Before this patch, when a node withdrew a gfs2 file system, it
wrote a (clean) unmount log header. That's wrong. You don't want
to write anything to the journal once you're withdrawn because
that's acknowledging that the transaction is complete and the
journal is in good shape, neither of which may be a valid
assumption when the file system is withdrawn. This is especially
true if the withdraw was caused due to io errors writing to the
journal in the first place. The best course of action is to leave
the journal "as is" until it may be safely replayed during
journal recovery, regardless of whether it's done by this node or
another.

Signed-off-by: Bob Peterson <rpete...@redhat.com>
---
 fs/gfs2/log.c | 7 ++++++-
 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/fs/gfs2/log.c b/fs/gfs2/log.c
index 2fd43146de00..4472f5fc471d 100644
--- a/fs/gfs2/log.c
+++ b/fs/gfs2/log.c
@@ -693,12 +693,16 @@ void gfs2_write_log_header(struct gfs2_sbd *sdp, struct 
gfs2_jdesc *jd,
 {
        struct gfs2_log_header *lh;
        u32 hash, crc;
-       struct page *page = mempool_alloc(gfs2_page_pool, GFP_NOIO);
+       struct page *page;
        struct gfs2_statfs_change_host *l_sc = &sdp->sd_statfs_local;
        struct timespec64 tv;
        struct super_block *sb = sdp->sd_vfs;
        u64 dblock;
 
+       if (gfs2_withdrawn(sdp))
+               goto out;
+
+       page = mempool_alloc(gfs2_page_pool, GFP_NOIO);
        lh = page_address(page);
        clear_page(lh);
 
@@ -751,6 +755,7 @@ void gfs2_write_log_header(struct gfs2_sbd *sdp, struct 
gfs2_jdesc *jd,
 
        gfs2_log_write(sdp, page, sb->s_blocksize, 0, dblock);
        gfs2_log_submit_bio(&sdp->sd_log_bio, REQ_OP_WRITE | op_flags);
+out:
        log_flush_wait(sdp);
 }
 
-- 
2.21.0

Reply via email to