Re: blk-mq timeout handling fixes

From: Jens Axboe
Date: Wed Sep 17 2014 - 17:56:43 EST


On 09/17/2014 03:53 PM, Elliott, Robert (Server Storage) wrote:
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Christoph Hellwig [mailto:hch@xxxxxx]
>> Sent: Saturday, 13 September, 2014 6:40 PM
>> To: Jens Axboe
>> Cc: Elliott, Robert (Server Storage); linux-scsi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; linux-
>> kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Subject: blk-mq timeout handling fixes
>>
>> This series fixes various issues with timeout handling that Robert
>> ran into when testing scsi-mq heavily. He tested an earlier version,
>> and couldn't reproduce the issues anymore, although the series changed
>> quite significantly since and should probably be retested.
>>
>> In summary we not only start the blk-mq timer inside the drivers
>> ->queue_rq method after the request has been fully setup, and we
>> also tell the drivers if we're timing out a reserved (internal)
>> request or a real one. Many drivers including will need to handle
>> those internal ones differently, e.g. for scsi-mq we don't even
>> have a scsi command structure allocated for the reserved commands.
>
> I have rerun a variety of tests on:
> * Jens' for-next tree that went into 3.17rc5
> * plus this series
> * plus two patches for infinite recursion on flushes from
> Ming and then Christoph

This is pretty much what is queued up for 3.17 as well. It's bigger than
I'd like at this point, but these are real fixes.

> and have not been able to trigger the scsi_times_out req->special
> NULL pointer dereference that prompted this series.

Great!!

> Testing includes:
> * concurrent heavy workload generators:
> * fio high iodepth direct 512 byte random reads (> 1M IOPS)
> * programs generating large bursts of paged writes
> * mkfs.ext4 (followed by e2fsck)
> * mkfs.xfs (followed by xfs_check)
> * ddpt
> * watch -n 0 sync to generate flushes
> * scsi_logging_level MLCOMPLETE set to 0 or 1
> * scsi_lib.c patched to put all the ACTION_FAIL messages
> under level 1 so they can be squelched (massive error
> prints cause more timeouts themselves)
> * 4 hpsa and 16 mpt3sas devices (all made from SAS SSDs)
> * lockless hpsa driver
> * injecting errors
> * device removal
> * device generating infinite errors
> * device generating a brief number of errors
>
> The filesystems don't always recover properly, but nothing in
> the block or scsi midlayers crashed.
>
> So, you may add this to the series:
> Tested-by: Robert Elliott <elliott@xxxxxx>

Thanks a lot for your (continued) testing, Robert. It's a great help.


--
Jens Axboe

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