Hi Jianchao, On Sat, Jan 27, 2018 at 08:33:35PM +0800, jianchao.wang wrote: > Hi ming > > Thanks for your kindly response. > And really sorry for delayed feedback here. > > On 01/25/2018 06:15 PM, Ming Lei wrote: > > Hi Jianchao, > > > > On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 04:52:31PM +0800, jianchao.wang wrote: > >> Hi Ming > >> > >> Thanks for your patch and detailed comment. > >> > >> On 01/25/2018 04:10 PM, Ming Lei wrote: > >>> If request is marked as NVME_REQ_CANCELLED, we don't need to retry for > >>> requeuing it, and it should be completed immediately. Even simply from > >>> the flag name, it needn't to be requeued. > >>> > >>> Otherwise, it is easy to cause IO hang when IO is timed out in case of > >>> PCI NVMe: > >>> > >>> 1) IO timeout is triggered, and nvme_timeout() tries to disable > >>> device(nvme_dev_disable) and reset controller(nvme_reset_ctrl) > >>> > >>> 2) inside nvme_dev_disable(), queue is frozen and quiesced, and > >>> try to cancel every request, but the timeout request can't be canceled > >>> since it is completed by __blk_mq_complete_request() in blk_mq_rq_timed_out(). > >>> > >>> 3) this timeout req is requeued via nvme_complete_rq(), but can't be > >>> dispatched at all because queue is quiesced and hardware isn't ready, > >>> finally nvme_wait_freeze() waits for ever in nvme_reset_work(). > >> > >> The queue will be unquiesced by nvme_start_queues() before start to wait freeze. > > > > Hammmm, just miss this point, so no such io hang in this case. > > > >> > >> nvme_reset_work > >> .... > >> nvme_start_queues(&dev->ctrl); > >> nvme_wait_freeze(&dev->ctrl); > >> /* hit this only when allocate tagset fails */ > >> if (nvme_dev_add(dev)) > >> new_state = NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY; > >> nvme_unfreeze(&dev->ctrl); > >> .... > >> And the relationship between nvme_timeout and nvme_dev_disable is really complicated. > >> The nvme_timeout may run with nvme_dev_disable in parallel and also could invoke it. > >> nvme_dev_disbale may sleep holding shutdown_lock, nvme_timeout will try to get it when invokes nvme_dev_disable.... > >> > > > > Yes, the implementation is really complicated, but nvme_dev_disable() is > > run exclusively because of dev->shutdown_lock. Also nvme_timeout() only > > handles the timeout request which is invisible to nvme_dev_disable() > > > > So in concept, looks it is fine, :-) > > In fact, I have incurred a scenario which is similar with description as above. > nvme_dev_disable issue sq/cq delete command on amdinq, but nvme device didn't response due to some unknown reason. > At the moment, the previous IO requests expired, and nvne_timeout is invoked when ctrl->state is RESETTING, then > nvme_dev_disable was invoked. So got a scenario: > > context A context B > nvme_dev_disable nvme_timeout > hold shutdown_lock nvme_dev_disable > wait sq/cq delete command response require shutdown_lock > > Finally, the context A broke out due to timeout, things went ok. > But this is a very dangerous. I guess that is exactly why nvme_delete_queue() submits request via blk_execute_rq_nowait() and wait_for_completion_io_timeout() is called in nvme_disable_io_queues(). Maybe it is better to add comment on that, and any requests submitted inside nvme_dev_disable() should have been done in this way. > > There are other cases where context may sleep with shutdown_lock held in nvme_dev_disable > > >> On the other hand, can we provide a helper interface to quiesce the request_work timeout_work ? > > > > Could you explain a bit why it is required? > For nvme_dev_disable, it need to cancel all the previously outstanding requests. > And it cannot wait them to be completed, because the device may goes wrong at the moment. Yes, that is why blk_mq_tagset_busy_iter(nvme_cancel_request) is called for making all in-flight requests becoming IDLE state and preparing for requeue because the hardware is supposed to be DEAD. So it doesn't depend on hardware to complete these request, and finally once controller is resetted successfully, these requests will be submitted to hardware again via requeue, and data loss can be avoided. > But nvme_dev_disable may run with nvme_timeout in parallel or race with it. But that doesn't mean it is a race, blk_mq_complete_request() can avoid race between timeout and other completions, such as cancel. > The best way to fix this is to ensure the timeout path has been completed before cancel the > previously outstanding requests. (Just ignore the case where the nvme_timeout will invoke nvme_dev_disable, > it has to be fixed by other way.) Maybe your approach looks a bit clean and simplify the implementation, but seems it isn't necessary. So could you explain a bit what the exact issue you are worrying about? deadlock? or others? Thanks, Ming