On Wed, Oct 24, 2007 at 05:25:17PM -0400, Jun'ichi Nomura wrote:
> - For some device-mapper targets (multipath and mirror),
> the mapping table sometimes has to be replaced to cope with device
> failure.
> OTOH, device-mapper flushes all pending I/Os upon table replacement
> and may result in I/O errors, if there are device failures.
> 'noflush' suspend is used to let dm queue the pending I/Os
> instead of flushing them.
> Since it's not possible for user space program to tell whether
> the suspend could cause I/O error, they always use
> 'noflush' to suspend mirror/multipath targets.
>
> - Currently resizing is disabled for 'noflush' suspend.
> Resizing occurs in the course of table replacement.
> To resize the device under use, device-mapper needs to get its
> bdev inode. However, using bdget() in this case could cause deadlock
> by waiting for I_LOCK where an I/O process holding I_LOCK is
> waiting for completion of table replacement.
Before reviewing the details of the proposed workaround, I'd like to see
a deeper analysis of the problem to see that there isn't a cleaner way
to resolve this.
For example:
Question) What are the realistic situations we must support that lead to
a resize during table reload with I/O outstanding?
- The resize is the purpose of the reload; noflush is only set to avoid losing
I/O if a path should fail. So any outstanding I/O may be expected to be
consistent with both the old and new sizes of the device. E.g. If it's
beyond the end of a shrinking device and userspace cared about not
losing that I/O, it would have waited for that I/O to be flushed
*before* issuing the resize. If the I/O is beyond the end of the
existing device but within the new size, userspace would have waited for
the resize operation to complete before allowing the new I/O to be
issued.
=> Is it OK for device-mapper to handle the device size check
internally, rejecting any I/O that falls beyond the end of the table (it
already must do this lookup anyway), and to update the size recorded in
the inode later, after I/O is flowing through the device again, but (of
course) before reporting that the resize operation is complete?
I.e. does it eliminate deadlocks if the bdget() and i_size_write()
happen after the 'resume'?
Alasdair
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