On 3/18/2019 6:06 PM, Ming Lei wrote:
On Mon, Mar 18, 2019 at 10:37:08AM -0700, James Smart wrote:
On 3/17/2019 8:29 PM, Ming Lei wrote:
In NVMe's error handler, follows the typical steps for tearing down
hardware:
1) stop blk_mq hw queues
2) stop the real hw queues
3) cancel in-flight requests via
blk_mq_tagset_busy_iter(tags, cancel_request, ...)
cancel_request():
mark the request as abort
blk_mq_complete_request(req);
4) destroy real hw queues
However, there may be race between #3 and #4, because blk_mq_complete_request()
actually completes the request asynchronously.
This patch introduces blk_mq_complete_request_sync() for fixing the
above race.
This won't help FC at all. Inherently, the "completion" has to be
asynchronous as line traffic may be required.
e.g. FC doesn't use nvme_complete_request() in the iterator routine.
Yeah, I saw the FC code, it is supposed to address the asynchronous
completion of blk_mq_complete_request() in error handler.
Also I think it is always the correct thing to abort requests
synchronously in error handler, isn't it?
not sure I fully follow you, but if you're asking shouldn't it always be
synchronous - why would that be the case ? I really don't want a
blocking thread that could block for several seconds on a single io to
complete. The controller has changed state and the queues frozen which
should have been sufficient - but bottom-end io can still complete at
any time.
-- james