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author | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2011-04-21 15:49:55 +0400 |
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committer | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2011-04-21 16:27:21 +0400 |
commit | 6e0d9fd38b750d678bf9fd07db23582f52fafa55 (patch) | |
tree | e802c35a4543f1f55f782838cb946c81c124843a /fs | |
parent | 1a067a22e466d2910d10d47a7125bf7ced943165 (diff) | |
download | linux-6e0d9fd38b750d678bf9fd07db23582f52fafa55.tar.xz |
UBIFS: fix master node recovery
This patch fixes the following symptoms:
1. Unmount UBIFS cleanly.
2. Start mounting UBIFS R/W and have a power cut immediately
3. Start mounting UBIFS R/O, this succeeds
4. Try to re-mount UBIFS R/W - this fails immediately or later on,
because UBIFS will write the master node to the flash area
which has been written before.
The analysis of the problem:
1. UBIFS is unmounted cleanly, both copies of the master node are clean.
2. UBIFS is being mounter R/W, starts changing master node copy 1, and
a power cut happens. The copy N1 becomes corrupted.
3. UBIFS is being mounted R/O. It notices the copy N1 is corrupted and
reads copy N2. Copy N2 is clean.
4. Because of R/O mode, UBIFS cannot recover copy 1.
5. The mount code (ubifs_mount()) sees that the master node is clean,
so it decides that no recovery is needed.
6. We are re-mounting R/W. UBIFS believes no recovery is needed and
starts updating the master node, but copy N1 is still corrupted
and was not recovered!
Fix this problem by marking the master node as dirty every time we
recover it and we are in R/O mode. This forces further recovery and
the UBIFS cleans-up the corruptions and recovers the copy N1 when
re-mounting R/W later.
Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Diffstat (limited to 'fs')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/ubifs/recovery.c | 26 |
1 files changed, 26 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/fs/ubifs/recovery.c b/fs/ubifs/recovery.c index 936f2cbfe6b6..3dbad6fbd1eb 100644 --- a/fs/ubifs/recovery.c +++ b/fs/ubifs/recovery.c @@ -317,6 +317,32 @@ int ubifs_recover_master_node(struct ubifs_info *c) goto out_free; } memcpy(c->rcvrd_mst_node, c->mst_node, UBIFS_MST_NODE_SZ); + + /* + * We had to recover the master node, which means there was an + * unclean reboot. However, it is possible that the master node + * is clean at this point, i.e., %UBIFS_MST_DIRTY is not set. + * E.g., consider the following chain of events: + * + * 1. UBIFS was cleanly unmounted, so the master node is clean + * 2. UBIFS is being mounted R/W and starts changing the master + * node in the first (%UBIFS_MST_LNUM). A power cut happens, + * so this LEB ends up with some amount of garbage at the + * end. + * 3. UBIFS is being mounted R/O. We reach this place and + * recover the master node from the second LEB + * (%UBIFS_MST_LNUM + 1). But we cannot update the media + * because we are being mounted R/O. We have to defer the + * operation. + * 4. However, this master node (@c->mst_node) is marked as + * clean (since the step 1). And if we just return, the + * mount code will be confused and won't recover the master + * node when it is re-mounter R/W later. + * + * Thus, to force the recovery by marking the master node as + * dirty. + */ + c->mst_node->flags |= cpu_to_le32(UBIFS_MST_DIRTY); } else { /* Write the recovered master node */ c->max_sqnum = le64_to_cpu(mst->ch.sqnum) - 1; |