* mismatch_cnt worries
@ 2007-04-02 14:45 Gavin McCullagh
2007-04-03 0:00 ` Neil Brown
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Gavin McCullagh @ 2007-04-02 14:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Linux RAID Mailing List
Hi,
I've relatively recently started using md having had some bad experiences
with hardware raid controllers. I've had some really good experiences
(stepwise upgrading a 800GB raid5 array to 1.5TB one by exchanging disks
and using mdadm --grow), but am in the middle of a more worrying one. I have
read previous recent threads about mismatch_cnt and am a little unclear as yet
how to interpret this. I'm seeing this issue on a couple of machines, but I'll
just use talk about one for now.
I ran a check on the three RAID1 arrays in a machine I'm managing. The check
finished without error. I then had a look at the mismatch_cnt and one of them
is non-zero (128), specifically the one which holds the root filesystem.
The Gentoo Wiki on the subject seems to be moreorless saying I need to
format the partition to be sure of anything. Needless to say that's not
desirable.
Stupidly, I have not been running Smart until now but I have installed and
configured it now and run long and short tests manually. The most interesting
part of the smartctl output on the disks is below but only ECC fast errors are
shown.
All of the event logs look like this, so I guess there's only partial support
for Smart:
Error event 19:
:Sense Key 06h Unit Attention :Add Sense Code 29h :Add Sense Code Qualif 02h :Hardware Status 00h :CCHSS Valid :CC ffffh :H No. 00h :SS No. 00
Neil's post here suggests either this is all normal or I'm seriously up the
creek.
http://www.mail-archive.com/linux-raid@vger.kernel.org/msg07349.html
My questions:
1. Should I be worried or is this normal? If so can you explain why the
number is non-zero?
2. Should I repair, fsck, replace a disk, something else?
3. Can someone explain how this quote can be true:
"Though it is less likely, a regular filesystem could still (I think)
genuinely write different data to difference devices in a raid1/10."
when I thought the point of RAID1 was that the data should be the same on
both disks.
Many thanks for any help/comfort,
Gavin
SDA:
Error counter log:
Errors Corrected by Total Correction Gigabytes Total
ECC rereads/ errors algorithm processed uncorrected
fast | delayed rewrites corrected invocations [10^9 bytes] errors
read: 8878773 0 0 8878773 0 437.620 0
write: 0 0 0 0 0 277.228 0
SDB:
Error counter log:
Errors Corrected by Total Correction Gigabytes Total
ECC rereads/ errors algorithm processed uncorrected
fast | delayed rewrites corrected invocations [10^9 bytes] errors
read: 5077782 0 0 5077782 0 455.871 0
write: 0 0 0 0 0 263.680 0
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread* Re: mismatch_cnt worries 2007-04-02 14:45 mismatch_cnt worries Gavin McCullagh @ 2007-04-03 0:00 ` Neil Brown 2007-04-03 8:16 ` Gavin McCullagh 2007-04-04 22:46 ` Bill Davidsen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Neil Brown @ 2007-04-03 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Gavin McCullagh; +Cc: Linux RAID Mailing List On Monday April 2, gmccullagh@gmail.com wrote: > > Neil's post here suggests either this is all normal or I'm seriously up the > creek. > http://www.mail-archive.com/linux-raid@vger.kernel.org/msg07349.html > > My questions: > > 1. Should I be worried or is this normal? If so can you explain why the > number is non-zero? Probably not too worried. Is it normal? I'm not really sure what 'normal' is. I'm beginning to think that it is 'normal' to get strange errors from disk drives, by maybe I have a jaded perspective. If you have a swap-partition or a swap-file on the device then you should consider it normal. If not, then it is much less likely but still possible. > 2. Should I repair, fsck, replace a disk, something else? 'repair' is probably a good idea. 'fsck' certainly wouldn't hurt and might show something, though I suspect it will find the filesystem to be structurally sound. I wouldn't replace the disk on the basis on a single difference report from mismatch_cnt. I don't know what the SMART message means so I don't know if that suggests that the drive needs to be replaced. > 3. Can someone explain how this quote can be true: > "Though it is less likely, a regular filesystem could still (I think) > genuinely write different data to difference devices in a raid1/10." > when I thought the point of RAID1 was that the data should be the same on > both disks. Suppose I memory-map a file and often modify the mapped memory. The system will at some point decide to write that block of the file to the device. It will send a request to raid1, which will send one request each to two different devices. They will each DMA the data out of that memory to the controller at different times so they could quite possibly get different data (if I changed the mapped memory between those two DMA request). So the data on the two drives in a mirror can easily be different. If a 'check' happens at exactly this time it will notice. Normally that block will be written out again (as it is still 'dirty') and again and again if necessary as long as I keep writing to the memory. Once I stop writing to the memory (e.g. close the file, unmount the filesystem) a final write will be made with the same data going to both devices. During this time we will never read that block from the filesystem, so the filesystem will never be able to see any difference between the two devices in a raid1. So: if you are actively writing to a file while 'check' is running on a raid1, it could show up as a difference in mismatch_cnt. But you have to get the timing just right (or wrong). I think it is possible in the above scenario to truncate the file while a write is underway but with new data in memory. If you do this, the system might not write out that last 'new' data, so the last write to the particular block on storage may have written different data to the two different drives, and this difference will not be corrected by the filesystem e.g on unmount. Note that the inconsistent data will never be read by the filesystem (the file has been truncated, remember) so there is no risk of data corruption. In this case the difference could remain for some time until later when a 'check' or 'repair' notices it. Does that help explain the above quote? It is still the case that: filesystem corruption won't happen in normal operation a small mismatch_cnt does not necessarily imply a problem. NeilBrown ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: mismatch_cnt worries 2007-04-03 0:00 ` Neil Brown @ 2007-04-03 8:16 ` Gavin McCullagh 2007-04-04 22:46 ` Bill Davidsen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Gavin McCullagh @ 2007-04-03 8:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux RAID Mailing List Hi, thanks for the reply. On Tue, 03 Apr 2007, Neil Brown wrote: > If you have a swap-partition or a swap-file on the device then you > should consider it normal. If not, then it is much less likely but > still possible. I see it on two machines' ext3 root filesystems. > > 2. Should I repair, fsck, replace a disk, something else? > > 'repair' is probably a good idea. I ran 'repair', then 'check' and the count is still 128. However, I'm running 2.6.17 on ubuntu edgy (from October) so I'm guessing 'repair' is still equivalent to check as you said here. http://www.mail-archive.com/linux-raid@vger.kernel.org/msg07269.html > 'fsck' certainly wouldn't hurt and might show something, though I > suspect it will find the filesystem to be structurally sound. You're probably right. > Suppose I memory-map a file and often modify the mapped memory. > The system will at some point decide to write that block of the file > to the device. It will send a request to raid1, which will send one > request each to two different devices. They will each DMA the data > out of that memory to the controller at different times so they could > quite possibly get different data (if I changed the mapped memory > between those two DMA request). So the data on the two drives in a > mirror can easily be different. If a 'check' happens at exactly this > time it will notice. > > So: if you are actively writing to a file while 'check' is running on > a raid1, it could show up as a difference in mismatch_cnt. But you > have to get the timing just right (or wrong). I presume then that if you run 'repair' all writes are flushed. Just thinking that in RAID1 where two blocks differ, one block gets chosen arbitrarily as the correct one and the other gets overwritten. Or should 'repair' ideally be run with the filesystem read-only? > I think it is possible in the above scenario to truncate the file > while a write is underway but with new data in memory. ..... > Does that help explain the above quote? Yes, thanks. > It is still the case that: > filesystem corruption won't happen in normal operation > a small mismatch_cnt does not necessarily imply a problem. Many thanks again for a very informative reply, Gavin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: mismatch_cnt worries 2007-04-03 0:00 ` Neil Brown 2007-04-03 8:16 ` Gavin McCullagh @ 2007-04-04 22:46 ` Bill Davidsen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread From: Bill Davidsen @ 2007-04-04 22:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Neil Brown; +Cc: Gavin McCullagh, Linux RAID Mailing List Neil Brown wrote: > On Monday April 2, gmccullagh@gmail.com wrote: > >> Neil's post here suggests either this is all normal or I'm seriously up the >> creek. >> http://www.mail-archive.com/linux-raid@vger.kernel.org/msg07349.html >> >> My questions: >> >> 1. Should I be worried or is this normal? If so can you explain why the >> number is non-zero? >> > > Probably not too worried. > Is it normal? I'm not really sure what 'normal' is. I'm beginning to > think that it is 'normal' to get strange errors from disk drives, by > maybe I have a jaded perspective. > If you have a swap-partition or a swap-file on the device then you > should consider it normal. If not, then it is much less likely but > still possible. > > >> 2. Should I repair, fsck, replace a disk, something else? >> > > 'repair' is probably a good idea. > 'fsck' certainly wouldn't hurt and might show something, though I > suspect it will find the filesystem to be structurally sound. > I wouldn't replace the disk on the basis on a single difference report > from mismatch_cnt. I don't know what the SMART message means so I > don't know if that suggests that the drive needs to be replaced. > > >> 3. Can someone explain how this quote can be true: >> "Though it is less likely, a regular filesystem could still (I think) >> genuinely write different data to difference devices in a raid1/10." >> when I thought the point of RAID1 was that the data should be the same on >> both disks. >> > > Suppose I memory-map a file and often modify the mapped memory. > The system will at some point decide to write that block of the file > to the device. It will send a request to raid1, which will send one > request each to two different devices. They will each DMA the data > out of that memory to the controller at different times so they could > quite possibly get different data (if I changed the mapped memory > between those two DMA request). So the data on the two drives in a > mirror can easily be different. If a 'check' happens at exactly this > time it will notice. > Normally that block will be written out again (as it is still 'dirty') > and again and again if necessary as long as I keep writing to the > memory. Once I stop writing to the memory (e.g. close the file, > unmount the filesystem) a final write will be made with the same data > going to both devices. During this time we will never read that block > from the filesystem, so the filesystem will never be able to see any > difference between the two devices in a raid1. > > So: if you are actively writing to a file while 'check' is running on > a raid1, it could show up as a difference in mismatch_cnt. But you > have to get the timing just right (or wrong). > > I think it is possible in the above scenario to truncate the file > while a write is underway but with new data in memory. If you do > this, the system might not write out that last 'new' data, so the last > write to the particular block on storage may have written different > data to the two different drives, and this difference will not be > corrected by the filesystem e.g on unmount. Note that the inconsistent > data will never be read by the filesystem (the file has been > truncated, remember) so there is no risk of data corruption. > In this case the difference could remain for some time until later > when a 'check' or 'repair' notices it. > Some time ago I suggested that marking a block in memory copy on write (COW) would allow preserving a coherent block to write. You noted that it was harder than it sounds, and I never thought it sounded easy, due to issues with multiple processes or threads modifying the data. But I do have another thought, which might be more useful, if not easier to implement. In the case of a repair, you really don't want to guess wrong which copy is the most recent. When a mismatch is detected, would it be feasible to either scan for a dirty block which is waiting to be written to that location, or just sync and check again? The performance hit might be considerable, but (a) running check on a busy system is already a serious hit, and (b) it would only happen when a problem was detected. Does any of that sound useful? > Does that help explain the above quote? > > It is still the case that: > filesystem corruption won't happen in normal operation > a small mismatch_cnt does not necessarily imply a problem. > -- bill davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com> CTO TMR Associates, Inc Doing interesting things with small computers since 1979 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-04-04 22:46 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2007-04-02 14:45 mismatch_cnt worries Gavin McCullagh 2007-04-03 0:00 ` Neil Brown 2007-04-03 8:16 ` Gavin McCullagh 2007-04-04 22:46 ` Bill Davidsen
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