12 19:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Eric Sandeen @ 2013-09-12 18:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alexander Harrowell; +Cc: linux-ext4 On 9/12/13 11:56 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> > Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM > Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour > To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> > > > It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my > Windows partition... Ok, so you tried to resize from 63G to 66G? Should have been relatively easy/safe. I forgot to ask which version of e2fsprogs you had, but if you did the grow online/mounted, most of the work is done in the kernel. As Ted said, knowing more info might yield clues: 1) what e2fsprogs version? 2) what were the kernel messages when it crashed/hung? 3) what was the fsck output? If you didn't save that stuff, it makes it harder to do a post-mortem... > The fstab is as follows > > /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) > /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G > /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: > -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G > -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G > /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G > unallocated 1M > > that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, > weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and > /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) TBH, I have no idea what Ubuntu Disk Utility does. I'd trust fdisk -lu output or /proc/partitions for accurate size info. Oh; 61.14GiB (powers of 2) == 71 GB (powers of 10) (61.14*1024*1024*1024/1000/1000/1000 = 71) So Ubuntu Disk Utility is in cahoots w/ the drive manufacturers, and using more favorable units. ;) -Eric > kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. > > thanks for your help. > > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >> On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >>> a resize operation, >> >> from what size to what size? On what kernel? >> >>> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >>> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >>> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >>> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >>> resize. >> >> hmmm... perhaps. >> >>> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >>> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >>> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >>> dropped into grub rescue. >>> >>> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >>> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >>> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >>> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >>> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >>> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >>> damaged volume. >>> >>> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >>> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >>> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >>> multiply-claimed blocks. >>> >>> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >>> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >>> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >>> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >>> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) >> >> = 111111111111111111111111 binary. >> >> Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? >> >> Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just >> been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... >> >> -Eric >> >>> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >>> this helping. >>> >>> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >>> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >>> involving it before. >>> -- >>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in >>> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >>> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >>> >> > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 18:59 ` Eric Sandeen @ 2013-09-12 19:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 11:46 ` Alexander Harrowell 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-12 19:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eric Sandeen; +Cc: linux-ext4 investigating dmesg, I think e2fsck may have been running out of memory. On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 6:59 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: > On 9/12/13 11:56 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >> From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> >> Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM >> Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour >> To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> >> >> >> It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my >> Windows partition... > > Ok, so you tried to resize from 63G to 66G? Should have been relatively > easy/safe. I forgot to ask which version of e2fsprogs you had, but if > you did the grow online/mounted, most of the work is done in the kernel. > > As Ted said, knowing more info might yield clues: > > 1) what e2fsprogs version? > 2) what were the kernel messages when it crashed/hung? > 3) what was the fsck output? > > If you didn't save that stuff, it makes it harder to do a post-mortem... > >> The fstab is as follows >> >> /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) >> /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G >> /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: >> -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G >> -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G >> /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G >> unallocated 1M >> >> that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, >> weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and >> /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) > > TBH, I have no idea what Ubuntu Disk Utility does. I'd trust fdisk -lu > output or /proc/partitions for accurate size info. > > Oh; 61.14GiB (powers of 2) == 71 GB (powers of 10) > > (61.14*1024*1024*1024/1000/1000/1000 = 71) > > So Ubuntu Disk Utility is in cahoots w/ the drive manufacturers, and > using more favorable units. ;) > > -Eric > >> kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. >> >> thanks for your help. >> >> >> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>> On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >>>> a resize operation, >>> >>> from what size to what size? On what kernel? >>> >>>> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >>>> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >>>> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >>>> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >>>> resize. >>> >>> hmmm... perhaps. >>> >>>> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >>>> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >>>> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >>>> dropped into grub rescue. >>>> >>>> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >>>> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >>>> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >>>> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >>>> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >>>> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >>>> damaged volume. >>>> >>>> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >>>> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >>>> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >>>> multiply-claimed blocks. >>>> >>>> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >>>> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >>>> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >>>> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >>>> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) >>> >>> = 111111111111111111111111 binary. >>> >>> Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? >>> >>> Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just >>> been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... >>> >>> -Eric >>> >>>> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >>>> this helping. >>>> >>>> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >>>> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >>>> involving it before. >>>> -- >>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in >>>> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >>>> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >>>> >>> >> -- >> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 19:33 ` Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 11:46 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 13:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 11:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eric Sandeen; +Cc: linux-ext4 To update, I've found that a) even with 8GB RAM and 8GB swap, e2fsck can silently run out of memory. b) something is clearly wrong in block 16777215. c) debugfs places that block in inode 409774, in use, with an extent of 16777212-5 and 10 associated filenames, plus several dozen ext2 directory errors. d) after a first attempt with the updated (1.42.8) version of e2fsprogs this morning, the disk is mountable again but not much on it is accessible and the % usage is still screwy. e) that said, "new" debugfs and e2fsck seem to find more things to fix. f) trying to decrypt the filenames, most of them don't get found by ecryptfs-find but the first one produces a list of the files in /home/ and a lot of find: no such file or directory messages. g) dumpe2fs -b reports no bad blocks. smart reports drive in good condition. h) I'm quite tempted to zap 409774. On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 7:33 PM, Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: > investigating dmesg, I think e2fsck may have been running out of memory. > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 6:59 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >> On 9/12/13 11:56 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >>> From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> >>> Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM >>> Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour >>> To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> >>> >>> >>> It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my >>> Windows partition... >> >> Ok, so you tried to resize from 63G to 66G? Should have been relatively >> easy/safe. I forgot to ask which version of e2fsprogs you had, but if >> you did the grow online/mounted, most of the work is done in the kernel. >> >> As Ted said, knowing more info might yield clues: >> >> 1) what e2fsprogs version? >> 2) what were the kernel messages when it crashed/hung? >> 3) what was the fsck output? >> >> If you didn't save that stuff, it makes it harder to do a post-mortem... >> >>> The fstab is as follows >>> >>> /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) >>> /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G >>> /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: >>> -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G >>> -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G >>> /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G >>> unallocated 1M >>> >>> that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, >>> weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and >>> /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) >> >> TBH, I have no idea what Ubuntu Disk Utility does. I'd trust fdisk -lu >> output or /proc/partitions for accurate size info. >> >> Oh; 61.14GiB (powers of 2) == 71 GB (powers of 10) >> >> (61.14*1024*1024*1024/1000/1000/1000 = 71) >> >> So Ubuntu Disk Utility is in cahoots w/ the drive manufacturers, and >> using more favorable units. ;) >> >> -Eric >> >>> kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. >>> >>> thanks for your help. >>> >>> >>> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>>> On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>>> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >>>>> a resize operation, >>>> >>>> from what size to what size? On what kernel? >>>> >>>>> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >>>>> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >>>>> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >>>>> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >>>>> resize. >>>> >>>> hmmm... perhaps. >>>> >>>>> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >>>>> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >>>>> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >>>>> dropped into grub rescue. >>>>> >>>>> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >>>>> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >>>>> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >>>>> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >>>>> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >>>>> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >>>>> damaged volume. >>>>> >>>>> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >>>>> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >>>>> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >>>>> multiply-claimed blocks. >>>>> >>>>> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >>>>> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >>>>> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >>>>> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >>>>> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) >>>> >>>> = 111111111111111111111111 binary. >>>> >>>> Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? >>>> >>>> Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just >>>> been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... >>>> >>>> -Eric >>>> >>>>> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >>>>> this helping. >>>>> >>>>> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >>>>> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >>>>> involving it before. >>>>> -- >>>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in >>>>> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >>>>> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >>>>> >>>> >>> -- >>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-13 11:46 ` Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 13:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 13:34 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 19:46 ` Theodore Ts'o 0 siblings, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eric Sandeen; +Cc: linux-ext4 Hmm, coming back to this, block 16777215 with identical content is recurring at intervals of 8 inodes. On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: > To update, I've found that a) even with 8GB RAM and 8GB swap, e2fsck > can silently run out of memory. > > b) something is clearly wrong in block 16777215. > > c) debugfs places that block in inode 409774, in use, with an extent > of 16777212-5 and 10 associated filenames, plus several dozen ext2 > directory errors. > > d) after a first attempt with the updated (1.42.8) version of > e2fsprogs this morning, the disk is mountable again but not much on it > is accessible and the % usage is still screwy. > > e) that said, "new" debugfs and e2fsck seem to find more things to fix. > > f) trying to decrypt the filenames, most of them don't get found by > ecryptfs-find but the first one produces a list of the files in /home/ > and a lot of find: no such file or directory messages. > > g) dumpe2fs -b reports no bad blocks. smart reports drive in good condition. > > h) I'm quite tempted to zap 409774. > > On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 7:33 PM, Alexander Harrowell > <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: >> investigating dmesg, I think e2fsck may have been running out of memory. >> >> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 6:59 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>> On 9/12/13 11:56 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >>>> From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> >>>> Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM >>>> Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour >>>> To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> >>>> >>>> >>>> It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my >>>> Windows partition... >>> >>> Ok, so you tried to resize from 63G to 66G? Should have been relatively >>> easy/safe. I forgot to ask which version of e2fsprogs you had, but if >>> you did the grow online/mounted, most of the work is done in the kernel. >>> >>> As Ted said, knowing more info might yield clues: >>> >>> 1) what e2fsprogs version? >>> 2) what were the kernel messages when it crashed/hung? >>> 3) what was the fsck output? >>> >>> If you didn't save that stuff, it makes it harder to do a post-mortem... >>> >>>> The fstab is as follows >>>> >>>> /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) >>>> /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G >>>> /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: >>>> -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G >>>> -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G >>>> /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G >>>> unallocated 1M >>>> >>>> that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, >>>> weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and >>>> /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) >>> >>> TBH, I have no idea what Ubuntu Disk Utility does. I'd trust fdisk -lu >>> output or /proc/partitions for accurate size info. >>> >>> Oh; 61.14GiB (powers of 2) == 71 GB (powers of 10) >>> >>> (61.14*1024*1024*1024/1000/1000/1000 = 71) >>> >>> So Ubuntu Disk Utility is in cahoots w/ the drive manufacturers, and >>> using more favorable units. ;) >>> >>> -Eric >>> >>>> kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. >>>> >>>> thanks for your help. >>>> >>>> >>>> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>>>> On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>>>> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >>>>>> a resize operation, >>>>> >>>>> from what size to what size? On what kernel? >>>>> >>>>>> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >>>>>> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >>>>>> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >>>>>> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >>>>>> resize. >>>>> >>>>> hmmm... perhaps. >>>>> >>>>>> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >>>>>> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >>>>>> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >>>>>> dropped into grub rescue. >>>>>> >>>>>> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >>>>>> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >>>>>> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >>>>>> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >>>>>> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >>>>>> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >>>>>> damaged volume. >>>>>> >>>>>> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >>>>>> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >>>>>> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >>>>>> multiply-claimed blocks. >>>>>> >>>>>> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >>>>>> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >>>>>> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >>>>>> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >>>>>> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) >>>>> >>>>> = 111111111111111111111111 binary. >>>>> >>>>> Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? >>>>> >>>>> Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just >>>>> been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... >>>>> >>>>> -Eric >>>>> >>>>>> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >>>>>> this helping. >>>>>> >>>>>> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >>>>>> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >>>>>> involving it before. >>>>>> -- >>>>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in >>>>>> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >>>>>> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> -- >>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-13 13:33 ` Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 13:34 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 19:46 ` Theodore Ts'o 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 13:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Eric Sandeen; +Cc: linux-ext4 example: Block Inode number 16777215 2937846 debugfs: clri <2937846> debugfs: icheck 16777215 Block Inode number 16777215 2937854 debugfs: clri <2937854> debugfs: icheck 16777215 Block Inode number 16777215 2937862 debugfs: clri <2937862> debugfs: icheck 16777215 Block Inode number 16777215 2937870 debugfs: clri <2937870> debugfs: icheck 16777215 Block Inode number 16777215 2937878 debugfs: clri <2937878> debugfs: icheck 16777215 debugfs: block_dump 16777215 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 2720 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ffff ff00 ................ 2740 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 3620 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ffff ff00 ................ 3640 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ * 4000 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 0000 0000 ................ 4020 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 4400 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ * 4720 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 0000 0000 ................ 4740 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 5640 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ * 6000 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ 6020 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 6400 0000 0000 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ 6420 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ * 6720 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ 6740 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * 7640 0000 0000 0000 0000 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ 7660 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ffff ff00 ................ * 7720 ffff ff00 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ 7740 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 ................ * On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 1:33 PM, Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: > Hmm, coming back to this, block 16777215 with identical content is > recurring at intervals of 8 inodes. > > On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Alexander Harrowell > <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: >> To update, I've found that a) even with 8GB RAM and 8GB swap, e2fsck >> can silently run out of memory. >> >> b) something is clearly wrong in block 16777215. >> >> c) debugfs places that block in inode 409774, in use, with an extent >> of 16777212-5 and 10 associated filenames, plus several dozen ext2 >> directory errors. >> >> d) after a first attempt with the updated (1.42.8) version of >> e2fsprogs this morning, the disk is mountable again but not much on it >> is accessible and the % usage is still screwy. >> >> e) that said, "new" debugfs and e2fsck seem to find more things to fix. >> >> f) trying to decrypt the filenames, most of them don't get found by >> ecryptfs-find but the first one produces a list of the files in /home/ >> and a lot of find: no such file or directory messages. >> >> g) dumpe2fs -b reports no bad blocks. smart reports drive in good condition. >> >> h) I'm quite tempted to zap 409774. >> >> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 7:33 PM, Alexander Harrowell >> <a.harrowell@gmail.com> wrote: >>> investigating dmesg, I think e2fsck may have been running out of memory. >>> >>> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 6:59 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>>> On 9/12/13 11:56 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >>>>> From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com> >>>>> Date: Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:54 PM >>>>> Subject: Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour >>>>> To: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> It was 63GB and I just wanted to fork over 3GB of extra space from my >>>>> Windows partition... >>>> >>>> Ok, so you tried to resize from 63G to 66G? Should have been relatively >>>> easy/safe. I forgot to ask which version of e2fsprogs you had, but if >>>> you did the grow online/mounted, most of the work is done in the kernel. >>>> >>>> As Ted said, knowing more info might yield clues: >>>> >>>> 1) what e2fsprogs version? >>>> 2) what were the kernel messages when it crashed/hung? >>>> 3) what was the fsck output? >>>> >>>> If you didn't save that stuff, it makes it harder to do a post-mortem... >>>> >>>>> The fstab is as follows >>>>> >>>>> /dev/sda1 SYSTEM_DRV ntfs 1.17g (boot) >>>>> /dev/sda2 Windows7_OS ntfs 63.4G >>>>> /dev/sda4 extended partition containing: >>>>> -- /dev/sda6 swap linux-swap 8.05G >>>>> -- /dev/sda5 /home ext4 66.14G >>>>> /dev/sda3 Lenovo_Recovery ntfs 10.25G >>>>> unallocated 1M >>>>> >>>>> that's what was intended and is what gparted reports. (however, >>>>> weirdly, if you ask Ubuntu Disk Utility, it says /dev/sda5 is 71GB and >>>>> /dev/sda4 is correspondingly bigger. this I have only just noticed.) >>>> >>>> TBH, I have no idea what Ubuntu Disk Utility does. I'd trust fdisk -lu >>>> output or /proc/partitions for accurate size info. >>>> >>>> Oh; 61.14GiB (powers of 2) == 71 GB (powers of 10) >>>> >>>> (61.14*1024*1024*1024/1000/1000/1000 = 71) >>>> >>>> So Ubuntu Disk Utility is in cahoots w/ the drive manufacturers, and >>>> using more favorable units. ;) >>>> >>>> -Eric >>>> >>>>> kernel is 3.2.0-29-generic, machine is a ThinkPad X200s with 160GB disk. >>>>> >>>>> thanks for your help. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> wrote: >>>>>> On 9/12/13 11:39 AM, Alexander Harrowell wrote: >>>>>>> I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during >>>>>>> a resize operation, >>>>>> >>>>>> from what size to what size? On what kernel? >>>>>> >>>>>>> the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb >>>>>>> stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, >>>>>>> unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called >>>>>>> from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the >>>>>>> resize. >>>>>> >>>>>> hmmm... perhaps. >>>>>> >>>>>>> however, where I was expecting a volume with about 3.5GB of free >>>>>>> space, there was now a volume with 32GB free space, a bit more than >>>>>>> 50% utilised. inevitably, trying to boot the linux that lives in there >>>>>>> dropped into grub rescue. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> going back, I tried to e2fsck it. this reported large numbers of inode >>>>>>> issues and eventually reported clean. I could mount the volume, but >>>>>>> file metadata looked generally broken (lots of ?s). testdisk showed >>>>>>> the partitions were intact, although it claimed the drive was the >>>>>>> wrong size (incorrectly), and found lots of deleted files within my >>>>>>> ecryptfs home folder. It also found the backup superblocks for the >>>>>>> damaged volume. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> the first couple I tried were corrupt, but the third was valid. e2fsck >>>>>>> -b [superblock] -y reports fixing a lot of inode things, checksums, >>>>>>> and then restarts. it then starts to report hunormous numbers of >>>>>>> multiply-claimed blocks. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 >>>>>>> starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, >>>>>>> until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in >>>>>>> fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block >>>>>>> 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) >>>>>> >>>>>> = 111111111111111111111111 binary. >>>>>> >>>>>> Guessing it's maybe a bitmap block? >>>>>> >>>>>> Resize2fs has had a lot of trouble lately it seems. You may have just >>>>>> been the unlucky recipient of a resize2fs bug... >>>>>> >>>>>> -Eric >>>>>> >>>>>>> I removed the first inode containing this block via debugfs, without >>>>>>> this helping. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> It sticks out that 16777215 is a magic number (the maximum in a 48 bit >>>>>>> address space) and I google that either ext4 or e2fsck has had a bug >>>>>>> involving it before. >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in >>>>>>> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org >>>>>>> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" 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] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-13 13:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 13:34 ` Alexander Harrowell @ 2013-09-13 19:46 ` Theodore Ts'o 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Theodore Ts'o @ 2013-09-13 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alexander Harrowell; +Cc: Eric Sandeen, linux-ext4 On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 01:33:12PM +0000, Alexander Harrowell wrote: > Hmm, coming back to this, block 16777215 with identical content is > recurring at intervals of 8 inodes. So you might want to check and see if there are overlapping metadata blocks --- that is, a bitmap allocation block that is also part of the inode table block, or multiple block groups that point at the same place for their inode table block. The other thing is before you do more experimentation, I hope you have made an image backup of your disk. The more you play games by running clri and then re-running e2fsck, the more likely that you might accidentally do damage that might cause less data to be recovered. In general, especially when the file system is this small such that it's relatively easy to do an image level backup, the moment that you think something might have gone off the rails, the wisest thing to do is to make an image-level backup of the partition before you try to repair things. The other thing that has to be asked here is how much do you care about this 64GB worth of data? How much is OS data that can be easily reproduced via an install, and how much are things like your home directory? And how recent was your last backup? It may be that it's not worth doing a whole lot more work trying to figure out what was going on. The other thing is that if this file system is this small, would you be willing to use e2image to send me a copy of the metadata blocks, so I can take a look at it myself. No guarantees that I will find anything useful, but I'll probably get more information that way. Regards, - Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour 2013-09-12 16:39 ` Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:43 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:44 ` Fwd: " Eric Sandeen @ 2013-09-12 17:35 ` Theodore Ts'o 2 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Theodore Ts'o @ 2013-09-12 17:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alexander Harrowell; +Cc: linux-ext4 On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 04:39:33PM +0000, Alexander Harrowell wrote: > I'm currently trying to recover an ext4 filesystem. Last night, during > a resize operation, the system (Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my fix-stuff usb > stick) locked up hard and eventually crashed. Restarting, > unsurprisingly, gparted offered to check the volume. e2fsck, called > from within gparted, replayed the journal overnight and completed the > resize. How big was this file system? And it sounds like you were doing an on-line resize (that is, the file system was mounted at the time when you did the resize)? There were some bugs there with file file systems with block numbers > 32-bits (i.e., greater than 16TB). But for smaller file systems, online resize should have been fairly safe. Certainly I'm not aware of any bugs that resulted in the system locking up hard. > and now comes the interesting bit - at some point, block 16777215 > starts to appear more and more often in the inodes, often duplicated, > until it starts to print out the number 16777215 in a fast loop. in > fact, it looks like it hits some inode and keeps printing block > 16777215 to the same very long line (it's generated 500MB of log) 0xFFFFFF or 0x1000000 isn't a magic boundary as far as ext4 is concerned. It appears that this is showing up as part of the multiply claimed blocks error message? That usually happens because there was garbage in an indirect block or in the extent tree. What you might have remembered is that the maximum number of physical blocks with ext4 is 48 bits, but what you are reporting is 24 bits, which is something else quite different. It would help to see a short except of exactly what e2fsck reported, so we could see whether it is being reported as a logical block number or a physical block number. However, I suspect this is really much more of a symptom rather than the cause. Regards, - Ted ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-09-13 19:46 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 11+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- [not found] <CA+qGm=-0w+gTh6=ZJhns_=4LKksJueiaYF0gxogmj=TmFN7yQg@mail.gmail.com> 2013-09-12 16:39 ` Fwd: strange e2fsck magic number behaviour Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:43 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 16:44 ` Fwd: " Eric Sandeen [not found] ` <CA+qGm=-jHzxFmb1yHqoB9UC8c7nvJN-WVP2Bb67=G63OKE3_2Q@mail.gmail.com> 2013-09-12 16:56 ` Fwd: " Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-12 18:59 ` Eric Sandeen 2013-09-12 19:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 11:46 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 13:33 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 13:34 ` Alexander Harrowell 2013-09-13 19:46 ` Theodore Ts'o 2013-09-12 17:35 ` Theodore Ts'o
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