Message ID | 20181126211946.77067-1-dennis@kernel.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | block: always associate blkg and refcount cleanup | expand |
On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 04:19:33PM -0500, Dennis Zhou wrote: > Hi everyone, > > This is respin of v3 [1] with fixes for the errors reported in [2] and > [3]. v3 was reverted in [4]. > > The issue in [3] was that bio->bi_disk->queue and blkg->q were out > of sync. So when I changed blk_get_rl() to use blkg->q, the wrong queue > was returned and elevator from q->elevator->type threw a NPE. Note, with > v4.21, the old block stack was removed and so this patch was dropped. I > did backport this to v4.20 and verified this series does not encounter > the error. > > The biggest changes in v4 are when association occurs and clearly > defining the cases where association should happen. > 1. Association is now done when the device is set to keep blkg->q and > bio->bi_disk->queue in sync. > 2. When a bio is submitted directly to the device, it will not be > associated with a blkg. This is because a blkg represents the > relationship between a blkcg and a request_queue. Going directly to > the device means the request_queue may not exist meaning no blkg > will exist. > > The patch updating blk_get_rl() was dropped (v3 10/12). The patch to > always associate a blkg from v3 (v3 04/12) was fixed and split into > patches 0004 and 0005. 0011 is new removing bio_disassociate_task(). > > Summarizing the ideas of this series: > 1. Gracefully handle blkg failure to create by walking up the blkg > tree rather than fall through to root. > 2. Associate a bio with a blkg in core logic rather than per > controller logic. > 3. Rather than have a css and blkg reference, hold just a blkg ref > as it also holds a css ref. > 4. Switch to percpu ref counting for blkg. > Hmm so reading through this series it's made me realize that iolatency is sort of broken. It relies on knowing if it needs to do something with the bio if there is a blkg associated with it. Before this patchset there wouldn't be a blkg on the bio unless it was specifically associated. I'm going to need to figure out a different way to tag bio's to indicate that blk-iolatency should care about it. Probably add a bio flag or something. Thanks, Josef
On Tue, Nov 27, 2018 at 04:10:01PM -0500, Josef Bacik wrote: > On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 04:19:33PM -0500, Dennis Zhou wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > > > This is respin of v3 [1] with fixes for the errors reported in [2] and > > [3]. v3 was reverted in [4]. > > > > The issue in [3] was that bio->bi_disk->queue and blkg->q were out > > of sync. So when I changed blk_get_rl() to use blkg->q, the wrong queue > > was returned and elevator from q->elevator->type threw a NPE. Note, with > > v4.21, the old block stack was removed and so this patch was dropped. I > > did backport this to v4.20 and verified this series does not encounter > > the error. > > > > The biggest changes in v4 are when association occurs and clearly > > defining the cases where association should happen. > > 1. Association is now done when the device is set to keep blkg->q and > > bio->bi_disk->queue in sync. > > 2. When a bio is submitted directly to the device, it will not be > > associated with a blkg. This is because a blkg represents the > > relationship between a blkcg and a request_queue. Going directly to > > the device means the request_queue may not exist meaning no blkg > > will exist. > > > > The patch updating blk_get_rl() was dropped (v3 10/12). The patch to > > always associate a blkg from v3 (v3 04/12) was fixed and split into > > patches 0004 and 0005. 0011 is new removing bio_disassociate_task(). > > > > Summarizing the ideas of this series: > > 1. Gracefully handle blkg failure to create by walking up the blkg > > tree rather than fall through to root. > > 2. Associate a bio with a blkg in core logic rather than per > > controller logic. > > 3. Rather than have a css and blkg reference, hold just a blkg ref > > as it also holds a css ref. > > 4. Switch to percpu ref counting for blkg. > > > > Hmm so reading through this series it's made me realize that iolatency is sort > of broken. It relies on knowing if it needs to do something with the bio if > there is a blkg associated with it. Before this patchset there wouldn't be a I don't think there is anything wrong with blk-iolatency. blk-iolatency piggybacks off of the rq_qos hooks which when throttle gets called means submit has happened on the bio. As a byproduct, all bios that blk-iolatency sees has a blkcg associated with it from blkcg_bio_issue_check(). This lets blk-iolatency associate a blkg in the throttle hook - blkcg_iolatency_throttle(). Order of functions called: generic_make_request() generic_make_request_checks() <- associates blkcg make_request_fn() (eventually blk_mq_make_request) rq_qos_throttle() blkcg_iolatency_throttle() <- associate blkg based on blkcg blk-throttle is another story, it kind of does association really high up, but lets the block layer manage the request_queue and attribute it all to the first blkg seen. I believe this is just the top level blkg (same css, first request_queue). Disclaimer, I haven't read through much of the blk-throttle code. > blkg on the bio unless it was specifically associated. I'm going to need to > figure out a different way to tag bio's to indicate that blk-iolatency should > care about it. Probably add a bio flag or something. Thanks, I think the interaction gets a little confusing with stacked block devices, but regardless, shouldn't blk-iolatency care about every bio that comes through anyway? I think this would just translate to throttling at each request_queue and not just the entrance queue. If a bio has a device with no request_queue, I don't think it will ever reach blk-iolatency because the bio goes straight to device and a requirement to get to call rq_qos_throttle is to have a request_queue. Thanks, Dennis