From: Vladislav Bolkhovitin <vst@vlnb.net>
To: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com>
Cc: Mike Christie <michaelc@cs.wisc.edu>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>,
linux-scsi@vger.kernel.org, bugme-daemon@bugzilla.kernel.org,
bart.vanassche@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Bugme-new] [Bug 9405] New: iSCSI does not implement ordering guarantees required by e.g. journaling filesystems
Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2007 21:22:16 +0300 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <474325D8.1080105@vlnb.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1195581426.3131.75.camel@localhost.localdomain>
James Bottomley wrote:
>>>>>>>I'm not sure your conclusions necessarily follow your data. What was
>>>>>>>the reason for the TASK ABORTED (I'd guess QErr settings, right)?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>It was my desire/curiosity during tests of SCST (http://scst.sf.net),
>>>>>>when it working with several initiators with different transports over
>>>>>>the same set of devices, each of them having with TAS bit in the control
>>>>>>mode page set. According to SAM, in this case TASK ABORTED status can be
>>>>>>returned at any time, similarly to QUEUE FULL, i.e. IMHO such command
>>>>>>just should be retried. But QUEUE FULL status handled well, but TASK
>>>>>>ABORTED leads to filesystem corruption.
>>>>>
>>>>>So this is with a soft target implementation ... so it could be an
>>>>>ordering issue inside the target that's causing the filesystem
>>>>>corruption on error.
>>>>
>>>>Target offers no ordering guarantees for SIMPLE commands and frankly
>>>>says that to initiator via QUEUE ALGORITHM MODIFIER value 1 in the
>>>>control mode page. As we know, initiator doesn't use ORDERED tags (and
>>>>it really doesn't use them according to the logs), so if it's an
>>>>ordering issue, it's at the initiator's side.
>>>>
>>>>>if you specifically set TAS=1 you're giving up the right to know what
>>>>>caused the command termination. With insufficient information, it's
>>>>>really unsafe to simply retry, which is why the mid layer just returns
>>>>>TASK ABORTED as an error. If you set TAS=0 we'll get a check
>>>>>condition/unit attention explaining what happened (usually commands
>>>>>cleared by another initiator) and we'll explicitly do the right thing
>>>>>based on the sense data.
>>>>
>>>>But having TAS=1 is legal, right? So it should be handled well. If
>>>>TAS=0, TASK ABORTED can't be returned, it would be illegal. So, TASK
>>>>ABORTED status can only be returned with TAS=1.
>>>
>>>Driving with your handbrake on is legal too ... that doesn't mean you
>>>should do it ... and it certainly doesn't give you a legitimate
>>>complaint against the manufacturer of your car for excessive brake pad
>>>wear.
>>>
>>>We handle TASK ABORTED as well as we can (by failing it). For better
>>>handling set TAS=0 and we'll handle the individual cases according to
>>>the sense codes.
>>
>>So, should I consider your words as you think that it's perfectly fine
>>to corrupt file system for devices with TAS=1? Absolutely legal devices,
>>repeat. Hence, in your opinion, no further investigation should be done?
>
> Logic wouldn't support such a conclusion.
Sorry, lately I've got too many "I won't bother, this is your problem"
style answers
> You have intertwined two issues
>
> 1. How should the mid layer handle TASK ABORTED. I think we've
> reached the point where returning I/O error is the best we can
> do, but if TAS=0 we could have used the sense data to do better.
> 2. Should a request I/O error cause corruption in ext3 that can't
> be recovered by a journal replay. I think the answer here is
> no, so there needs to be an easily reproducible test case to
> pass to the filesystem people.
OK, I see you point. As I already wrote, I can assist only in testing here.
> James
>
>
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-11-20 18:28 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 18+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <bug-9405-10286@http.bugzilla.kernel.org/>
2007-11-19 20:50 ` [Bugme-new] [Bug 9405] New: iSCSI does not implement ordering guarantees required by e.g. journaling filesystems Andrew Morton
2007-11-19 20:56 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-19 21:22 ` Mike Christie
2007-11-19 21:28 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 15:04 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin
2007-11-20 15:28 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 16:15 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin
2007-11-20 16:43 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 17:17 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin
2007-11-20 17:30 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 17:45 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin
2007-11-20 17:52 ` Matthew Wilcox
2007-11-20 17:57 ` James Bottomley
2007-11-20 18:22 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin [this message]
2007-11-21 12:31 ` Vladislav Bolkhovitin
2007-11-19 21:15 ` Mike Christie
2007-11-19 21:18 ` Matthew Wilcox
2007-11-19 21:24 ` Mike Christie
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