On Wed, Nov 01, 2023 at 03:14:22AM +0100, Marek Marczykowski-Górecki wrote: > On Wed, Nov 01, 2023 at 09:27:24AM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 31, 2023 at 11:42 PM Marek Marczykowski-Górecki > > <marmarek@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Tue, Oct 31, 2023 at 03:01:36PM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > > > > On Tue 31-10-23 04:48:44, Marek Marczykowski-Górecki wrote: > > > > > Then tried: > > > > > - PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER=4, order=4 - cannot reproduce, > > > > > - PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER=4, order=5 - cannot reproduce, > > > > > - PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER=4, order=6 - freeze rather quickly > > > > > > > > > > I've retried the PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER=4,order=5 case several times > > > > > and I can't reproduce the issue there. I'm confused... > > > > > > > > And this kind of confirms that allocations > PAGE_ALLOC_COSTLY_ORDER > > > > causing hangs is most likely just a coincidence. Rather something either in > > > > the block layer or in the storage driver has problems with handling bios > > > > with sufficiently high order pages attached. This is going to be a bit > > > > painful to debug I'm afraid. How long does it take for you trigger the > > > > hang? I'm asking to get rough estimate how heavy tracing we can afford so > > > > that we don't overwhelm the system... > > > > > > Sometimes it freezes just after logging in, but in worst case it takes > > > me about 10min of more or less `tar xz` + `dd`. > > > > blk-mq debugfs is usually helpful for hang issue in block layer or > > underlying drivers: > > > > (cd /sys/kernel/debug/block && find . -type f -exec grep -aH . {} \;) > > > > BTW, you can just collect logs of the exact disks if you know what > > are behind dm-crypt, > > which can be figured out by `lsblk`, and it has to be collected after > > the hang is triggered. > > dm-crypt lives on the nvme disk, this is what I collected when it > hanged: > ... > nvme0n1/hctx4/cpu4/default_rq_list:000000000d41998f {.op=READ, .cmd_flags=, .rq_flags=IO_STAT, .state=idle, .tag=65, .internal_tag=-1} > nvme0n1/hctx4/cpu4/default_rq_list:00000000d0d04ed2 {.op=READ, .cmd_flags=, .rq_flags=IO_STAT, .state=idle, .tag=70, .internal_tag=-1} Two requests stays in sw queue, but not related with this issue. > nvme0n1/hctx4/type:default > nvme0n1/hctx4/dispatch_busy:9 non-zero dispatch_busy means BLK_STS_RESOURCE is returned from nvme_queue_rq() recently and mostly. > nvme0n1/hctx4/active:0 > nvme0n1/hctx4/run:20290468 ... > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:nr_tags=1023 > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:nr_reserved_tags=0 > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:active_queues=0 > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:bitmap_tags: > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:depth=1023 > nvme0n1/hctx4/tags:busy=3 Just three requests in-flight, two are in sw queue, another is in hctx->dispatch. ... > nvme0n1/hctx4/dispatch:00000000b335fa89 {.op=WRITE, .cmd_flags=NOMERGE, .rq_flags=DONTPREP|IO_STAT, .state=idle, .tag=78, .internal_tag=-1} > nvme0n1/hctx4/flags:alloc_policy=FIFO SHOULD_MERGE > nvme0n1/hctx4/state:SCHED_RESTART The request staying in hctx->dispatch can't move on, and nvme_queue_rq() returns -BLK_STS_RESOURCE constantly, and you can verify with the following bpftrace when the hang is triggered: bpftrace -e 'kretfunc:nvme_queue_rq { @[retval, kstack]=count() }' It is very likely that memory allocation inside nvme_queue_rq() can't be done successfully, then blk-mq just have to retry by calling nvme_queue_rq() on the above request. Thanks, Ming