Message ID | 20140706134325.GA18955@amd.pavel.ucw.cz |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On Sun, Jul 06, 2014 at 03:43:25PM +0200, Pavel Machek wrote: > Hi! > > > Now I'm running fsck.new -cf. I don't think this filesystem has any > > bad blocks. Still, it says "rootfs: Updating bad block inode." > > ... "FILE SYSTEM WAS MODIFIED", "REBOOT LINUX". > > And here's patch to fix this uglyness. Unfortunately, it makes it read > the inode... but perhaps it is good idea as we are able to print > before/after bad block counts...? > > Signed-off-by: Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz> Thanks, I'll take a look at these patches. Honestly, I've been half tempted to remove the e2fsck -c option entirely. 99.9% of the time, with modern disks, which has bad block remapping, it doesn't do any good, and often, it's harmful. In general, e2fsck -c is not something I recommend people use. If you want to use badblocks by itself to see if there are any blocks that are suffering read problems, that's fine, but if there is, in general the safest thing to do is to mount the disk read-only, back it up, and then either (a) reformat and see if you can restore onto it with backups w/o any further errors, or (b) just trash the disk, and get a new one, since in general the contents are way more valuable than the disk itself. Certainly after trying (a), you get any further errors, (b) is defintely the way to go. - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-ext4" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
diff --git a/e2fsck/badblocks.c b/e2fsck/badblocks.c index 7f3641b..32e08bf 100644 --- a/e2fsck/badblocks.c +++ b/e2fsck/badblocks.c @@ -30,6 +30,7 @@ void read_bad_blocks_file(e2fsck_t ctx, const char *bad_blocks_file, ext2_filsys fs = ctx->fs; errcode_t retval; badblocks_list bb_list = 0; + int old_bb_count = -1; FILE *f; char buf[1024]; @@ -51,14 +52,16 @@ void read_bad_blocks_file(e2fsck_t ctx, const char *bad_blocks_file, * If we're appending to the bad blocks inode, read in the * current bad blocks. */ - if (!replace_bad_blocks) { - retval = ext2fs_read_bb_inode(fs, &bb_list); - if (retval) { - com_err("ext2fs_read_bb_inode", retval, "%s", - _("while reading the bad blocks inode")); - goto fatal; - } + retval = ext2fs_read_bb_inode(fs, &bb_list); + if (retval) { + com_err("ext2fs_read_bb_inode", retval, "%s", + _("while reading the bad blocks inode")); + goto fatal; } + old_bb_count = ext2fs_u32_list_count(bb_list); + printf("%s: Currently %d bad blocks.\n", ctx->device_name, old_bb_count); + if (replace_bad_blocks) + bb_list = 0; /* * Now read in the bad blocks from the file; if @@ -95,10 +98,16 @@ void read_bad_blocks_file(e2fsck_t ctx, const char *bad_blocks_file, goto fatal; } + if ((ext2fs_u32_list_count(bb_list) == 0) && + ((!replace_bad_blocks) || (!old_bb_count))) { + printf("%s: No bad blocks found, no update neeeded.\n", ctx->device_name); + return; + } + /* * Finally, update the bad blocks from the bad_block_map */ - printf("%s: Updating bad block inode.\n", ctx->device_name); + printf("%s: Updating bad block inode (%d bad blocks).\n", ctx->device_name, ext2fs_u32_list_count(bb_list)); retval = ext2fs_update_bb_inode(fs, bb_list); if (retval) { com_err("ext2fs_update_bb_inode", retval, "%s",