Return-Path: linux-nfs-owner@vger.kernel.org Received: from fieldses.org ([174.143.236.118]:43004 "EHLO fieldses.org" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1752998Ab3ACULY (ORCPT ); Thu, 3 Jan 2013 15:11:24 -0500 Date: Thu, 3 Jan 2013 15:11:20 -0500 From: "J. Bruce Fields" To: "Adamson, Dros" Cc: "Myklebust, Trond" , Dave Jones , Linux Kernel , "linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org" , Tejun Heo Subject: Re: nfsd oops on Linus' current tree. Message-ID: <20130103201120.GA2096@fieldses.org> References: <20121221153348.GA32151@redhat.com> <20121221180824.GA27729@fieldses.org> <4FA345DA4F4AE44899BD2B03EEEC2FA91197273D@SACEXCMBX04-PRD.hq.netapp.com> <20121221230849.GB29739@fieldses.org> <4FA345DA4F4AE44899BD2B03EEEC2FA911972C73@SACEXCMBX04-PRD.hq.netapp.com> <20121221232609.GC29739@fieldses.org> <4FA345DA4F4AE44899BD2B03EEEC2FA911972CA1@SACEXCMBX04-PRD.hq.netapp.com> <20121221234530.GA30048@fieldses.org> <0EC8763B847DB24D9ADF5EBD9CD7B4191259E4A2@SACEXCMBX02-PRD.hq.netapp.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii In-Reply-To: <0EC8763B847DB24D9ADF5EBD9CD7B4191259E4A2@SACEXCMBX02-PRD.hq.netapp.com> Sender: linux-nfs-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: On Thu, Jan 03, 2013 at 04:28:37PM +0000, Adamson, Dros wrote: > Hey, sorry for the late response, I've been on vacation. > > On Dec 21, 2012, at 6:45 PM, J. Bruce Fields > wrote: > > > On Fri, Dec 21, 2012 at 11:36:51PM +0000, Myklebust, Trond wrote: > >> Please reread what I said. There was no obvious circular > >> dependency, because nfsiod and rpciod are separate workqueues, both > >> created with WQ_MEM_RECLAIM. > > > > Oh, sorry, I read "rpciod" as "nfsiod"! > > > >> Dros' experience shows, however that a call to rpc_shutdown_client > >> in an nfsiod work item will deadlock with rpciod if the RPC task's > >> work item has been assigned to the same CPU as the one running the > >> rpc_shutdown_client work item. > >> > >> I can't tell right now if that is intentional (in which case the > >> WARN_ON in the rpc code is correct), or if it is a bug in the > >> workqueue code. For now, we're assuming the former. > > > > Well, Documentation/workqueue.txt says: > > > > "Each wq with WQ_MEM_RECLAIM set has an execution context > > reserved for it. If there is dependency among multiple work > > items used during memory reclaim, they should be queued to > > separate wq each with WQ_MEM_RECLAIM." > > The deadlock we were seeing was: > > - task A gets queued on rpciod workqueue and assigned kworker-0:0 - > task B gets queued on rpciod workqueue and assigned the same kworker > (kworker-0:0) - task A gets run, calls rpc_shutdown_client(), which > will loop forever waiting for task B to run rpc_async_release() - task > B will never run rpc_async_release() - it can't run until kworker-0:0 > is free, which won't happen until task A (rpc_shutdown_client) is done > > The same deadlock happened when we tried queuing the tasks on a > different workqueues -- queue_work() assigns the task to a kworker > thread and it's luck of the draw if it's the same kworker as task A. > We tried the different workqueue options, but nothing changed this > behavior. > > Once a work struct is queued, there is no way to back out of the > deadlock. From kernel/workqueue.c:insert_wq_barrier comment: > > * Currently, a queued barrier can't be canceled. This is because * > try_to_grab_pending() can't determine whether the work to be * > grabbed is at the head of the queue and thus can't clear LINKED * > flag of the previous work while there must be a valid next work * > after a work with LINKED flag set. > > So once a work struct is queued and there is an ordering dependency > (i.e. task A is before task B), there is no way to back task B out - > so we can't just call cancel_work() or something on task B in > rpc_shutdown_client. > > The root of our issue is that rpc_shutdown_client is never safe to > call from a workqueue context - it loops until there are no more > tasks, marking tasks as killed and waiting for them to be cleaned up > in each task's own workqueue context. Any tasks that have already been > assigned to the same kworker thread will never have a chance to run > this cleanup stage. > > When fixing this deadlock, Trond and I discussed changing how > rpc_shutdown_client works (making it workqueue safe), but Trond felt > that it'd be better to just not call it from a workqueue context and > print a warning if it is. > > IIRC we tried using different workqueues with WQ_MEM_RECLAIM (with no > success), but I'd argue that even if that did work it would still be > very easy to call rpc_shutdown_client from the wrong context and MUCH > harder to detect it. It's also unclear to me if setting rpciod > workqueue to WQ_MEM_RECLAIM would limit it to one kworker, etc... Both rpciod and nfsiod already set WQ_MEM_RECLAIM. But, right, looking at kernel/workqueue.c, it seems that the dedicated "rescuer" threads are invoked only in the case when work is stalled because a new worker thread isn't allocated quickly enough. So, what to do that's simplest enough that it would work for post-rc2/stable? I was happy having just a simple dedicated thread--these are only started when nfsd is, so there's no real thread proliferation problem. I'll go quietly weep for a little while and then think about it some more.... --b.