Re: [PATCH] xfs: Wake CIL push waiters more reliably

From: Donald Buczek
Date: Sun Jan 03 2021 - 11:13:35 EST


On 02.01.21 23:44, Dave Chinner wrote:
On Sat, Jan 02, 2021 at 08:12:56PM +0100, Donald Buczek wrote:
On 31.12.20 22:59, Dave Chinner wrote:
On Thu, Dec 31, 2020 at 12:48:56PM +0100, Donald Buczek wrote:
On 30.12.20 23:16, Dave Chinner wrote:

One could argue that, but one should also understand the design
constraints for a particular algorithm are before suggesting
that their solution is "robust". :)

Yes, but an understanding to the extend required by the
argument should be sufficient :-)

And that's the fundamental conceit described by Dunning-Kruger.

I.e. someone thinks they know enough to understand the argument,
when in fact they don't understand enough about the subject matter
to realise they don't understand what the expert at the other end is
saying at all....

# seq 29

2020-12-29T20:08:15.652167+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 1053.860637] XXX trigger cil 00000000e374c6f1 ctx 000000004967d650 ctx->space_used=33554656 , push_seq=29, ctx->sequence=29

So, at 20:08:15 we get a push trigger and the work is queued. But...

.....
2020-12-29T20:09:04.961088+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 1103.168964] XXX wake cil 00000000e374c6f1 ctx 000000004967d650 ctx->space_used=67109136 >= 67108864, push_seq=29, ctx->sequence=29

It takes the best part of *50 seconds* before the push work actually
runs?

That's .... well and truly screwed up - the work should run on that
CPU on the very next time it yeilds the CPU. If we're holding the
CPU without yeilding it for that long, hangcheck and RCU warnings
should be going off...

No such warnings.

But the load is probably I/O bound to the log:

- creates `cp -a` copies of a directory tree with small files (linux source repository)
- source tree probably completely cached.
- two copies in parallel
- slow log (on software raid6)

Isn't it to be expected that sooner or later you need to wait for
log writes when you write as fast as possible with lots of
metadata updates and not so much data?

No, incoming transactions waits for transaction reservation space,
not log writes. Reservation space is freed up by metadata writeback.
So if you have new transactions blocking in xfs_trans_reserve(),
then we are blocking on metadata writeback.

The CIL worker thread may be waiting for log IO completion before it
issues more log IO, and in that case it is waiting on iclog buffer
space (i.e. only waiting on internal log state, not metadata
writeback). Can you find that kworker thread stack and paste it? If
bound on log IO, it will be blocked in xlog_get_iclog_space().

Please paste the entire stack output, too, not just the bits you
think are relevant or understand....

That would be a kworker on the "xfs-cil/%s" workqueue, correct?
And you mean before the lockup, when the I/O is still active, correct?

This is the usual stack output from that thread:

# # /proc/2080/task/2080: kworker/u82:3+xfs-cil/md0 :
# cat /proc/2080/task/2080/stack

[<0>] md_flush_request+0x87/0x190
[<0>] raid5_make_request+0x61b/0xb30
[<0>] md_handle_request+0x127/0x1a0
[<0>] md_submit_bio+0xbd/0x100
[<0>] submit_bio_noacct+0x151/0x410
[<0>] submit_bio+0x4b/0x1a0
[<0>] xlog_state_release_iclog+0x87/0xb0
[<0>] xlog_write+0x452/0x6d0
[<0>] xlog_cil_push_work+0x2e0/0x4d0
[<0>] process_one_work+0x1dd/0x3e0
[<0>] worker_thread+0x23f/0x3b0
[<0>] kthread+0x118/0x130
[<0>] ret_from_fork+0x22/0x30

sampled three times with a few seconds in between, stack identical.

Also, cp -a of a linux source tree is just as data intensive as it
is metadata intensive. There's probably more data IO than metadata
IO, so that's more likely to be what is slowing the disks down as
metadata writeback is...

I'm a bit concerned, though, that there seem to be a rather
unlimited (~ 1000) number of kernel worker threads waiting for the
cil push and indirectly for log writes.

That's normal - XFS is highly asynchronous and defers a lot of work
to completion threads.

So it dropped by 16 bytes (seems to be common) which is
unexpected. I wonder if it filled a hole in a buffer and so
needed one less xlog_op_header()? But then the size would have
gone up by at least 128 bytes for the hole that was filled, so
it still shouldn't go down in size.

I think you need to instrument xlog_cil_insert_items() and catch
a negative length here:

/* account for space used by new iovec headers */
iovhdr_res = diff_iovecs * sizeof(xlog_op_header_t); len +=
iovhdr_res; ctx->nvecs += diff_iovecs;

(diff_iovecs will be negative if the number of xlog_op_header
structures goes down)

And if this happens, then dump the transaction ticket via
xlog_print_trans(tp) so we can see all the log items types and
vectors that the transaction has formatted...

I tried that, but the output was difficult to understand, because
at that point you can only log the complete transaction with the
items already updated. And a shrinking item is not switched to the
shadow vector, so the formatted content is already overwritten and
not available for analysis.

Yes, that's exactly the information I need to see.

But the fact you think this is something I don't need to know about
is classic Dunning-Kruger in action. You don't understand why I
asked for this information, and found the information "difficult to
understand", so you decided I didn't need it either, despite the
fact I asked explicitly for it.

What I first need to know is what operations are being performed by
the transaciton that shrunk and what all the items in it are, not
which specific items shrunk and by how much. There can be tens to
hundreds of items in a single transaction, and it's the combination
of the transaction state, the reservation, the amount of the
reservation that has been consumed, what items are consuming that
reservation, etc. that I need to first see and analyse.

I don't ask for specific information just for fun - I ask for
specific information because it is *necessary*. If you want the
problem triaged and fixed, then please supply the information you
are asked for, even if you don't understand why or what it means.

I see. I hope, you can make use of the following.

Attempt 1 ( base: Linux v5.1.10 + smartpqi driver 2.1.6-005)

+++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_log_cil.c
@@ -405,6 +405,11 @@ xlog_cil_insert_items(
spin_lock(&cil->xc_cil_lock);
+ if (diff_iovecs < 0 && strcmp(tp->t_mountp->m_super->s_id, "md0") == 0) {
+ xfs_warn (tp->t_mountp, "XXX diff_iovecs %d", diff_iovecs);
+ xlog_print_trans(tp);
+ }
+
/* account for space used by new iovec headers */
iovhdr_res = diff_iovecs * sizeof(xlog_op_header_t);
len += iovhdr_res;

Result: No log output before filesystem locked up after 15 iterations of the copy loop.

Attempt 2 ( base: previous patch):

--- a/fs/xfs/xfs_log_cil.c
+++ b/fs/xfs/xfs_log_cil.c
@@ -405,8 +405,8 @@ xlog_cil_insert_items(
spin_lock(&cil->xc_cil_lock);
- if (diff_iovecs < 0 && strcmp(tp->t_mountp->m_super->s_id, "md0") == 0) {
- xfs_warn (tp->t_mountp, "XXX diff_iovecs %d", diff_iovecs);
+ if ((diff_iovecs < 0 || len < 0) && strcmp(tp->t_mountp->m_super->s_id, "md0") == 0) {
+ xfs_warn (tp->t_mountp, "XXX diff_iovecs %d diff_len %d", diff_iovecs, len);
xlog_print_trans(tp);
}

Result: 594 rather similar events logged before filesystem locked up after 29 iterations of the copy loop

The third iovec sometimes has len=48 instead of len=16.

Last two events before the lockup:

2021-01-03T14:48:43.098887+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.831260] XFS (md0): XXX diff_iovecs 0 diff_len -16
2021-01-03T14:48:43.109363+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.837364] XFS (md0): transaction summary:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.109367+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.842544] XFS (md0): log res = 212728
2021-01-03T14:48:43.118996+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.847617] XFS (md0): log count = 8
2021-01-03T14:48:43.119010+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.852193] XFS (md0): flags = 0x25
2021-01-03T14:48:43.129701+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.857156] XFS (md0): ticket reservation summary:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.129714+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.862890] XFS (md0): unit res = 225140 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.135515+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.868710] XFS (md0): current res = 225140 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.148684+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.874702] XFS (md0): total reg = 0 bytes (o/flow = 0 bytes)
2021-01-03T14:48:43.148700+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.881885] XFS (md0): ophdrs = 0 (ophdr space = 0 bytes)
2021-01-03T14:48:43.155781+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.888975] XFS (md0): ophdr + reg = 0 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.161210+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.894404] XFS (md0): num regions = 0
2021-01-03T14:48:43.165948+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.899141] XFS (md0): log item:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.169996+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.903203] XFS (md0): type = 0x123b
2021-01-03T14:48:43.174544+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.907741] XFS (md0): flags = 0x8
2021-01-03T14:48:43.178996+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.912191] XFS (md0): niovecs = 3
2021-01-03T14:48:43.183347+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.916546] XFS (md0): size = 696
2021-01-03T14:48:43.187598+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.920791] XFS (md0): bytes = 248
2021-01-03T14:48:43.191932+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.925131] XFS (md0): buf len = 248
2021-01-03T14:48:43.196581+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.929776] XFS (md0): iovec[0]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.200633+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.933832] XFS (md0): type = 0x5
2021-01-03T14:48:43.205069+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.938264] XFS (md0): len = 56
2021-01-03T14:48:43.209293+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.942497] XFS (md0): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.215494+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.948690] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 05 00 00 00 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
2021-01-03T14:48:43.224801+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.957997] 00000010: 35 e3 ba 80 2e 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 5...............
2021-01-03T14:48:43.234100+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.967297] XFS (md0): iovec[1]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.238293+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.971484] XFS (md0): type = 0x6
2021-01-03T14:48:43.242744+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.975942] XFS (md0): len = 176
2021-01-03T14:48:43.247108+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.980295] XFS (md0): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.253304+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.986506] 00000000: 4e 49 b0 81 03 02 00 00 7d 00 00 00 7d 00 00 00 NI......}...}...
2021-01-03T14:48:43.262648+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3194.995835] 00000010: 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
2021-01-03T14:48:43.272064+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.005267] XFS (md0): iovec[2]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.276174+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.009366] XFS (md0): type = 0x7
2021-01-03T14:48:43.280649+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.013848] XFS (md0): len = 16
2021-01-03T14:48:43.285042+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.018243] XFS (md0): first 16 bytes of iovec[2]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.291166+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.024364] 00000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ba 02 ef e0 01 23 ef ..............#.

2021-01-03T14:48:43.300880+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.033706] XFS (md0): XXX diff_iovecs 0 diff_len -16
2021-01-03T14:48:43.311716+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.039849] XFS (md0): transaction summary:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.311732+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.044919] XFS (md0): log res = 212728
2021-01-03T14:48:43.316784+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.049982] XFS (md0): log count = 8
2021-01-03T14:48:43.321455+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.054663] XFS (md0): flags = 0x25
2021-01-03T14:48:43.326316+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.059519] XFS (md0): ticket reservation summary:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.332050+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.065247] XFS (md0): unit res = 225140 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.337873+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.071065] XFS (md0): current res = 225140 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.343762+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.076967] XFS (md0): total reg = 0 bytes (o/flow = 0 bytes)
2021-01-03T14:48:43.350951+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.084148] XFS (md0): ophdrs = 0 (ophdr space = 0 bytes)
2021-01-03T14:48:43.358036+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.091238] XFS (md0): ophdr + reg = 0 bytes
2021-01-03T14:48:43.363476+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.096671] XFS (md0): num regions = 0
2021-01-03T14:48:43.368213+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.101416] XFS (md0): log item:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.372263+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.105465] XFS (md0): type = 0x123b
2021-01-03T14:48:43.376895+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.110101] XFS (md0): flags = 0x8
2021-01-03T14:48:43.381240+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.114443] XFS (md0): niovecs = 3
2021-01-03T14:48:43.385587+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.118788] XFS (md0): size = 696
2021-01-03T14:48:43.389830+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.123026] XFS (md0): bytes = 248
2021-01-03T14:48:43.394355+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.127469] XFS (md0): buf len = 248
2021-01-03T14:48:43.398909+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.132100] XFS (md0): iovec[0]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.402967+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.136147] XFS (md0): type = 0x5
2021-01-03T14:48:43.407367+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.140574] XFS (md0): len = 56
2021-01-03T14:48:43.411704+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.144903] XFS (md0): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.417812+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.151002] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 05 00 00 00 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
2021-01-03T14:48:43.427114+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.160302] 00000010: 57 b1 d6 80 2b 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 W...+...........
2021-01-03T14:48:43.440572+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.169704] XFS (md0): iovec[1]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.440581+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.173774] XFS (md0): type = 0x6
2021-01-03T14:48:43.449478+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.178225] XFS (md0): len = 176
2021-01-03T14:48:43.449481+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.182687] XFS (md0): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.464908+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.188797] 00000000: 4e 49 20 81 03 02 00 00 7d 00 00 00 7d 00 00 00 NI .....}...}...
2021-01-03T14:48:43.464910+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.198116] 00000010: 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
2021-01-03T14:48:43.478436+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.207555] XFS (md0): iovec[2]
2021-01-03T14:48:43.478438+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.211645] XFS (md0): type = 0x7
2021-01-03T14:48:43.487300+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.216229] XFS (md0): len = 16
2021-01-03T14:48:43.487303+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.220509] XFS (md0): first 16 bytes of iovec[2]:
2021-01-03T14:48:43.502751+01:00 deadbird kernel: [ 3195.226631] 00000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ae 04 29 00 00 da 24 ...........)...$

Full output available at https://owww.molgen.mpg.de/~buczek/2021-01-03_13-09/log.txt (2.2M)

So I've added some code to dump an item in its old and its new
state in xlog_cil_insert_format_items when either the requested
buffer len or the number of vectors decreased.

Yes, that would be useful when trying to understand the low level
details of where a specific operation might be doing something
unexpected, but I don't have a high level picture of what operations
are triggering this issue so have no clue about the context in which
these isolated, context free changes are occuring.

That said ....

Several examples of different kind with a little bit of manual annotation following

Best
Donald

- XFS_LI_INODE.XLOG_REG_TYPE_ILOCAL from 32 to 20 bytes

[ 29.606212] XFS (sda1): XXX required buf size 184 -> 172
[ 29.612591] XFS (sda1): XXX niovecs 3 -> 3

[ 29.618570] XFS (sda1): XXX old log item:
[ 29.623469] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 29.627683] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b # XFS_LI_INODE
[ 29.632375] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 29.636858] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 29.647442] XFS (sda1): size = 312
[ 29.651814] XFS (sda1): bytes = 184
[ 29.656278] XFS (sda1): buf len = 184
[ 29.660927] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 29.665071] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5 # XLOG_REG_TYPE_IFORMAT
[ 29.669592] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 29.673914] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 29.680079] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 20 00 00 00 00 00 ;......... .....
[ 29.689363] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 29.698633] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 29.702756] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6 # XLOG_REG_TYPE_ICORE
[ 29.707263] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 29.711571] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 29.717720] 00000000: 4e 49 ed 41 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI.A............
[ 29.726986] 00000010: 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................
[ 29.736241] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 29.740364] XFS (sda1): type = 0x9 # XLOG_REG_TYPE_ILOCAL
[ 29.744873] XFS (sda1): len = 32
[ 29.749184] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 29.755336] 00000000: 02 00 30 e7 02 26 06 00 40 73 65 72 76 65 72 00 ..0..&..@server.
[ 29.764612] 00000010: 08 92 ef 04 00 58 6d 78 36 34 00 d3 93 58 00 58 .....Xmx64...X.X

[ 29.773900] XFS (sda1): XXX new log item:
[ 29.778718] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 29.782856] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 29.787478] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 29.791902] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 29.796321] XFS (sda1): size = 312
[ 29.800640] XFS (sda1): bytes = 172
[ 29.805052] XFS (sda1): buf len = 176
[ 29.809659] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 29.813781] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 29.818289] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 29.822599] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 29.828754] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 14 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 29.838024] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 29.847292] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 29.851420] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 29.855933] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 29.860247] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 29.866406] 00000000: 4e 49 ed 41 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI.A............
[ 29.875677] 00000010: 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................
[ 29.884949] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 29.889081] XFS (sda1): type = 0x9
[ 29.893601] XFS (sda1): len = 20
[ 29.897924] XFS (sda1): first 20 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 29.904096] 00000000: 01 00 30 e7 02 26 04 00 58 6d 78 36 34 00 d3 93 ..0..&..Xmx64...
[ 29.913381] 00000010: 58 92 ef 04 X...

That may be removal of a directory entry from a local form
directory. Hmmm - local form inode forks only log the active byte
range so that could be the issue here.

Hold on - where did this come from? "cp -a" doesn't result in file
and directory removals, right?

Correct. In the above part of the mail, where I described the load, that was reffering to your question "It takes the best part of *50 seconds* before the push work actually runs?". So this was related to the specific test from which the quoted loglines were.

The second part of the email was just about the question, whether it can be demonstrated that items in the CIL shrink. This was the followup to "Do you have tracing showing the operation where the relogged item has actually gotten smaller?" and "But, of course, if the size is not expected to decrease, this discrepancy must be clarified anyway. I am sure, I can find out the exact circumstances, this does happen. I will follow up on this. "

As soon as I added that logging, I got events from the system disk ("sda1") during boot activity. This already seemed to answer the question whether log items shrink (rightfully or wrongfully). So I didn't even start the described workload on the md devices. I should have made this difference clear and apologize that you needed to spend time to figure that out.

- (then) XFS_LI_INODE.XLOG_REG_TYPE_ILOCAL from 20 to 8 bytes

[ 29.982907] XFS (sda1): XXX required buf size 172 -> 160
[ 29.992716] XFS (sda1): XXX niovecs 3 -> 3

[ 29.998728] XFS (sda1): XXX old log item:
[ 30.003624] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 30.007835] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 30.012654] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 30.017145] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 30.021638] XFS (sda1): size = 312
[ 30.026012] XFS (sda1): bytes = 172
[ 30.030610] XFS (sda1): buf len = 176
[ 30.035292] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 30.039480] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 30.044054] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 30.048534] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 30.054749] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 14 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 30.064091] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 30.073545] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 30.077744] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 30.082455] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 30.086824] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 30.093025] 00000000: 4e 49 ed 41 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI.A............
[ 30.102346] 00000010: 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................
[ 30.111801] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 30.115989] XFS (sda1): type = 0x9
[ 30.120715] XFS (sda1): len = 20
[ 30.125102] XFS (sda1): first 20 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 30.131331] 00000000: 01 00 30 e7 02 26 04 00 58 6d 78 36 34 00 d3 93 ..0..&..Xmx64...
[ 30.140808] 00000010: 58 92 ef 04 X...

[ 30.149006] XFS (sda1): XXX new log item:
[ 30.154039] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 30.154039] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 30.154041] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 30.167436] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 30.167437] XFS (sda1): size = 312
[ 30.167438] XFS (sda1): bytes = 160
[ 30.180881] XFS (sda1): buf len = 160
[ 30.180882] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 30.180882] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 30.180883] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 30.180884] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 30.180884] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 08 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 30.180885] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 30.180886] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 30.180886] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 30.180887] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 30.180887] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 30.180888] 00000000: 4e 49 ed 41 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI.A............
[ 30.180889] 00000010: 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................
[ 30.180889] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 30.180890] XFS (sda1): type = 0x9
[ 30.180890] XFS (sda1): len = 8
[ 30.180890] XFS (sda1): first 8 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 30.180891] 00000000: 00 00 30 e7 02 26 04 00 ..0..&..

And that looks to be another unlink in the same directory inode, now
empty.


- (then) XFS_LI_INODE.XLOG_REG_TYPE_ILOCAL removed - niovecs from 3 to 2

[ 30.197403] XFS (sda1): XXX required buf size 160 -> 152
[ 30.296091] XFS (sda1): XXX niovecs 3 -> 2

[ 30.296092] XFS (sda1): XXX old log item:
[ 30.296093] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 30.297552] ixgbe 0000:01:00.1 net03: renamed from eth3
[ 30.317524] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 30.317524] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 30.317525] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 30.317525] XFS (sda1): size = 304
[ 30.317526] XFS (sda1): bytes = 160
[ 30.317526] XFS (sda1): buf len = 160
[ 30.317527] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 30.317527] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 30.317528] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 30.317528] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 30.317529] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 08 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 30.317530] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 30.317531] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 30.317531] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 30.317531] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 30.317532] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 30.317533] 00000000: 4e 49 ed 41 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI.A............
[ 30.317533] 00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................
[ 30.317533] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 30.317534] XFS (sda1): type = 0x9
[ 30.317534] XFS (sda1): len = 8
[ 30.317535] XFS (sda1): first 8 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 30.317535] 00000000: 00 00 30 e7 02 26 04 00 ..0..&..

[ 30.317536] XFS (sda1): XXX new log item:
[ 30.317537] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 30.317537] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 30.317538] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 30.317539] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 2
[ 30.317539] XFS (sda1): size = 304
[ 30.317540] XFS (sda1): bytes = 152
[ 30.317540] XFS (sda1): buf len = 152
[ 30.317541] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 30.317541] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 30.317542] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 30.317542] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 30.317543] 00000000: 3b 12 02 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 30.317543] 00000010: 37 ab 20 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 7. .............
[ 30.317544] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 30.317544] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 30.317545] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 30.317545] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 30.317546] 00000000: 4e 49 00 00 02 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 NI..............
[ 30.317546] 00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 ................

And maybe that's an rmdir() triggering an unlink on the same - now
empty - directory.

Does your workload also do 'rm -rf' anywhere because I can't explain
how a concurrent 'cp -a' workload would trigger this behaviour...

- XFS_LI_INODE.XLOG_REG_TYPE_IEXT removed - niovecs from 3 to 2

[ 37.983756] XFS (sda1): XXX required buf size 168 -> 152
[ 37.990253] XFS (sda1): XXX niovecs 3 -> 2

[ 37.996202] XFS (sda1): XXX old log item:
[ 38.001061] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 38.005239] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 38.009885] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x9
[ 38.014330] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 3
[ 38.018764] XFS (sda1): size = 440
[ 38.023100] XFS (sda1): bytes = 168
[ 38.027533] XFS (sda1): buf len = 168
[ 38.032157] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 38.036286] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 38.040796] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 38.045114] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 38.051277] 00000000: 3b 12 03 00 05 00 00 00 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 38.060562] 00000010: cb 91 08 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
[ 38.069853] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 38.073989] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 38.078525] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 38.082871] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 38.089052] 00000000: 4e 49 a4 81 02 02 00 00 62 00 00 00 62 00 00 00 NI......b...b...
[ 38.098331] 00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 42 09 ..............B.
[ 38.107611] XFS (sda1): iovec[2]
[ 38.111754] XFS (sda1): type = 0x7 # XLOG_REG_TYPE_IEXT
[ 38.116285] XFS (sda1): len = 16
[ 38.120608] XFS (sda1): first 16 bytes of iovec[2]:
[ 38.126770] 00000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 11 31 80 00 01 ............1...

[ 38.136054] XFS (sda1): XXX new log item:
[ 38.140878] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 38.145025] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123b
[ 38.149645] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x9
[ 38.154067] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 2
[ 38.158490] XFS (sda1): size = 440
[ 38.162799] XFS (sda1): bytes = 152
[ 38.167202] XFS (sda1): buf len = 152
[ 38.171801] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 38.175911] XFS (sda1): type = 0x5
[ 38.180409] XFS (sda1): len = 56
[ 38.184708] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 38.190852] 00000000: 3b 12 02 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ;...............
[ 38.200115] 00000010: cb 91 08 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
[ 38.209373] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 38.213488] XFS (sda1): type = 0x6
[ 38.217990] XFS (sda1): len = 96
[ 38.222297] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 38.228442] 00000000: 4e 49 a4 81 02 02 00 00 62 00 00 00 62 00 00 00 NI......b...b...
[ 38.237707] 00000010: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 42 09 ..............B.

truncate() or directory entry removal resulting in block to
shortform conversion, maybe? Implies 'rm -rf', too.


- XFS_LI_BUF.XLOG_REG_TYPE_BCHUNK removed - niovecs from 3 to 2

[ 2120.030590] XFS (md0): XXX required buf size 3992 -> 4120
[ 2120.037257] XFS (md0): XXX niovecs 3 -> 2

Logged buffer size went up because a hole was filled. Not a
candidate. Was a directory buffer.


[ 2279.729095] XFS (sda1): XXX required buf size 152 -> 24
[ 2279.735437] XFS (sda1): XXX niovecs 2 -> 1

[ 2279.741360] XFS (sda1): XXX old log item:
[ 2279.746199] XFS (sda1): log item:
[ 2279.750512] XFS (sda1): type = 0x123c
[ 2279.755181] XFS (sda1): flags = 0x8
[ 2279.759644] XFS (sda1): niovecs = 2
[ 2279.764246] XFS (sda1): size = 256
[ 2279.768625] XFS (sda1): bytes = 152
[ 2279.773094] XFS (sda1): buf len = 152
[ 2279.777741] XFS (sda1): iovec[0]
[ 2279.782044] XFS (sda1): type = 0x1
[ 2279.786607] XFS (sda1): len = 24
[ 2279.790980] XFS (sda1): first 24 bytes of iovec[0]:
[ 2279.797290] 00000000: 3c 12 02 00 00 20 08 00 b0 41 f8 08 00 00 00 00 <.... ...A......
[ 2279.806730] 00000010: 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 ........
[ 2279.815287] XFS (sda1): iovec[1]
[ 2279.819604] XFS (sda1): type = 0x2
[ 2279.824408] XFS (sda1): len = 128
[ 2279.828888] XFS (sda1): first 32 bytes of iovec[1]:
[ 2279.835126] 00000000: 42 4d 41 50 00 00 00 09 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff BMAP............
[ 2279.844617] 00000010: ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

Hold on - BMAP?

But the directory buffer above was a XDB3, and so a matching BMAP
btree buffer should have a BMA3 signature. So this is output from
two different filesystems, one formatted with crc=0, the other with
crc=1....

Oh, wait, now that I look at it, all the inodes in the output are v2
inodes. Yet your testing is supposed to be running on CRC+reflink
enabled filesystems, which use v3 inodes. So none of these traces
come from the filesystem under your 'cp -a' workload, right?

Fmeh, it's right there - "XFS (sda1)...". These are all traces from
your root directory, not md0/md1 which are your RAID6 devices
running the 'cp -a' workload. The only trace from md0 was the hole
filling buffer which grew the size of the log vector.

Ok, can you plese filter the output to limit it to just the RAID6
filesystem under test so we get the transaction dumps just before it
hangs? If you want to, create a separate dump output from the root
device to capture the things it is doing, but the first thing is to
isolate the 'cp -a' hang vector...
Okay, the (transaction-) logs for the `cp -a` load to the (empty) raid is above.

When this is understood, you probably also know, whether other transactions might still cause a problem and are of interest. So I suggest to postpone these for now.

Best

Donald

Cheers,

Dave.