> Am 18.05.2019 um 06:09 schrieb Chris Murphy <li...@colorremedies.com>: > > On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 11:37 AM Michael Laß <be...@bi-co.net> wrote: >> >> >> I tried to reproduce this issue: I recreated the btrfs file system, set up a >> minimal system and issued fstrim again. It printed the following error >> message: >> >> fstrim: /: FITRIM ioctl failed: Input/output error > > Huh. Any kernel message at the same time? I would expect any fstrim > user space error message to also have a kernel message. Any i/o error > suggests some kind of storage stack failure - which could be hardware > or software, you can't know without seeing the kernel messages.
I missed that. The kernel messages are: attempt to access beyond end of device sda1: rw=16387, want=252755893, limit=250067632 BTRFS warning (device dm-5): failed to trim 1 device(s), last error -5 Here are some more information on the partitions and LVM physical segments: fdisk -l /dev/sda: Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type /dev/sda1 * 2048 250069679 250067632 119.2G 8e Linux LVM pvdisplay -m: --- Physical volume --- PV Name /dev/sda1 VG Name vg_system PV Size 119.24 GiB / not usable <22.34 MiB Allocatable yes (but full) PE Size 32.00 MiB Total PE 3815 Free PE 0 Allocated PE 3815 PV UUID mqCLFy-iDnt-NfdC-lfSv-Maor-V1Ih-RlG8lP --- Physical Segments --- Physical extent 0 to 1248: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 2231 to 3479 Physical extent 1249 to 1728: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 640 to 1119 Physical extent 1729 to 1760: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/grml-images Logical extents 0 to 31 Physical extent 1761 to 2016: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/swap Logical extents 0 to 255 Physical extent 2017 to 2047: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 3480 to 3510 Physical extent 2048 to 2687: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 0 to 639 Physical extent 2688 to 3007: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 1911 to 2230 Physical extent 3008 to 3320: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 1120 to 1432 Physical extent 3321 to 3336: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/boot Logical extents 0 to 15 Physical extent 3337 to 3814: Logical volume /dev/vg_system/btrfs Logical extents 1433 to 1910 Would btrfs even be able to accidentally trim parts of other LVs or does this clearly hint towards a LVM/dm issue? Is there an easy way to somehow trace the trim through the different layers so one can see where it goes wrong? Cheers, Michael PS: Current state of bisection: It looks like the error was introduced somewhere between b5dd0c658c31b469ccff1b637e5124851e7a4a1c and v5.1.