1 ============= 2 dm-log-writes 3 ============= 4 5 This target takes 2 devices, one to pass all I 6 of the write operations to. This is intended 7 to verify the integrity of metadata or data as 8 There is a log_write_entry written for every W 9 able to take arbitrary data from userspace to 10 that is in the WRITE requests is copied into t 11 exactly as it happened originally. 12 13 Log Ordering 14 ============ 15 16 We log things in order of completion once we a 17 cache. This means that normal WRITE requests 18 next REQ_PREFLUSH request. This is to make it 19 the log in a way that correlates to what is on 20 to make it easier to detect improper waiting/f 21 22 This works by attaching all WRITE requests to 23 Once we see a REQ_PREFLUSH request we splice t 24 the FLUSH request completes we log all of the 25 completed WRITEs, at the time the REQ_PREFLUSH 26 simulate the worst case scenario with regard t 27 following example (W means write, C means comp 28 29 W1,W2,W3,C3,C2,Wflush,C1,Cflush 30 31 The log would show the following: 32 33 W3,W2,flush,W1.... 34 35 Again this is to simulate what is actually on 36 cases where a power failure at a particular po 37 inconsistent file system. 38 39 Any REQ_FUA requests bypass this flushing mech 40 they complete as those requests will obviously 41 42 Any REQ_OP_DISCARD requests are treated like W 43 have all the DISCARD requests, and then the WR 44 request. Consider the following example: 45 46 WRITE block 1, DISCARD block 1, FLUSH 47 48 If we logged DISCARD when it completed, the re 49 50 DISCARD 1, WRITE 1, FLUSH 51 52 which isn't quite what happened and wouldn't b 53 54 Target interface 55 ================ 56 57 i) Constructor 58 59 log-writes <dev_path> <log_dev_path> 60 61 ============= ============================= 62 dev_path Device that all of the IO wil 63 log_dev_path Device where the log entries 64 ============= ============================= 65 66 ii) Status 67 68 <#logged entries> <highest allocated secto 69 70 =========================== ============== 71 #logged entries Number of logg 72 highest allocated sector Highest alloca 73 =========================== ============== 74 75 iii) Messages 76 77 mark <description> 78 79 You can use a dmsetup message to set a 80 For example say you want to fsck a fil 81 write, but first you need to replay up 82 we're fsck'ing something reasonable, y 83 this:: 84 85 mkfs.btrfs -f /dev/mapper/log 86 dmsetup message log 0 mark mkfs 87 <run test> 88 89 This would allow you to replay the log 90 then replay from that point on doing t 91 interval that you want. 92 93 Every log has a mark at the end labele 94 95 Userspace component 96 =================== 97 98 There is a userspace tool that will replay the 99 It can be found here: https://github.com/josef 100 101 Example usage 102 ============= 103 104 Say you want to test fsync on your file system 105 this:: 106 107 TABLE="0 $(blockdev --getsz /dev/sdb) log-wr 108 dmsetup create log --table "$TABLE" 109 mkfs.btrfs -f /dev/mapper/log 110 dmsetup message log 0 mark mkfs 111 112 mount /dev/mapper/log /mnt/btrfs-test 113 <some test that does fsync at the end> 114 dmsetup message log 0 mark fsync 115 md5sum /mnt/btrfs-test/foo 116 umount /mnt/btrfs-test 117 118 dmsetup remove log 119 replay-log --log /dev/sdc --replay /dev/sdb 120 mount /dev/sdb /mnt/btrfs-test 121 md5sum /mnt/btrfs-test/foo 122 <verify md5sum's are correct> 123 124 Another option is to do a complicated file s 125 system is consistent during the entire opera 126 127 TABLE="0 $(blockdev --getsz /dev/sdb) log-wr 128 dmsetup create log --table "$TABLE" 129 mkfs.btrfs -f /dev/mapper/log 130 dmsetup message log 0 mark mkfs 131 132 mount /dev/mapper/log /mnt/btrfs-test 133 <fsstress to dirty the fs> 134 btrfs filesystem balance /mnt/btrfs-test 135 umount /mnt/btrfs-test 136 dmsetup remove log 137 138 replay-log --log /dev/sdc --replay /dev/sdb 139 btrfsck /dev/sdb 140 replay-log --log /dev/sdc --replay /dev/sdb 141 --fsck "btrfsck /dev/sdb" --check fua 142 143 And that will replay the log until it sees a F 144 and if the fsck passes it will replay to the n 145 the fsck command exists abnormally.
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