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Message-ID: <20120611095132.045a8d09@corrin.poochiereds.net>
Date:	Mon, 11 Jun 2012 09:51:32 -0400
From:	Jeff Layton <jlayton@...hat.com>
To:	Boaz Harrosh <bharrosh@...asas.com>
Cc:	bfields <bfields@...ldses.org>, Steve Dickson <steved@...hat.com>,
	"Myklebust, Trond" <Trond.Myklebust@...app.com>,
	Joerg Platte <jplatte@...sa.net>,
	"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
	"linux-nfs@...r.kernel.org" <linux-nfs@...r.kernel.org>,
	Hans de Bruin <jmdebruin@...net.nl>
Subject: Re: Kernel 3.4.X NFS server regression

On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 16:32:10 +0300
Boaz Harrosh <bharrosh@...asas.com> wrote:

> On 06/11/2012 03:39 PM, Jeff Layton wrote:
> 
> > On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 08:16:34 -0400
> > bfields <bfields@...ldses.org> wrote:
> > 
> >> On Sun, Jun 10, 2012 at 03:00:42PM +0000, Myklebust, Trond wrote:
> >>> Cc: linux-nfs@...r.kernel.org + bfields and changing title to label it
> >>> as a server regression since that is what the trace appears to imply.
> >>>
> >>> On Sun, 2012-06-10 at 12:56 +0200, Joerg Platte wrote:
> >>>> All 3.4 kernels I tried so far (3.4, 3.4.1 and 3.4.2) suffer from the 
> >>>> same NFS related problem:
> >>>>
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel: INFO: task kworker/u:1:8 blocked for more 
> >>>> than 120 seconds.
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel: "echo 0 > 
> >>>> /proc/sys/kernel/hung_task_timeout_secs" disables this message.
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel: kworker/u:1     D 002ba28c     0     8 
> >>>>   2 0x00000000
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  df465ec0 00000046 00000005 002ba28c 
> >>>> 00000000 0000000a 00000282 df465e70
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  df465ec0 df44d2b0 ffff6b60 df465e84 
> >>>> df44d2b0 e33fa6b3 00000282 de764ae0
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  ffffffff d78bcfb8 df465e8c c012e0f6 
> >>>> df465ea4 c013610c 00000000 d78bcf80
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel: Call Trace:
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c012e0f6>] ? add_timer+0x11/0x17
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c013610c>] ? queue_delayed_work_on+0x74/0xf0
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c0136ba4>] ? queue_delayed_work+0x1b/0x28
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c0350f5b>] schedule+0x1d/0x4c
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<e0cda5f1>] cld_pipe_upcall+0x4e/0x75 [nfsd]
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<e0cda678>] 
> >>>> nfsd4_cld_grace_done+0x60/0x99 [nfsd]
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<e0cd9cb5>] 
> >>>> nfsd4_record_grace_done+0x10/0x12 [nfsd]
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<e0cd6696>] laundromat_main+0x291/0x2d8 
> >>>> [nfsd]
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c0136d2f>] process_one_work+0xff/0x325
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c0134bec>] ? start_worker+0x20/0x23
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<e0cd6405>] ? 
> >>>> nfsd4_process_open1+0x32b/0x32b [nfsd]
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c013727a>] worker_thread+0xf4/0x39a
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c0137186>] ? rescuer_thread+0x231/0x231
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c013a556>] kthread+0x6c/0x6e
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c013a4ea>] ? kthreadd+0xe8/0xe8
> >>>> Jun 10 09:23:36 coco kernel:  [<c035263e>] kernel_thread_helper+0x6/0xd
> >>>>
> >>>> A kworker task is stuck in D state and nfs mounts from other clients do 
> >>>> not work at all. This happens only on one machine, another one with the 
> >>>> same kernel (same self compiled Debian package) works. All previous 3.3 
> >>>> kernels work as well.
> >>>>
> >>>> Since this machine is remote it is not that easy to bisect to find the 
> >>>> bad commit. Are there any other things I can try?
> >>
> >> If you create a directory named /var/lib/nfs/v4recovery/, does the
> >> problem go away?
> >>
> >> My guess would be that it's trying to upcall to the new reboot-recovery
> >> state daemon, and you don't have that running.
> >>
> >> Before the addition of that upcall state was kept in
> >> /var/lib/nfs/v4recovery.  So we decide whether to use the old method or
> >> the new one by checking for the existance of that path.
> >>
> >> But I'm guessing we were wrong to assume that existing setups that
> >> people perceived as working would have that path, because the failures
> >> in the absence of that path were probably less obvious.
> >>
> >> --b.
> > 
> > This sounds like the same problem that Hans reported as well. I've not
> > been able to reproduce that so far. Here's what I get when I start nfsd
> > with no v4recoverdir and nfsdcld isn't running:
> > 
> > [  109.715080] NFSD: starting 90-second grace period
> > [  229.984220] NFSD: Unable to end grace period: -110
> > 
> > What I don't quite understand is why the queue_timeout job isn't
> > getting run here. What should happen is that 30s after upcall,
> > rpc_timeout_upcall_queue should run. The message will be found to be
> > still sitting on the , so it should set its status to -ETIMEDOUT
> > and wake up the caller.
> > 
> > I can only assume that the queue_timeout job isn't getting run for some
> > reason, but I'm unclear on why that would be.
> > 
> 
> 
> Regression fixing aside. I would consider changing the all mechanism to
> a call_usermodehelper mechanism. Not only it cuts the in-kernel code
> to 1/3, it also cuts user-mode code to 1/3. And specially it relives you
> of any special daemon setup dependency. All you do is run an app/script
> that does what it does when it does it, directly without anyone waiting
> and/or any kind of handshake.
> 

That was considered here, but the problem with the usermode helper is
that you can't pass anything back to the kernel but a simple status
code (and that's assuming that you wait for it to exit). In the near
future, we'll need to pass back more info to the kernel for this, so
the usermode helper callout wasn't suitable.

-- 
Jeff Layton <jlayton@...hat.com>
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