[LTP] LTP test df01.sh detected different size of loop device in v5.19
Eric Sandeen
sandeen@redhat.com
Thu Aug 18 23:19:42 CEST 2022
On 8/18/22 12:01 PM, Petr Vorel wrote:
>> On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 11:05:33AM -0500, Eric Sandeen wrote:
>>> On 8/18/22 10:25 AM, Petr Vorel wrote:
>>>> Hi Eric, all,
>
>
>>> ...
>
>
>>>>> IOWS, I think the test expects that free space is reflected in statfs numbers
>>>>> immediately after a file is removed, and that's no longer the case here. They
>>>>> change in between the df check and the statfs check.
>
>>>>> (The test isn't just checking that the values are correct, it is checking that
>>>>> the values are /immediately/ correct.)
>
>>>>> Putting a "sleep 1" after the "rm -f" in the test seems to fix it; IIRC
>>>>> the max time to wait for inodegc is 1s. This does slow the test down a bit.
>
>>>> Sure, it looks like we can sleep just 50ms on my hw (although better might be to
>>>> poll for the result [1]), I just wanted to make sure there is no bug/regression
>>>> before hiding it with sleep.
>
>>>> Thanks for your input!
>
>>>> Kind regards,
>>>> Petr
>
>>>> [1] https://people.kernel.org/metan/why-sleep-is-almost-never-acceptable-in-tests
>
>>>>> -Eric
>
>>>> +++ testcases/commands/df/df01.sh
>>>> @@ -63,6 +63,10 @@ df_test()
>>>> tst_res TFAIL "'$cmd' failed."
>>>> fi
>
>>>> + if [ "$DF_FS_TYPE" = xfs ]; then
>>>> + tst_sleep 50ms
>>>> + fi
>>>> +
>
>>> Probably worth at least a comment as to why ...
>
> Sure, that was just to document possible fix. BTW even 200ms was not reliable in
> the long run => not a good solution.
>
>>> Dave / Darrick / Brian - I'm not sure how long it might take to finish inodegc?
>>> A too-short sleep will let the flakiness remain ...
>
>> A fsfreeze -f / fsfreeze -u cycle will force all the background garbage
>> collection to run to completion when precise free space accounting is
>> being tested.
> Thanks for a hint, do you mean to put it into df_test after creating file with
> dd to wrap second df_verify (calls df) and df_check (runs stat and compare values)?
> Because that does not help - it fails when running in the loop (managed to break after 5th run).
I think it would go after you remove the file, to ensure that no space usage
changes are pending when you check.
<tests>
This seems to work fine (pseudopatch):
ROD_SILENT rm -rf mntpoint/testimg
+ # Ensure free space change can be seen by statfs
+ fsfreeze -f $TST_MNTPOINT
+ fsfreeze -u $TST_MNTPOINT
# flush file system buffers, then we can get the actual sizes.
sync
(although: what's the difference between $TST_MNTPOINT and mountpoint/ ?)
You just don't want to accidentally freeze the root filesystem ;)
-Eric
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