btrfs-progs: test: add simple test for defrag recursion depth

The documentation lacks clarity about depth to which recursive
defragmentation go, and was pointed out by a user.

The problem here is that the subvolume behaves the same as mount point
regarding path traversal. The nftw stops on mount boundary (FTW_MOUNT).

Add test that verifies this behaviour. Defrag has to be updated to allow
descending to subvolumes (and not mountpoints).

Issue: #185
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
This commit is contained in:
David Sterba 2019-07-02 15:17:47 +02:00
parent 064341dca9
commit 88f4bcb351
2 changed files with 28 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ and metadata blocks from all devices and verify checksums. Automatically repair
corrupted blocks if there's a correct copy available.
NOTE: Scrub is not a filesystem checker (fsck) and does not verify nor repair
structural damage in the filesystem. It really only checks checksums of of data
structural damage in the filesystem. It really only checks checksums of data
and tree blocks, it doesn't ensure the content of tree blocks is valid and
consistent. There's some validation performed when metadata blocks are read
from disk but it's not extensive and cannot substitute full 'btrfs check' run.

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@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
#!/bin/bash
# check how deep does recursive defrag go, currently it has to stop at
# mountpoint and subvolume boundary, ie. only the first file should
# appear in the list of processed files
source "$TEST_TOP/common"
check_prereq mkfs.btrfs
check_prereq btrfs
setup_root_helper
prepare_test_dev
run_check_mkfs_test_dev
run_check_mount_test_dev
run_check $SUDO_HELPER dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=10 of="$TEST_MNT"/file1
run_check $SUDO_HELPER "$TOP/btrfs" subvolume create "$TEST_MNT"/subv1
run_check $SUDO_HELPER dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=10 of="$TEST_MNT"/subv1/file2
run_check $SUDO_HELPER "$TOP/btrfs" subvolume snapshot "$TEST_MNT"/subv1 "$TEST_MNT"/snap1
run_check $SUDO_HELPER dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=10 of="$TEST_MNT"/snap1/file3
run_check $SUDO_HELPER find "$TEST_MNT"
run_check_stdout $SUDO_HELPER "$TOP/btrfs" filesystem defrag -v -r "$TEST_MNT" |
grep -q 'file[23]' && _fail "recursive defrag went to subvolumes"
run_check_umount_test_dev