#! /bin/bash # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 # Copyright (C) 2018 SUSE Linux Products GmbH. All Rights Reserved. # # FS QA Test 167 # # Test if btrfs will corrupt compressed data extent without data csum # by replacing it with uncompressed data, when doing device replace. # # This could be fixed by the following kernel commit: # ac0b4145d662 ("btrfs: scrub: Don't use inode pages for device replace") # . ./common/preamble _begin_fstest auto quick replace volume remount compress . ./common/filter _supported_fs btrfs _require_scratch_dev_pool 2 _require_scratch_dev_pool_equal_size _scratch_dev_pool_get 1 _spare_dev_get _scratch_pool_mkfs >> $seqres.full 2>&1 # Create nodatasum inode _scratch_mount "-o nodatasum" touch $SCRATCH_MNT/nodatasum_file _scratch_remount "datasum,compress" _pwrite_byte 0xcd 0 128K $SCRATCH_MNT/nodatasum_file > /dev/null # Write the compressed data back to disk sync # Replace the device _btrfs replace start -Bf 1 $SPARE_DEV $SCRATCH_MNT # Unmount to drop all cache so next read will read from disk _scratch_unmount _mount $SPARE_DEV $SCRATCH_MNT # Now the EXTENT_DATA item still marks the extent as compressed, # but the on-disk data is uncompressed, thus reading it as compressed # will definitely cause EIO. cat $SCRATCH_MNT/nodatasum_file > /dev/null _scratch_unmount _spare_dev_put _scratch_dev_pool_put echo "Silence is golden" # success, all done status=0 exit