From: John Garry <john.garry@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Tuesday, March 9, 2021 2:10 AM > > On 08/03/2021 17:56, Melanie Plageman wrote: > > On Mon, Mar 08, 2021 at 02:37:40PM +0000, Michael Kelley wrote: > >> From: Melanie Plageman (Microsoft) <melanieplageman@xxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, > March 5, 2021 3:22 PM > >>> > >>> The scsi_device->queue_depth is set to Scsi_Host->cmd_per_lun during > >>> allocation. > >>> > >>> Cap cmd_per_lun at can_queue to avoid dispatch errors. > >>> > >>> Signed-off-by: Melanie Plageman (Microsoft) <melanieplageman@xxxxxxxxx> > >>> --- > >>> drivers/scsi/storvsc_drv.c | 2 ++ > >>> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+) > >>> > >>> diff --git a/drivers/scsi/storvsc_drv.c b/drivers/scsi/storvsc_drv.c > >>> index 6bc5453cea8a..d7953a6e00e6 100644 > >>> --- a/drivers/scsi/storvsc_drv.c > >>> +++ b/drivers/scsi/storvsc_drv.c > >>> @@ -1946,6 +1946,8 @@ static int storvsc_probe(struct hv_device *device, > >>> (max_sub_channels + 1) * > >>> (100 - ring_avail_percent_lowater) / 100; > >>> > >>> + scsi_driver.cmd_per_lun = min_t(u32, scsi_driver.cmd_per_lun, > scsi_driver.can_queue); > >>> + > >> > >> I'm not sure what you mean by "avoid dispatch errors". Can you elaborate? > > > > The scsi_driver.cmd_per_lun is set to 2048. Which is then used to set > > Scsi_Host->cmd_per_lun in storvsc_probe(). > > > > In storvsc_probe(), when doing scsi_scan_host(), scsi_alloc_sdev() is > > called and sets the scsi_device->queue_depth to the Scsi_Host's > > cmd_per_lun with this code: > > > > scsi_change_queue_depth(sdev, sdev->host->cmd_per_lun ? > > sdev->host->cmd_per_lun : 1); > > > > During dispatch, the scsi_device->queue_depth is used in > > scsi_dev_queue_ready(), called by scsi_mq_get_budget() to determine > > whether or not the device can queue another command. > > > > On some machines, with the 2048 value of cmd_per_lun that was used to > > set the initial scsi_device->queue_depth, commands can be queued that > > are later not able to be dispatched after running out of space in the > > ringbuffer. > > > > On an 8 core Azure VM with 16GB of memory with a single 1 TiB SSD > > (running an fio workload that I can provide if needed), storvsc_do_io() > > ends up often returning SCSI_MLQUEUE_DEVICE_BUSY. > > > > This is the call stack: > > > > hv_get_bytes_to_write > > hv_ringbuffer_write > > vmbus_send_packet > > storvsc_dio_io > > storvsc_queuecommand > > scsi_dispatch_cmd > > scsi_queue_rq > > dispatch_rq_list > > > >> Be aware that the calculation of "can_queue" in this driver is somewhat > >> flawed -- it should not be based on the size of the ring buffer, but instead on > >> the maximum number of requests Hyper-V will queue. And even then, > >> can_queue doesn't provide the cap you might expect because the blk-mq layer > >> allocates can_queue tags for each HW queue, not as a total. > > > > > > The docs for scsi_mid_low_api document Scsi_Host can_queue this way: > > > > can_queue > > - must be greater than 0; do not send more than can_queue > > commands to the adapter. > > > > I did notice that in scsi_host.h, the comment for can_queue does say > > can_queue is the "maximum number of simultaneous commands a single hw > > queue in HBA will accept." However, I don't see it being used this way > > in the code. > > > > JFYI, the block layer ensures that no more than can_queue requests are > sent to the host. See scsi_mq_setup_tags(), and how the tagset queue > depth is set to shost->can_queue. > > Thanks, > John Agree on what's in scsi_mq_setup_tags(). But scsi_mq_setup_tags() calls blk_mq_alloc_tag_set(), which in turn calls blk_mq_alloc_map_and_requests(), which calls __blk_mq_alloc_rq_maps() repeatedly, reducing the tag set queue_depth as needed until it succeeds. The key thing is that __blk_mq_alloc_rq_maps() iterates over the number of HW queues calling __blk_mq_alloc_map_and_request(). The latter function allocates the map and the requests with a count of the tag set's queue_depth. There's no logic to apportion the can_queue value across multiple HW queues. So each HW queue gets can_queue tags allocated, and the SCSI host driver may see up to (can_queue * # HW queues) simultaneous requests. I'm certainly not an expert in this area, but that's what I see in the code. We've run live experiments, and can see the number simultaneous requests sent to the storvsc driver be greater than can_queue when the # of HW queues is greater than 1, which seems to be consistent with the code. Michael > > > > During dispatch, In scsi_target_queue_ready(), there is this code: > > > > if (busy >= starget->can_queue) > > goto starved; > > > > And the scsi_target->can_queue value should be coming from Scsi_host as > > mentioned in the scsi_target definition in scsi_device.h > > /* > > * LLDs should set this in the slave_alloc host template callout. > > * If set to zero then there is not limit. > > */ > > unsigned int can_queue; > > > > So, I don't really see how this would be per hardware queue. > > > >> > >> I agree that the cmd_per_lun setting is also too big, but we should fix that in > >> the context of getting all of these different settings working together correctly, > >> and not piecemeal. > >> > > > > Capping Scsi_Host->cmd_per_lun to scsi_driver.can_queue during probe > > will also prevent the LUN queue_depth from being set to a value that is > > higher than it can ever be set to again by the user when > > storvsc_change_queue_depth() is invoked. > > > > Also in scsi_sysfs sdev_store_queue_depth() there is this check: > > > > if (depth < 1 || depth > sdev->host->can_queue) > > return -EINVAL; > > > > I would also note that VirtIO SCSI in virtscsi_probe(), Scsi_Host->cmd_per_lun > > is set to the min of the configured cmd_per_lun and > > Scsi_Host->can_queue: > > > > shost->cmd_per_lun = min_t(u32, cmd_per_lun, shost->can_queue); > > > > Best, > > Melanie > > . > >