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bees/docs/btrfs-kernel.md
Zygo Blaxell 19859b0a0d docs: toxic extents and btrfs send
Update documentation of toxic extent / slow backref workaround.

Add notes about btrfs send kernel bugs and incremental send failures.

Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
2018-11-08 21:31:02 -05:00

2.7 KiB

Recommended kernel version

Linux 4.14.34 or later.

A Brief List Of Btrfs Kernel Bugs

Recent kernel bug fixes:

  • 4.14.29: WARN_ON(ref->count < 0) in fs/btrfs/backref.c triggers almost once per second. The WARN_ON is incorrect, and is now removed.

Unfixed kernel bugs (as of 4.14.71):

  • Bad filesystem destroying interactions with other Linux block layers: bcache and lvmcache can fail spectacularly, and apparently only do so while running bees. This is definitely a kernel bug, either in btrfs or the lower block layers. Avoid using bees with these tools unless your filesystem is disposable and you intend to debug the kernel.

  • Compressed data corruption is possible when using the fallocate system call to punch holes into compressed extents that contain long runs of zeros. The bug results in intermittent corruption during reads, but due to the bug, the kernel might sometimes mistakenly determine data is duplicate, and deduplication will corrupt the data permanently. This bug also affects compressed kvm raw images with the discard feature on btrfs or any compressed file where fallocate -d or fallocate -p has been used.

  • Deadlock when simultaneously using the same files in dedupe and rename. There is no way for bees to reliably know when another process is about to rename a file while bees is deduping it. In the rsync case, bees will dedupe the new file rsync is creating using the old file rsync is copying from, while rsync will rename the new file over the old file to replace it.

  • btrfs send has various problems when bees is deduping RO snapshots, especially if the snapshot is used as a parent for incremental send.

Minor kernel problems with workarounds:

  • Slow backrefs (aka toxic extents): Under certain conditions, if the number of references to a single shared extent grows too high, the kernel consumes more and more CPU while holding locks that block access to the filesystem. bees avoids this bug by measuring the time the kernel spends performing LOGICAL_INO operations and permanently blacklisting any extent or hash involved where the kernel starts to get slow. In the bees log, such blocks are labelled as 'toxic' hash/block addresses.

Older kernels:

  • Older kernels have various data corruption and deadlock/hang issues that are no longer listed here, and older kernels are missing important features such as LOGICAL_INO_V2. Using an older kernel is not recommended.