On 17.06.2014 13:46, Paolo Bonzini
wrote:
Il
17/06/2014 13:37, Peter Lieven ha scritto:
On 17.06.2014 13:15, Paolo Bonzini wrote:
Il 17/06/2014 08:14, Peter Lieven ha
scritto:
BTW, while debugging a case with a bigger storage supplier I
found
that open-iscsi seems to do exactly this undeterministic
behaviour.
I have a 3TB LUN. If I access < 2TB sectors it uses
READ10/WRITE10 and
if I go beyond 2TB it changes to READ16/WRITE16.
Isn't that exactly what your latest patch does for >64K
sector writes? :)
Not exactly, we choose the default by checking the LUN size. 10
Byte for
< 2TB and 16 Byte otherwise.
Yeah, I meant introducing the non-determinism.
My latest patch makes an exception if a
request is bigger than 64K
sectors and
switches to 16 Byte requests. These would otherwise end in an
I/O error.
It could also be split at the block layer, like we do for unmap.
I think there's also a maximum transfer size somewhere in the VPD,
we could to READ16/WRITE16 if it is >64K sectors.
It seems that there might be a real world example where Linux issues
>32MB write requests. Maybe someone familiar with btrfs can
advise.
I see iSCSI Protocol Errors in my logs:
Sep 1 10:10:14 libiscsi:0 PDU header: 01 a1 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 07 06 8f 30 00 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 0a 2a
00 01 09 9e 50 00 47 98 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 [XXX]
Sep 1 10:10:14 qemu-2.0.0: iSCSI: Failed to write10 data to iSCSI
lun. Request was rejected with reason: 0x04 (Protocol Error)
Looking at the headers the xferlen in the iSCSI PDU is 110047232
Byte which is 214936 sectors.
214936 % 65536 = 18328 which is exactly the number of blocks in the
SCSI WRITE10 CDB.
Can someone advise if this is something that btrfs can cause or if I
have to blame the customer that he issues very big write requests
with Direct I/O?
The user sseems something like this in the log:
[34640.489284]
BTRFS: bdev /dev/vda2 errs: wr 8232, rd 0, flush 0, corrupt 0,
gen 0
[34640.490379]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17446880
[34640.491251]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 5150144
[34640.491290]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17472080
[34640.492201]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17523488
[34640.492201]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17536592
[34640.492201]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17599088
[34640.492201]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 17601104
[34640.685611]
end_request: I/O error, dev vda, sector 15495456
[34640.685650] end_request: I/O error,
dev vda, sector 7138216
Thanks,
Peter