Andreas Dilger wrote:
> On Oct 18, 2006  16:11 -0500, Eric Sandeen wrote:
>> First, we had a corrupted index directory that was never checked
>> for consistency... it was corrupt, and pointed to another "entry"
>> of length 0.  The for() loop looped forever, since the length
>> of ext3_next_entry(de) was 0, and we kept looking at the same
>> pointer over and over and over and over... I modeled this check
>> and subsequent action on what is done for non-index directories
>> in ext3_readdir... but I also see a few places where this check
>> is deemed "too expensive" - any thoughts?
> 
> Hmm, in 2.6 ext2 this is handled somewhat differently - one of the main
> places where ext2 and ext3 differ.  The directory leaf data is kept in
> the page cache and there is a helper function ext2_check_page() to mark
> the page "checked".  That means the page only needs to be checked once
> after being read from disk, instead of each time through readdir.

ah, sure.  Hm...  well, this might be a bit of a performance hit if it's
checking cached data... let me think on that.

<... next patch ...>

> I'm not sure whether this is a win or not.  It means that if there is ever
> a directory with a bad leaf block any entries beyond that block are not
> accessible anymore.  

I'm amazed at how hard ext3 works to cope with bad blocks ;-)

Hm, yes, so just bailing out may not be so good.

> The existing !bh case already marks the filesystem in
> error.  Maybe as a special case we can check in "if (!bh)" if i_size and
> i_blocks make sense.  Something like:
> 
>               if (!bh) {
>                       :
>                       :
> +                     if (filp->f_pos > inode->i_blocks << 9) {
> +                             break;
>                       filp->f_pos += sb->s_blocksize - offset;
>                       continue;
>               }
> 
> This obviously won't help if the whole inode is bogus, but then nothing
> will catch all errors.

Yep, I'd thought maybe a size vs. blocks test might make sense; I think
there can never legitimately be a sparse directory?

I guess if the intent is to soldier on in the face of adversity, it
doesn't matter if it's an umappable offset or an IO error; ext3 wants to
go ahead & try the next one block anyway.  So the size test probably
makes sense as a stopping point.

Thanks for the comments,

-Eric
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