On Tuesday 10 February 2009 14:26:47 Peter Barada wrote: > On Tue, 2009-02-10 at 11:08 +1300, Charles Manning wrote: > > On Tuesday 10 February 2009 07:02:05 Peter Barada wrote: > > > I pulled a new copy of CVS YAFFS2 just after Charles added his patch > > > for write_begin/write_end to build YAFFS for 2.6.28 kernels. > > > > > > > > > yaffs locking > > > yaffs_mknod: making file > > > yaffs_clear_inode: ino 1489, count 0 object exists > > > yaffs locking > > > yaffs_write_super > > > yaffs_write_super > > > yaffs_write_super > > > yaffs_write_super > > > > > > It looks like a lookup for "Podgorica" came back as not there, but > > > creating the object for "Podgorica" needs to clear the inode which > > > tries to lock it, and YAFFS (and the upper FS layers) are wedged. > > > > > > Any ideas on how to fix this? > > > > Peter > > > > You say you pulled CVS just after I checked in the 2.6.28 stuff. > > > > A while later I checked in change to yportenv.h > > > > http://www.aleph1.co.uk/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/yaffs2/yportenv.h?r1=1.20&r2= > >1.21 > > > > This patch **should** fix what you're seeing. > > Still hangs, even with a fresh checkout of YAFFS2 from 19:41 EST > (GMT-0500) that incorporates the patch to use GFP_NOFS on YMALLOC() (log > from file operation before): > > > yaffs locking > yaffs_lookup for 2945:Andorra > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_lookup not found > yaffs_create > yaffs_mknod: parent object 2945 type 3 > yaffs_mknod: making oject for Andorra, mode 81ed dev 0 > yaffs locking > yaffs_mknod: making file > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_get_inode for object 2829 > yaffs_iget for 2829 > yaffs locking > yaffs_FillInode mode 81ed uid 0 gid 0 size 0 count 1 > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_mknod created object 2829 count = 1 > start yaffs_write_begin > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_readpage at 00000000, size 00001000 > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_readpage done > end yaffs_write_begin - ok > yaffs_write_end addr c64a2000 pos 0 nBytes 2185 > yaffs locking > yaffs_file_write about to write writing 2185 bytesto object 2829 at 0 > yaffs_file_write writing 2185 bytes, 2185 written at 0 > yaffs_file_write size updated to 2185 bytes, 5 blocks > yaffs unlocking > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_file_flush object 2829 (dirty) > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_setattr of object 2829 > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_setattr of object 2829 > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_setattr of object 2829 > yaffs locking > yaffs unlocking > yaffs locking > yaffs_lookup for 2945:Podgorica > yaffs unlocking > yaffs_lookup not found > yaffs_create > yaffs_mknod: parent object 2945 type 3 > yaffs_mknod: making oject for Podgorica, mode 81ed dev 0 > yaffs locking > yaffs_mknod: making file > yaffs_clear_inode: ino 1489, count 0 object exists > yaffs locking > yaffs_write_super > yaffs_write_super > yaffs_write_super > yaffs_write_super Hi Peter Could you try adding a bit more tracing to the YMALLOC to verify that that is the chain that is causing the problem. Also try extending the tracing on the locking with something like: static void yaffs_GrossLock(yaffs_Device * dev) { T(YAFFS_TRACE_OS, (KERN_DEBUG "yaffs locking %p\n",current)); down(&dev->grossLock); T(YAFFS_TRACE_OS, (KERN_DEBUG "yaffs locked %p\n",current)); } static void yaffs_GrossUnlock(yaffs_Device * dev) { T(YAFFS_TRACE_OS, (KERN_DEBUG "yaffs unlocking %p\n",current)); up(&dev->grossLock); } that should confirm the chain for us. Perhaps the NOFS flag is not being honoured the way that was being expected. -- Charles