[dm-devel] [PATCH 1/9] QUEUE_FLAG_NOWAIT to indicate device supports nowait

Goldwyn Rodrigues rgoldwyn at suse.de
Thu Aug 10 17:15:08 UTC 2017



On 08/10/2017 09:28 AM, Jens Axboe wrote:
> On 08/10/2017 08:25 AM, Jan Kara wrote:
>> On Thu 10-08-17 06:49:53, Goldwyn Rodrigues wrote:
>>> On 08/09/2017 09:17 PM, Jens Axboe wrote:
>>>> On 08/09/2017 08:07 PM, Goldwyn Rodrigues wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> No, from a multi-device point of view, this is inconsistent. I
>>>>>>>>>>> have tried the request bio returns -EAGAIN before the split, but
>>>>>>>>>>> I shall check again. Where do you see this happening?
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> No, this isn't multi-device specific, any driver can do it.
>>>>>>>>>> Please see blk_queue_split.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> In that case, the bio end_io function is chained and the bio of
>>>>>>>>> the split will replicate the error to the parent (if not already
>>>>>>>>> set).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> this doesn't answer my question. So if a bio returns -EAGAIN, part
>>>>>>>> of the bio probably already dispatched to disk (if the bio is
>>>>>>>> splitted to 2 bios, one returns -EAGAIN, the other one doesn't
>>>>>>>> block and dispatch to disk), what will application be going to do?
>>>>>>>> I think this is different to other IO errors. FOr other IO errors,
>>>>>>>> application will handle the error, while we ask app to retry the
>>>>>>>> whole bio here and app doesn't know part of bio is already written
>>>>>>>> to disk.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> It is the same as for other I/O errors as well, such as EIO. You do
>>>>>>> not know which bio of all submitted bio's returned the error EIO.
>>>>>>> The application would and should consider the whole I/O as failed.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The user application does not know of bios, or how it is going to be
>>>>>>> split in the underlying layers. It knows at the system call level.
>>>>>>> In this case, the EAGAIN will be returned to the user for the whole
>>>>>>> I/O not as a part of the I/O. It is up to application to try the I/O
>>>>>>> again with or without RWF_NOWAIT set. In direct I/O, it is bubbled
>>>>>>> out using dio->io_error. You can read about it at the patch header
>>>>>>> for the initial patchset at [1].
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Use case: It is for applications having two threads, a compute
>>>>>>> thread and an I/O thread. It would try to push AIO as much as
>>>>>>> possible in the compute thread using RWF_NOWAIT, and if it fails,
>>>>>>> would pass it on to I/O thread which would perform without
>>>>>>> RWF_NOWAIT. End result if done right is you save on context switches
>>>>>>> and all the synchronization/messaging machinery to perform I/O.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> [1] http://marc.info/?l=linux-block&m=149789003305876&w=2
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yes, I knew the concept, but I didn't see previous patches mentioned
>>>>>> the -EAGAIN actually should be taken as a real IO error. This means a
>>>>>> lot to applications and make the API hard to use. I'm wondering if we
>>>>>> should disable bio split for NOWAIT bio, which will make the -EAGAIN
>>>>>> only mean 'try again'.
>>>>>
>>>>> Don't take it as EAGAIN, but read it as EWOULDBLOCK. Why do you say
>>>>> the API is hard to use? Do you have a case to back it up?
>>>>
>>>> Because it is hard to use, and potentially suboptimal. Let's say you're
>>>> doing a 1MB write, we hit EWOULDBLOCK for the last split. Do we return a
>>>> short write, or do we return EWOULDBLOCK? If the latter, then that
>>>> really sucks from an API point of view.
>>>>
>>>>> No, not splitting the bio does not make sense here. I do not see any
>>>>> advantage in it, unless you can present a case otherwise.
>>>>
>>>> It ties back into the "hard to use" that I do agree with IFF we don't
>>>> return the short write. It's hard for an application to use that
>>>> efficiently, if we write 1MB-128K but get EWOULDBLOCK, the re-write the
>>>> full 1MB from a different context.
>>>>
>>>
>>> It returns the error code only and not short reads/writes. But isn't
>>> that true for all system calls in case of error?
>>>
>>> For aio, there are two result fields in io_event out of which one could
>>> be used for error while the other be used for amount of writes/reads
>>> performed. However, only one is used. This will not work with
>>> pread()/pwrite() calls though because of the limitation of return values.
>>>
>>> Finally, what if the EWOULDBLOCK is returned for an earlier bio (say
>>> offset 128k) for a 1MB pwrite(), while the rest of the 7 128K are
>>> successful. What short return value should the system call return?
>>
>> This is indeed tricky. If an application submits 1MB write, I don't think
>> we can afford to just write arbitrary subset of it. That just IMHO too much
>> violates how writes traditionally behaved. Even short writes trigger bugs
>> in various applications but I'm willing to require that applications using
>> NOWAIT IO can handle these. However writing arbitrary subset looks like a
>> nasty catch. IMHO we should not submit further bios until we are sure
>> current one does not return EWOULDBLOCK when splitting a larger one...
> 
> Exactly, that's the point that both Shaohua and I was getting at. Short
> writes should be fine, especially if NOWAIT is set. Discontig writes
> should also be OK, but it's horrible and inefficient. If we do that,
> then using this feature is a net-loss, not a win by any stretch.
> 

To make sure I understand this, we disable bio splits for NOWAIT bio so
we return EWOULDBLOCK for the entire I/O.

-- 
Goldwyn




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