[dm-devel] [PATCH] block: introduce QUEUE_FLAG_POLL_CAP flag

Ming Lei ming.lei at redhat.com
Mon Apr 19 13:36:18 UTC 2021


On Mon, Apr 19, 2021 at 01:40:21PM +0800, JeffleXu wrote:
> 
> 
> On 4/19/21 10:21 AM, Ming Lei wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 17, 2021 at 10:06:53PM +0800, JeffleXu wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> On 4/16/21 5:07 PM, Ming Lei wrote:
> >>> On Fri, Apr 16, 2021 at 04:00:37PM +0800, Jeffle Xu wrote:
> >>>> Hi,
> >>>> How about this patch to remove the extra poll_capable() method?
> >>>>
> >>>> And the following 'dm: support IO polling for bio-based dm device' needs
> >>>> following change.
> >>>>
> >>>> ```
> >>>> +       /*
> >>>> +        * Check for request-based device is remained to
> >>>> +        * dm_mq_init_request_queue()->blk_mq_init_allocated_queue().
> >>>> +        * For bio-based device, only set QUEUE_FLAG_POLL when all underlying
> >>>> +        * devices supporting polling.
> >>>> +        */
> >>>> +       if (__table_type_bio_based(t->type)) {
> >>>> +               if (dm_table_supports_poll(t)) {
> >>>> +                       blk_queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_POLL_CAP, q);
> >>>> +                       blk_queue_flag_set(QUEUE_FLAG_POLL, q);
> >>>> +               }
> >>>> +               else {
> >>>> +                       blk_queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_POLL, q);
> >>>> +                       blk_queue_flag_clear(QUEUE_FLAG_POLL_CAP, q);
> >>>> +               }
> >>>> +       }
> >>>> ```
> >>>
> >>> Frankly speaking, I don't see any value of using QUEUE_FLAG_POLL_CAP for
> >>> DM, and the result is basically subset of treating DM as always being capable
> >>> of polling.
> >>>
> >>> Also underlying queue change(either limits or flag) won't be propagated
> >>> to DM/MD automatically. Strictly speaking it doesn't matter if all underlying
> >>> queues are capable of supporting polling at the exact time of 'write sysfs/poll',
> >>> cause any of them may change in future.
> >>>
> >>> So why not start with the simplest approach(always capable of polling)
> >>> which does meet normal bio based polling requirement?
> >>>
> >>
> >> I find one scenario where this issue may matter. Consider the scenario
> >> where HIPRI bios are submitted to DM device though **all** underlying
> >> devices has been disabled for polling. In this case, a **valid** cookie
> >> (pid of current submitting process) is still returned. Then if @spin of
> >> the following blk_poll() is true, blk_poll() will get stuck in dead loop
> >> because blk_mq_poll() always returns 0, since previously submitted bios
> >> are all enqueued into IRQ hw queue.
> >>
> >> Maybe you need to re-remove the bio from the poll context if the
> >> returned cookie is BLK_QC_T_NONE?
> > 
> > It won't be one issue, see blk_bio_poll_preprocess() which is called
> > from submit_bio_checks(), so any bio's HIPRI will be cleared if the
> > queue doesn't support POLL, that code does cover underlying bios.
> 
> Sorry there may be some confusion in my description. Let's discuss in
> the following scenario: MD/DM advertise QUEUE_FLAG_POLL, though **all**
> underlying devices are without QUEUE_FLAG_POLL. This scenario is
> possible, if you want to enable MD/DM's polling without checking the
> capability of underlying devices.
> 
> In this case, it seems that REQ_HIPRI is kept for both MD/DM and
> underlying blk-mq devices. I used to think that REQ_HIPRI will be
> cleared for underlying blk-mq deivces, but now it seems that REQ_HIPRI
> of bios submitted to underlying blk-mq deivces won't be cleared, since
> submit_bio_checks() is only called in the entry of submit_bio(), not in
> the while() loop of __submit_bio_noacct_ctx(). Though these underlying
> blk-mq devices don't support IO polling at all, or they all have been
> disabled for polling, REQ_HIPRI bios are finally submitted down.
> 
> Or do I miss something?

No matter the loop, the bios are actually submitted to the
current->bio_list via submit_bio_noacct() or submit_bio().
'grep -r submit_bio drivers/md' will show you the point.

Also it is a bug if one underlying bio is submitted without being checked.

You can observe it by the following bpftrace when you run io_uring on dm
disk:

#include <linux/blkdev.h>

kprobe:blk_mq_submit_bio
/strncmp(((struct bio *)arg0)->bi_bdev->bd_disk->disk_name, "nvme", 4) == 0/
{
	$b = (struct bio *)arg0;
	$hipri = $b->bi_opf & (1 << __REQ_HIPRI);

	printf("%s %d: %s %lu %lu high prio %d\n", comm, tid, $b->bi_bdev->bd_disk->disk_name,
		$b->bi_iter.bi_sector, $b->bi_iter.bi_size, $hipri);
}


> 
> 
> > 
> >>
> >>
> >> Something like:
> >>
> >> -static blk_qc_t __submit_bio_noacct(struct bio *bio)
> >> +static blk_qc_t __submit_bio_noacct_ctx(struct bio *bio, struct
> >> io_context *ioc)
> >>  {
> >>  	struct bio_list bio_list_on_stack[2];
> >>  	blk_qc_t ret = BLK_QC_T_NONE;
> >> @@ -1047,7 +1163,15 @@ static blk_qc_t __submit_bio_noacct(struct bio *bio)
> >>  		bio_list_on_stack[1] = bio_list_on_stack[0];
> >>  		bio_list_init(&bio_list_on_stack[0]);
> >>
> >> 		if (ioc && queue_is_mq(q) && (bio->bi_opf & REQ_HIPRI)) {
> > 
> > REQ_HIPRI won't be set for underlying bios which queue doesn't support
> > poll, so this branch won't be reached. 
> 
> Sorry I missed the '(bio->bi_opf & REQ_HIPRI)' condition here. Indeed
> bio without REQ_HIPRI won't be enqueued into the poll_context.

Even though these bios are queued, blk_poll() still can handle them
easily by just ignoring queues which aren't POLL_TYPE. However, I still
think their HIPRI will be cleared.

Thanks,
Ming




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