Re: [PATCHSET block#for-2.6.36-post] block: replace barrier with sequenced flush

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Hello, Christoph.

On 08/14/2010 12:36 PM, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 04:51:17PM +0200, Tejun Heo wrote:
>> Do you want to change the whole thing in a single commit?  That would
>> be a pretty big invasive patch touching multiple subsystems.
> 
> We can just stop draining in the block layer in the first patch, then
> stop doing the stuff in md/dm/etc in the following and then do the
> final renaming patches.  It would still be less patches then now, but
> keep things working through the whole transition, which would really
> help biseting any problems.

I'm not really convinced that would help much.  If bisecting can point
to the conversion as the culprit for whatever kind of failure,
wouldn't that be enough?  No matter what we do the conversion will be
a single step thing.  If we make the filesystems enforce the ordering
first and then relax ordering in the block layer, bisection would
still just point at the later patch.  The same goes for md/dm, the
best we can find out would be whether the conversion is correct or not
anyway.

I'm not against restructuring the patchset if it makes more sense but
it just feels like it would be a bit pointless effort (and one which
would require much tighter coordination among different trees) at this
point.  Am I missing something?

>> +			if (req->cmd_flags & REQ_FUA)
>> +				vbr->out_hdr.type |= VIRTIO_BLK_T_FUA;
> 
> I'd suggest not adding FUA support to virtio yet.  Just using the flush
> feature gives you a fully working barrier implementation.
> 
> Eventually we might want to add a flag in the block queue to send
> REQ_FLUSH|REQ_FUA request through to virtio directly so that we can
> avoid separate pre- and post flushes, but I really want to benchmark if
> it makes an impact on real life setups first.

I wrote this in the other mail but I think it would make difference if
the backend storag is md/dm especially if it's shared by multiple VMs.
It cuts down on one array wide cache flush.

>> Index: block/drivers/md/linear.c
>> ===================================================================
>> --- block.orig/drivers/md/linear.c
>> +++ block/drivers/md/linear.c
>> @@ -294,8 +294,8 @@ static int linear_make_request (mddev_t
>>  	dev_info_t *tmp_dev;
>>  	sector_t start_sector;
>>
>> -	if (unlikely(bio->bi_rw & REQ_HARDBARRIER)) {
>> -		md_barrier_request(mddev, bio);
>> +	if (unlikely(bio->bi_rw & REQ_FLUSH)) {
>> +		md_flush_request(mddev, bio);
> 
> We only need the special md_flush_request handling for
> empty REQ_FLUSH requests.  REQ_WRITE | REQ_FLUSH just need the
> flag propagated to the underlying devices.

Hmm, not really, the WRITE should happen after all the data in cache
are committed to NV media, meaning that empty FLUSH should already
have finished by the time the WRITE starts.

>> +static void md_end_flush(struct bio *bio, int err)
>>  {
>>  	mdk_rdev_t *rdev = bio->bi_private;
>>  	mddev_t *mddev = rdev->mddev;
>>
>>  	rdev_dec_pending(rdev, mddev);
>>
>>  	if (atomic_dec_and_test(&mddev->flush_pending)) {
>> +		/* The pre-request flush has finished */
>> +		schedule_work(&mddev->flush_work);
> 
> Once we only handle empty barriers here we can directly call bio_endio
> instead of first scheduling a work queue.Once we only handle empty
> barriers here we can directly call bio_endio and the super wakeup
> instead of first scheduling a work queue.

Yeap, right.  That would be a nice optimization.

>>  	while ((bio = bio_list_pop(writes))) {
>> -		if (unlikely(bio_empty_barrier(bio))) {
>> +		if ((bio->bi_rw & REQ_FLUSH) && !bio_has_data(bio)) {
> 
> I kept bio_empty_barrier as bio_empty_flush, which actually is a quite
> useful macro for the bio based drivers.

Hmm... maybe.  The reason why I removed bio_empty_flush() was that
except for the front-most sequencer (block layer for all the request
based ones and the front-most make_request for bio based ones), it
doesn't make sense to see REQ_FLUSH + data bios.  They should be
sequenced at the front-most stage anyway, so I didn't have much use
for them.  Those code paths couldn't deal with REQ_FLUSH + data bios
anyway.

>> @@ -621,7 +621,7 @@ static void dec_pending(struct dm_io *io
>>  			 */
>>  			spin_lock_irqsave(&md->deferred_lock, flags);
>>  			if (__noflush_suspending(md)) {
>> -				if (!(io->bio->bi_rw & REQ_HARDBARRIER))
>> +				if (!(io->bio->bi_rw & REQ_FLUSH))
> 
> I suspect we don't actually need to special case flushes here anymore.

Oh, I'm not sure about this part at all.  I'll ask Mike.

>> @@ -633,14 +633,14 @@ static void dec_pending(struct dm_io *io
>>  		io_error = io->error;
>>  		bio = io->bio;
>>
>> -		if (bio->bi_rw & REQ_HARDBARRIER) {
>> +		if (bio->bi_rw & REQ_FLUSH) {
>>  			/*
>> -			 * There can be just one barrier request so we use
>> +			 * There can be just one flush request so we use
>>  			 * a per-device variable for error reporting.
>>  			 * Note that you can't touch the bio after end_io_acct
>>  			 */
>> -			if (!md->barrier_error && io_error != -EOPNOTSUPP)
>> -				md->barrier_error = io_error;
>> +			if (!md->flush_error)
>> +				md->flush_error = io_error;
> 
> And we certainly do not need any special casing here.  See my patch.

I wasn't sure about that part.  You removed store_flush_error(), but
DM_ENDIO_REQUEUE should still have higher priority than other
failures, no?

>>  {
>>  	int rw = rq_data_dir(clone);
>>  	int run_queue = 1;
>> -	bool is_barrier = clone->cmd_flags & REQ_HARDBARRIER;
>> +	bool is_flush = clone->cmd_flags & REQ_FLUSH;
>>  	struct dm_rq_target_io *tio = clone->end_io_data;
>>  	struct mapped_device *md = tio->md;
>>  	struct request *rq = tio->orig;
>>
>> -	if (rq->cmd_type == REQ_TYPE_BLOCK_PC && !is_barrier) {
>> +	if (rq->cmd_type == REQ_TYPE_BLOCK_PC && !is_flush) {
> 
> We never send flush requests as REQ_TYPE_BLOCK_PC anymore, so no need
> for the second half of this conditional.

I see.

>> +	if (!is_flush)
>> +		blk_end_request_all(rq, error);
>> +	else {
>>  		if (unlikely(error))
>> -			store_barrier_error(md, error);
>> +			store_flush_error(md, error);
>>  		run_queue = 0;
>> -	} else
>> -		blk_end_request_all(rq, error);
>> +	}
> 
> Flush requests can now be completed normally.

The same question as before.  I think we still need to prioritize
DM_ENDIO_REQUEUE failures.

>> @@ -1417,11 +1419,11 @@ static int _dm_request(struct request_qu
>>  	part_stat_unlock();
>>
>>  	/*
>> -	 * If we're suspended or the thread is processing barriers
>> +	 * If we're suspended or the thread is processing flushes
>>  	 * we have to queue this io for later.
>>  	 */
>>  	if (unlikely(test_bit(DMF_QUEUE_IO_TO_THREAD, &md->flags)) ||
>> -	    unlikely(bio->bi_rw & REQ_HARDBARRIER)) {
>> +	    (bio->bi_rw & REQ_FLUSH)) {
>>  		up_read(&md->io_lock);
> 
> AFAICS this is only needed for the old barrier code, no need for this
> for pure flushes.

I'll ask Mike.

>> @@ -1464,10 +1466,7 @@ static int dm_request(struct request_que
>>
>>  static bool dm_rq_is_flush_request(struct request *rq)
>>  {
>> -	if (rq->cmd_flags & REQ_FLUSH)
>> -		return true;
>> -	else
>> -		return false;
>> +	return rq->cmd_flags & REQ_FLUSH;
>>  }
> 
> It's probably worth just killing this wrapper.

Yeah, probably.  It was an accidental edit to begin with and I left
this part out in the new patch.

>> +static void process_flush(struct mapped_device *md, struct bio *bio)
>>  {
>> +	md->flush_error = 0;
>> +
>> +	/* handle REQ_FLUSH */
>>  	dm_wait_for_completion(md, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
>>
>> -	bio_init(&md->barrier_bio);
>> -	md->barrier_bio.bi_bdev = md->bdev;
>> -	md->barrier_bio.bi_rw = WRITE_BARRIER;
>> -	__split_and_process_bio(md, &md->barrier_bio);
>> +	bio_init(&md->flush_bio);
>> +	md->flush_bio.bi_bdev = md->bdev;
>> +	md->flush_bio.bi_rw = WRITE_FLUSH;
>> +	__split_and_process_bio(md, &md->flush_bio);
> 
> There's not need to use a separate flush_bio here.
> __split_and_process_bio does the right thing for empty REQ_FLUSH
> requests.  See my patch for how to do this differenty.  And yeah,
> my version has been tested.

But how do you make sure REQ_FLUSHes for preflush finish before
starting the write?

Thanks.

-- 
tejun

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