| Need to process the bad block inode *before* doing the inode scan. |
| |
| Also check to see if the first block of the inode table is not on the |
| bad block scan, and fix that. We need to check for an inaccurate |
| blocks, and fix them before we start doing anything else with the |
| filesystem! |
| |
| --------------------------------------------------- |
| User request: |
| |
| BTW: Could you please add some sort of deleted and possibly corrupted file |
| and inode list to e2fsck report. There should be filenames deleted |
| from directory inodes, files with duplicate blocks e.t.c. |
| It's pretty annoying to filter this information from e2fsck output |
| by hand :- |
| |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Add a "answer Yes always to this class of question" response. |
| |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| ext2fs_flush() should return a different error message for primary |
| versus backup superblock flushing, so that mke2fs can print an |
| appropriate error message. |
| |
| --------------------------------- |
| Date: Mon, 08 Mar 1999 21:46:14 +0100 |
| From: Sergio Polini <s.polini@mclink.it> |
| |
| |
| I'm reading the sorce code of e2fsck 1.14. |
| In pass2.c, lines 352-357, I read: |
| |
| if ((dirent->name_len & 0xFF) > EXT2_NAME_LEN) { |
| if (fix_problem(ctx, PR_2_FILENAME_LONG, &cd->pctx)) { |
| dirent->name_len = EXT2_NAME_LEN; |
| dir_modified++; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| I think that I'll never see any messages about too long filenames, |
| because "whatever & 0xFF" can never be "> 0xFF". |
| Am I wrong? |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| Add chmod command to debugfs. |
| |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2000 17:54:53 -0800 (PST) |
| From: Alan Blanchard <alan@abraxas.to> |
| To: tytso@MIT.EDU |
| Subject: DEBUGFS - thanks and a feature idea |
| Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII |
| |
| Theodore: |
| |
| First, let me thank you for writing debugfs. Recently, my Linux box |
| (RH 6.0, 400 MHz PIII, on a DSL line) was hacked into. The intruder did |
| an "rm -Rf" on a 34 GB drive with about 5GB of data on it. I was able to |
| restore essentially the entire thing with debugfs and a bit of C code and Perl. |
| Actually, I could have done the entire thing with debugfs and Perl, but I |
| thought it would be too slow. |
| |
| During this exercise, I noticed that one small feature was lacking that would |
| have made my job a bit easier. The length of a deleted directory is |
| reported as 0, hence debugfs won't dump the contents of the directory to a |
| file using the "dump" command. The only thing that saved me was that the |
| list of disk blocks is not zeroed out. I was able to dump the contents of the |
| directories by using debugfs to get the relevant block numbers, then |
| using dd to get the actual data. |
| |
| If debugfs had a feature where it ignored the size of a directory reported by |
| the inode and instead just dumped all the blocks, it would have facilited |
| things a bit. This seems like a very easy feature to add. |
| |
| Again, thanks for writing debugfs (and all the other Linux stuff you've written!). |
| |
| Cheers, |
| Alan Blanchard |
| alan@abraxas.to |
| |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 14:07:12 -0800 |
| From: "H. Peter Anvin" <hpa@www.transmeta.com> |
| Subject: mkfs -cc and fsck -c |
| |
| b) An option to mkfs to zero the partition. Yes, it can be done with |
| dd, but it would be a nicer way of doing it. |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Add support for in ext2fs_block_iterate() for a returning the |
| compressed flag blocks to block_iterate. Change default to not return |
| EXT2_COMPRESSED_BLKADDR. Change e2fsck to pass this flag in. |
| |
| (The old compression patches did this by default all the time, which |
| is bad, since it meant e2fsck never saw the EXT2_COMPRESSED_BLKADDR |
| flagword. |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| E2fsck should offer to clear all the blocks in an indirect block, not |
| the entire inode, so there's better recovery for when an indirect |
| block gets trashed. |
| |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| From: Yann Dirson - LOGATIQUE <Yann.Dirson@France.Sun.COM> |
| Date: Thu, 2 Mar 2000 13:52:13 +0100 (MET) |
| |
| During my experiments on the broken system, I noticed the following in |
| the badblocks program (which I'm aware is not designed for IDE drives) |
| - I'd probably have already fixed them if my home system was up :( |
| |
| * the syntax summary documents 2nd arg as blocks_count, which should |
| probably read something like end_count. |
| |
| * testing past end of device is not detected, and lists those blocks |
| as bad, whereas they simply do not exist. |
| |
| |
| I think I'll probably add a "max count" option to findsuper(8), so |
| that I do not have to wait for the whole disk to be scanned when the |
| system had to be launched with "init=/bin/sh", in which case Ctrl-[CZ] |
| and friends appear to be absolutely ignored. |
| |
| |
| Somewhat unrelated, I just noticed the |
| http://web.mit.edu/tytso/www/linux/ext2.html could be updated: |
| |
| - could mention SGI xfs (http://oss.sgi.com/projects/xfs/ - they just |
| release 0.03 snapshot) |
| |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Return-Path: <tytso@MIT.EDU> |
| Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2000 13:20:14 -0500 |
| From: "Theodore Y. Ts'o" <tytso@MIT.EDU> |
| To: R.E.Wolff@BitWizard.nl |
| In-Reply-To: Rogier Wolff's message of Thu, 10 Feb 2000 08:46:30 +0100 (MET), |
| <200002100746.IAA24573@cave.bitwizard.nl> |
| Subject: Re: e2fsck request for enhancement. |
| Phone: (781) 391-3464 |
| |
| Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2000 08:46:30 +0100 (MET) |
| From: R.E.Wolff@BitWizard.nl (Rogier Wolff) |
| |
| Lately, while trying to recover a broken disk, my system froze (twice, |
| until I tried something else) while copying the disk. |
| |
| So I had a file of about 50Mb that was growing frantically at the |
| moment of the crash. |
| |
| e2fsck, then finds an indirect block that is completely bogus. It |
| starts by asking me if it's ok to clear a few of the referenced |
| blocks. I say yes. Then it comes to the conclusion: |
| |
| too many invalid blocks. Clear inode? |
| |
| and then I get the option to delete the whole file. Not to truncate |
| the file to a "working" size. |
| |
| |
| I'd MUCH rather have e2fsck say something like: |
| |
| inode 1234 references an invalid block 134345454. Hmm. |
| inode 1234 references 567 out of 50176 invalid blocks, |
| all near the end. Truncate file to 49152 blocks? |
| |
| Here you can see that of the 1024 blocks near the end of the file, |
| only 567 were detected as invalid. However now 48Mb of the file will |
| be recovered, instead of thrown away. |
| |
| That's a good point. Actually, the right thing is for e2fsck to offer |
| to clear all of the bad blocks in a particular indirect block. I don't |
| know how hard it would be to do that, but I'll put it on my e2fsprogs |
| TODO list. |
| |
| - Ted |
| |
| --------------------------------------------------------------- |
| From e2fsprogs Debian TODO file as of 1.10-13. |
| |
| * Maybe make -dbg packages. Look at how others do it. |
| |
| --------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Add --lba option to debian icheck command, and have ways of making it |
| easier to translate LBA to filesystem block numbers. |
| |
| ------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| |
| |
| List of projects for e2fsprogs: |
| |
| |
| 1) Make debugfs's "ncheck <inode>" command list all of the pathnames |
| to an inode, not just only the first link to the inode which is found. |
| (A good "intro to libext2fs programming interfaces project) |
| |
| Difficulty: Low Priority: Low |
| |
| 2) Use a code coverage tool such as Rational's PureCoverage to see |
| what kind of code coverage we have for e2fsck, and try to add test |
| cases to increase the code coverage for e2fsck. |
| |
| Difficulty: Medium Priorty: Low |
| |
| 3) Use a code coverage tool such as Rational's PureCoverage to see |
| what kind of code coverage we have for resize2fs, and try to add test |
| cases to increase the code coverage for resize2fs. |
| |
| Difficulty: Medium Priorty: Medium |
| |
| 4) Create a new I/O manager (i.e., test_io.c, unix_io.c, et.al.) which |
| layers on top of an existing I/O manager which provides copy-on-write |
| functionality. This COW I/O manager takes will take two open I/O |
| managers, call them "base" and "changed". The "base" I/O manager is |
| opened read/only, so any changes are written instead to the "changed" |
| I/O manager, in a compact, non-sparse format containing the intended |
| modification to the "base" filesystem. |
| |
| This will allow resize2fs to figure out what changes need to made to |
| extend a filesystem, or expand the size of inodes in the inode table, |
| and the changes can be pushed the filesystem in one fell swoop. (If |
| the system crashes; the program which runs the "changed" file can be |
| re-run, much like a journal replay. My assumption is that the COW |
| file will contain the filesystem UUID in a the COW superblock, and the |
| COW file will be stored in some place such as /var/state/e2fsprogs, |
| with an init.d file to automate the replay so we can recover cleanly |
| from a crash during the resize2fs process.) |
| |
| Difficulty: Medium Priority: Medium |
| |
| 5) Create a new I/O manager (i.e., test_io.c, unix_io.c, et.al.) which |
| layers on top of an existing I/O manager which provides an "undo" |
| functionality. This undo I/O manager takes will take two open I/O |
| managers, call them "base" and "undo". The "base" I/O manager is be |
| opened read/write, and when any writes are sent to the I/O manager, |
| the I/O manager will check the "undo" I/O manager, using a file format |
| identical to the one found in (5) above. |
| |
| This is useful for allowing e2fsck to create an "undo" file, which |
| would make things like "e2fsck -y" much safer. |
| |
| Difficulty: Low (once 5 is done) Priority: Low |
| |
| 6) Modify resize2fs so that it can relocate and reorganize the |
| filesystem in the following ways: (1) increase the inode size, so that |
| an existing filesystem can use the EA-in-inode kernel patch, (2) |
| reserve blocks in the resize inode to allow for on-line resizing. Use |
| the COW I/O manager described in (5) in order to provide robustness in |
| case of a crash during the resize/reorganization operation. |
| |
| Difficulty: High Priority: Medium |
| |
| 7) Review the EA-in-inode patches to e2fsck for correctness/code |
| cleanliness. (I will probably have to do this myself -- Ted) |
| |
| Difficulty: High Priorty: Medium |
| |
| 8) Add support for extent maps to e2fsprogs. I need to review the |
| extent maps first/in parallel. |
| |
| Difficulty: High Priority: Medium |
| |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Need to deal with the case where the resize inode overlaps with the |
| bad blocks inode. |
| |