On Thu, Sep 23, 2021 at 06:21:19PM -0700, Jane Chu wrote: > > On 9/23/2021 6:18 PM, Dan Williams wrote: > > On Thu, Sep 23, 2021 at 3:54 PM Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 10:42:11PM -0700, Dan Williams wrote: > > > > On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 7:43 PM Dan Williams <dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 6:42 PM Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > [..] > > > > > > Hence this discussion leads me to conclude that fallocate() simply > > > > > > isn't the right interface to clear storage hardware poison state and > > > > > > it's much simpler for everyone - kernel and userspace - to provide a > > > > > > pwritev2(RWF_CLEAR_HWERROR) flag to directly instruct the IO path to > > > > > > clear hardware error state before issuing this user write to the > > > > > > hardware. > > > > > > > > > > That flag would slot in nicely in dax_iomap_iter() as the gate for > > > > > whether dax_direct_access() should allow mapping over error ranges, > > > > > and then as a flag to dax_copy_from_iter() to indicate that it should > > > > > compare the incoming write to known poison and clear it before > > > > > proceeding. > > > > > > > > > > I like the distinction, because there's a chance the application did > > > > > not know that the page had experienced data loss and might want the > > > > > error behavior. The other service the driver could offer with this > > > > > flag is to do a precise check of the incoming write to make sure it > > > > > overlaps known poison and then repair the entire page. Repairing whole > > > > > pages makes for a cleaner implementation of the code that tries to > > > > > keep poison out of the CPU speculation path, {set,clear}_mce_nospec(). > > > > > > > > This flag could also be useful for preadv2() as there is currently no > > > > way to read the good data in a PMEM page with poison via DAX. So the > > > > flag would tell dax_direct_access() to again proceed in the face of > > > > errors, but then the driver's dax_copy_to_iter() operation could > > > > either read up to the precise byte offset of the error in the page, or > > > > autoreplace error data with zero's to try to maximize data recovery. > > > > > > Yes, it could. I like the idea - say RWF_IGNORE_HWERROR - to read > > > everything that can be read from the bad range because it's the > > > other half of the problem RWF_RESET_HWERROR is trying to address. > > > That is, the operation we want to perform on a range with an error > > > state is -data recovery-, not "reinitialisation". Data recovery > > > requires two steps: > > > > > > - "try to recover the data from the bad storage"; and > > > - "reinitialise the data and clear the error state" > > > > > > These naturally map to read() and write() operations, not > > > fallocate(). With RWF flags they become explicit data recovery > > > operations, unlike fallocate() which needs to imply that "writing > > > zeroes" == "reset hardware error state". While that reset method > > > may be true for a specific pmem hardware implementation it is not a > > > requirement for all storage hardware. It's most definitely not a > > > requirement for future storage hardware, either. > > > > > > It also means that applications have no choice in what data they can > > > use to reinitialise the damaged range with because fallocate() only > > > supports writing zeroes. If we've recovered data via a read() as you > > > suggest we could, then we can rebuild the data from other redundant > > > information and immediately write that back to the storage, hence > > > repairing the fault. > > > > > > That, in turn, allows the filesystem to turn the RWF_RESET_HWERROR > > > write into an exclusive operation and hence allow the > > > reinitialisation with the recovered/repaired state to run atomically > > > w.r.t. all other filesystem operations. i.e. the reset write > > > completes the recovery operation instead of requiring separate > > > "reset" and "write recovered data into zeroed range" steps that > > > cannot be executed atomically by userspace... > > > > /me nods > > > > Jane, want to take a run at patches for this ^^^? > > > > Sure, I'll give it a try. > > Thank you all for the discussions! Cool, thank you! --D > > -jane > >