Hi Here I'm sending a patch for this bug. BTW. I found several other bugs in bcache when testing this. 1) make-bcache and the other tools do not perform endian conversion - consequently bcache doesn't work on big-endian machines. 2) bcache cannot be compiled on newer gcc because of inline keyword. Note that in GNU C, the inline keyword is just a hint that doesn't change correntness or behavior of a program. However, according to ANSI C, the inline keywork changes meaning of a program - GCC recently switched to ANSI C by default and so the code doesn't compile. This is a patch: --- bcache-tools.orig/bcache.c +++ bcache-tools/bcache.c @@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ static const uint64_t crc_table[256] = { 0x9AFCE626CE85B507ULL }; -inline uint64_t crc64(const void *_data, size_t len) +uint64_t crc64(const void *_data, size_t len) { uint64_t crc = 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFULL; const unsigned char *data = _data; 3) dm-crypt returns large bios with -EIO and bcache responds by attempting to submit the bios again and again (which results in the reported loop). The patch below fixes dm-crypt to not return errors, however you should also fix bcache to handle errors gracefully (i.e. stop using the device on I/O error, and don't submit the bios over and over again). Mikulas On Sun, 22 May 2016, James Johnston wrote: > > On Fri, 20 May 2016, James Johnston wrote: > > > > > > On Mon, 16 May 2016, Tim Small wrote: > > > > > > > > > On 08/05/16 19:39, James Johnston wrote: > > > > > > I've run into a problem where the bcache writeback cache can't be flushed to > > > > > > disk when the backing device is a LUKS / dm-crypt device and the cache set has > > > > > > a non-default bucket size. Basically, only a few megabytes will be flushed to > > > > > > disk, and then it gets stuck. Stuck means that the bcache writeback task > > > > > > thrashes the disk by constantly reading hundreds of MB/second from the cache set > > > > > > in an infinite loop, while not actually progressing (dirty_data never decreases > > > > > > beyond a certain point). > > > > > > > > > > > [...] > > > > > > > > > > > The situation is basically unrecoverable as far as I can tell: if you attempt > > > > > > to detach the cache set then the cache set disk gets thrashed extra-hard > > > > > > forever, and it's impossible to actually get the cache set detached. The only > > > > > > solution seems to be to back up the data and destroy the volume... > > > > > > > > > > You can boot an older kernel to flush the device without destroying it > > > > > (I'm guessing that's because older kernels split down the big requests > > > > > which are failing on the 4.4 kernel). Once flushed you could put the > > > > > cache into writethrough mode, or use a smaller bucket size. > > > > > > > > Indeed, can someone test 4.1.y and see if the problem persists with a 2M > > > > bucket size? (If someone has already tested 4.1, then appologies as I've > > > > not yet seen that report.) > > > > > > > > If 4.1 works, then I think a bisect is in order. Such a bisect would at > > > > least highlight the problem and might indicate a (hopefully trivial) fix. > > > > > > To help narrow this down, I tested the following generic pre-compiled mainline kernels > > > on Ubuntu 15.10: > > > > > > * WORKS: http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/v4.3.6-wily/ > > > * DOES NOT WORK: http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/v4.4-rc1+cod1-wily/ > > > > > > I also tried the default & latest distribution-provided 4.2 kernel. It worked. > > > This one also worked: > > > > > > * WORKS: http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-ppa/mainline/v4.2.8-wily/ > > > > > > So it seems to me that it is a regression from 4.3.6 kernel to any 4.4 kernel. That > > > should help save time with bisection... > > > > Below is the patchlist for md and block that might help with a place to > > start. Are there any other places in the Linux tree where we should watch > > for changes? > > > > I'm wondering if it might be in dm-4.4-changes since this is dm-crypt > > related, but it could be ac322de which was quite large. > > > > James or Tim, > > > > Can you try building ac322de? If that produces the problem, then there > > are only 3 more to try (unless this was actually a problem in 4.3 which > > was fixed in 4.3.y, but hopefully that isn't so). > > > > ccf21b6 is probably the next to test to rule out neil's big md patch, > > which Linus abreviated in the commit log so it must be quite long. OTOH, > > if dm-4.4-changes works, then I'm not sure what commit might produce the > > problem because the rest are not obviously relevant to the issue that are > > more recent. > > So I decided to go ahead and bisect it today. Looks like the bad commit is > this one. The commit prior flushed the bcache writeback cache without > incident; this one does not and I guess caused this bcache regression. > (FWIW ac322de came up during bisection, and tested good.) > > johnstonj@kernel-build:~/linux$ git bisect bad > dbba42d8a9ebddcc1c1412e8457f79f3cb6ef6e7 is the first bad commit > commit dbba42d8a9ebddcc1c1412e8457f79f3cb6ef6e7 > Author: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Wed Oct 21 16:34:20 2015 -0400 > > dm: eliminate unused "bioset" process for each bio-based DM device > > Commit 54efd50bfd873e2dbf784e0b21a8027ba4299a3e ("block: make > generic_make_request handle arbitrarily sized bios") makes it possible > for block devices to process large bios. In doing so that commit > allocates a new queue->bio_split bioset for each block device, this > bioset is used for allocating bios when the driver needs to split large > bios. > > Each bioset allocates a workqueue process, thus the above commit > increases the number of processes allocated per block device. > > DM doesn't need the queue->bio_split bioset, thus we can deallocate it. > This reduces the number of allocated processes per bio-based DM device > from 3 to 2. Also remove the call to blk_queue_split(), it is not > needed because DM does its own splitting. > > Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@xxxxxxxxxx> > > The patch for this commit is very brief; reproduced here: > > diff --git a/drivers/md/dm.c b/drivers/md/dm.c > index 9555843..64b50b7 100644 > --- a/drivers/md/dm.c > +++ b/drivers/md/dm.c > @@ -1763,8 +1763,6 @@ static void dm_make_request(struct request_queue *q, struct bio *bio) > > map = dm_get_live_table(md, &srcu_idx); > > - blk_queue_split(q, &bio, q->bio_split); > - > generic_start_io_acct(rw, bio_sectors(bio), &dm_disk(md)->part0); > > /* if we're suspended, we have to queue this io for later */ > @@ -2792,6 +2790,12 @@ int dm_setup_md_queue(struct mapped_device *md) > case DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED: > dm_init_old_md_queue(md); > blk_queue_make_request(md->queue, dm_make_request); > + /* > + * DM handles splitting bios as needed. Free the bio_split bioset > + * since it won't be used (saves 1 process per bio-based DM device). > + */ > + bioset_free(md->queue->bio_split); > + md->queue->bio_split = NULL; > break; > } > > Here is the bisect log: > > johnstonj@kernel-build:~/linux$ git bisect log > git bisect start > # good: [6a13feb9c82803e2b815eca72fa7a9f5561d7861] Linux 4.3 > git bisect good 6a13feb9c82803e2b815eca72fa7a9f5561d7861 > # bad: [8005c49d9aea74d382f474ce11afbbc7d7130bec] Linux 4.4-rc1 > git bisect bad 8005c49d9aea74d382f474ce11afbbc7d7130bec > # bad: [118c216e16c5ccb028cd03a0dcd56d17a07ff8d7] Merge tag 'staging-4.4-rc1' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/staging > git bisect bad 118c216e16c5ccb028cd03a0dcd56d17a07ff8d7 > # good: [e627078a0cbdc0c391efeb5a2c4eb287328fd633] Merge branch 'for-linus' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/s390/linux > git bisect good e627078a0cbdc0c391efeb5a2c4eb287328fd633 > # good: [c17c6da659571a115c7b4983da6c6ac464317c34] staging: wilc1000: rename pfScanResult of struct scan_attr > git bisect good c17c6da659571a115c7b4983da6c6ac464317c34 > # good: [7bdb7d554e0e433b92b63f3472523cc3067f8ab4] Staging: rtl8192u: ieee80211: corrected indent > git bisect good 7bdb7d554e0e433b92b63f3472523cc3067f8ab4 > # good: [ac322de6bf5416cb145b58599297b8be73cd86ac] Merge tag 'md/4.4' of git://neil.brown.name/md > git bisect good ac322de6bf5416cb145b58599297b8be73cd86ac > # good: [a4d8e93c3182a54d8d21a4d1cec6538ae1be9e16] Merge tag 'usb-for-v4.4' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/balbi/usb into usb-next > git bisect good a4d8e93c3182a54d8d21a4d1cec6538ae1be9e16 > # good: [4f56f3fdca43c9a18339b6e0c3b1aa2f57f6d0b0] serial: 8250: Tolerate clock variance for max baud rate > git bisect good 4f56f3fdca43c9a18339b6e0c3b1aa2f57f6d0b0 > # good: [e052c6d15c61cc4caff2f06cbca72b183da9f15e] tty: Use unbound workqueue for all input workers > git bisect good e052c6d15c61cc4caff2f06cbca72b183da9f15e > # good: [b9ca0c948c921e960006aaf319a29c004917cdf6] uwb: neh: Use setup_timer > git bisect good b9ca0c948c921e960006aaf319a29c004917cdf6 > # bad: [aad9ae4550755edc020b5c511a8b54f0104b2f47] dm switch: simplify conditional in alloc_region_table() > git bisect bad aad9ae4550755edc020b5c511a8b54f0104b2f47 > # good: [a3d939ae7b5f82688a6d3450f95286eaea338328] dm: convert ffs to __ffs > git bisect good a3d939ae7b5f82688a6d3450f95286eaea338328 > # bad: [00272c854ee17b804ce81ef706f611dac17f4f89] dm linear: remove redundant target name from error messages > git bisect bad 00272c854ee17b804ce81ef706f611dac17f4f89 > # bad: [4c7da06f5a780bbf44ebd7547789e48536d0a823] dm persistent data: eliminate unnecessary return values > git bisect bad 4c7da06f5a780bbf44ebd7547789e48536d0a823 > # bad: [dbba42d8a9ebddcc1c1412e8457f79f3cb6ef6e7] dm: eliminate unused "bioset" process for each bio-based DM device > git bisect bad dbba42d8a9ebddcc1c1412e8457f79f3cb6ef6e7 > # first bad commit: [dbba42d8a9ebddcc1c1412e8457f79f3cb6ef6e7] dm: eliminate unused "bioset" process for each bio-based DM device > > Commands used for testing: > > # Make cache set > make-bcache --bucket 2M -C /dev/sdb > # Set up backing device crypto > cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/sdc > cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/sdc backCrypt > # Make backing device & enable writeback > make-bcache -B /dev/mapper/backCrypt > bcache-super-show /dev/sdb | grep cset.uuid | cut -f 3 > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/attach > echo writeback > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/cache_mode > > # KILL SEQUENCE > > cd /sys/block/bcache0/bcache > echo 0 > sequential_cutoff > # Verify that the cache is attached (i.e. does not say "no cache") > cat state > dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/bcache0 bs=1M count=250 > cat dirty_data > cat state > # Next line causes severe disk thrashing and failure to flush writeback cache > # on bad commits. > echo 1 > detach > cat dirty_data > cat state > > Hope this provides some insight into the problem... > > James dm-crypt: Fix error with too large bios When dm-crypt processes writes, it allocates a new bio in the function crypt_alloc_buffer. The bio is allocated from a bio set and it can have at most BIO_MAX_PAGES vector entries, however the incoming bio can be larger if it was allocated by other means. For example, bcache creates bios larger than BIO_MAX_PAGES. If the incoming bio is larger, bio_alloc_bioset fails and error is returned. To avoid the error, we test for too large bio in the function crypt_map and dm_accept_partial_bio to split the bio. dm_accept_partial_bio trims the current bio to the desired size and requests that the device mapper core sends another bio with the rest of the data. Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx> Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx # v3.16+ Index: linux-4.6/drivers/md/dm-crypt.c =================================================================== --- linux-4.6.orig/drivers/md/dm-crypt.c +++ linux-4.6/drivers/md/dm-crypt.c @@ -2137,6 +2137,10 @@ static int crypt_map(struct dm_target *t struct dm_crypt_io *io; struct crypt_config *cc = ti->private; + if (unlikely(bio->bi_iter.bi_size > BIO_MAX_SIZE) && + (bio->bi_rw & (REQ_FLUSH | REQ_DISCARD | REQ_WRITE)) == REQ_WRITE) + dm_accept_partial_bio(bio, BIO_MAX_SIZE >> SECTOR_SHIFT); + /* * If bio is REQ_FLUSH or REQ_DISCARD, just bypass crypt queues. * - for REQ_FLUSH device-mapper core ensures that no IO is in-flight -- dm-devel mailing list dm-devel@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/dm-devel