On Wed, May 03, 2023 at 08:33:23AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Tue, May 02, 2023 at 08:35:16AM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote: > > On Tue, May 02, 2023 at 11:35:57AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote: > > > On Tue, May 02, 2023 at 08:57:32AM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > > > On Mon, May 01, 2023 at 06:47:44AM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > > > > On Sat, Apr 29, 2023 at 01:10:49PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote: > > > > > > Not sure if it is needed for non s_bdev > > > > > > > > > > So you don't want to work this at all for btrfs? Or the XFS log device, > > > > > or .. > > > > > > > > Basically FS can provide one generic API of shutdown_filesystem() which > > > > shutdown FS generically, meantime calls each fs's ->shutdown() for > > > > dealing with fs specific shutdown. > > > > > > > > If there isn't superblock attached for one bdev, can you explain a bit what > > > > filesystem code can do? Same with block layer bdev. > > > > > > > > The current bio->bi_status together disk_live()(maybe bdev_live() is > > > > needed) should be enough for FS code to handle non s_bdev. > > > > > > maybe necessary for btrfs, but not for XFS.... > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > , because FS is over stackable device > > > > > > directly. Stackable device has its own logic for handling underlying disks dead > > > > > > or deleted, then decide if its own disk needs to be deleted, such as, it is > > > > > > fine for raid1 to work from user viewpoint if one underlying disk is deleted. > > > > > > > > > > We still need to propagate the even that device has been removed upwards. > > > > > Right now some file systems (especially XFS) are good at just propagating > > > > > it from an I/O error. And explicity call would be much better. > > > > > > > > It depends on the above question about how FS code handle non s_bdev > > > > deletion/dead. > > > > > > as XFS doesn't treat the individual devices differently. A > > > failure on an external log device is just as fatal as a failure on > > > a single device filesystem with an internal log. ext4 is > > > going to consider external journal device removal as fatal, too. > > > > > > As for removal of realtime devices on XFS, all the user data has > > > gone away, so the filesystem will largely be useless for users and > > > applications. At this point, we'll probably want to shut down the > > > filesystem because we've had an unknown amount of user data loss and > > > so silently continuing on as if nothing happened is not the right > > > thing to do. > > > > > > So as long as we can attach the superblock to each block device that > > > the filesystem opens (regardless of where sb->s_bdev points), device > > > removal calling sb_force_shutdown(sb, SB_SHUTDOWN_DEVICE_DEAD) will > > > do what we need. If we need anything different in future, then we > > > can worry about how to do that in the future. > > > > Shiyang spent a lot of time hooking up pmem failure notifications so > > that xfs can kill processes that have pmem in their mapping. I wonder > > if we could reuse some of that infrastructure here? > > ISTR that the generic mechanism for "device failure ranges" (I think > I called the mechanism ->corrupt_range()) that we came up with in > the first instance for this functionality got shouted down by some > block layer devs because they saw it as unnecessary complexity to > push device range failure notifications through block devices up > to the filesystem. > > The whole point of starting from that point was so that any type of > block device could report a failure to the filesystem and have the > filesystem deal with it appropriately: > > This is where we started: > > https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20201215121414.253660-1-ruansy.fnst@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > > "..... > The call trace is like this: > memory_failure() > pgmap->ops->memory_failure() => pmem_pgmap_memory_failure() > gendisk->fops->corrupted_range() => - pmem_corrupted_range() > - md_blk_corrupted_range() > sb->s_ops->currupted_range() => xfs_fs_corrupted_range() > xfs_rmap_query_range() > xfs_currupt_helper() > * corrupted on metadata > try to recover data, call xfs_force_shutdown() > * corrupted on file data > try to recover data, call mf_dax_mapping_kill_procs() > ...." <nod> I dug up https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20210108095614.GB5647@xxxxxx/ which I interpreted as Christoph asking Shiyang not to make the dax device code go swerving through the block layer to call ->corrupted_range, since he was trying to separate the two entirely. I didn't think he was shutting down the idea of block devices being able to call ->corrupted_range to tell the filesystem that the user's $2 NVME<->STL<->USB bridge caught on fire. > > That MF_MEM_REMOVE > > patchset he's been trying to get us to merge would be a good starting > > point for building something similar for block devices. AFAICT it does > > the right thing if you hand it a subrange of the dax device or if you > > pass it the customary (0, -1ULL) to mean "the entire device". > > *nod* > > That was exactly how I originally envisiaged that whole "bad device > range" stack being used. > > > The block device version of that could be a lot simpler-- imagine if > > "echo 0 > /sys/block/fd0/device/delete" resulted in the block layer > > first sending us a notification that the device is about to be removed. > > We could then flush the fs and try to freeze it. After the device > > actually goes away, the blocy layer would send us a second notification > > about DEVICE_DEAD and we could shut down the incore filesystem objects. > > *nod* > > But seeing this mechanism has already been shot down by the block > layer devs, let's be a little less ambitious and just start with > a simple, pre-existing "kill the filesystem" mechanism. Once we've > got that in place and working, we can then expand on the error > handling mechanism to perform notification of on more fine-grained > storage errors... <shrug> Seeing as LSF is next week, I'll ask the room about this when I'm there. --D > -Dave. > -- > Dave Chinner > david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx