On Fri, 2013-05-10 at 16:22 +0300, Baruch Even wrote: > On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 3:43 PM, Ewan Milne <emilne@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Thu, 2013-05-09 at 23:11 -0400, Martin K. Petersen wrote: > > > Introduce eh_timeout which can be used for error handling purposes. This > > > was previously hardcoded to 10 seconds in the SCSI error handling > > > code. However, for some fast-fail scenarios it is necessary to be able > > > to tune this as it can take several iterations (bus device, target, bus, > > > controller) before we give up. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > > Thanks for posting this. It will be very helpful to have this > > capability, particularly when alternate paths to the device exist. > > > > Acked-by: Ewan D. Milne <emilne@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > I would argue that waiting for the eh to timeout before you switch to > another path is most likely to be wrong. If you did the first pass of > error recovery (task abort) and that failed the > path/hba/logical-device is doomed. If you will switch to another path > it will either work (meaning the path/hba were bad) or not (logical > device was the culprit). It is necessary to either know the disposition of a command or else wait for a defined amount of time before retrying the command on another path. Otherwise you run the risk that the command will eventually complete on the first path. So yes, we need to do the abort (and its timeout). > > Actually reducing the timeouts is probably not a good approach since > it will cause the host to take a more radical approach without waiting > sufficiently for a potential recovery. In addition the more radical > error handlings such as host reset will destroy other paths for > completely unrelated devices/links, from my experience a host reset is > usually not required and the Linux kernel currently reaches to this > big hammer too fast. I believe that Hannes is working on a better error handling algorithm that e.g. does not cause an emulated bus reset in an FC environment by resetting all the targets (and affecting I/O to unrelated targets in the process). > > Not that I have any qualms about the patch itself, I've been down this > path myself and was proven wrong by real life. Though my experience > was mostly on the SAS network rather than the FC network. > > Baruch -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html