Re: [dm-devel] [PATCH 0/6] dax poison recovery with RWF_RECOVERY_DATA flag

From: Dan Williams
Date: Thu Nov 04 2021 - 02:21:54 EST


On Wed, Nov 3, 2021 at 11:10 AM Jane Chu <jane.chu@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On 11/1/2021 11:18 PM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 27, 2021 at 05:24:51PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> >> ...so would you happen to know if anyone's working on solving this
> >> problem for us by putting the memory controller in charge of dealing
> >> with media errors?
> >
> > The only one who could know is Intel..
> >
> >> The trouble is, we really /do/ want to be able to (re)write the failed
> >> area, and we probably want to try to read whatever we can. Those are
> >> reads and writes, not {pre,f}allocation activities. This is where Dave
> >> and I arrived at a month ago.
> >>
> >> Unless you'd be ok with a second IO path for recovery where we're
> >> allowed to be slow? That would probably have the same user interface
> >> flag, just a different path into the pmem driver.
> >
> > Which is fine with me. If you look at the API here we do have the
> > RWF_ API, which them maps to the IOMAP API, which maps to the DAX_
> > API which then gets special casing over three methods.
> >
> > And while Pavel pointed out that he and Jens are now optimizing for
> > single branches like this. I think this actually is silly and it is
> > not my point.
> >
> > The point is that the DAX in-kernel API is a mess, and before we make
> > it even worse we need to sort it first. What is directly relevant
> > here is that the copy_from_iter and copy_to_iter APIs do not make
> > sense. Most of the DAX API is based around getting a memory mapping
> > using ->direct_access, it is just the read/write path which is a slow
> > path that actually uses this. I have a very WIP patch series to try
> > to sort this out here:
> >
> > http://git.infradead.org/users/hch/misc.git/shortlog/refs/heads/dax-devirtualize
> >
> > But back to this series. The basic DAX model is that the callers gets a
> > memory mapping an just works on that, maybe calling a sync after a write
> > in a few cases. So any kind of recovery really needs to be able to
> > work with that model as going forward the copy_to/from_iter path will
> > be used less and less. i.e. file systems can and should use
> > direct_access directly instead of using the block layer implementation
> > in the pmem driver. As an example the dm-writecache driver, the pending
> > bcache nvdimm support and the (horribly and out of tree) nova file systems
> > won't even use this path. We need to find a way to support recovery
> > for them. And overloading it over the read/write path which is not
> > the main path for DAX, but the absolutely fast path for 99% of the
> > kernel users is a horrible idea.
> >
> > So how can we work around the horrible nvdimm design for data recovery
> > in a way that:
> >
> > a) actually works with the intended direct memory map use case
> > b) doesn't really affect the normal kernel too much
> >
> > ?
> >
>
> This is clearer, I've looked at your 'dax-devirtualize' patch which
> removes pmem_copy_to/from_iter, and as you mentioned before,
> a separate API for poison-clearing is needed. So how about I go ahead
> rebase my earlier patch
>
> https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210914233132.3680546-2-jane.chu@xxxxxxxxxx/
> on 'dax-devirtualize', provide dm support for clear-poison?
> That way, the non-dax 99% of the pwrite use-cases aren't impacted at all
> and we resolve the urgent pmem poison-clearing issue?
>
> Dan, are you okay with this? I am getting pressure from our customers
> who are basically stuck at the moment.

The concern I have with dax_clear_poison() is that it precludes atomic
error clearing. Also, as Boris and I discussed, poisoned pages should
be marked NP (not present) rather than UC (uncacheable) [1]. With
those 2 properties combined I think that wants a custom pmem fault
handler that knows how to carefully write to pmem pages with poison
present, rather than an additional explicit dax-operation. That also
meets Christoph's requirement of "works with the intended direct
memory map use case".

[1]: https://lore.kernel.org/r/CAPcyv4hrXPb1tASBZUg-GgdVs0OOFKXMXLiHmktg_kFi7YBMyQ@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx