On Mon, Nov 16, 2020 at 07:45:46PM +0200, Alex Lyakas wrote: > Greetings XFS community, > > We had an RCU stall [1]. According to the code, it happened in > radix_tree_gang_lookup_tag(): > > rcu_read_lock(); > nr_found = radix_tree_gang_lookup_tag( > &pag->pag_ici_root, > (void **)batch, first_index, > XFS_LOOKUP_BATCH, > XFS_ICI_RECLAIM_TAG); > > > This XFS system has over 100M files. So perhaps looping inside the radix > tree took too long, and it was happening in RCU read-side critical seciton. > This is one of the possible causes for RCU stall. Doubt it. According to the trace it was stalled for 60s, and a radix tree walk of 100M entries only takes a second or two. Further, unless you are using inode32, the inodes will be spread across multiple radix trees and that makes the radix trees much smaller and even less likely to take this long to run a traversal. This could be made a little more efficient by adding a "last index" parameter to tell the search where to stop (i.e. if the batch count has not yet been reached), but in general that makes little difference to the search because the radix tree walk finds the next inodes in a few pointer chases... > This happened in kernel 4.14.99, but looking at latest mainline code, code > is still the same. These inode radix trees have been used in XFS since 2008, and this is the first time anyone has reported a stall like this, so I'm doubtful that there is actually a general bug. My suspicion for such a rare occurrence would be memory corruption of some kind or a leaked atomic/rcu state in some other code on that CPU.... > Can anyone please advise how to address that? It is not possible to put > cond_resched() inside the radix tree code, because it can be used with > spinlocks, and perhaps other contexts where sleeping is not allowed. I don't think there is a solution to this problem - it just shouldn't happen in when everything is operating normally as it's just a tag search on an indexed tree. Hence even if there was a hack to stop stall warnings, it won't fix whatever problem is leading to the rcu stall. The system will then just spin burning CPU, and eventually something else will fail. IOWs, unless you can reproduce this stall and find out what is wrong in the radix tree that is leading to it looping forever, there's likely nothing we can do to avoid this. Cheers, Dave. -- Dave Chinner david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx