Hello
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING used to indicate the range of nvme initializing
strictly in fd634f41(nvme: merge probe_work and reset_work), but it
is not now. The NVME_CTRL_RESETTING is set before queue the
reset_work, there could be a big gap before the reset work handles
the outstanding requests. So when the NVME_CTRL_RESETTING is set,
nvme_timeout will not only meet the admin requests from the
initializing procedure, but also the IO and admin requests from
previous work before nvme_dev_disable is invoked.
To fix this, based on Christoph's suggestion, splits the
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING into NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE
and NVME_CTRL_RESETTING. At the same time, after Sagi introduced
d5bf4b7 (nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect), both
nvme-rdma/fc use NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING to mark the setup and
reconnect procedure. The RESETTING state has been narrowed.
So we use this new state NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE to mark the
reset_work or error recovery work, scheduling gap and disable
procedure. After that:
- For nvme-pci, nvmet-loop, set state to RESETTING, start
initialization.
- For nvme-rdma, nvme-fc, set state to RECONNECTING, start
initialization or reconnect.
Finally, we could use NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE to distinguish the
different requests and handle them separately. More details, please
refer to the comment of the 2nd patch.
V4:
- rebase patches on Jens' for-next
- let RESETTING equal to RECONNECTING in terms of work procedure
- change the 1st patch's name and comment
- other misc changes
V3:
- fix wrong reference in loop.c
- other misc changes
V2:
- split NVME_CTRL_RESETTING into NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE and
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING. Introduce new patch based on this.
- distinguish the requests based on the new state in nvme_timeout
- change comments of patch
Jianchao Wang (2)
0001-nvme-add-NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE-state.patch
0002-nvme-pci-fix-the-timeout-case-when-reset-is-ongoing.patch
drivers/nvme/host/core.c | 18 +++++++++++++---
drivers/nvme/host/fc.c | 4 ++--
drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h | 8 +++++++
drivers/nvme/host/pci.c | 54 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------
drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c | 2 +-
drivers/nvme/target/loop.c | 5 +++++
6 files changed, 72 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
Thanks
Jianchao
There could be request timeout when the reset is ongoing.
nvme_timeout will not only meet the admin requests from the
initializing procedure, but also the IO and admin requests
from previous work before nvme_dev_disable is invoked. These
requests should be handled separately.
We could distinguish them through the ctrl->state.
If the state is NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE, handle the expried
requests as nvme_cancel_request.
If the state is NVME_CTRL_RESETTING, the requests should be
from the initializing procedure. Handle them as before. Because the
nvme_reset_work will see the error and disable the dev itself, so
discard the nvme_dev_disable here.
Signed-off-by: Jianchao Wang <[email protected]>
---
drivers/nvme/host/pci.c | 29 ++++++++++++++++++++---------
1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
index f4b47b9..f3f6113 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
@@ -1210,18 +1210,24 @@ static enum blk_eh_timer_return nvme_timeout(struct request *req, bool reserved)
}
/*
- * Shutdown immediately if controller times out while starting. The
- * reset work will see the pci device disabled when it gets the forced
- * cancellation error. All outstanding requests are completed on
- * shutdown, so we return BLK_EH_HANDLED.
+ * There could be two kinds of expired reqs when reset is ongoing.
+ * Outstanding IO or admin requests from previous work before the
+ * nvme_reset_work invokes nvme_dev_disable. Handle them as the
+ * nvme_cancel_request. Outstanding admin requests from the
+ * initializing procedure. Set NVME_REQ_CANCELLED flag on them,
+ * then nvme_reset_work will see the error, then disable the device
+ * and remove the ctrl.
*/
- if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING) {
- dev_warn(dev->ctrl.device,
- "I/O %d QID %d timeout, disable controller\n",
- req->tag, nvmeq->qid);
- nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
+ switch (dev->ctrl.state) {
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
+ nvme_req(req)->status = NVME_SC_ABORT_REQ;
+ return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(nvmeq->qid);
nvme_req(req)->flags |= NVME_REQ_CANCELLED;
return BLK_EH_HANDLED;
+ default:
+ break;
}
/*
@@ -2316,6 +2322,11 @@ static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
if (dev->ctrl.ctrl_config & NVME_CC_ENABLE)
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
+ /*
+ * After this, all the outstanding requests must have been handled by
+ * nvme_cancel_request. This could ensure the nvme_timeout do the right
+ * thing. More details, please refer to the comment in nvme_timeout.
+ */
if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)) {
WARN_ON_ONCE(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
goto out;
--
2.7.4
Currently, the ctrl->state will be changed to NVME_CTRL_RESETTING
before queue the reset work. This is not so strict. There could be
a big gap before the reset_work callback is invoked. In addition,
there is some disable work in the reset_work callback, strictly
speaking, not part of reset work, and could lead to some confusion.
In addition, after set state to RESETTING and disable procedure,
nvme-rdma/fc use NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING to mark the setup and
reconnect procedure. The RESETTING state has been narrowed.
This patch add NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE state to mark the reset_work
or error recovery work, scheduling gap and disable procedure.
After that,
- For nvme-pci, nvmet-loop, set state to RESETTING, start
initialization.
- For nvme-rdma, nvme-fc, set state to RECONNECTING, start
initialization or reconnect.
Suggested-by: Christoph Hellwig <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Jianchao Wang <[email protected]>
---
drivers/nvme/host/core.c | 18 +++++++++++++++---
drivers/nvme/host/fc.c | 4 ++--
drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h | 8 ++++++++
drivers/nvme/host/pci.c | 25 +++++++++++++++++++++----
drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c | 2 +-
drivers/nvme/target/loop.c | 5 +++++
6 files changed, 52 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/core.c b/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
index 230cc09..87d209f 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ static __le32 nvme_get_log_dw10(u8 lid, size_t size)
int nvme_reset_ctrl(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl)
{
- if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
+ if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
return -EBUSY;
if (!queue_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->reset_work))
return -EBUSY;
@@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
break;
}
break;
- case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
switch (old_state) {
case NVME_CTRL_NEW:
case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
@@ -271,10 +271,20 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
break;
}
break;
+
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ switch (old_state) {
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
+ changed = true;
+ /* FALLTHRU */
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
+ break;
case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
switch (old_state) {
case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
- case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
changed = true;
/* FALLTHRU */
default:
@@ -286,6 +296,7 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
case NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY:
case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
changed = true;
/* FALLTHRU */
@@ -2660,6 +2671,7 @@ static ssize_t nvme_sysfs_show_state(struct device *dev,
[NVME_CTRL_LIVE] = "live",
[NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY] = "only-admin",
[NVME_CTRL_RESETTING] = "resetting",
+ [NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE] = "reset-prepare",
[NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING]= "reconnecting",
[NVME_CTRL_DELETING] = "deleting",
[NVME_CTRL_DEAD] = "dead",
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c b/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
index 306aee4..1ba0669 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
@@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ nvme_fc_resume_controller(struct nvme_fc_ctrl *ctrl)
queue_delayed_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->connect_work, 0);
break;
- case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
/*
* Controller is already in the process of terminating the
* association. No need to do anything further. The reconnect
@@ -789,7 +789,7 @@ nvme_fc_ctrl_connectivity_loss(struct nvme_fc_ctrl *ctrl)
*/
break;
- case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
/*
* Controller is already in the process of terminating the
* association. No need to do anything further. The reconnect
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h b/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
index a44eeca..e4cae21 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
@@ -116,10 +116,18 @@ static inline struct nvme_request *nvme_req(struct request *req)
*/
#define NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_AMOUNT 2300
+/*
+ * RESET_PREPARE - mark the state of scheduling gap and disable procedure
+ * RESETTING - nvme-pci, nvmet loop use it to mark the state of setup
+ * procedure
+ * RECONNECTING - nvme-fc, nvme-rdma use it to mark the state of setup
+ * and reconnect procedure
+ */
enum nvme_ctrl_state {
NVME_CTRL_NEW,
NVME_CTRL_LIVE,
NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY, /* Only admin queue live */
+ NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE,
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING,
NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING,
NVME_CTRL_DELETING,
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
index 45f843d..f4b47b9 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
@@ -1139,8 +1139,13 @@ static bool nvme_should_reset(struct nvme_dev *dev, u32 csts)
bool nssro = dev->subsystem && (csts & NVME_CSTS_NSSRO);
/* If there is a reset ongoing, we shouldn't reset again. */
- if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)
+ switch (dev->ctrl.state) {
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
return false;
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
/* We shouldn't reset unless the controller is on fatal error state
* _or_ if we lost the communication with it.
@@ -2181,9 +2186,16 @@ static void nvme_dev_disable(struct nvme_dev *dev, bool shutdown)
if (pci_is_enabled(pdev)) {
u32 csts = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS);
- if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_LIVE ||
- dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)
+ switch (dev->ctrl.state) {
+ case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
+ case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
nvme_start_freeze(&dev->ctrl);
+ break;
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
+
dead = !!((csts & NVME_CSTS_CFS) || !(csts & NVME_CSTS_RDY) ||
pdev->error_state != pci_channel_io_normal);
}
@@ -2294,7 +2306,7 @@ static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
int result = -ENODEV;
enum nvme_ctrl_state new_state = NVME_CTRL_LIVE;
- if (WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
+ if (WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
goto out;
/*
@@ -2304,6 +2316,11 @@ static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
if (dev->ctrl.ctrl_config & NVME_CC_ENABLE)
nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
+ if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)) {
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
+ goto out;
+ }
+
result = nvme_pci_enable(dev);
if (result)
goto out;
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
index d49b1e7..6b5f2f4 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
@@ -985,7 +985,7 @@ static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work(struct work_struct *work)
static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery(struct nvme_rdma_ctrl *ctrl)
{
- if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
+ if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
return;
queue_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->err_work);
diff --git a/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c b/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
index fdfcc96..cbc9249 100644
--- a/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
+++ b/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
@@ -481,6 +481,11 @@ static void nvme_loop_reset_ctrl_work(struct work_struct *work)
nvme_stop_ctrl(&ctrl->ctrl);
nvme_loop_shutdown_ctrl(ctrl);
+ changed = nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING);
+ if (!changed) {
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(ctrl->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
+ return;
+ }
ret = nvme_loop_configure_admin_queue(ctrl);
if (ret)
goto out_disable;
--
2.7.4
hi Jianchao Wang,
On 1/17/2018 6:54 AM, Jianchao Wang wrote:
> Currently, the ctrl->state will be changed to NVME_CTRL_RESETTING
> before queue the reset work. This is not so strict. There could be
> a big gap before the reset_work callback is invoked. In addition,
> there is some disable work in the reset_work callback, strictly
> speaking, not part of reset work, and could lead to some confusion.
>
> In addition, after set state to RESETTING and disable procedure,
> nvme-rdma/fc use NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING to mark the setup and
> reconnect procedure. The RESETTING state has been narrowed.
>
> This patch add NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE state to mark the reset_work
> or error recovery work, scheduling gap and disable procedure.
> After that,
> - For nvme-pci, nvmet-loop, set state to RESETTING, start
> initialization.
> - For nvme-rdma, nvme-fc, set state to RECONNECTING, start
> initialization or reconnect.
>
> Suggested-by: Christoph Hellwig <[email protected]>
> Signed-off-by: Jianchao Wang <[email protected]>
> ---
> drivers/nvme/host/core.c | 18 +++++++++++++++---
> drivers/nvme/host/fc.c | 4 ++--
> drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h | 8 ++++++++
> drivers/nvme/host/pci.c | 25 +++++++++++++++++++++----
> drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c | 2 +-
> drivers/nvme/target/loop.c | 5 +++++
> 6 files changed, 52 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/core.c b/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
> index 230cc09..87d209f 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/core.c
> @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ static __le32 nvme_get_log_dw10(u8 lid, size_t size)
>
> int nvme_reset_ctrl(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl)
> {
> - if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
> + if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
> return -EBUSY;
> if (!queue_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->reset_work))
> return -EBUSY;
> @@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
> break;
> }
> break;
> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> switch (old_state) {
> case NVME_CTRL_NEW:
> case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
> @@ -271,10 +271,20 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
> break;
> }
> break;
> +
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + switch (old_state) {
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> + changed = true;
> + /* FALLTHRU */
> + default:
> + break;
> + }
> + break;
> case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
> switch (old_state) {
> case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
As I suggested in V3, please don't allow this transition.
We'll move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING from NVME_CTRL_RESETTING.
I look on it like that:
NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE - "suspend" state
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING - "resume" state
you don't reconnect from "suspend" state, you must "resume" before you
reconnect.
> changed = true;
> /* FALLTHRU */
> default:
> @@ -286,6 +296,7 @@ bool nvme_change_ctrl_state(struct nvme_ctrl *ctrl,
> case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
> case NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY:
> case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
> changed = true;
> /* FALLTHRU */
> @@ -2660,6 +2671,7 @@ static ssize_t nvme_sysfs_show_state(struct device *dev,
> [NVME_CTRL_LIVE] = "live",
> [NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY] = "only-admin",
> [NVME_CTRL_RESETTING] = "resetting",
> + [NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE] = "reset-prepare",
> [NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING]= "reconnecting",
> [NVME_CTRL_DELETING] = "deleting",
> [NVME_CTRL_DEAD] = "dead",
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c b/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
> index 306aee4..1ba0669 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/fc.c
> @@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ nvme_fc_resume_controller(struct nvme_fc_ctrl *ctrl)
> queue_delayed_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->connect_work, 0);
> break;
>
> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> /*
> * Controller is already in the process of terminating the
> * association. No need to do anything further. The reconnect
> @@ -789,7 +789,7 @@ nvme_fc_ctrl_connectivity_loss(struct nvme_fc_ctrl *ctrl)
> */
> break;
>
> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> /*
> * Controller is already in the process of terminating the
> * association. No need to do anything further. The reconnect
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h b/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
> index a44eeca..e4cae21 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/nvme.h
> @@ -116,10 +116,18 @@ static inline struct nvme_request *nvme_req(struct request *req)
> */
> #define NVME_QUIRK_DELAY_AMOUNT 2300
>
> +/*
> + * RESET_PREPARE - mark the state of scheduling gap and disable procedure
> + * RESETTING - nvme-pci, nvmet loop use it to mark the state of setup
> + * procedure
> + * RECONNECTING - nvme-fc, nvme-rdma use it to mark the state of setup
> + * and reconnect procedure
> + */
> enum nvme_ctrl_state {
> NVME_CTRL_NEW,
> NVME_CTRL_LIVE,
> NVME_CTRL_ADMIN_ONLY, /* Only admin queue live */
> + NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE,
> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING,
> NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING,
> NVME_CTRL_DELETING,
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
> index 45f843d..f4b47b9 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/pci.c
> @@ -1139,8 +1139,13 @@ static bool nvme_should_reset(struct nvme_dev *dev, u32 csts)
> bool nssro = dev->subsystem && (csts & NVME_CSTS_NSSRO);
>
> /* If there is a reset ongoing, we shouldn't reset again. */
> - if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)
> + switch (dev->ctrl.state) {
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> return false;
> + default:
> + break;
> + }
>
> /* We shouldn't reset unless the controller is on fatal error state
> * _or_ if we lost the communication with it.
> @@ -2181,9 +2186,16 @@ static void nvme_dev_disable(struct nvme_dev *dev, bool shutdown)
> if (pci_is_enabled(pdev)) {
> u32 csts = readl(dev->bar + NVME_REG_CSTS);
>
> - if (dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_LIVE ||
> - dev->ctrl.state == NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)
> + switch (dev->ctrl.state) {
> + case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
> nvme_start_freeze(&dev->ctrl);
> + break;
> + default:
> + break;
> + }
> +
> dead = !!((csts & NVME_CSTS_CFS) || !(csts & NVME_CSTS_RDY) ||
> pdev->error_state != pci_channel_io_normal);
> }
> @@ -2294,7 +2306,7 @@ static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
> int result = -ENODEV;
> enum nvme_ctrl_state new_state = NVME_CTRL_LIVE;
>
> - if (WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
> + if (WARN_ON(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
> goto out;
>
> /*
> @@ -2304,6 +2316,11 @@ static void nvme_reset_work(struct work_struct *work)
> if (dev->ctrl.ctrl_config & NVME_CC_ENABLE)
> nvme_dev_disable(dev, false);
>
> + if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&dev->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING)) {
> + WARN_ON_ONCE(dev->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
> + goto out;
> + }
> +
> result = nvme_pci_enable(dev);
> if (result)
> goto out;
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
> index d49b1e7..6b5f2f4 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
> @@ -985,7 +985,7 @@ static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work(struct work_struct *work)
>
> static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery(struct nvme_rdma_ctrl *ctrl)
> {
> - if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
> + if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
> return;
We can add a NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE --> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING transition
and then move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING (in nvme_rdma_reset_ctrl_work
and nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work).
I want to add an ability to recover from device removal (actually wanted
to send it today but I'm waiting to see what will happen with this
patchset) for RDMA and your approach (enable transition to from both
"suspend" and "resume" to "reconnect") might be problematic.
Sagi/Christoph ?
>
> queue_work(nvme_wq, &ctrl->err_work);
> diff --git a/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c b/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
> index fdfcc96..cbc9249 100644
> --- a/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
> +++ b/drivers/nvme/target/loop.c
> @@ -481,6 +481,11 @@ static void nvme_loop_reset_ctrl_work(struct work_struct *work)
> nvme_stop_ctrl(&ctrl->ctrl);
> nvme_loop_shutdown_ctrl(ctrl);
>
> + changed = nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING);
> + if (!changed) {
> + WARN_ON_ONCE(ctrl->ctrl.state != NVME_CTRL_DELETING);
> + return;
> + }
> ret = nvme_loop_configure_admin_queue(ctrl);
> if (ret)
> goto out_disable;
>
Hi Max
Thanks for your kindly response.
I have merged the response to you together below.
On 01/17/2018 05:06 PM, Max Gurtovoy wrote:
>> ? case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
>> ????????? switch (old_state) {
>> ????????? case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
>> -??????? case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>> +??????? case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>
> As I suggested in V3, please don't allow this transition.
> We'll move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING from NVME_CTRL_RESETTING.
>
> I look on it like that:
>
> NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE - "suspend" state
> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING - "resume" state
>
> you don't reconnect from "suspend" state, you must "resume" before you reconnect.
>> index d49b1e7..6b5f2f4 100644
>> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
>> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
>> @@ -985,7 +985,7 @@ static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work(struct work_struct *work)
>> ? ? static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery(struct nvme_rdma_ctrl *ctrl)
>> ? {
>> -??? if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
>> +??? if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
>> ????????? return;
>
> We can add a NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE --> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING transition and then move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING (in nvme_rdma_reset_ctrl_work and nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work).
> I want to add an ability to recover from device removal (actually wanted to send it today but I'm waiting to see what will happen with this patchset) for RDMA and your approach (enable transition to from both "suspend" and "resume" to "reconnect") might be problematic.
>
> Sagi/Christoph ?
I used to respond you in the V3 and wait for your feedback.
Please refer to:
>>>
After Sagi's nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect, the rdma ctrl state is changed to RECONNECTING state
after some clearing and shutdown work, then some initializing procedure, no matter reset work path or error recovery path.
The fc reset work also does the same thing.
So if we define the range that RESET_PREPARE includes scheduling gap and disable and clear work, RESETTING includes initializing
procedure, RECONNECTING is very similar with RESETTING.
Maybe we could do like this;
In nvme fc/rdma
- set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work/err_work
- clear/shutdown works, set state to RECONNECTING
- initialization, set state to LIVE
In nvme pci
- set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work
- clear/shutdown works, set state to RESETTING
- initialization, set state to LIVE
>>>
Currently, RECONNECTING has overlapped with RESETTING.
So I suggest to use RESET_PREPARE to mark the "suspend" part as you said.
And use RECONNECTING to mark the "resume" part in nvme-rdma/fc
use RESETTING part to mark the "resume" part in nvme-pci, nvmt-loop.
I want to confirm with all of you, but no none had feedback, so I sent out the patch directly.
Please forgive my abrupt actions.
Thanks
Jianchao
Thanks
Jianchao
Hi max
On 01/17/2018 05:19 PM, jianchao.wang wrote:
> Hi Max
>
> Thanks for your kindly response.
>
> I have merged the response to you together below.
> On 01/17/2018 05:06 PM, Max Gurtovoy wrote:
>>> ? case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
>>> ????????? switch (old_state) {
>>> ????????? case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
>>> -??????? case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>>> +??????? case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>>
>> As I suggested in V3, please don't allow this transition.
>> We'll move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING from NVME_CTRL_RESETTING.
>>
>> I look on it like that:
>>
>> NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE - "suspend" state
>> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING - "resume" state
>>
>> you don't reconnect from "suspend" state, you must "resume" before you reconnect.
>
>>> index d49b1e7..6b5f2f4 100644
>>> --- a/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
>>> +++ b/drivers/nvme/host/rdma.c
>>> @@ -985,7 +985,7 @@ static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work(struct work_struct *work)
>>> ? ? static void nvme_rdma_error_recovery(struct nvme_rdma_ctrl *ctrl)
>>> ? {
>>> -??? if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESETTING))
>>> +??? if (!nvme_change_ctrl_state(&ctrl->ctrl, NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE))
>>> ????????? return;
>>
>> We can add a NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE --> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING transition and then move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING (in nvme_rdma_reset_ctrl_work and nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work).
>> I want to add an ability to recover from device removal (actually wanted to send it today but I'm waiting to see what will happen with this patchset) for RDMA and your approach (enable transition to from both "suspend" and "resume" to "reconnect") might be problematic.
>>
>> Sagi/Christoph ?
>
> I used to respond you in the V3 and wait for your feedback.
> Please refer to:
>>>>
> After Sagi's nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect, the rdma ctrl state is changed to RECONNECTING state
> after some clearing and shutdown work, then some initializing procedure, no matter reset work path or error recovery path.
> The fc reset work also does the same thing.
> So if we define the range that RESET_PREPARE includes scheduling gap and disable and clear work, RESETTING includes initializing
> procedure, RECONNECTING is very similar with RESETTING.
>
> Maybe we could do like this;
> In nvme fc/rdma
> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work/err_work
> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RECONNECTING
> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>
> In nvme pci
> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work
> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RESETTING
> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>>>>
>
> Currently, RECONNECTING has overlapped with RESETTING.
> So I suggest to use RESET_PREPARE to mark the "suspend" part as you said.
> And use RECONNECTING to mark the "resume" part in nvme-rdma/fc
> use RESETTING part to mark the "resume" part in nvme-pci, nvmt-loop.
I have added a comment above the definition of nvme_ctrl_state as below:
+/*
+ * RESET_PREPARE - mark the state of scheduling gap and disable procedure
+ * RESETTING - nvme-pci, nvmet loop use it to mark the state of setup
+ * procedure
+ * RECONNECTING - nvme-fc, nvme-rdma use it to mark the state of setup
+ * and reconnect procedure
+ */
Consequently, nvme-fc/rdma don't use RESETTING state any more, but only RESET_PREPARE.
Thanks
Jianchao
>
> I want to confirm with all of you, but no none had feedback, so I sent out the patch directly.
> Please forgive my abrupt actions.
>
> Thanks
> Jianchao
>
> _______________________________________________
> Linux-nvme mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__lists.infradead.org_mailman_listinfo_linux-2Dnvme&d=DwIGAA&c=RoP1YumCXCgaWHvlZYR8PZh8Bv7qIrMUB65eapI_JnE&r=7WdAxUBeiTUTCy8v-7zXyr4qk7sx26ATvfo6QSTvZyQ&m=lUkrKY6u8mGr5k1ajcQSKfsk1N2wKpmD60MJfojz4iY&s=AtvJd5ElCQ_WoO2Q5-LBTEdlZeTmWOHEGO-baUZyl-o&e=
>
I'm having a hard time following why this patch is being requested. Help
me catch on.....
On 1/16/2018 8:54 PM, Jianchao Wang wrote:
> Currently, the ctrl->state will be changed to NVME_CTRL_RESETTING
> before queue the reset work. This is not so strict. There could be
> a big gap before the reset_work callback is invoked.
ok.... so what you're saying is you want something to know that you've
transitioned to RESETTING but not yet performed an action for the
reset. What is that something and what is it to do ?
guessing - I assume it's in the transport xxx_is_ready() and/or
nvmf_check_init_req(), which is called at the start of queue_rq(), that
wants to do something ?
> In addition,
> there is some disable work in the reset_work callback, strictly
> speaking, not part of reset work, and could lead to some confusion.
Can you explain this ? what's the confusion ?
I assume by "disable" you mean it is quiescing queues ?
>
> In addition, after set state to RESETTING and disable procedure,
> nvme-rdma/fc use NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING to mark the setup and
> reconnect procedure. The RESETTING state has been narrowed.
I still don't follow. Yes RECONNECTING is where we repetitively: try to
create a link-side association again: if it fails, delay and try again;
or if success, reinit the controller, and unquiesce all queues -
allowing full operation again, at which time we transition to LIVE.
by "narrowed" what do you mean ? what "narrowed" ?
In FC, as we have a lot of work that must occur to terminate io as part
of the reset, it can be a fairly long window. I don't know that any
functionally in this path, regardless of time window, has narrowed.
>
> This patch add NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE state to mark the reset_work
> or error recovery work, scheduling gap and disable procedure.
> After that,
> - For nvme-pci, nvmet-loop, set state to RESETTING, start
> initialization.
> - For nvme-rdma, nvme-fc, set state to RECONNECTING, start
> initialization or reconnect.
So I'm lost - so you've effectively renamed RESETTING to RESET_PREPARE
for fc/rdma. What do you define are the actions in RESETTING that went
away and why is that different between pci and the other transports ?
Why doesn't nvme-pci need to go through RESET_PREPARE ? doesn't it have
the same scheduling window for a reset_work thread ?
On 1/17/2018 1:06 AM, Max Gurtovoy wrote:
>
>> +
>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>> + switch (old_state) {
>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>> + changed = true;
>> + /* FALLTHRU */
>> + default:
>> + break;
>> + }
>> + break;
>> case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
>> switch (old_state) {
>> case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
>> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>
> As I suggested in V3, please don't allow this transition.
> We'll move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING from NVME_CTRL_RESETTING.
>
> I look on it like that:
>
> NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE - "suspend" state
> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING - "resume" state
>
> you don't reconnect from "suspend" state, you must "resume" before you
> reconnect.
This makes no sense to me.
I could use a definition of what "suspend" and "resume" mean to you....
from what I've seen so far:
NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE: means I've decided to reset, changed state,
but the actual work for reset hasn't started yet. As we haven't
commonized who does the quiescing of the queues, the queues are still
live at this state, although some nvme check routine may bounce them. In
truth, the queues should be quiesced here.
NVME_CTRL_RESETTING: I'm resetting the controller, tearing down
queues/connections, the link side association. AFAIK - pci and all the
other transports have to do things things. Now is when the blk-mq
queues get stopped. We have a variance on whether the queues are
unquiesced or left quiesced (I think this is what you meant by "resume",
where resume means unquiesce) at the end of this. The admin_q is
unquiesced, meaning new admin cmds should fail. rdma also has io queues
unquiesced meaning new ios fail, while fc leaves them quiesced while
background timers run - meaning no new ios issued, nor any fail back to
a multipather. With the agreement that we would patch all of the
transports to leave them quiesced with fast-fail-timeouts occuring to
unquiesce them and start failing ios.
NVME_RECONNECTING: transitioned to after the link-side association is
terminated and the transport will now attempt to reconnect (perhaps
several attempts) to create a new link-side association. Stays in this
state until the controller is fully reconnected and it transitions to
NVME_LIVE. Until the link side association is active, queues do what
they do (as left by RESETTING and/or updated per timeouts) excepting
that after an active assocation, they queues will be unquiesced at the
time of the LIVE transition. Note: we grandfathered PCI into not
needing this state: As you (almost) can't fail the establishment of
the link-side association as it's a PCI function and registers so unless
the device has dropped off the bus, you can immediately talk to
registers and start to reinit the controller. Given it was almost
impossible not to succeed, and as the code path already existed, we
didn't see a reason to make pci change.
On 1/17/2018 1:19 AM, jianchao.wang wrote:
>
> I used to respond you in the V3 and wait for your feedback.
> Please refer to:
> After Sagi's nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect, the rdma ctrl state is changed to RECONNECTING state
> after some clearing and shutdown work, then some initializing procedure, no matter reset work path or error recovery path.
> The fc reset work also does the same thing.
> So if we define the range that RESET_PREPARE includes scheduling gap and disable and clear work, RESETTING includes initializing
> procedure, RECONNECTING is very similar with RESETTING.
I get the impression we have very different understandings of what
occurs under what states. I'd like to see a summary of what you think
that is as this is what we must agree upon.
Of course, if you move the gap, disable, and clear work into
RESET_PREPARE, you've taken most of the RESETTING state away. What was
left ?
I don't believe RESETTING and RECONNECTING are that similar - unless -
you are looking at that "reinit" part that we left grandfathered into PCI.
On 1/17/2018 1:24 AM, jianchao.wang wrote:
>
>> Maybe we could do like this;
>> In nvme fc/rdma
>> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work/err_work
>> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RECONNECTING
>> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>>
>> In nvme pci
>> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work
>> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RESETTING
>> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>> Currently, RECONNECTING has overlapped with RESETTING.
>> So I suggest to use RESET_PREPARE to mark the "suspend" part as you said.
>> And use RECONNECTING to mark the "resume" part in nvme-rdma/fc
>> use RESETTING part to mark the "resume" part in nvme-pci, nvmt-loop.
> I have added a comment above the definition of nvme_ctrl_state as below:
> +/*
> + * RESET_PREPARE - mark the state of scheduling gap and disable procedure
> + * RESETTING - nvme-pci, nvmet loop use it to mark the state of setup
> + * procedure
> + * RECONNECTING - nvme-fc, nvme-rdma use it to mark the state of setup
> + * and reconnect procedure
> + */
>
> Consequently, nvme-fc/rdma don't use RESETTING state any more, but only RESET_PREPARE.
So now I'm confused again... The purpose of the new state was to have a
state indicator to cover the transition into the state while the
reset_work item was yet to be scheduled. If all you've done is change
the state name on fc/rdma - don't you still have that window ?
-- james
Hi James
Thanks for your kindly and detailed response.
That's really appreciated!
And sorry for my bad description.
On 01/18/2018 05:01 AM, James Smart wrote:
> I'm having a hard time following why this patch is being requested. Help me catch on.....
>
Actually, this patchset is to fix a issue in nvme_timeout.
Please consider the following scenario.
nvme_reset_ctrl
-> set state to RESETTING
-> queue reset_work
(scheduling)
nvme_reset_work
-> nvme_dev_disable
-> quiesce queues
-> nvme_cancel_request
on outstanding requests
--------------------------------------------------------------------_boundary_
-> nvme initializing (may issue request on adminq)
Before the boundary, not only quiesce the queues, but only cancel all the outstanding requests.
A request could expire when the ctrl state is RESETTING.
- If the timeout occur before the _boundary_, the expired requests are from the previous work.
- Otherwise, the expired requests are from the controller initializing procedure, such as sending cq/sq
create commands to adminq to setup io queues.
In current implementation, nvme_timeout cannot identify the _boundary_ so only handles second case above.
This patchset is to identify the _boundary_ above, so introduce RESET_PREPARE.
Please refer to the following diagram.
nvme_reset_ctrl
-> set state to RESET_PREPARE
-> queue reset_work
(scheduling)
nvme_reset_work
-> nvme_dev_disable
-> quiesce queues
-> nvme_cancel_request
on outstanding requests
-> set state to RESETTING ----------> boundary
-> nvme initializing (may issue request on adminq)
Then we could identify the boundary by checking the ctrl-> state
After Sagi introduced d5bf4b7 (nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect), actually, same things as been done
in both nvme-fc/nvme.
- nvme_rdma_error_recovery_work
- nvme_rdma_reset_ctrl_work
- nvme_fc_reset_ctrl_work
But the state is from RESETTING to RECONNECTING.
So in the patch, RESETTING in nvme-fc/rdma is changed to RESET_PREPARE. Then we get:
nvme-fc/rdma RESET_PREPARE -> RECONNECTING -> LIVE
nvme-pci RESET_PREPARE -> RESETTING -> LIVE
> On 1/16/2018 8:54 PM, Jianchao Wang wrote:
>> Currently, the ctrl->state will be changed to NVME_CTRL_RESETTING
>> before queue the reset work. This is not so strict. There could be
>> a big gap before the reset_work callback is invoked.
> ok.... so what you're saying is you want something to know that you've transitioned to RESETTING but not yet performed an action for the reset. What is that something and what is it to do >
> guessing - I assume it's in the transport xxx_is_ready() and/or nvmf_check_init_req(), which is called at the start of queue_rq(), that wants to do something ?
>
Should be explained above. :)
>
>> In addition,
>> there is some disable work in the reset_work callback, strictly
>> speaking, not part of reset work, and could lead to some confusion.
>
> Can you explain this ? what's the confusion ?
>
> I assume by "disable" you mean it is quiescing queues ?
Sorry for my bad description. Not only quiesce queues, but also handle the outstanding requests.
>
>
>>
>> In addition, after set state to RESETTING and disable procedure,
>> nvme-rdma/fc use NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING to mark the setup and
>> reconnect procedure. The RESETTING state has been narrowed.
>
> I still don't follow. Yes RECONNECTING is where we repetitively: try to create a link-side association again: if it fails, delay and try again; or if success, reinit the controller, and unquiesce all queues - allowing full operation again, at which time we transition to LIVE.
>
> by "narrowed" what do you mean ? what "narrowed" ?
Currently , in nvme-pci, the RESETTING state includes both "shutdown" and "setup". But in nvme-fc/rdma, only "shutdown", "setup" is in RECONECTTING
shutdown - tear down queues/connections, quiesce queues, cancel requests ....
setup - setup new IO queues or connections and some other initializing work ....
>
> In FC, as we have a lot of work that must occur to terminate io as part of the reset, it can be a fairly long window. I don't know that any functionally in this path, regardless of time window, has narrowed.
>
>
>>
>> This patch add NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE state to mark the reset_work
>> or error recovery work, scheduling gap and disable procedure.
>> After that,
>> - For nvme-pci, nvmet-loop, set state to RESETTING, start
>> initialization.
>> - For nvme-rdma, nvme-fc, set state to RECONNECTING, start
>> initialization or reconnect.
>
> So I'm lost - so you've effectively renamed RESETTING to RESET_PREPARE for fc/rdma. What do you define are the actions in RESETTING that went away and why is that different between pci and the other transports ?
As Sagi said, we could merge RECONNECTING and RESETTING into a unique state.
> Why doesn't nvme-pci need to go through RESET_PREPARE ? doesn't it have the same scheduling window for a reset_work thread ?
Sure, nvme-pci also need to pass through RESET_PREPARE.
>
>
> On 1/17/2018 1:06 AM, Max Gurtovoy wrote:
>>
>>> +
>>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>>> + switch (old_state) {
>>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>>> + changed = true;
>>> + /* FALLTHRU */
>>> + default:
>>> + break;
>>> + }
>>> + break;
>>> case NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING:
>>> switch (old_state) {
>>> case NVME_CTRL_LIVE:
>>> - case NVME_CTRL_RESETTING:
>>> + case NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE:
>>
>> As I suggested in V3, please don't allow this transition.
>> We'll move to NVME_CTRL_RECONNECTING from NVME_CTRL_RESETTING.
>>
>> I look on it like that:
>>
>> NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE - "suspend" state
>> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING - "resume" state
>>
>> you don't reconnect from "suspend" state, you must "resume" before you reconnect.
>
> This makes no sense to me.
>
> I could use a definition of what "suspend" and "resume" mean to you....
>
> from what I've seen so far:
> NVME_CTRL_RESET_PREPARE: means I've decided to reset, changed state, but the actual work for reset hasn't started yet. As we haven't commonized who does the quiescing of the queues, the queues are still live at this state, although some nvme check routine may bounce them. In truth, the queues should be quiesced here.
>
> NVME_CTRL_RESETTING: I'm resetting the controller, tearing down queues/connections, the link side association. AFAIK - pci and all the other transports have to do things things. Now is when the blk-mq queues get stopped. We have a variance on whether the queues are unquiesced or left quiesced (I think this is what you meant by "resume", where resume means unquiesce) at the end of this. The admin_q is unquiesced, meaning new admin cmds should fail. rdma also has io queues unquiesced meaning new ios fail, while fc leaves them quiesced while background timers run - meaning no new ios issued, nor any fail back to a multipather. With the agreement that we would patch all of the transports to leave them quiesced with fast-fail-timeouts occuring to unquiesce them and start failing ios.
>
> NVME_RECONNECTING: transitioned to after the link-side association is terminated and the transport will now attempt to reconnect (perhaps several attempts) to create a new link-side association. Stays in this state until the controller is fully reconnected and it transitions to NVME_LIVE. Until the link side association is active, queues do what they do (as left by RESETTING and/or updated per timeouts) excepting that after an active assocation, they queues will be unquiesced at the time of the LIVE transition. Note: we grandfathered PCI into not needing this state: As you (almost) can't fail the establishment of the link-side association as it's a PCI function and registers so unless the device has dropped off the bus, you can immediately talk to registers and start to reinit the controller. Given it was almost impossible not to succeed, and as the code path already existed, we didn't see a reason to make pci change.
Thanks for your directive here. That's really appreciated.
>
>
> On 1/17/2018 1:19 AM, jianchao.wang wrote:
>>
>> I used to respond you in the V3 and wait for your feedback.
>> Please refer to:
>> After Sagi's nvme-rdma: fix concurrent reset and reconnect, the rdma ctrl state is changed to RECONNECTING state
>> after some clearing and shutdown work, then some initializing procedure, no matter reset work path or error recovery path.
>> The fc reset work also does the same thing.
>> So if we define the range that RESET_PREPARE includes scheduling gap and disable and clear work, RESETTING includes initializing
>> procedure, RECONNECTING is very similar with RESETTING.
>
> I get the impression we have very different understandings of what occurs under what states. I'd like to see a summary of what you think that is as this is what we must agree upon.
>
> Of course, if you move the gap, disable, and clear work into RESET_PREPARE, you've taken most of the RESETTING state away. What was left ?
Things should be cleared on the top. :)
> > I don't believe RESETTING and RECONNECTING are that similar - unless - you are looking at that "reinit" part that we left grandfathered into PCI.
Yes. I have got the point. Thanks for your directive.
Both nvme-pc and nvme-fc/rdma have "shutdown" part to tear down queues/connects, quiesce queues, cancel outstanding requests...
We could call this part as "shutdowning" as well as the scheduling gap.
Because the difference of initializing between the nvme-pci and nvme-fc/rdma, we could call "reiniting" for nvme-pci and
call "reconnecting" for nvme-fc/rdma
>
>
> On 1/17/2018 1:24 AM, jianchao.wang wrote:
>>
>>> Maybe we could do like this;
>>> In nvme fc/rdma
>>> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work/err_work
>>> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RECONNECTING
>>> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>>>
>>> In nvme pci
>>> - set state to RESET_PREPARE, queue reset_work
>>> - clear/shutdown works, set state to RESETTING
>>> - initialization, set state to LIVE
>>> Currently, RECONNECTING has overlapped with RESETTING.
>>> So I suggest to use RESET_PREPARE to mark the "suspend" part as you said.
>>> And use RECONNECTING to mark the "resume" part in nvme-rdma/fc
>>> use RESETTING part to mark the "resume" part in nvme-pci, nvmt-loop.
>> I have added a comment above the definition of nvme_ctrl_state as below:
>> +/*
>> + * RESET_PREPARE - mark the state of scheduling gap and disable procedure
>> + * RESETTING - nvme-pci, nvmet loop use it to mark the state of setup
>> + * procedure
>> + * RECONNECTING - nvme-fc, nvme-rdma use it to mark the state of setup
>> + * and reconnect procedure
>> + */
>>
>> Consequently, nvme-fc/rdma don't use RESETTING state any more, but only RESET_PREPARE.
>
> So now I'm confused again... The purpose of the new state was to have a state indicator to cover the transition into the state while the reset_work item was yet to be scheduled. If all you've done is change the state name on fc/rdma - don't you still have that window ?
Things should be cleared on the top. :)
Many thanks again.
>
> -- james
>
>
>
>
Thanks jianchoa. This helped.
On 1/17/2018 7:13 PM, jianchao.wang wrote:
> Actually, this patchset is to fix a issue in nvme_timeout.
> Please consider the following scenario.
>
> nvme_reset_ctrl
> -> set state to RESETTING
> -> queue reset_work
> (scheduling)
> nvme_reset_work -> nvme_dev_disable
> -> quiesce queues
> -> nvme_cancel_request
> on outstanding requests
> --------------------------------------------------------------------_boundary_
> -> nvme initializing (may issue request on adminq)
>
> Before the boundary, not only quiesce the queues, but only cancel all the outstanding requests.
>
> A request could expire when the ctrl state is RESETTING.
> - If the timeout occur before the _boundary_, the expired requests are from the previous work.
> - Otherwise, the expired requests are from the controller initializing procedure, such as sending cq/sq
> create commands to adminq to setup io queues.
> In current implementation, nvme_timeout cannot identify the _boundary_ so only handles second case above.
So what you've described very well is the pci adapter and the fact that
it doesn't use a RECONNECTING state when it starts to reinit the
controller like rdma/fc does. Note: we had left it that way as a
"grandfathering" as the code already existed and we didn't see an issue
just leaving the reinit in the resetting handler.
> ....
>
> So in the patch, RESETTING in nvme-fc/rdma is changed to RESET_PREPARE. Then we get:
> nvme-fc/rdma RESET_PREPARE -> RECONNECTING -> LIVE
> nvme-pci RESET_PREPARE -> RESETTING -> LIVE
Right - so another way to look at this is you renamed RESETTING to
RESET_PREPARE and added a new RESETTING state in the nvme-pci when in
reinits. Why not simply have the nvme-pci transport transition to
RECONNECTING like the other transports. No new states, semantics are all
the same.
Here's what the responsibility of the states are:
RESETTING:
-quiescing the blk-mq queues os errors don't bubble back to callees and
new io is suspended
-terminating the link-side association: resets the controller via
register access/SET_PROPERTY, deletes connections/queues, cleans out
active io and lets them queue for resending, etc.
-end result is nvme block device is present, but idle, and no active
controller on the link side (link being a transport specific link such
as pci, or ethernet/ib for rdma or fc link).
RECONNECTING:
- "establish an association at the transport" on PCI this is immediate -
you can either talk to the pci function or you can't. With rdma/fc we
send transport traffic to create an admin q connection.
- if association succeeded: the controller is init'd via register
accesses/fabric GET/SET_PROPERTIES and admin-queue command, io
connections/queues created, blk-mq queues unquiesced, and finally
transition to NVME_CTRL_LIVE.
- if association failed: check controller timeout., if not exceeded,
schedule timer and retry later. With pci, this could cover the
temporary loss of the pci function access (a hot plug event) while
keeping the nvme blk device live in the system.
It matches what you are describing but using what we already have in
place - with the only difference being the addition of your "boundary"
by adding the RECONNECTING state to nvme-pci.
>
>>> I don't believe RESETTING and RECONNECTING are that similar - unless - you are looking at that "reinit" part that we left grandfathered into PCI.
> Yes. I have got the point. Thanks for your directive.
>
> Both nvme-pc and nvme-fc/rdma have "shutdown" part to tear down queues/connects, quiesce queues, cancel outstanding requests...
> We could call this part as "shutdowning" as well as the scheduling gap.
> Because the difference of initializing between the nvme-pci and nvme-fc/rdma, we could call "reiniting" for nvme-pci and
> call "reconnecting" for nvme-fc/rdma
I don't think we need different states for the two. The actions taken
are really very similar. How they do the actions varies slightly, but
not what they are trying to do. Thus, I'd prefer we keep the existing
RECONNECTING state and use it in nvme-pci as well. I'm open to renaming
it if there's something about the name that is not agreeable.
-- james
Hi James
Thanks for you detailed, kindly response and directive.
That's really appreciated.
On 01/18/2018 02:24 PM, James Smart wrote:
>> So in the patch, RESETTING in nvme-fc/rdma is changed to RESET_PREPARE. Then we get:
>> nvme-fc/rdma RESET_PREPARE -> RECONNECTING -> LIVE
>> nvme-pci RESET_PREPARE -> RESETTING -> LIVE
>
> Right - so another way to look at this is you renamed RESETTING to RESET_PREPARE and added a new RESETTING state in the nvme-pci when in reinits. Why not simply have the nvme-pci transport transition to RECONNECTING like the other transports. No new states, semantics are all the same.
>
> Here's what the responsibility of the states are:
> RESETTING:
> -quiescing the blk-mq queues os errors don't bubble back to callees and new io is suspended
> -terminating the link-side association: resets the controller via register access/SET_PROPERTY, deletes connections/queues, cleans out active io and lets them queue for resending, etc.
> -end result is nvme block device is present, but idle, and no active controller on the link side (link being a transport specific link such as pci, or ethernet/ib for rdma or fc link).
>
> RECONNECTING:
> - "establish an association at the transport" on PCI this is immediate - you can either talk to the pci function or you can't. With rdma/fc we send transport traffic to create an admin q connection.
> - if association succeeded: the controller is init'd via register accesses/fabric GET/SET_PROPERTIES and admin-queue command, io connections/queues created, blk-mq queues unquiesced, and finally transition to NVME_CTRL_LIVE.
> - if association failed: check controller timeout., if not exceeded, schedule timer and retry later. With pci, this could cover the temporary loss of the pci function access (a hot plug event) while keeping the nvme blk device live in the system.
>
> It matches what you are describing but using what we already have in place - with the only difference being the addition of your "boundary" by adding the RECONNECTING state to nvme-pci.
Yes, absolutely. Thanks for your detailed summary here.
Introducing RECONNECTING into nvme-pci is indeed a clearer way to fix the issue.
>
>
>>
>>>> I don't believe RESETTING and RECONNECTING are that similar - unless - you are looking at that "reinit" part that we left grandfathered into PCI.
>> Yes. I have got the point. Thanks for your directive.
>>
>> Both nvme-pc and nvme-fc/rdma have "shutdown" part to tear down queues/connects, quiesce queues, cancel outstanding requests...
>> We could call this part as "shutdowning" as well as the scheduling gap.
>> Because the difference of initializing between the nvme-pci and nvme-fc/rdma, we could call "reiniting" for nvme-pci and
>> call "reconnecting" for nvme-fc/rdma
>
> I don't think we need different states for the two. The actions taken are really very similar. How they do the actions varies slightly, but not what they are trying to do. Thus, I'd prefer we keep the existing RECONNECTING state and use it in nvme-pci as well. I'm open to renaming it if there's something about the name that is not agreeable.
Yes. And I will use RECONNECTING in next version to fix this issue. If better name, could introduce in other patchset. :)
Many thanks again.
Jianchao