| OCFS2 online file check |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| This document will describe OCFS2 online file check feature. |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| OCFS2 is often used in high-availability systems. However, OCFS2 usually |
| converts the filesystem to read-only when encounters an error. This may not be |
| necessary, since turning the filesystem read-only would affect other running |
| processes as well, decreasing availability. |
| Then, a mount option (errors=continue) is introduced, which would return the |
| -EIO errno to the calling process and terminate further processing so that the |
| filesystem is not corrupted further. The filesystem is not converted to |
| read-only, and the problematic file's inode number is reported in the kernel |
| log. The user can try to check/fix this file via online filecheck feature. |
| |
| Scope |
| ===== |
| This effort is to check/fix small issues which may hinder day-to-day operations |
| of a cluster filesystem by turning the filesystem read-only. The scope of |
| checking/fixing is at the file level, initially for regular files and eventually |
| to all files (including system files) of the filesystem. |
| |
| In case of directory to file links is incorrect, the directory inode is |
| reported as erroneous. |
| |
| This feature is not suited for extravagant checks which involve dependency of |
| other components of the filesystem, such as but not limited to, checking if the |
| bits for file blocks in the allocation has been set. In case of such an error, |
| the offline fsck should/would be recommended. |
| |
| Finally, such an operation/feature should not be automated lest the filesystem |
| may end up with more damage than before the repair attempt. So, this has to |
| be performed using user interaction and consent. |
| |
| User interface |
| ============== |
| When there are errors in the OCFS2 filesystem, they are usually accompanied |
| by the inode number which caused the error. This inode number would be the |
| input to check/fix the file. |
| |
| There is a sysfs directory for each OCFS2 file system mounting: |
| |
| /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck |
| |
| Here, <devname> indicates the name of OCFS2 volume device which has been already |
| mounted. The file above would accept inode numbers. This could be used to |
| communicate with kernel space, tell which file(inode number) will be checked or |
| fixed. Currently, three operations are supported, which includes checking |
| inode, fixing inode and setting the size of result record history. |
| |
| 1. If you want to know what error exactly happened to <inode> before fixing, do |
| |
| # echo "<inode>" > /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck/check |
| # cat /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck/check |
| |
| The output is like this: |
| INO DONE ERROR |
| 39502 1 GENERATION |
| |
| <INO> lists the inode numbers. |
| <DONE> indicates whether the operation has been finished. |
| <ERROR> says what kind of errors was found. For the detailed error numbers, |
| please refer to the file linux/fs/ocfs2/filecheck.h. |
| |
| 2. If you determine to fix this inode, do |
| |
| # echo "<inode>" > /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck/fix |
| # cat /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck/fix |
| |
| The output is like this: |
| INO DONE ERROR |
| 39502 1 SUCCESS |
| |
| This time, the <ERROR> column indicates whether this fix is successful or not. |
| |
| 3. The record cache is used to store the history of check/fix results. It's |
| default size is 10, and can be adjust between the range of 10 ~ 100. You can |
| adjust the size like this: |
| |
| # echo "<size>" > /sys/fs/ocfs2/<devname>/filecheck/set |
| |
| Fixing stuff |
| ============ |
| On receiving the inode, the filesystem would read the inode and the |
| file metadata. In case of errors, the filesystem would fix the errors |
| and report the problems it fixed in the kernel log. As a precautionary measure, |
| the inode must first be checked for errors before performing a final fix. |
| |
| The inode and the result history will be maintained temporarily in a |
| small linked list buffer which would contain the last (N) inodes |
| fixed/checked, the detailed errors which were fixed/checked are printed in the |
| kernel log. |