From: Mike Christie <michaelc@cs.wisc.edu>
To: Alan Stern <stern@rowland.harvard.edu>
Cc: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com>,
SCSI development list <linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [BUG] Yet another scsi_cmnd leak?
Date: Tue, 04 Oct 2005 10:51:30 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4342A502.6010204@cs.wisc.edu> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.44L0.0510031127470.4824-100000@iolanthe.rowland.org>
Alan Stern wrote:
> On Thu, 29 Sep 2005, Mike Christie wrote:
>
>
>>Alan Stern wrote:
>>
>>>James:
>>>
>>>This report is based on 2.6.14-rc2-git6. The code in your scsi-misc-2.6
>>>git tree is somewhat different (and I don't know which is more current),
>>>but it still contains the same bug.
>>>
>>>
>>>In scsi_prep_fn, a request can get deferred if scsi_init_io fails to
>>>allocate an sg table. When this happens, the scsi_cmnd isn't released and
>>>the request is not marked DONTPREP.
>>>
>>>Then when scsi_prep_fn is called again, the request may be killed for
>>>a number of reasons. The code branches to the kill: label near the end of
>>>the routine, which returns BLKPREP_KILL.
>>>
>>>Isn't it true that when this happens, the scsi_cmnd allocated during the
>>>original prep will never be released?
>>>
>>>It appears that scsi_prep_fn is undecided about whether or not the request
>>>is allowed to have a scsi_cmnd already. The jumps to kill: seem to assume
>>>that it isn't, but the code for allocating a new scsi_cmnd tests for an
>>>existing one first.
>>>
>>
>>The gotos used to be just a return BLKPREP* and were added so I did not
>>have to write DID_NO_CONNECT or unplug multiple times :) I think you are
>>right and we need to further unwind what a previous prep had done
>>becuase when we return with BLKPREP_KILL we only hear about this command
>>again if it's request has a end_io function or waiting completion.
>
>
> I'm still not very clear about the conditions under which a request on the
> queue can be partially prepared -- for example, scsi_cmnd assigned but
> not the sg table. For the normal submission pathways, it looks like this
> happens only when the sg allocation fails. In those cases it wouldn't
> hurt to release the scsi_cmnd before deferring. Or before returning
> BLKPREP_KILL.
>
> But what about other pathways? As long as the special scsi_request things
> exist, I don't know what should be done. I saw you had submitted patches
> to get rid of them; how far has that progressed?
>
I am not done. I still have osst to convert and I think Doug found a bug
I cannot reproduce. I was not sure if everyone was happy with the
max_sectors and the SCSI_MAX_PHYS_SEGMENTS compile option either.
I think I need to change the interface too. Passing in a scatterlist is
nice beucase we do not have to touch the ULDs much, but I think if we
went Christoph's route and used a array of bio_bvecs it might be nicer.
We would need a bio helper function that could build bios from bvecs
though and I think maybe that should be done based on the bioset stuff.
I am not sure though.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-10-04 15:51 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 6+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-09-29 20:02 [BUG] Yet another scsi_cmnd leak? Alan Stern
2005-09-29 20:28 ` Mike Christie
2005-09-29 20:31 ` Mike Christie
2005-10-03 15:34 ` Alan Stern
2005-10-04 15:51 ` Mike Christie [this message]
2005-10-14 15:23 ` [PATCH] Fix leak of Scsi_Cmnds Alan Stern
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