WSL2-Linux-Kernel/drivers/md/dm-mpath.c

2256 строки
56 KiB
C
Исходник Обычный вид История

/*
* Copyright (C) 2003 Sistina Software Limited.
* Copyright (C) 2004-2005 Red Hat, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
* This file is released under the GPL.
*/
#include <linux/device-mapper.h>
#include "dm-rq.h"
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
#include "dm-bio-record.h"
#include "dm-path-selector.h"
#include "dm-uevent.h"
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
#include <linux/blkdev.h>
#include <linux/ctype.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/mempool.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/pagemap.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/time.h>
#include <linux/timer.h>
#include <linux/workqueue.h>
#include <linux/delay.h>
#include <scsi/scsi_dh.h>
#include <linux/atomic.h>
#include <linux/blk-mq.h>
#define DM_MSG_PREFIX "multipath"
#define DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_MSECS 2000
#define DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_DEFAULT ((unsigned) -1)
#define QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT 0
static unsigned long queue_if_no_path_timeout_secs = QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH_TIMEOUT_DEFAULT;
/* Path properties */
struct pgpath {
struct list_head list;
struct priority_group *pg; /* Owning PG */
unsigned fail_count; /* Cumulative failure count */
struct dm_path path;
struct delayed_work activate_path;
bool is_active:1; /* Path status */
};
#define path_to_pgpath(__pgp) container_of((__pgp), struct pgpath, path)
/*
* Paths are grouped into Priority Groups and numbered from 1 upwards.
* Each has a path selector which controls which path gets used.
*/
struct priority_group {
struct list_head list;
struct multipath *m; /* Owning multipath instance */
struct path_selector ps;
unsigned pg_num; /* Reference number */
unsigned nr_pgpaths; /* Number of paths in PG */
struct list_head pgpaths;
bool bypassed:1; /* Temporarily bypass this PG? */
};
/* Multipath context */
struct multipath {
unsigned long flags; /* Multipath state flags */
spinlock_t lock;
enum dm_queue_mode queue_mode;
struct pgpath *current_pgpath;
struct priority_group *current_pg;
struct priority_group *next_pg; /* Switch to this PG if set */
atomic_t nr_valid_paths; /* Total number of usable paths */
unsigned nr_priority_groups;
struct list_head priority_groups;
const char *hw_handler_name;
char *hw_handler_params;
wait_queue_head_t pg_init_wait; /* Wait for pg_init completion */
unsigned pg_init_retries; /* Number of times to retry pg_init */
unsigned pg_init_delay_msecs; /* Number of msecs before pg_init retry */
atomic_t pg_init_in_progress; /* Only one pg_init allowed at once */
atomic_t pg_init_count; /* Number of times pg_init called */
struct mutex work_mutex;
struct work_struct trigger_event;
struct dm_target *ti;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
struct work_struct process_queued_bios;
struct bio_list queued_bios;
struct timer_list nopath_timer; /* Timeout for queue_if_no_path */
};
/*
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
* Context information attached to each io we process.
*/
struct dm_mpath_io {
struct pgpath *pgpath;
size_t nr_bytes;
};
typedef int (*action_fn) (struct pgpath *pgpath);
static struct workqueue_struct *kmultipathd, *kmpath_handlerd;
static void trigger_event(struct work_struct *work);
static void activate_or_offline_path(struct pgpath *pgpath);
static void activate_path_work(struct work_struct *work);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
static void process_queued_bios(struct work_struct *work);
static void queue_if_no_path_timeout_work(struct timer_list *t);
/*-----------------------------------------------
* Multipath state flags.
*-----------------------------------------------*/
#define MPATHF_QUEUE_IO 0 /* Must we queue all I/O? */
#define MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH 1 /* Queue I/O if last path fails? */
#define MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH 2 /* Saved state during suspension */
#define MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER 3 /* If there's already a hw_handler present, don't change it. */
#define MPATHF_PG_INIT_DISABLED 4 /* pg_init is not currently allowed */
#define MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED 5 /* pg_init needs calling? */
#define MPATHF_PG_INIT_DELAY_RETRY 6 /* Delay pg_init retry? */
static bool mpath_double_check_test_bit(int MPATHF_bit, struct multipath *m)
{
bool r = test_bit(MPATHF_bit, &m->flags);
if (r) {
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
r = test_bit(MPATHF_bit, &m->flags);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
return r;
}
/*-----------------------------------------------
* Allocation routines
*-----------------------------------------------*/
static struct pgpath *alloc_pgpath(void)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath = kzalloc(sizeof(*pgpath), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!pgpath)
return NULL;
pgpath->is_active = true;
return pgpath;
}
static void free_pgpath(struct pgpath *pgpath)
{
kfree(pgpath);
}
static struct priority_group *alloc_priority_group(void)
{
struct priority_group *pg;
pg = kzalloc(sizeof(*pg), GFP_KERNEL);
if (pg)
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&pg->pgpaths);
return pg;
}
static void free_pgpaths(struct list_head *pgpaths, struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath, *tmp;
list_for_each_entry_safe(pgpath, tmp, pgpaths, list) {
list_del(&pgpath->list);
dm_put_device(ti, pgpath->path.dev);
free_pgpath(pgpath);
}
}
static void free_priority_group(struct priority_group *pg,
struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct path_selector *ps = &pg->ps;
if (ps->type) {
ps->type->destroy(ps);
dm_put_path_selector(ps->type);
}
free_pgpaths(&pg->pgpaths, ti);
kfree(pg);
}
static struct multipath *alloc_multipath(struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct multipath *m;
m = kzalloc(sizeof(*m), GFP_KERNEL);
if (m) {
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&m->priority_groups);
spin_lock_init(&m->lock);
atomic_set(&m->nr_valid_paths, 0);
INIT_WORK(&m->trigger_event, trigger_event);
mutex_init(&m->work_mutex);
m->queue_mode = DM_TYPE_NONE;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
m->ti = ti;
ti->private = m;
timer_setup(&m->nopath_timer, queue_if_no_path_timeout_work, 0);
}
return m;
}
static int alloc_multipath_stage2(struct dm_target *ti, struct multipath *m)
{
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_NONE) {
m->queue_mode = DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED;
} else if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED) {
INIT_WORK(&m->process_queued_bios, process_queued_bios);
/*
* bio-based doesn't support any direct scsi_dh management;
* it just discovers if a scsi_dh is attached.
*/
set_bit(MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER, &m->flags);
}
dm_table_set_type(ti->table, m->queue_mode);
/*
* Init fields that are only used when a scsi_dh is attached
* - must do this unconditionally (really doesn't hurt non-SCSI uses)
*/
set_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags);
atomic_set(&m->pg_init_in_progress, 0);
atomic_set(&m->pg_init_count, 0);
m->pg_init_delay_msecs = DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_DEFAULT;
init_waitqueue_head(&m->pg_init_wait);
return 0;
}
static void free_multipath(struct multipath *m)
{
struct priority_group *pg, *tmp;
list_for_each_entry_safe(pg, tmp, &m->priority_groups, list) {
list_del(&pg->list);
free_priority_group(pg, m->ti);
}
kfree(m->hw_handler_name);
kfree(m->hw_handler_params);
mutex_destroy(&m->work_mutex);
kfree(m);
}
static struct dm_mpath_io *get_mpio(union map_info *info)
{
return info->ptr;
}
static size_t multipath_per_bio_data_size(void)
{
return sizeof(struct dm_mpath_io) + sizeof(struct dm_bio_details);
}
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
static struct dm_mpath_io *get_mpio_from_bio(struct bio *bio)
{
return dm_per_bio_data(bio, multipath_per_bio_data_size());
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
static struct dm_bio_details *get_bio_details_from_mpio(struct dm_mpath_io *mpio)
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
{
/* dm_bio_details is immediately after the dm_mpath_io in bio's per-bio-data */
void *bio_details = mpio + 1;
return bio_details;
}
static void multipath_init_per_bio_data(struct bio *bio, struct dm_mpath_io **mpio_p)
{
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio_from_bio(bio);
struct dm_bio_details *bio_details = get_bio_details_from_mpio(mpio);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
mpio->nr_bytes = bio->bi_iter.bi_size;
mpio->pgpath = NULL;
*mpio_p = mpio;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
dm_bio_record(bio_details, bio);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
/*-----------------------------------------------
* Path selection
*-----------------------------------------------*/
static int __pg_init_all_paths(struct multipath *m)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath;
unsigned long pg_init_delay = 0;
lockdep_assert_held(&m->lock);
if (atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress) || test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DISABLED, &m->flags))
return 0;
atomic_inc(&m->pg_init_count);
clear_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags);
/* Check here to reset pg_init_required */
if (!m->current_pg)
return 0;
if (test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DELAY_RETRY, &m->flags))
pg_init_delay = msecs_to_jiffies(m->pg_init_delay_msecs != DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_DEFAULT ?
m->pg_init_delay_msecs : DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_MSECS);
list_for_each_entry(pgpath, &m->current_pg->pgpaths, list) {
/* Skip failed paths */
if (!pgpath->is_active)
continue;
if (queue_delayed_work(kmpath_handlerd, &pgpath->activate_path,
pg_init_delay))
atomic_inc(&m->pg_init_in_progress);
}
return atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress);
}
static int pg_init_all_paths(struct multipath *m)
{
int ret;
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
ret = __pg_init_all_paths(m);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return ret;
}
static void __switch_pg(struct multipath *m, struct priority_group *pg)
{
lockdep_assert_held(&m->lock);
m->current_pg = pg;
/* Must we initialise the PG first, and queue I/O till it's ready? */
if (m->hw_handler_name) {
set_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags);
set_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags);
} else {
clear_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags);
clear_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags);
}
atomic_set(&m->pg_init_count, 0);
}
static struct pgpath *choose_path_in_pg(struct multipath *m,
struct priority_group *pg,
size_t nr_bytes)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct dm_path *path;
struct pgpath *pgpath;
path = pg->ps.type->select_path(&pg->ps, nr_bytes);
if (!path)
return ERR_PTR(-ENXIO);
pgpath = path_to_pgpath(path);
if (unlikely(READ_ONCE(m->current_pg) != pg)) {
/* Only update current_pgpath if pg changed */
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
m->current_pgpath = pgpath;
__switch_pg(m, pg);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
return pgpath;
}
static struct pgpath *choose_pgpath(struct multipath *m, size_t nr_bytes)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct priority_group *pg;
struct pgpath *pgpath;
unsigned bypassed = 1;
if (!atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths)) {
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
clear_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
goto failed;
}
/* Were we instructed to switch PG? */
if (READ_ONCE(m->next_pg)) {
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
pg = m->next_pg;
if (!pg) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
goto check_current_pg;
}
m->next_pg = NULL;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
pgpath = choose_path_in_pg(m, pg, nr_bytes);
if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pgpath))
return pgpath;
}
/* Don't change PG until it has no remaining paths */
check_current_pg:
pg = READ_ONCE(m->current_pg);
if (pg) {
pgpath = choose_path_in_pg(m, pg, nr_bytes);
if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pgpath))
return pgpath;
}
/*
* Loop through priority groups until we find a valid path.
* First time we skip PGs marked 'bypassed'.
* Second time we only try the ones we skipped, but set
* pg_init_delay_retry so we do not hammer controllers.
*/
do {
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
if (pg->bypassed == !!bypassed)
continue;
pgpath = choose_path_in_pg(m, pg, nr_bytes);
if (!IS_ERR_OR_NULL(pgpath)) {
if (!bypassed) {
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
set_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DELAY_RETRY, &m->flags);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
return pgpath;
}
}
} while (bypassed--);
failed:
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
m->current_pg = NULL;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return NULL;
}
/*
* dm_report_EIO() is a macro instead of a function to make pr_debug_ratelimited()
* report the function name and line number of the function from which
* it has been invoked.
*/
#define dm_report_EIO(m) \
do { \
DMDEBUG_LIMIT("%s: returning EIO; QIFNP = %d; SQIFNP = %d; DNFS = %d", \
dm_table_device_name((m)->ti->table), \
test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &(m)->flags), \
test_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &(m)->flags), \
dm_noflush_suspending((m)->ti)); \
} while (0)
/*
* Check whether bios must be queued in the device-mapper core rather
* than here in the target.
*/
static bool __must_push_back(struct multipath *m)
{
return dm_noflush_suspending(m->ti);
}
static bool must_push_back_rq(struct multipath *m)
{
unsigned long flags;
bool ret;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
ret = (test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags) || __must_push_back(m));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return ret;
}
/*
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
* Map cloned requests (request-based multipath)
*/
static int multipath_clone_and_map(struct dm_target *ti, struct request *rq,
union map_info *map_context,
struct request **__clone)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
size_t nr_bytes = blk_rq_bytes(rq);
struct pgpath *pgpath;
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
struct block_device *bdev;
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio(map_context);
struct request_queue *q;
struct request *clone;
/* Do we need to select a new pgpath? */
pgpath = READ_ONCE(m->current_pgpath);
if (!pgpath || !mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m))
pgpath = choose_pgpath(m, nr_bytes);
if (!pgpath) {
if (must_push_back_rq(m))
return DM_MAPIO_DELAY_REQUEUE;
dm_report_EIO(m); /* Failed */
return DM_MAPIO_KILL;
} else if (mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m) ||
mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, m)) {
pg_init_all_paths(m);
return DM_MAPIO_DELAY_REQUEUE;
}
mpio->pgpath = pgpath;
mpio->nr_bytes = nr_bytes;
bdev = pgpath->path.dev->bdev;
q = bdev_get_queue(bdev);
clone = blk_get_request(q, rq->cmd_flags | REQ_NOMERGE,
BLK_MQ_REQ_NOWAIT);
if (IS_ERR(clone)) {
/* EBUSY, ENODEV or EWOULDBLOCK: requeue */
if (blk_queue_dying(q)) {
atomic_inc(&m->pg_init_in_progress);
activate_or_offline_path(pgpath);
return DM_MAPIO_DELAY_REQUEUE;
}
/*
* blk-mq's SCHED_RESTART can cover this requeue, so we
* needn't deal with it by DELAY_REQUEUE. More importantly,
* we have to return DM_MAPIO_REQUEUE so that blk-mq can
* get the queue busy feedback (via BLK_STS_RESOURCE),
* otherwise I/O merging can suffer.
*/
return DM_MAPIO_REQUEUE;
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
}
clone->bio = clone->biotail = NULL;
clone->rq_disk = bdev->bd_disk;
clone->cmd_flags |= REQ_FAILFAST_TRANSPORT;
*__clone = clone;
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
if (pgpath->pg->ps.type->start_io)
pgpath->pg->ps.type->start_io(&pgpath->pg->ps,
&pgpath->path,
nr_bytes);
return DM_MAPIO_REMAPPED;
}
static void multipath_release_clone(struct request *clone,
union map_info *map_context)
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
{
if (unlikely(map_context)) {
/*
* non-NULL map_context means caller is still map
* method; must undo multipath_clone_and_map()
*/
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio(map_context);
struct pgpath *pgpath = mpio->pgpath;
if (pgpath && pgpath->pg->ps.type->end_io)
pgpath->pg->ps.type->end_io(&pgpath->pg->ps,
&pgpath->path,
mpio->nr_bytes,
clone->io_start_time_ns);
}
blk_put_request(clone);
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
}
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
/*
* Map cloned bios (bio-based multipath)
*/
static void __multipath_queue_bio(struct multipath *m, struct bio *bio)
{
/* Queue for the daemon to resubmit */
bio_list_add(&m->queued_bios, bio);
if (!test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags))
queue_work(kmultipathd, &m->process_queued_bios);
}
static void multipath_queue_bio(struct multipath *m, struct bio *bio)
{
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
__multipath_queue_bio(m, bio);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
static struct pgpath *__map_bio(struct multipath *m, struct bio *bio)
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
{
struct pgpath *pgpath;
unsigned long flags;
/* Do we need to select a new pgpath? */
pgpath = READ_ONCE(m->current_pgpath);
if (!pgpath || !mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m))
pgpath = choose_pgpath(m, bio->bi_iter.bi_size);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (!pgpath) {
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags)) {
__multipath_queue_bio(m, bio);
pgpath = ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
}
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
} else if (mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m) ||
mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, m)) {
multipath_queue_bio(m, bio);
pg_init_all_paths(m);
return ERR_PTR(-EAGAIN);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
return pgpath;
}
static int __multipath_map_bio(struct multipath *m, struct bio *bio,
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath = __map_bio(m, bio);
if (IS_ERR(pgpath))
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
return DM_MAPIO_SUBMITTED;
if (!pgpath) {
if (__must_push_back(m))
return DM_MAPIO_REQUEUE;
dm_report_EIO(m);
return DM_MAPIO_KILL;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
mpio->pgpath = pgpath;
bio->bi_status = 0;
bio_set_dev(bio, pgpath->path.dev->bdev);
bio->bi_opf |= REQ_FAILFAST_TRANSPORT;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (pgpath->pg->ps.type->start_io)
pgpath->pg->ps.type->start_io(&pgpath->pg->ps,
&pgpath->path,
mpio->nr_bytes);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
return DM_MAPIO_REMAPPED;
}
static int multipath_map_bio(struct dm_target *ti, struct bio *bio)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = NULL;
multipath_init_per_bio_data(bio, &mpio);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
return __multipath_map_bio(m, bio, mpio);
}
static void process_queued_io_list(struct multipath *m)
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
{
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED)
dm_mq_kick_requeue_list(dm_table_get_md(m->ti->table));
else if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED)
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
queue_work(kmultipathd, &m->process_queued_bios);
}
static void process_queued_bios(struct work_struct *work)
{
int r;
unsigned long flags;
struct bio *bio;
struct bio_list bios;
struct blk_plug plug;
struct multipath *m =
container_of(work, struct multipath, process_queued_bios);
bio_list_init(&bios);
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (bio_list_empty(&m->queued_bios)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return;
}
bio_list_merge(&bios, &m->queued_bios);
bio_list_init(&m->queued_bios);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
blk_start_plug(&plug);
while ((bio = bio_list_pop(&bios))) {
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio_from_bio(bio);
dm_bio_restore(get_bio_details_from_mpio(mpio), bio);
r = __multipath_map_bio(m, bio, mpio);
switch (r) {
case DM_MAPIO_KILL:
bio->bi_status = BLK_STS_IOERR;
bio_endio(bio);
break;
case DM_MAPIO_REQUEUE:
bio->bi_status = BLK_STS_DM_REQUEUE;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
bio_endio(bio);
break;
case DM_MAPIO_REMAPPED:
submit_bio_noacct(bio);
break;
case DM_MAPIO_SUBMITTED:
break;
default:
WARN_ONCE(true, "__multipath_map_bio() returned %d\n", r);
}
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
blk_finish_plug(&plug);
}
/*
* If we run out of usable paths, should we queue I/O or error it?
*/
static int queue_if_no_path(struct multipath *m, bool queue_if_no_path,
bool save_old_value, const char *caller)
{
unsigned long flags;
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
bool queue_if_no_path_bit, saved_queue_if_no_path_bit;
const char *dm_dev_name = dm_table_device_name(m->ti->table);
DMDEBUG("%s: %s caller=%s queue_if_no_path=%d save_old_value=%d",
dm_dev_name, __func__, caller, queue_if_no_path, save_old_value);
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
queue_if_no_path_bit = test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags);
saved_queue_if_no_path_bit = test_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags);
if (save_old_value) {
if (unlikely(!queue_if_no_path_bit && saved_queue_if_no_path_bit)) {
DMERR("%s: QIFNP disabled but saved as enabled, saving again loses state, not saving!",
dm_dev_name);
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
} else
assign_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags, queue_if_no_path_bit);
} else if (!queue_if_no_path && saved_queue_if_no_path_bit) {
/* due to "fail_if_no_path" message, need to honor it. */
clear_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags);
}
assign_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags, queue_if_no_path);
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
DMDEBUG("%s: after %s changes; QIFNP = %d; SQIFNP = %d; DNFS = %d",
dm_dev_name, __func__,
test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags),
test_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags),
dm_noflush_suspending(m->ti));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (!queue_if_no_path) {
dm_table_run_md_queue_async(m->ti->table);
process_queued_io_list(m);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
return 0;
}
/*
* If the queue_if_no_path timeout fires, turn off queue_if_no_path and
* process any queued I/O.
*/
static void queue_if_no_path_timeout_work(struct timer_list *t)
{
struct multipath *m = from_timer(m, t, nopath_timer);
DMWARN("queue_if_no_path timeout on %s, failing queued IO",
dm_table_device_name(m->ti->table));
queue_if_no_path(m, false, false, __func__);
}
/*
* Enable the queue_if_no_path timeout if necessary.
* Called with m->lock held.
*/
static void enable_nopath_timeout(struct multipath *m)
{
unsigned long queue_if_no_path_timeout =
READ_ONCE(queue_if_no_path_timeout_secs) * HZ;
lockdep_assert_held(&m->lock);
if (queue_if_no_path_timeout > 0 &&
atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths) == 0 &&
test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags)) {
mod_timer(&m->nopath_timer,
jiffies + queue_if_no_path_timeout);
}
}
static void disable_nopath_timeout(struct multipath *m)
{
del_timer_sync(&m->nopath_timer);
}
/*
* An event is triggered whenever a path is taken out of use.
* Includes path failure and PG bypass.
*/
static void trigger_event(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct multipath *m =
container_of(work, struct multipath, trigger_event);
dm_table_event(m->ti->table);
}
/*-----------------------------------------------------------------
* Constructor/argument parsing:
* <#multipath feature args> [<arg>]*
* <#hw_handler args> [hw_handler [<arg>]*]
* <#priority groups>
* <initial priority group>
* [<selector> <#selector args> [<arg>]*
* <#paths> <#per-path selector args>
* [<path> [<arg>]* ]+ ]+
*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
static int parse_path_selector(struct dm_arg_set *as, struct priority_group *pg,
struct dm_target *ti)
{
int r;
struct path_selector_type *pst;
unsigned ps_argc;
static const struct dm_arg _args[] = {
{0, 1024, "invalid number of path selector args"},
};
pst = dm_get_path_selector(dm_shift_arg(as));
if (!pst) {
ti->error = "unknown path selector type";
return -EINVAL;
}
r = dm_read_arg_group(_args, as, &ps_argc, &ti->error);
if (r) {
dm_put_path_selector(pst);
return -EINVAL;
}
r = pst->create(&pg->ps, ps_argc, as->argv);
if (r) {
dm_put_path_selector(pst);
ti->error = "path selector constructor failed";
return r;
}
pg->ps.type = pst;
dm_consume_args(as, ps_argc);
return 0;
}
static int setup_scsi_dh(struct block_device *bdev, struct multipath *m,
const char **attached_handler_name, char **error)
{
struct request_queue *q = bdev_get_queue(bdev);
int r;
if (mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER, m)) {
retain:
if (*attached_handler_name) {
/*
* Clear any hw_handler_params associated with a
* handler that isn't already attached.
*/
if (m->hw_handler_name && strcmp(*attached_handler_name, m->hw_handler_name)) {
kfree(m->hw_handler_params);
m->hw_handler_params = NULL;
}
/*
* Reset hw_handler_name to match the attached handler
*
* NB. This modifies the table line to show the actual
* handler instead of the original table passed in.
*/
kfree(m->hw_handler_name);
m->hw_handler_name = *attached_handler_name;
*attached_handler_name = NULL;
}
}
if (m->hw_handler_name) {
r = scsi_dh_attach(q, m->hw_handler_name);
if (r == -EBUSY) {
char b[BDEVNAME_SIZE];
printk(KERN_INFO "dm-mpath: retaining handler on device %s\n",
bdevname(bdev, b));
goto retain;
}
if (r < 0) {
*error = "error attaching hardware handler";
return r;
}
if (m->hw_handler_params) {
r = scsi_dh_set_params(q, m->hw_handler_params);
if (r < 0) {
*error = "unable to set hardware handler parameters";
return r;
}
}
}
return 0;
}
static struct pgpath *parse_path(struct dm_arg_set *as, struct path_selector *ps,
struct dm_target *ti)
{
int r;
struct pgpath *p;
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct request_queue *q;
const char *attached_handler_name = NULL;
/* we need at least a path arg */
if (as->argc < 1) {
ti->error = "no device given";
return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
}
p = alloc_pgpath();
if (!p)
return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
r = dm_get_device(ti, dm_shift_arg(as), dm_table_get_mode(ti->table),
&p->path.dev);
if (r) {
ti->error = "error getting device";
goto bad;
}
q = bdev_get_queue(p->path.dev->bdev);
attached_handler_name = scsi_dh_attached_handler_name(q, GFP_KERNEL);
if (attached_handler_name || m->hw_handler_name) {
INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&p->activate_path, activate_path_work);
r = setup_scsi_dh(p->path.dev->bdev, m, &attached_handler_name, &ti->error);
kfree(attached_handler_name);
if (r) {
dm_put_device(ti, p->path.dev);
goto bad;
}
}
r = ps->type->add_path(ps, &p->path, as->argc, as->argv, &ti->error);
if (r) {
dm_put_device(ti, p->path.dev);
goto bad;
}
return p;
bad:
free_pgpath(p);
return ERR_PTR(r);
}
static struct priority_group *parse_priority_group(struct dm_arg_set *as,
struct multipath *m)
{
static const struct dm_arg _args[] = {
{1, 1024, "invalid number of paths"},
{0, 1024, "invalid number of selector args"}
};
int r;
unsigned i, nr_selector_args, nr_args;
struct priority_group *pg;
struct dm_target *ti = m->ti;
if (as->argc < 2) {
as->argc = 0;
ti->error = "not enough priority group arguments";
return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
}
pg = alloc_priority_group();
if (!pg) {
ti->error = "couldn't allocate priority group";
return ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM);
}
pg->m = m;
r = parse_path_selector(as, pg, ti);
if (r)
goto bad;
/*
* read the paths
*/
r = dm_read_arg(_args, as, &pg->nr_pgpaths, &ti->error);
if (r)
goto bad;
r = dm_read_arg(_args + 1, as, &nr_selector_args, &ti->error);
if (r)
goto bad;
nr_args = 1 + nr_selector_args;
for (i = 0; i < pg->nr_pgpaths; i++) {
struct pgpath *pgpath;
struct dm_arg_set path_args;
if (as->argc < nr_args) {
ti->error = "not enough path parameters";
r = -EINVAL;
goto bad;
}
path_args.argc = nr_args;
path_args.argv = as->argv;
pgpath = parse_path(&path_args, &pg->ps, ti);
if (IS_ERR(pgpath)) {
r = PTR_ERR(pgpath);
goto bad;
}
pgpath->pg = pg;
list_add_tail(&pgpath->list, &pg->pgpaths);
dm_consume_args(as, nr_args);
}
return pg;
bad:
free_priority_group(pg, ti);
return ERR_PTR(r);
}
static int parse_hw_handler(struct dm_arg_set *as, struct multipath *m)
{
unsigned hw_argc;
int ret;
struct dm_target *ti = m->ti;
static const struct dm_arg _args[] = {
{0, 1024, "invalid number of hardware handler args"},
};
if (dm_read_arg_group(_args, as, &hw_argc, &ti->error))
return -EINVAL;
if (!hw_argc)
return 0;
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED) {
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
dm_consume_args(as, hw_argc);
DMERR("bio-based multipath doesn't allow hardware handler args");
return 0;
}
m->hw_handler_name = kstrdup(dm_shift_arg(as), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!m->hw_handler_name)
return -EINVAL;
if (hw_argc > 1) {
char *p;
int i, j, len = 4;
for (i = 0; i <= hw_argc - 2; i++)
len += strlen(as->argv[i]) + 1;
p = m->hw_handler_params = kzalloc(len, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!p) {
ti->error = "memory allocation failed";
ret = -ENOMEM;
goto fail;
}
j = sprintf(p, "%d", hw_argc - 1);
for (i = 0, p+=j+1; i <= hw_argc - 2; i++, p+=j+1)
j = sprintf(p, "%s", as->argv[i]);
}
dm_consume_args(as, hw_argc - 1);
return 0;
fail:
kfree(m->hw_handler_name);
m->hw_handler_name = NULL;
return ret;
}
static int parse_features(struct dm_arg_set *as, struct multipath *m)
{
int r;
unsigned argc;
struct dm_target *ti = m->ti;
const char *arg_name;
static const struct dm_arg _args[] = {
{0, 8, "invalid number of feature args"},
{1, 50, "pg_init_retries must be between 1 and 50"},
{0, 60000, "pg_init_delay_msecs must be between 0 and 60000"},
};
r = dm_read_arg_group(_args, as, &argc, &ti->error);
if (r)
return -EINVAL;
if (!argc)
return 0;
do {
arg_name = dm_shift_arg(as);
argc--;
if (!strcasecmp(arg_name, "queue_if_no_path")) {
r = queue_if_no_path(m, true, false, __func__);
continue;
}
if (!strcasecmp(arg_name, "retain_attached_hw_handler")) {
set_bit(MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER, &m->flags);
continue;
}
if (!strcasecmp(arg_name, "pg_init_retries") &&
(argc >= 1)) {
r = dm_read_arg(_args + 1, as, &m->pg_init_retries, &ti->error);
argc--;
continue;
}
if (!strcasecmp(arg_name, "pg_init_delay_msecs") &&
(argc >= 1)) {
r = dm_read_arg(_args + 2, as, &m->pg_init_delay_msecs, &ti->error);
argc--;
continue;
}
if (!strcasecmp(arg_name, "queue_mode") &&
(argc >= 1)) {
const char *queue_mode_name = dm_shift_arg(as);
if (!strcasecmp(queue_mode_name, "bio"))
m->queue_mode = DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED;
else if (!strcasecmp(queue_mode_name, "rq") ||
!strcasecmp(queue_mode_name, "mq"))
m->queue_mode = DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED;
else {
ti->error = "Unknown 'queue_mode' requested";
r = -EINVAL;
}
argc--;
continue;
}
ti->error = "Unrecognised multipath feature request";
r = -EINVAL;
} while (argc && !r);
return r;
}
static int multipath_ctr(struct dm_target *ti, unsigned argc, char **argv)
{
/* target arguments */
static const struct dm_arg _args[] = {
{0, 1024, "invalid number of priority groups"},
{0, 1024, "invalid initial priority group number"},
};
int r;
struct multipath *m;
struct dm_arg_set as;
unsigned pg_count = 0;
unsigned next_pg_num;
unsigned long flags;
as.argc = argc;
as.argv = argv;
m = alloc_multipath(ti);
if (!m) {
ti->error = "can't allocate multipath";
return -EINVAL;
}
r = parse_features(&as, m);
if (r)
goto bad;
r = alloc_multipath_stage2(ti, m);
if (r)
goto bad;
r = parse_hw_handler(&as, m);
if (r)
goto bad;
r = dm_read_arg(_args, &as, &m->nr_priority_groups, &ti->error);
if (r)
goto bad;
r = dm_read_arg(_args + 1, &as, &next_pg_num, &ti->error);
if (r)
goto bad;
if ((!m->nr_priority_groups && next_pg_num) ||
(m->nr_priority_groups && !next_pg_num)) {
ti->error = "invalid initial priority group";
r = -EINVAL;
goto bad;
}
/* parse the priority groups */
while (as.argc) {
struct priority_group *pg;
unsigned nr_valid_paths = atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths);
pg = parse_priority_group(&as, m);
if (IS_ERR(pg)) {
r = PTR_ERR(pg);
goto bad;
}
nr_valid_paths += pg->nr_pgpaths;
atomic_set(&m->nr_valid_paths, nr_valid_paths);
list_add_tail(&pg->list, &m->priority_groups);
pg_count++;
pg->pg_num = pg_count;
if (!--next_pg_num)
m->next_pg = pg;
}
if (pg_count != m->nr_priority_groups) {
ti->error = "priority group count mismatch";
r = -EINVAL;
goto bad;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
enable_nopath_timeout(m);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
ti->num_flush_bios = 1;
ti->num_discard_bios = 1;
ti->num_write_same_bios = 1;
ti->num_write_zeroes_bios = 1;
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED)
ti->per_io_data_size = multipath_per_bio_data_size();
else
ti->per_io_data_size = sizeof(struct dm_mpath_io);
return 0;
bad:
free_multipath(m);
return r;
}
static void multipath_wait_for_pg_init_completion(struct multipath *m)
{
DEFINE_WAIT(wait);
while (1) {
prepare_to_wait(&m->pg_init_wait, &wait, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
if (!atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress))
break;
io_schedule();
}
finish_wait(&m->pg_init_wait, &wait);
}
static void flush_multipath_work(struct multipath *m)
{
if (m->hw_handler_name) {
unsigned long flags;
if (!atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress))
goto skip;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress) &&
!test_and_set_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DISABLED, &m->flags)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
flush_workqueue(kmpath_handlerd);
multipath_wait_for_pg_init_completion(m);
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
clear_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DISABLED, &m->flags);
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
skip:
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED)
flush_work(&m->process_queued_bios);
workqueue: deprecate flush[_delayed]_work_sync() flush[_delayed]_work_sync() are now spurious. Mark them deprecated and convert all users to flush[_delayed]_work(). If you're cc'd and wondering what's going on: Now all workqueues are non-reentrant and the regular flushes guarantee that the work item is not pending or running on any CPU on return, so there's no reason to use the sync flushes at all and they're going away. This patch doesn't make any functional difference. Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org> Cc: Russell King <linux@arm.linux.org.uk> Cc: Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org> Cc: Ian Campbell <ian.campbell@citrix.com> Cc: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk> Cc: Mattia Dongili <malattia@linux.it> Cc: Kent Yoder <key@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Cc: David Airlie <airlied@linux.ie> Cc: Jiri Kosina <jkosina@suse.cz> Cc: Karsten Keil <isdn@linux-pingi.de> Cc: Bryan Wu <bryan.wu@canonical.com> Cc: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> Cc: Alasdair Kergon <agk@redhat.com> Cc: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@infradead.org> Cc: Florian Tobias Schandinat <FlorianSchandinat@gmx.de> Cc: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org> Cc: "David S. Miller" <davem@davemloft.net> Cc: linux-wireless@vger.kernel.org Cc: Anton Vorontsov <cbou@mail.ru> Cc: Sangbeom Kim <sbkim73@samsung.com> Cc: "James E.J. Bottomley" <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Cc: Eric Van Hensbergen <ericvh@gmail.com> Cc: Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de> Cc: Steven Whitehouse <swhiteho@redhat.com> Cc: Petr Vandrovec <petr@vandrovec.name> Cc: Mark Fasheh <mfasheh@suse.com> Cc: Christoph Hellwig <hch@infradead.org> Cc: Avi Kivity <avi@redhat.com>
2012-08-21 01:51:24 +04:00
flush_work(&m->trigger_event);
}
static void multipath_dtr(struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
disable_nopath_timeout(m);
flush_multipath_work(m);
free_multipath(m);
}
/*
* Take a path out of use.
*/
static int fail_path(struct pgpath *pgpath)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct multipath *m = pgpath->pg->m;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (!pgpath->is_active)
goto out;
DMWARN("%s: Failing path %s.",
dm_table_device_name(m->ti->table),
pgpath->path.dev->name);
pgpath->pg->ps.type->fail_path(&pgpath->pg->ps, &pgpath->path);
pgpath->is_active = false;
pgpath->fail_count++;
atomic_dec(&m->nr_valid_paths);
if (pgpath == m->current_pgpath)
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
dm_path_uevent(DM_UEVENT_PATH_FAILED, m->ti,
pgpath->path.dev->name, atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths));
schedule_work(&m->trigger_event);
enable_nopath_timeout(m);
out:
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return 0;
}
/*
* Reinstate a previously-failed path
*/
static int reinstate_path(struct pgpath *pgpath)
{
int r = 0, run_queue = 0;
unsigned long flags;
struct multipath *m = pgpath->pg->m;
unsigned nr_valid_paths;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (pgpath->is_active)
goto out;
DMWARN("%s: Reinstating path %s.",
dm_table_device_name(m->ti->table),
pgpath->path.dev->name);
r = pgpath->pg->ps.type->reinstate_path(&pgpath->pg->ps, &pgpath->path);
if (r)
goto out;
pgpath->is_active = true;
nr_valid_paths = atomic_inc_return(&m->nr_valid_paths);
if (nr_valid_paths == 1) {
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
run_queue = 1;
} else if (m->hw_handler_name && (m->current_pg == pgpath->pg)) {
if (queue_work(kmpath_handlerd, &pgpath->activate_path.work))
atomic_inc(&m->pg_init_in_progress);
}
dm_path_uevent(DM_UEVENT_PATH_REINSTATED, m->ti,
pgpath->path.dev->name, nr_valid_paths);
schedule_work(&m->trigger_event);
out:
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (run_queue) {
dm_table_run_md_queue_async(m->ti->table);
process_queued_io_list(m);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
if (pgpath->is_active)
disable_nopath_timeout(m);
return r;
}
/*
* Fail or reinstate all paths that match the provided struct dm_dev.
*/
static int action_dev(struct multipath *m, struct dm_dev *dev,
action_fn action)
{
int r = -EINVAL;
struct pgpath *pgpath;
struct priority_group *pg;
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
list_for_each_entry(pgpath, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
if (pgpath->path.dev == dev)
r = action(pgpath);
}
}
return r;
}
/*
* Temporarily try to avoid having to use the specified PG
*/
static void bypass_pg(struct multipath *m, struct priority_group *pg,
bool bypassed)
{
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
pg->bypassed = bypassed;
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
m->current_pg = NULL;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
schedule_work(&m->trigger_event);
}
/*
* Switch to using the specified PG from the next I/O that gets mapped
*/
static int switch_pg_num(struct multipath *m, const char *pgstr)
{
struct priority_group *pg;
unsigned pgnum;
unsigned long flags;
char dummy;
if (!pgstr || (sscanf(pgstr, "%u%c", &pgnum, &dummy) != 1) || !pgnum ||
!m->nr_priority_groups || (pgnum > m->nr_priority_groups)) {
DMWARN("invalid PG number supplied to switch_pg_num");
return -EINVAL;
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
pg->bypassed = false;
if (--pgnum)
continue;
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
m->current_pg = NULL;
m->next_pg = pg;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
schedule_work(&m->trigger_event);
return 0;
}
/*
* Set/clear bypassed status of a PG.
* PGs are numbered upwards from 1 in the order they were declared.
*/
static int bypass_pg_num(struct multipath *m, const char *pgstr, bool bypassed)
{
struct priority_group *pg;
unsigned pgnum;
char dummy;
if (!pgstr || (sscanf(pgstr, "%u%c", &pgnum, &dummy) != 1) || !pgnum ||
!m->nr_priority_groups || (pgnum > m->nr_priority_groups)) {
DMWARN("invalid PG number supplied to bypass_pg");
return -EINVAL;
}
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
if (!--pgnum)
break;
}
bypass_pg(m, pg, bypassed);
return 0;
}
/*
* Should we retry pg_init immediately?
*/
static bool pg_init_limit_reached(struct multipath *m, struct pgpath *pgpath)
{
unsigned long flags;
bool limit_reached = false;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (atomic_read(&m->pg_init_count) <= m->pg_init_retries &&
!test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DISABLED, &m->flags))
set_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags);
else
limit_reached = true;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return limit_reached;
}
static void pg_init_done(void *data, int errors)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath = data;
struct priority_group *pg = pgpath->pg;
struct multipath *m = pg->m;
unsigned long flags;
bool delay_retry = false;
/* device or driver problems */
switch (errors) {
case SCSI_DH_OK:
break;
case SCSI_DH_NOSYS:
if (!m->hw_handler_name) {
errors = 0;
break;
}
DMERR("Could not failover the device: Handler scsi_dh_%s "
"Error %d.", m->hw_handler_name, errors);
/*
* Fail path for now, so we do not ping pong
*/
fail_path(pgpath);
break;
case SCSI_DH_DEV_TEMP_BUSY:
/*
* Probably doing something like FW upgrade on the
* controller so try the other pg.
*/
bypass_pg(m, pg, true);
break;
case SCSI_DH_RETRY:
/* Wait before retrying. */
delay_retry = true;
fallthrough;
case SCSI_DH_IMM_RETRY:
case SCSI_DH_RES_TEMP_UNAVAIL:
if (pg_init_limit_reached(m, pgpath))
fail_path(pgpath);
errors = 0;
break;
case SCSI_DH_DEV_OFFLINED:
default:
/*
* We probably do not want to fail the path for a device
* error, but this is what the old dm did. In future
* patches we can do more advanced handling.
*/
fail_path(pgpath);
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (errors) {
if (pgpath == m->current_pgpath) {
DMERR("Could not failover device. Error %d.", errors);
m->current_pgpath = NULL;
m->current_pg = NULL;
}
} else if (!test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags))
pg->bypassed = false;
if (atomic_dec_return(&m->pg_init_in_progress) > 0)
/* Activations of other paths are still on going */
goto out;
if (test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags)) {
if (delay_retry)
set_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DELAY_RETRY, &m->flags);
else
clear_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_DELAY_RETRY, &m->flags);
if (__pg_init_all_paths(m))
goto out;
}
clear_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags);
process_queued_io_list(m);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
/*
* Wake up any thread waiting to suspend.
*/
wake_up(&m->pg_init_wait);
out:
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
static void activate_or_offline_path(struct pgpath *pgpath)
{
struct request_queue *q = bdev_get_queue(pgpath->path.dev->bdev);
if (pgpath->is_active && !blk_queue_dying(q))
scsi_dh_activate(q, pg_init_done, pgpath);
else
pg_init_done(pgpath, SCSI_DH_DEV_OFFLINED);
}
static void activate_path_work(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct pgpath *pgpath =
container_of(work, struct pgpath, activate_path.work);
activate_or_offline_path(pgpath);
}
static int multipath_end_io(struct dm_target *ti, struct request *clone,
blk_status_t error, union map_info *map_context)
{
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio(map_context);
struct pgpath *pgpath = mpio->pgpath;
int r = DM_ENDIO_DONE;
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
/*
* We don't queue any clone request inside the multipath target
* during end I/O handling, since those clone requests don't have
* bio clones. If we queue them inside the multipath target,
* we need to make bio clones, that requires memory allocation.
* (See drivers/md/dm-rq.c:end_clone_bio() about why the clone requests
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
* don't have bio clones.)
* Instead of queueing the clone request here, we queue the original
* request into dm core, which will remake a clone request and
* clone bios for it and resubmit it later.
*/
if (error && blk_path_error(error)) {
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
if (error == BLK_STS_RESOURCE)
r = DM_ENDIO_DELAY_REQUEUE;
else
r = DM_ENDIO_REQUEUE;
if (pgpath)
fail_path(pgpath);
if (!atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths) &&
!must_push_back_rq(m)) {
if (error == BLK_STS_IOERR)
dm_report_EIO(m);
/* complete with the original error */
r = DM_ENDIO_DONE;
}
}
if (pgpath) {
struct path_selector *ps = &pgpath->pg->ps;
if (ps->type->end_io)
ps->type->end_io(ps, &pgpath->path, mpio->nr_bytes,
clone->io_start_time_ns);
}
return r;
}
static int multipath_end_io_bio(struct dm_target *ti, struct bio *clone,
blk_status_t *error)
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct dm_mpath_io *mpio = get_mpio_from_bio(clone);
struct pgpath *pgpath = mpio->pgpath;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
unsigned long flags;
int r = DM_ENDIO_DONE;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (!*error || !blk_path_error(*error))
goto done;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (pgpath)
fail_path(pgpath);
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (!atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths)) {
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (!test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags)) {
if (__must_push_back(m)) {
r = DM_ENDIO_REQUEUE;
} else {
dm_report_EIO(m);
*error = BLK_STS_IOERR;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
goto done;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
multipath_queue_bio(m, clone);
r = DM_ENDIO_INCOMPLETE;
done:
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (pgpath) {
struct path_selector *ps = &pgpath->pg->ps;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
if (ps->type->end_io)
ps->type->end_io(ps, &pgpath->path, mpio->nr_bytes,
dm_start_time_ns_from_clone(clone));
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
return r;
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
}
/*
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
* Suspend with flush can't complete until all the I/O is processed
* so if the last path fails we must error any remaining I/O.
* - Note that if the freeze_bdev fails while suspending, the
* queue_if_no_path state is lost - userspace should reset it.
* Otherwise, during noflush suspend, queue_if_no_path will not change.
*/
static void multipath_presuspend(struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
/* FIXME: bio-based shouldn't need to always disable queue_if_no_path */
if (m->queue_mode == DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED || !dm_noflush_suspending(m->ti))
queue_if_no_path(m, false, true, __func__);
}
static void multipath_postsuspend(struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
mutex_lock(&m->work_mutex);
flush_multipath_work(m);
mutex_unlock(&m->work_mutex);
}
/*
* Restore the queue_if_no_path setting.
*/
static void multipath_resume(struct dm_target *ti)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
dm mpath: restrict queue_if_no_path state machine Do not allow saving disabled queue_if_no_path if already saved as enabled; implies multiple suspends (which shouldn't ever happen). Log if this unlikely scenario is ever triggered. Also, only write MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH during presuspend or if "fail_if_no_path" message. MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH is no longer always modified, e.g.: even if queue_if_no_path()'s save_old_value argument wasn't set. This just implies a bit tighter control over the management of MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH. Side-effect is multipath_resume() doesn't reset MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH unless MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH was set (during presuspend); and at that time the MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH bit gets cleared. So MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH's use is much more narrow in scope. Last, but not least, do _not_ disable queue_if_no_path during noflush suspend. There is no need/benefit to saving off queue_if_no_path via MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH and clearing MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH for noflush suspend -- by avoiding this needless queue_if_no_path flag churn there is less potential for MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH to get lost. Which avoids potential for IOs to be errored back up to userspace during DM multipath's handling of path failures. That said, this last change papers over a reported issue concerning request-based dm-multipath's interaction with blk-mq, relative to suspend and resume: multipath_endio is being called _before_ multipath_resume. This should never happen if DM suspend's blk_mq_quiesce_queue() + dm_wait_for_completion() is genuinely waiting for all inflight blk-mq requests to complete. Similarly: drivers/md/dm.c:__dm_resume() clearly calls dm_table_resume_targets() _before_ dm_start_queue()'s blk_mq_unquiesce_queue() is called. If the queue isn't even restarted until after multipath_resume(); the BIG question that still needs answering is: how can multipath_end_io beat multipath_resume in a race!? Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2020-05-27 23:32:51 +03:00
if (test_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags)) {
set_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags);
clear_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags);
}
DMDEBUG("%s: %s finished; QIFNP = %d; SQIFNP = %d",
dm_table_device_name(m->ti->table), __func__,
test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags),
test_bit(MPATHF_SAVED_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags));
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
/*
* Info output has the following format:
* num_multipath_feature_args [multipath_feature_args]*
* num_handler_status_args [handler_status_args]*
* num_groups init_group_number
* [A|D|E num_ps_status_args [ps_status_args]*
* num_paths num_selector_args
* [path_dev A|F fail_count [selector_args]* ]+ ]+
*
* Table output has the following format (identical to the constructor string):
* num_feature_args [features_args]*
* num_handler_args hw_handler [hw_handler_args]*
* num_groups init_group_number
* [priority selector-name num_ps_args [ps_args]*
* num_paths num_selector_args [path_dev [selector_args]* ]+ ]+
*/
dm: fix truncated status strings Avoid returning a truncated table or status string instead of setting the DM_BUFFER_FULL_FLAG when the last target of a table fills the buffer. When processing a table or status request, the function retrieve_status calls ti->type->status. If ti->type->status returns non-zero, retrieve_status assumes that the buffer overflowed and sets DM_BUFFER_FULL_FLAG. However, targets don't return non-zero values from their status method on overflow. Most targets returns always zero. If a buffer overflow happens in a target that is not the last in the table, it gets noticed during the next iteration of the loop in retrieve_status; but if a buffer overflow happens in the last target, it goes unnoticed and erroneously truncated data is returned. In the current code, the targets behave in the following way: * dm-crypt returns -ENOMEM if there is not enough space to store the key, but it returns 0 on all other overflows. * dm-thin returns errors from the status method if a disk error happened. This is incorrect because retrieve_status doesn't check the error code, it assumes that all non-zero values mean buffer overflow. * all the other targets always return 0. This patch changes the ti->type->status function to return void (because most targets don't use the return code). Overflow is detected in retrieve_status: if the status method fills up the remaining space completely, it is assumed that buffer overflow happened. Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2013-03-02 02:45:44 +04:00
static void multipath_status(struct dm_target *ti, status_type_t type,
unsigned status_flags, char *result, unsigned maxlen)
{
int sz = 0, pg_counter, pgpath_counter;
unsigned long flags;
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct priority_group *pg;
struct pgpath *p;
unsigned pg_num;
char state;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
/* Features */
if (type == STATUSTYPE_INFO)
DMEMIT("2 %u %u ", test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, &m->flags),
atomic_read(&m->pg_init_count));
else {
DMEMIT("%u ", test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags) +
(m->pg_init_retries > 0) * 2 +
(m->pg_init_delay_msecs != DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_DEFAULT) * 2 +
test_bit(MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER, &m->flags) +
(m->queue_mode != DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED) * 2);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags))
DMEMIT("queue_if_no_path ");
if (m->pg_init_retries)
DMEMIT("pg_init_retries %u ", m->pg_init_retries);
if (m->pg_init_delay_msecs != DM_PG_INIT_DELAY_DEFAULT)
DMEMIT("pg_init_delay_msecs %u ", m->pg_init_delay_msecs);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_RETAIN_ATTACHED_HW_HANDLER, &m->flags))
DMEMIT("retain_attached_hw_handler ");
if (m->queue_mode != DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED) {
switch(m->queue_mode) {
case DM_TYPE_BIO_BASED:
DMEMIT("queue_mode bio ");
break;
default:
WARN_ON_ONCE(true);
break;
}
}
}
if (!m->hw_handler_name || type == STATUSTYPE_INFO)
DMEMIT("0 ");
else
DMEMIT("1 %s ", m->hw_handler_name);
DMEMIT("%u ", m->nr_priority_groups);
if (m->next_pg)
pg_num = m->next_pg->pg_num;
else if (m->current_pg)
pg_num = m->current_pg->pg_num;
else
pg_num = (m->nr_priority_groups ? 1 : 0);
DMEMIT("%u ", pg_num);
switch (type) {
case STATUSTYPE_INFO:
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
if (pg->bypassed)
state = 'D'; /* Disabled */
else if (pg == m->current_pg)
state = 'A'; /* Currently Active */
else
state = 'E'; /* Enabled */
DMEMIT("%c ", state);
if (pg->ps.type->status)
sz += pg->ps.type->status(&pg->ps, NULL, type,
result + sz,
maxlen - sz);
else
DMEMIT("0 ");
DMEMIT("%u %u ", pg->nr_pgpaths,
pg->ps.type->info_args);
list_for_each_entry(p, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
DMEMIT("%s %s %u ", p->path.dev->name,
p->is_active ? "A" : "F",
p->fail_count);
if (pg->ps.type->status)
sz += pg->ps.type->status(&pg->ps,
&p->path, type, result + sz,
maxlen - sz);
}
}
break;
case STATUSTYPE_TABLE:
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
DMEMIT("%s ", pg->ps.type->name);
if (pg->ps.type->status)
sz += pg->ps.type->status(&pg->ps, NULL, type,
result + sz,
maxlen - sz);
else
DMEMIT("0 ");
DMEMIT("%u %u ", pg->nr_pgpaths,
pg->ps.type->table_args);
list_for_each_entry(p, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
DMEMIT("%s ", p->path.dev->name);
if (pg->ps.type->status)
sz += pg->ps.type->status(&pg->ps,
&p->path, type, result + sz,
maxlen - sz);
}
}
break;
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
case STATUSTYPE_IMA:
sz = 0; /*reset the result pointer*/
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
DMEMIT_TARGET_NAME_VERSION(ti->type);
DMEMIT(",nr_priority_groups=%u", m->nr_priority_groups);
pg_counter = 0;
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
if (pg->bypassed)
state = 'D'; /* Disabled */
else if (pg == m->current_pg)
state = 'A'; /* Currently Active */
else
state = 'E'; /* Enabled */
DMEMIT(",pg_state_%d=%c", pg_counter, state);
DMEMIT(",nr_pgpaths_%d=%u", pg_counter, pg->nr_pgpaths);
DMEMIT(",path_selector_name_%d=%s", pg_counter, pg->ps.type->name);
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
pgpath_counter = 0;
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
list_for_each_entry(p, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
DMEMIT(",path_name_%d_%d=%s,is_active_%d_%d=%c,fail_count_%d_%d=%u",
pg_counter, pgpath_counter, p->path.dev->name,
pg_counter, pgpath_counter, p->is_active ? 'A' : 'F',
pg_counter, pgpath_counter, p->fail_count);
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
if (pg->ps.type->status) {
DMEMIT(",path_selector_status_%d_%d=",
pg_counter, pgpath_counter);
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
sz += pg->ps.type->status(&pg->ps, &p->path,
type, result + sz,
maxlen - sz);
}
pgpath_counter++;
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
}
pg_counter++;
2021-07-13 03:49:03 +03:00
}
DMEMIT(";");
break;
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
static int multipath_message(struct dm_target *ti, unsigned argc, char **argv,
char *result, unsigned maxlen)
{
int r = -EINVAL;
struct dm_dev *dev;
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
action_fn action;
unsigned long flags;
mutex_lock(&m->work_mutex);
if (dm_suspended(ti)) {
r = -EBUSY;
goto out;
}
if (argc == 1) {
if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "queue_if_no_path")) {
r = queue_if_no_path(m, true, false, __func__);
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
enable_nopath_timeout(m);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
goto out;
} else if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "fail_if_no_path")) {
r = queue_if_no_path(m, false, false, __func__);
disable_nopath_timeout(m);
goto out;
}
}
if (argc != 2) {
DMWARN("Invalid multipath message arguments. Expected 2 arguments, got %d.", argc);
goto out;
}
if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "disable_group")) {
r = bypass_pg_num(m, argv[1], true);
goto out;
} else if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "enable_group")) {
r = bypass_pg_num(m, argv[1], false);
goto out;
} else if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "switch_group")) {
r = switch_pg_num(m, argv[1]);
goto out;
} else if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "reinstate_path"))
action = reinstate_path;
else if (!strcasecmp(argv[0], "fail_path"))
action = fail_path;
else {
DMWARN("Unrecognised multipath message received: %s", argv[0]);
goto out;
}
r = dm_get_device(ti, argv[1], dm_table_get_mode(ti->table), &dev);
if (r) {
DMWARN("message: error getting device %s",
argv[1]);
goto out;
}
r = action_dev(m, dev, action);
dm_put_device(ti, dev);
out:
mutex_unlock(&m->work_mutex);
return r;
}
static int multipath_prepare_ioctl(struct dm_target *ti,
struct block_device **bdev)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct pgpath *pgpath;
unsigned long flags;
int r;
pgpath = READ_ONCE(m->current_pgpath);
if (!pgpath || !mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m))
pgpath = choose_pgpath(m, 0);
if (pgpath) {
if (!mpath_double_check_test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IO, m)) {
*bdev = pgpath->path.dev->bdev;
r = 0;
} else {
/* pg_init has not started or completed */
r = -ENOTCONN;
}
} else {
/* No path is available */
r = -EIO;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags))
r = -ENOTCONN;
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
if (r == -ENOTCONN) {
if (!READ_ONCE(m->current_pg)) {
/* Path status changed, redo selection */
(void) choose_pgpath(m, 0);
}
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_PG_INIT_REQUIRED, &m->flags))
(void) __pg_init_all_paths(m);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
dm_table_run_md_queue_async(m->ti->table);
process_queued_io_list(m);
}
/*
* Only pass ioctls through if the device sizes match exactly.
*/
if (!r && ti->len != i_size_read((*bdev)->bd_inode) >> SECTOR_SHIFT)
return 1;
return r;
}
static int multipath_iterate_devices(struct dm_target *ti,
iterate_devices_callout_fn fn, void *data)
{
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct priority_group *pg;
struct pgpath *p;
int ret = 0;
list_for_each_entry(pg, &m->priority_groups, list) {
list_for_each_entry(p, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
ret = fn(ti, p->path.dev, ti->begin, ti->len, data);
if (ret)
goto out;
}
}
out:
return ret;
}
static int pgpath_busy(struct pgpath *pgpath)
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
{
struct request_queue *q = bdev_get_queue(pgpath->path.dev->bdev);
return blk_lld_busy(q);
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
}
/*
* We return "busy", only when we can map I/Os but underlying devices
* are busy (so even if we map I/Os now, the I/Os will wait on
* the underlying queue).
* In other words, if we want to kill I/Os or queue them inside us
* due to map unavailability, we don't return "busy". Otherwise,
* dm core won't give us the I/Os and we can't do what we want.
*/
static int multipath_busy(struct dm_target *ti)
{
bool busy = false, has_active = false;
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
struct multipath *m = ti->private;
struct priority_group *pg, *next_pg;
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
struct pgpath *pgpath;
/* pg_init in progress */
if (atomic_read(&m->pg_init_in_progress))
return true;
/* no paths available, for blk-mq: rely on IO mapping to delay requeue */
if (!atomic_read(&m->nr_valid_paths)) {
unsigned long flags;
spin_lock_irqsave(&m->lock, flags);
if (test_bit(MPATHF_QUEUE_IF_NO_PATH, &m->flags)) {
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
return (m->queue_mode != DM_TYPE_REQUEST_BASED);
}
spin_unlock_irqrestore(&m->lock, flags);
}
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
/* Guess which priority_group will be used at next mapping time */
pg = READ_ONCE(m->current_pg);
next_pg = READ_ONCE(m->next_pg);
if (unlikely(!READ_ONCE(m->current_pgpath) && next_pg))
pg = next_pg;
if (!pg) {
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
/*
* We don't know which pg will be used at next mapping time.
* We don't call choose_pgpath() here to avoid to trigger
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
* pg_init just by busy checking.
* So we don't know whether underlying devices we will be using
* at next mapping time are busy or not. Just try mapping.
*/
return busy;
}
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
/*
* If there is one non-busy active path at least, the path selector
* will be able to select it. So we consider such a pg as not busy.
*/
busy = true;
list_for_each_entry(pgpath, &pg->pgpaths, list) {
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
if (pgpath->is_active) {
has_active = true;
if (!pgpath_busy(pgpath)) {
busy = false;
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
break;
}
}
}
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
if (!has_active) {
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
/*
* No active path in this pg, so this pg won't be used and
* the current_pg will be changed at next mapping time.
* We need to try mapping to determine it.
*/
busy = false;
}
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
return busy;
}
/*-----------------------------------------------------------------
* Module setup
*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
static struct target_type multipath_target = {
.name = "multipath",
.version = {1, 14, 0},
.features = DM_TARGET_SINGLETON | DM_TARGET_IMMUTABLE |
DM_TARGET_PASSES_INTEGRITY,
.module = THIS_MODULE,
.ctr = multipath_ctr,
.dtr = multipath_dtr,
2014-12-18 05:08:12 +03:00
.clone_and_map_rq = multipath_clone_and_map,
.release_clone_rq = multipath_release_clone,
dm mpath: change to be request based This patch converts dm-multipath target to request-based from bio-based. Basically, the patch just converts the I/O unit from struct bio to struct request. In the course of the conversion, it also changes the I/O queueing mechanism. The change in the I/O queueing is described in details as follows. I/O queueing mechanism change ----------------------------- In I/O submission, map_io(), there is no mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is ready for retry as it is. However, in I/O complition, do_end_io(), there is a mechanism change from bio-based, since the clone request is not ready for retry. In do_end_io() of bio-based, the clone bio has all needed memory for resubmission. So the target driver can queue it and resubmit it later without memory allocations. The mechanism has almost no overhead. On the other hand, in do_end_io() of request-based, the clone request doesn't have clone bios, so the target driver can't resubmit it as it is. To resubmit the clone request, memory allocation for clone bios is needed, and it takes some overheads. To avoid the overheads just for queueing, the target driver doesn't queue the clone request inside itself. Instead, the target driver asks dm core for queueing and remapping the original request of the clone request, since the overhead for queueing is just a freeing memory for the clone request. As a result, the target driver doesn't need to record/restore the information of the original request for resubmitting the clone request. So dm_bio_details in dm_mpath_io is removed. multipath_busy() --------------------- The target driver returns "busy", only when the following case: o The target driver will map I/Os, if map() function is called and o The mapped I/Os will wait on underlying device's queue due to their congestions, if map() function is called now. In other cases, the target driver doesn't return "busy". Otherwise, dm core will keep the I/Os and the target driver can't do what it wants. (e.g. the target driver can't map I/Os now, so wants to kill I/Os.) Signed-off-by: Kiyoshi Ueda <k-ueda@ct.jp.nec.com> Signed-off-by: Jun'ichi Nomura <j-nomura@ce.jp.nec.com> Acked-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Alasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
2009-06-22 13:12:37 +04:00
.rq_end_io = multipath_end_io,
dm mpath: reinstate bio-based support Add "multipath-bio" target that offers a bio-based multipath target as an alternative to the request-based "multipath" target -- but in a following commit "multipath-bio" will immediately be replaced by a new "queue_mode" feature for the "multipath" target which will allow bio-based mode to be selected. When DM multipath was originally converted from bio-based to request-based the motivation for the change was better dynamic load balancing (by leveraging block core's request-based IO schedulers, for merging and sorting, _before_ DM multipath would make the decision on where to steer the IO -- based on path load and/or availability). More background is available in this "Request-based Device-mapper multipath and Dynamic load balancing" paper: https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2007/ols2007v2-pages-235-244.pdf But we've now come full circle where significantly faster storage devices no longer need IOs to be made larger to drive optimal IO performance. And even if they do there have been changes to the block and filesystem layers that help ensure upper layers are constructing larger IOs. In addition, SCSI's differentiated IO errors will propagate through to bio-based IO completion hooks -- so that eliminates another historic justiciation for request-based DM multipath. Lastly, the block layer's immutable biovec changes have made bio cloning cheaper than it has ever been; whereas request cloning is still relatively expensive (both on a CPU usage and memory footprint level). As such, bio-based DM multipath offers the promise of a more efficient IO path for high IOPs devices that are, or will be, emerging. Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2016-05-19 23:15:14 +03:00
.map = multipath_map_bio,
.end_io = multipath_end_io_bio,
.presuspend = multipath_presuspend,
.postsuspend = multipath_postsuspend,
.resume = multipath_resume,
.status = multipath_status,
.message = multipath_message,
.prepare_ioctl = multipath_prepare_ioctl,
.iterate_devices = multipath_iterate_devices,
.busy = multipath_busy,
};
static int __init dm_multipath_init(void)
{
int r;
kmultipathd = alloc_workqueue("kmpathd", WQ_MEM_RECLAIM, 0);
if (!kmultipathd) {
DMERR("failed to create workqueue kmpathd");
r = -ENOMEM;
goto bad_alloc_kmultipathd;
}
/*
* A separate workqueue is used to handle the device handlers
* to avoid overloading existing workqueue. Overloading the
* old workqueue would also create a bottleneck in the
* path of the storage hardware device activation.
*/
kmpath_handlerd = alloc_ordered_workqueue("kmpath_handlerd",
WQ_MEM_RECLAIM);
if (!kmpath_handlerd) {
DMERR("failed to create workqueue kmpath_handlerd");
r = -ENOMEM;
goto bad_alloc_kmpath_handlerd;
}
dm: fix various targets to dm_register_target after module __init resources created A NULL pointer is seen if two concurrent "vgchange -ay -K <vg name>" processes race to load the dm-thin-pool module: PID: 25992 TASK: ffff883cd7d23500 CPU: 4 COMMAND: "vgchange" #0 [ffff883cd743d600] machine_kexec at ffffffff81038fa9 0000001 [ffff883cd743d660] crash_kexec at ffffffff810c5992 0000002 [ffff883cd743d730] oops_end at ffffffff81515c90 0000003 [ffff883cd743d760] no_context at ffffffff81049f1b 0000004 [ffff883cd743d7b0] __bad_area_nosemaphore at ffffffff8104a1a5 0000005 [ffff883cd743d800] bad_area at ffffffff8104a2ce 0000006 [ffff883cd743d830] __do_page_fault at ffffffff8104aa6f 0000007 [ffff883cd743d950] do_page_fault at ffffffff81517bae 0000008 [ffff883cd743d980] page_fault at ffffffff81514f95 [exception RIP: kmem_cache_alloc+108] RIP: ffffffff8116ef3c RSP: ffff883cd743da38 RFLAGS: 00010046 RAX: 0000000000000004 RBX: ffffffff81121b90 RCX: ffff881bf1e78cc0 RDX: 0000000000000000 RSI: 00000000000000d0 RDI: 0000000000000000 RBP: ffff883cd743da68 R8: ffff881bf1a4eb00 R9: 0000000080042000 R10: 0000000000002000 R11: 0000000000000000 R12: 00000000000000d0 R13: 0000000000000000 R14: 00000000000000d0 R15: 0000000000000246 ORIG_RAX: ffffffffffffffff CS: 0010 SS: 0018 0000009 [ffff883cd743da70] mempool_alloc_slab at ffffffff81121ba5 0000010 [ffff883cd743da80] mempool_create_node at ffffffff81122083 0000011 [ffff883cd743dad0] mempool_create at ffffffff811220f4 0000012 [ffff883cd743dae0] pool_ctr at ffffffffa08de049 [dm_thin_pool] 0000013 [ffff883cd743dbd0] dm_table_add_target at ffffffffa0005f2f [dm_mod] 0000014 [ffff883cd743dc30] table_load at ffffffffa0008ba9 [dm_mod] 0000015 [ffff883cd743dc90] ctl_ioctl at ffffffffa0009dc4 [dm_mod] The race results in a NULL pointer because: Process A (vgchange -ay -K): a. send DM_LIST_VERSIONS_CMD ioctl; b. pool_target not registered; c. modprobe dm_thin_pool and wait until end. Process B (vgchange -ay -K): a. send DM_LIST_VERSIONS_CMD ioctl; b. pool_target registered; c. table_load->dm_table_add_target->pool_ctr; d. _new_mapping_cache is NULL and panic. Note: 1. process A and process B are two concurrent processes. 2. pool_target can be detected by process B but _new_mapping_cache initialization has not ended. To fix dm-thin-pool, and other targets (cache, multipath, and snapshot) with the same problem, simply dm_register_target() after all resources created during module init (as labelled with __init) are finished. Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: monty <monty_pavel@sina.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2017-11-24 20:43:50 +03:00
r = dm_register_target(&multipath_target);
if (r < 0) {
DMERR("request-based register failed %d", r);
r = -EINVAL;
goto bad_register_target;
}
return 0;
dm: fix various targets to dm_register_target after module __init resources created A NULL pointer is seen if two concurrent "vgchange -ay -K <vg name>" processes race to load the dm-thin-pool module: PID: 25992 TASK: ffff883cd7d23500 CPU: 4 COMMAND: "vgchange" #0 [ffff883cd743d600] machine_kexec at ffffffff81038fa9 0000001 [ffff883cd743d660] crash_kexec at ffffffff810c5992 0000002 [ffff883cd743d730] oops_end at ffffffff81515c90 0000003 [ffff883cd743d760] no_context at ffffffff81049f1b 0000004 [ffff883cd743d7b0] __bad_area_nosemaphore at ffffffff8104a1a5 0000005 [ffff883cd743d800] bad_area at ffffffff8104a2ce 0000006 [ffff883cd743d830] __do_page_fault at ffffffff8104aa6f 0000007 [ffff883cd743d950] do_page_fault at ffffffff81517bae 0000008 [ffff883cd743d980] page_fault at ffffffff81514f95 [exception RIP: kmem_cache_alloc+108] RIP: ffffffff8116ef3c RSP: ffff883cd743da38 RFLAGS: 00010046 RAX: 0000000000000004 RBX: ffffffff81121b90 RCX: ffff881bf1e78cc0 RDX: 0000000000000000 RSI: 00000000000000d0 RDI: 0000000000000000 RBP: ffff883cd743da68 R8: ffff881bf1a4eb00 R9: 0000000080042000 R10: 0000000000002000 R11: 0000000000000000 R12: 00000000000000d0 R13: 0000000000000000 R14: 00000000000000d0 R15: 0000000000000246 ORIG_RAX: ffffffffffffffff CS: 0010 SS: 0018 0000009 [ffff883cd743da70] mempool_alloc_slab at ffffffff81121ba5 0000010 [ffff883cd743da80] mempool_create_node at ffffffff81122083 0000011 [ffff883cd743dad0] mempool_create at ffffffff811220f4 0000012 [ffff883cd743dae0] pool_ctr at ffffffffa08de049 [dm_thin_pool] 0000013 [ffff883cd743dbd0] dm_table_add_target at ffffffffa0005f2f [dm_mod] 0000014 [ffff883cd743dc30] table_load at ffffffffa0008ba9 [dm_mod] 0000015 [ffff883cd743dc90] ctl_ioctl at ffffffffa0009dc4 [dm_mod] The race results in a NULL pointer because: Process A (vgchange -ay -K): a. send DM_LIST_VERSIONS_CMD ioctl; b. pool_target not registered; c. modprobe dm_thin_pool and wait until end. Process B (vgchange -ay -K): a. send DM_LIST_VERSIONS_CMD ioctl; b. pool_target registered; c. table_load->dm_table_add_target->pool_ctr; d. _new_mapping_cache is NULL and panic. Note: 1. process A and process B are two concurrent processes. 2. pool_target can be detected by process B but _new_mapping_cache initialization has not ended. To fix dm-thin-pool, and other targets (cache, multipath, and snapshot) with the same problem, simply dm_register_target() after all resources created during module init (as labelled with __init) are finished. Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: monty <monty_pavel@sina.com> Signed-off-by: Mike Snitzer <snitzer@redhat.com>
2017-11-24 20:43:50 +03:00
bad_register_target:
destroy_workqueue(kmpath_handlerd);
bad_alloc_kmpath_handlerd:
destroy_workqueue(kmultipathd);
bad_alloc_kmultipathd:
return r;
}
static void __exit dm_multipath_exit(void)
{
destroy_workqueue(kmpath_handlerd);
destroy_workqueue(kmultipathd);
dm_unregister_target(&multipath_target);
}
module_init(dm_multipath_init);
module_exit(dm_multipath_exit);
module_param_named(queue_if_no_path_timeout_secs,
queue_if_no_path_timeout_secs, ulong, S_IRUGO | S_IWUSR);
MODULE_PARM_DESC(queue_if_no_path_timeout_secs, "No available paths queue IO timeout in seconds");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION(DM_NAME " multipath target");
MODULE_AUTHOR("Sistina Software <dm-devel@redhat.com>");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");