We ran into an issue where a production workload would randomly grind to a halt and not continue until the pending IO had timed out. This turned out to be a complicated interaction between queue freezing and polled IO: 1) You have an application that does polled IO. At any point in time, there may be polled IO pending. 2) You have a monitoring application that issues a passthrough command, which is marked with side effects such that it needs to freeze the queue. 3) Passthrough command is started, which calls blk_freeze_queue_start() on the device. At this point the queue is marked frozen, and any attempt to enter the queue will fail (for non-blocking) or block. 4) Now the driver calls blk_mq_freeze_queue_wait(), which will return when the queue is quiesced and pending IO has completed. 5) The pending IO is polled IO, but any attempt to poll IO through the normal iocb_bio_iopoll() -> bio_poll() will fail when it gets to bio_queue_enter() as the queue is frozen. Rather than poll and complete IO, the polling threads will sit in a tight loop attempting to poll, but failing to enter the queue to do so. The end result is that progress for either application will be stalled until all pending polled IO has timed out. This causes obvious huge latency issues for the application doing polled IO, but also long delays for passthrough command. Fix this by treating queue enter for polled IO just like we do for timeouts. This allows quick quiesce of the queue as we still poll and complete this IO, while still disallowing queueing up new IO. Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> --- diff --git a/block/blk-core.c b/block/blk-core.c index 6fa82291210e..ccf9a7683a3c 100644 --- a/block/blk-core.c +++ b/block/blk-core.c @@ -869,7 +869,16 @@ int bio_poll(struct bio *bio, struct io_comp_batch *iob, unsigned int flags) */ blk_flush_plug(current->plug, false); - if (bio_queue_enter(bio)) + /* + * We need to be able to enter a frozen queue, similar to how + * timeouts also need to do that. If that is blocked, then we can + * have pending IO when a queue freeze is started, and then the + * wait for the freeze to finish will wait for polled requests to + * timeout as the poller is preventer from entering the queue and + * completing them. As long as we prevent new IO from being queued, + * that should be all that matters. + */ + if (!percpu_ref_tryget(&q->q_usage_counter)) return 0; if (queue_is_mq(q)) { ret = blk_mq_poll(q, cookie, iob, flags); -- Jens Axboe