[PATCH V2 0/4] nvme: fix two kinds of IO hang from removing NSs

Sagi Grimberg sagi at grimberg.me
Wed Jun 28 00:26:44 PDT 2023


>>> Yeah, but you can't remove the gap at all with start_freeze, that said
>>> the current code has to live with the situation of new mapping change
>>> and old request with old mapping.
>>>
>>> Actually I considered to handle this kind of situation before, one approach
>>> is to reuse the bio steal logic taken in nvme mpath:
>>>
>>> 1) for FS IO, re-submit bios, meantime free request
>>>
>>> 2) for PT request, simply fail it
>>>
>>> It could be a bit violent for 2) even though REQ_FAILFAST_DRIVER is
>>> always set for PT request, but not see any better approach for handling
>>> PT request.
>>
>> I think that's acceptable for PT requests, or any request that doesn't
>> have a bio. I tried something similiar a while back that was almost
>> working, but I neither never posted it, or it's in that window when
>> infradead lost all the emails. :(
> 
> If you are fine to fail PT request, I'd suggest to handle the
> problem in the following way:
> 
> 1) moving freeze into reset
> 
> 2) during resetting
> 
> - freeze NS queues
> - unquiesce NS queues
> - nvme_wait_freeze()
> - update_nr_hw_queues
> - unfreeze NS queues
> 
> 3) meantime changes driver's ->queue_rq() in case that ctrl state is NVME_CTRL_CONNECTING,
> 
> - if the request is FS IO with data, re-submit all bios of this request,
>    and free the request
> 
> - otherwise, fail the request
> 
> With this way, not only freeze is paired with unfreeze. More
> importantly, it becomes not possible to trigger new timeout during
> handling NVME_CTRL_CONNECTING, then fallback to ctrl removal can
> be avoided.
> 
> Any comment on this approach?

As aid, for tcp/rdma I agree with this approach. No need to worry
about the non-mpath case, I don't think it is really used anyway
nowadays.



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