Home
last modified time | relevance | path

Searched hist:d4d12c02 (Results 1 – 8 of 8) sorted by relevance

/openbmc/linux/fs/xfs/
H A Dxfs_icache.hd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_trans.cd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_icache.cd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_log_recover.cd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>

H A Dxfs_inode.hd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_mount.hd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_super.cd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_inode.cd4d12c02 Sun Jun 04 23:48:15 CDT 2023 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: collect errors from inodegc for unlinked inode recovery

Unlinked list recovery requires errors removing the inode the from
the unlinked list get fed back to the main recovery loop. Now that
we offload the unlinking to the inodegc work, we don't get errors
being fed back when we trip over a corruption that prevents the
inode from being removed from the unlinked list.

This means we never clear the corrupt unlinked list bucket,
resulting in runtime operations eventually tripping over it and
shutting down.

Fix this by collecting inodegc worker errors and feed them
back to the flush caller. This is largely best effort - the only
context that really cares is log recovery, and it only flushes a
single inode at a time so we don't need complex synchronised
handling. Essentially the inodegc workers will capture the first
error that occurs and the next flush will gather them and clear
them. The flush itself will only report the first gathered error.

In the cases where callers can return errors, propagate the
collected inodegc flush error up the error handling chain.

In the case of inode unlinked list recovery, there are several
superfluous calls to flush queued unlinked inodes -
xlog_recover_iunlink_bucket() guarantees that it has flushed the
inodegc and collected errors before it returns. Hence nothing in the
calling path needs to run a flush, even when an error is returned.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>