Guest vm doesn't recover after the nfs connection resume

Liang Cong lcong at redhat.com
Tue Dec 14 07:35:42 UTC 2021


Hi Daniel,

Thanks for your reply. I tried the nfs hard mount, and got the same
behavior of the soft mount.
But in the /var/log/message, got nfs server recovery message which is not
printed when mounting as soft mode.

Dec 14 02:12:47 test-1 kernel: nfs: server ip not responding, still trying
Dec 14 02:13:39 test-1 kernel: nfs: server ip not responding, timed out
*Dec 14 02:14:34 test-1 kernel: nfs: server ip OK*
Dec 14 02:14:34 test-1 kernel: NFS: __nfs4_reclaim_open_state: Lock reclaim
failed!


According to my understanding the vm boot process will not recover(the vm
is still in running state, never paused) to normal until restarting the vm
guest.
And it is not the issue of libvirt or qemu, it is just the correct behavior
with the nfs connection timeout, right?

Thanks,
Liang Cong

On Thu, Dec 9, 2021 at 6:03 PM Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange at redhat.com>
wrote:

> On Thu, Dec 09, 2021 at 05:54:15PM +0800, Liang Cong wrote:
> > Dear developers:
> >
> > I found one issue during regular test and I could not confirm whether it
> is
> > a libvirt|qemu issue or it is a nfs client issue or it is not an issue,
> so
> > could you help to check it?
> > Below is the issue reproduce steps:
> >
> > 1.there is a nfs server with exports file like:
> > /nfs *(async,rw,no_root_squash)
> > 2. host machine soft mount nfs:
> > mount nfs_server_ip:/nfs /var/lib/libvirt/images/nfs -o v4,soft
> > 3. start a guest vm with disk tag xml like below:
> > <disk type='file' device='disk'>
> > <driver name='qemu' type='qcow2'/>
> > <source
> > file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/nfs/RHEL-8.6.0-20211102.1-x86_64.qcow2'
> > index='1'/>
> > <backingStore/>
> > <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
> > <alias name='virtio-disk0'/>
> > </disk>
> > 4.Start the vm and during the guest vm boot, apply the iptables rule to
> > drop the nfs connection to nfs server
> > iptables -A OUTPUT -d nfs_server_ip -p tcp --dport 2049 -j DROP
> > 5. Wait until the error log appear in /var/log/message
> > kernel: nfs: server nfs_server_ip not responding, timed out
> > 6. delete the iptables rule to retain the connection to nfs server
> > iptables -D OUTPUT -d nfs_server_ip -p tcp --dport 2049 -j DROP
> > 7. check the guest vm, found the boot process with error and can not
> > recover.
> > rror: ../../grub-core/disk/i386/pc/biosdisk.c:546:failure reading sector
> >
> > 0x7ab8 from `hd0'.
> >
> > error: ../../grub-core/disk/i386/pc/biosdisk.c:546:failure reading sector
> >
> > 0x9190 from `hd0'.
> >
> > error: ../../grub-core/disk/i386/pc/biosdisk.c:546:failure reading sector
>
>
> So this shows that I/O errors have been sent from the host to the guest.
>
> This means two things:
>
>  - The host has reported I/O errors to QEMU
>  - QEMU is confjigured to reporte I/O errors to the guest
>    (rerror/werror attributes for disk config)
>
> I expect the first point there is a result of you using 'soft' for
> the NFS mount - try it again with 'hard'.
>
> The alternative for 'rerror/werror' is to pause the guest, allowing
> the host problem to be solved whereupon you unpause the guest.
>
> Overall this behaviour just looks like a result of your config
> choices.
>
> Regards,
> Daniel
> --
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> |: https://libvirt.org         -o-
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>
>
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