Re: [resend PATCH 1/3] block, fs: reliably communicate bdev end-of-life

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On Mon, Jan 04, 2016 at 10:20:05AM -0800, Dan Williams wrote:
> Historically we have waited for filesystem specific heuristics to
> attempt to guess when a block device is gone.  Sometimes this works, but
> in other cases the system can hang waiting for the fs to trigger its
> shutdown protocol.
> 
> The initial motivation for this investigation was to prevent DAX
> mappings (direct mmap access to persistent memory) from leaking past the
> lifetime of the hosting block device.  However, Dave points out that
> these shutdown operations are needed in other scenarios.  Quoting Dave:
> 
>     For example, if we detect a free space corruption during allocation,
>     it is not safe to trust *any active mapping* because we can't trust
>     that we having handed out the same block to multiple owners. Hence
>     on such a filesystem shutdown, we have to prevent any new DAX
>     mapping from occurring and invalidate all existing mappings as we
>     cannot allow userspace to modify any data or metadata until we've
>     resolved the corruption situation.
> 
> The current block device shutdown sequence of del_gendisk +
> blk_cleanup_queue is problematic.  We want to tell the fs after
> blk_cleanup_queue that there is no possibility of recovery, but by that
> time we have deleted partitions and lost the ability to find all the
> super-blocks on a block device.
> 
> Introduce del_gendisk_queue to trigger ->quiesce() and ->bdi_gone()

I don't see anything that introduces a ->quiesce() method.

> notifications to all the filesystems hosted on the disk.  Where
> ->quiesce() are 'shutdown' operations while the bdev may still be alive,

So you are saying "quiesce == invalidation", which is in conflict
with what we typically think quiesce means. i.e.  "Quiesce" is what
we do when doing orderly writeback of all outstanding dirty objects
in a filesystem - what we do during freeze, remount-ro, and unmount.
e.g. See the functions xfs_log_quiesce() and xfs_attr_quiesce()

> and ->bdi_gone() is a set of actions to take after the backing device
> is known to be permanently dead.

In which case, bdi_gone == shutdown.

Operation methods should be named after what they do, not what their
calling context is. i.e. these are "invalidate" and "shutdown"
superblock operations, not "quiesce" and "bdi_gone".

> generic_quiesce_super and generic_bdi_gone, are the default operations
> when a filesystem does not implement ->quiesce(), ->bdi_gone().  They
> invalidate inodes and unmap DAX-inodes respectively.  For now only
> ->bdi_gone() has an associated super operation as xfs will implement
> ->bdi_gone() in a later patch.

I don't quite understand what the point of factoring
__invalidate_device() like this is - it's not used by anyone, so it
seems completely unnecessary to me.

And really, that points out that there are multiple changes in this
patch set that should be done separately.  The rework of
del_gendisk() into del_gendisk_start/del_gendisk_end should be the
first patch.  The del_gendisk/blk_cleanup_queue to
blk_cleanup_queue() combining should be the second part, as it
builds on the factoring of del_gendisk(). Then, if we really need to
keep it, the factoring to introduce generic_quiesce_super. And
finally, the patch that allows the shutdown callout can be
introduced.

[snip]
>  
> +static void generic_bdi_gone(struct super_block *sb)
> +{
> +	struct inode *inode, *_inode = NULL;
> +
> +	spin_lock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock);
> +	list_for_each_entry(inode, &sb->s_inodes, i_sb_list) {
> +		spin_lock(&inode->i_lock);
> +		if ((inode->i_state & (I_FREEING|I_WILL_FREE|I_NEW))
> +				|| !IS_DAX(inode)) {
> +			spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
> +			continue;
> +		}
> +		__iget(inode);
> +		spin_unlock(&inode->i_lock);
> +		spin_unlock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock);
> +
> +		unmap_mapping_range(inode->i_mapping, 0, 0, 1);
> +		iput(_inode);
> +		_inode = inode;
> +		cond_resched();
> +
> +		spin_lock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock);
> +	}
> +	spin_unlock(&sb->s_inode_list_lock);
> +	iput(_inode);
> +}

This belongs in fs/inode.c, right next to invalidate_inodes(), and
with a name that describes what it does, not the context in which
it is called. e.g. unmap_dax_inodes().

> +void shutdown_partition(struct gendisk *disk, int partno)
> +{
> +	struct block_device *bdev = bdget_disk(disk, partno);
> +	struct super_block *sb = get_super(bdev);
> +
> +	if (!bdev)
> +		return;

Null pointer deref. Certainly a landmine waiting for someone to
tread on.

> +	if (!sb) {
> +		bdput(bdev);
> +		return;
> +	}
> +
> +	if (sb->s_op->bdi_gone)
> +		sb->s_op->bdi_gone(sb);
> +	else
> +		generic_bdi_gone(sb);

	if (sb->s_op->shutdown)
		sb->s_op->shutdown(sb);
	else
		unmap_dax_inodes(sb);

name things correctly, and the code documents itself.

-- 
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

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