Return-Path: Received: from userp1040.oracle.com ([156.151.31.81]:39774 "EHLO userp1040.oracle.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1752613AbdJaOz2 (ORCPT ); Tue, 31 Oct 2017 10:55:28 -0400 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Mime-Version: 1.0 (Mac OS X Mail 9.3 \(3124\)) Subject: Re: NFS Force Unmounting From: Chuck Lever In-Reply-To: <1509460909.4553.37.camel@kernel.org> Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 10:55:19 -0400 Cc: NeilBrown , Bruce Fields , Joshua Watt , Linux NFS Mailing List Message-Id: References: <1508951506.2542.51.camel@gmail.com> <20171030202045.GA6168@fieldses.org> <87h8ugwdev.fsf@notabene.neil.brown.name> <1509460909.4553.37.camel@kernel.org> To: Jeff Layton Sender: linux-nfs-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: > On Oct 31, 2017, at 10:41 AM, Jeff Layton wrote: > > On Tue, 2017-10-31 at 08:09 +1100, NeilBrown wrote: >> On Mon, Oct 30 2017, J. Bruce Fields wrote: >> >>> On Wed, Oct 25, 2017 at 12:11:46PM -0500, Joshua Watt wrote: >>>> I'm working on a networking embedded system where NFS servers can come >>>> and go from the network, and I've discovered that the Kernel NFS server >>> >>> For "Kernel NFS server", I think you mean "Kernel NFS client". >>> >>>> make it difficult to cleanup applications in a timely manner when the >>>> server disappears (and yes, I am mounting with "soft" and relatively >>>> short timeouts). I currently have a user space mechanism that can >>>> quickly detect when the server disappears, and does a umount() with the >>>> MNT_FORCE and MNT_DETACH flags. Using MNT_DETACH prevents new accesses >>>> to files on the defunct remote server, and I have traced through the >>>> code to see that MNT_FORCE does indeed cancel any current RPC tasks >>>> with -EIO. However, this isn't sufficient for my use case because if a >>>> user space application isn't currently waiting on an RCP task that gets >>>> canceled, it will have to timeout again before it detects the >>>> disconnect. For example, if a simple client is copying a file from the >>>> NFS server, and happens to not be waiting on the RPC task in the read() >>>> call when umount() occurs, it will be none the wiser and loop around to >>>> call read() again, which must then try the whole NFS timeout + recovery >>>> before the failure is detected. If a client is more complex and has a >>>> lot of open file descriptor, it will typical have to wait for each one >>>> to timeout, leading to very long delays. >>>> >>>> The (naive?) solution seems to be to add some flag in either the NFS >>>> client or the RPC client that gets set in nfs_umount_begin(). This >>>> would cause all subsequent operations to fail with an error code >>>> instead of having to be queued as an RPC task and the and then timing >>>> out. In our example client, the application would then get the -EIO >>>> immediately on the next (and all subsequent) read() calls. >>>> >>>> There does seem to be some precedence for doing this (especially with >>>> network file systems), as both cifs (CifsExiting) and ceph >>>> (CEPH_MOUNT_SHUTDOWN) appear to implement this behavior (at least from >>>> looking at the code. I haven't verified runtime behavior). >>>> >>>> Are there any pitfalls I'm oversimplifying? >>> >>> I don't know. >>> >>> In the hard case I don't think you'd want to do something like >>> this--applications expect mounts to be stay pinned while they're using >>> them, not to get -EIO. In the soft case maybe an exception like this >>> makes sense. >> >> Applications also expect to get responses to read() requests, and expect >> fsync() to complete, but if the servers has melted down, that isn't >> going to happen. Sometimes unexpected errors are better than unexpected >> infinite delays. >> >> I think we need a reliable way to unmount an NFS filesystem mounted from >> a non-responsive server. Maybe that just means fixing all the places >> where use we use TASK_UNINTERRUTIBLE when waiting for the server. That >> would allow processes accessing the filesystem to be killed. I don't >> know if that would meet Joshua's needs. >> >> Last time this came up, Trond didn't want to make MNT_FORCE too strong as >> it only makes sense to be forceful on the final unmount, and we cannot >> know if this is the "final" unmount (no other bind-mounts around) until >> much later than ->umount_prepare. Maybe umount is the wrong interface. >> Maybe we should expose "struct nfs_client" (or maybe "struct >> nfs_server") objects via sysfs so they can be marked "dead" (or similar) >> meaning that all IO should fail. >> > > I like this idea. > > Note that we already have some per-rpc_xprt / per-rpc_clnt info in > debugfs sunrpc dir. We could make some writable files in there, to allow > you to kill off individual RPCs or maybe mark a whole clnt and/or xprt > dead in some fashion. Listing individual RPCs seems like overkill. It would be straightforward to identify these transports by the IP addresses of the remotes, and just mark the specific transports for a dead server. Maybe the --force option of umount could do this. The RPC client can then walk through the dead transport's list of RPC tasks and terminate all of them. That makes it easy to find these things. But it doesn't take care of killing processes that are not interruptible, though. > I don't really have a good feel for what this interface should look like > yet. debugfs is attractive here, as it's supposedly not part of the > kernel ABI guarantee. That allows us to do some experimentation in this > area, without making too big an initial commitment. > -- > Jeff Layton > -- > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-nfs" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html -- Chuck Lever