linux-ide.vger.kernel.org archive mirror
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
* Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
       [not found] <20080328093055.GA16736@basil.nowhere.org>
@ 2008-03-29  7:16 ` Tejun Heo
  2008-03-29 15:34   ` Ric Wheeler
  2008-03-29 20:53   ` Mark Lord
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Tejun Heo @ 2008-03-29  7:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andi Kleen
  Cc: Jeff Garzik, Alan Cox, Mark Lord, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Hello, all.

Andi Kleen wrote:
 >
 > I'm attaching them.  They are huge, sorry.
 >
 > This was over multiple attempts with different kernels. Initially
 > it failed just on mounting, then later also developed problems
 > on scanning. I also tried to switch the port around so you see
 > it moving. There were two identical disk on the box, only
 > one failed.
 >
 > I think it started when I hard powered off the machine at some point,
 > the result was a large corrupted chunk in the inode table on the
 > disk (didn't Linus run into a similar problem recently?)

Heh.. that disk is completely toasted.  Probing itself was okay.
Errors occur when someone is trying to access the data on platter -
reading the partition, udev trying to determine persistent names.
Several things to note.

(While writing, the message developed into discussion material, cc'ing
  relevant people.  The log is quite large and can be accessed from
  http://htj.dyndns.org/export/libata-eh.log).

1. Currently timeout for reads and writes is 30secs which is a bit too
    long.  This long default timeout is one of the reasons why IO
    errors take so long to get detected and acted upon.  I think it
    should be in the range of 10-15 second.

2. In the first error case in the log, the device goes offline after
    timing out.  When the device keeps its link up but doesn't respond
    at all, libata takes slightly over 1 minutes before it gives up.
    Combined with the initial 30sec timeout, this can feel quite long.
    This timing is determined by ata_eh_timeouts[] table in
    drivers/ata/libata-eh.c and the current timeout table is the
    shortest it can get while allowing the theoretical worst case with
    a bit of margin.  There are several factors at play here.

    ATA resets are allowed to take up to 30 secs.  Don't ask me why.
    That's the spec.  This is to allow the device to postpone replying
    to reset while spinning up, which simply is a bad design.

    Waiting blindly for 30 + margin seconds for each try doesn't work
    too well because during hotplug or after PHY events, reset protocol
    could get a bit unreliable and the response from device can get
    lost.  In addition, some devices might not respond to reset if it's
    issued before the device indicated readiness (SRST) and some
    controllers can only wait for the initial readiness notificaiton
    from the drive after SRST.  The combined result is that even when
    everything is done right there are times when the driver misses
    reset completion.

    So, to handle the common cases better, libata EH times out resets
    quickly.  The first two tries are 10 seconds each and most devices
    get reset properly before it hits the end of the second reset try
    even if it needs to spin up.  What takes the longest is the third
    try, for which the timeout is 35secs.  This is to allow dumb
    devices which require long silent period after reset is issued and
    have at least one reset try with the timeout suggested by the spec.
    I haven't actually seen such device and it could be that we could
    be paying too much for a problem which doesn't exist.

    If we can lift the 35 sec reset try, we can give up resetting in
    slightly over 30 seconds.  If we reduce the command timeout, the
    whole thing from command issue to device disablement could be done
    in around 50 seconds.

3. Another possible source of delay is command retries after failure.
    sd currently sets retry count to five so every failed IO command is
    retried five times.  I agree with Mark that there isn't much sense
    in retrying a command when the drive already told us that it
    couldn't accomplish it due to media problem.  So, retrying commands
    failed with media error five times is probably not the best action
    to take.

What do you guys think?

Thanks.

-- 
tejun

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29  7:16 ` Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about Tejun Heo
@ 2008-03-29 15:34   ` Ric Wheeler
  2008-03-29 20:49     ` Mark Lord
  2008-03-29 20:53   ` Mark Lord
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Ric Wheeler @ 2008-03-29 15:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tejun Heo
  Cc: Andi Kleen, Jeff Garzik, Alan Cox, Mark Lord,
	IDE/ATA development list

Tejun Heo wrote:
> Hello, all.
> 
> Andi Kleen wrote:
>  >
>  > I'm attaching them.  They are huge, sorry.
>  >
>  > This was over multiple attempts with different kernels. Initially
>  > it failed just on mounting, then later also developed problems
>  > on scanning. I also tried to switch the port around so you see
>  > it moving. There were two identical disk on the box, only
>  > one failed.
>  >
>  > I think it started when I hard powered off the machine at some point,
>  > the result was a large corrupted chunk in the inode table on the
>  > disk (didn't Linus run into a similar problem recently?)
> 
> Heh.. that disk is completely toasted.  Probing itself was okay.
> Errors occur when someone is trying to access the data on platter -
> reading the partition, udev trying to determine persistent names.
> Several things to note.
> 
> (While writing, the message developed into discussion material, cc'ing
>  relevant people.  The log is quite large and can be accessed from
>  http://htj.dyndns.org/export/libata-eh.log).
> 
> 1. Currently timeout for reads and writes is 30secs which is a bit too
>    long.  This long default timeout is one of the reasons why IO
>    errors take so long to get detected and acted upon.  I think it
>    should be in the range of 10-15 second.

I agree that 10-15 seconds is a more reasonable default timeout.

For the extremely unusual case where the device does respond with 
success after more than 15 seconds, what would it look like to us when 
we have timed it out?

> 
> 2. In the first error case in the log, the device goes offline after
>    timing out.  When the device keeps its link up but doesn't respond
>    at all, libata takes slightly over 1 minutes before it gives up.
>    Combined with the initial 30sec timeout, this can feel quite long.
>    This timing is determined by ata_eh_timeouts[] table in
>    drivers/ata/libata-eh.c and the current timeout table is the
>    shortest it can get while allowing the theoretical worst case with
>    a bit of margin.  There are several factors at play here.
> 
>    ATA resets are allowed to take up to 30 secs.  Don't ask me why.
>    That's the spec.  This is to allow the device to postpone replying
>    to reset while spinning up, which simply is a bad design.
> 
>    Waiting blindly for 30 + margin seconds for each try doesn't work
>    too well because during hotplug or after PHY events, reset protocol
>    could get a bit unreliable and the response from device can get
>    lost.  In addition, some devices might not respond to reset if it's
>    issued before the device indicated readiness (SRST) and some
>    controllers can only wait for the initial readiness notificaiton
>    from the drive after SRST.  The combined result is that even when
>    everything is done right there are times when the driver misses
>    reset completion.
> 
>    So, to handle the common cases better, libata EH times out resets
>    quickly.  The first two tries are 10 seconds each and most devices
>    get reset properly before it hits the end of the second reset try
>    even if it needs to spin up.  What takes the longest is the third
>    try, for which the timeout is 35secs.  This is to allow dumb
>    devices which require long silent period after reset is issued and
>    have at least one reset try with the timeout suggested by the spec.
>    I haven't actually seen such device and it could be that we could
>    be paying too much for a problem which doesn't exist.
> 
>    If we can lift the 35 sec reset try, we can give up resetting in
>    slightly over 30 seconds.  If we reduce the command timeout, the
>    whole thing from command issue to device disablement could be done
>    in around 50 seconds.

I think that this is also reasonable. We should try to respond with a 
failure in that 30 second window when we can.

> 
> 3. Another possible source of delay is command retries after failure.
>    sd currently sets retry count to five so every failed IO command is
>    retried five times.  I agree with Mark that there isn't much sense
>    in retrying a command when the drive already told us that it
>    couldn't accomplish it due to media problem.  So, retrying commands
>    failed with media error five times is probably not the best action
>    to take.

I definitely agree with you and Mark on this - no reason to retry media 
errors (or some other less popular errors).  We run with the retry logic 
neutered and have not seen an issue with a very large population of 
S-ATA drives in the field...

> 
> What do you guys think?
> 
> Thanks.
> 

One thought that is related to this is that we could really, really use 
a target mode S-ATA (or ATA) device. I am pretty sure that some of the 
Marvell parts support target mode. Their original (non-libata) driver 
had target mode support coded in as well if I remember correctly.

With that base, we could program the target driver to inject errors and 
give us a much more complete testing of the error injection code. Maybe 
even really test the debated error during CACHE_FLUSH sequence ;-)

It is really, really hard to find flaky drives that are not totally dead 
which means we are left using common sense and intuition around this 
kind of thing...

ric

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29 15:34   ` Ric Wheeler
@ 2008-03-29 20:49     ` Mark Lord
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Mark Lord @ 2008-03-29 20:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Ric Wheeler
  Cc: Tejun Heo, Andi Kleen, Jeff Garzik, Alan Cox,
	IDE/ATA development list

Ric Wheeler wrote:
>
> One thought that is related to this is that we could really, really use 
> a target mode S-ATA (or ATA) device. I am pretty sure that some of the 
> Marvell parts support target mode. Their original (non-libata) driver 
> had target mode support coded in as well if I remember correctly.
..

Yeah.  It's on my TO-DO list, funded by Marvell.
But currently at the *bottom* of that TO-DO list.  :)

Cheers

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29  7:16 ` Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about Tejun Heo
  2008-03-29 15:34   ` Ric Wheeler
@ 2008-03-29 20:53   ` Mark Lord
  2008-03-29 21:12     ` Jeff Garzik
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Mark Lord @ 2008-03-29 20:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Tejun Heo
  Cc: Andi Kleen, Jeff Garzik, Alan Cox, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Tejun Heo wrote:
..

>    So, to handle the common cases better, libata EH times out resets
>    quickly.  The first two tries are 10 seconds each and most devices
>    get reset properly before it hits the end of the second reset try
>    even if it needs to spin up.  What takes the longest is the third
..

I think that 10 seconds timeout is just *slightly* too short.
There are drives here somewhere, that always fail the first attempt
because they take about 12 seconds to spin-up and begin communicating.

Cheers

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29 20:53   ` Mark Lord
@ 2008-03-29 21:12     ` Jeff Garzik
  2008-03-29 23:35       ` Tejun Heo
  2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Jeff Garzik @ 2008-03-29 21:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mark Lord; +Cc: Tejun Heo, Andi Kleen, Alan Cox, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Mark Lord wrote:
> Tejun Heo wrote:
> ..
> 
>>    So, to handle the common cases better, libata EH times out resets
>>    quickly.  The first two tries are 10 seconds each and most devices
>>    get reset properly before it hits the end of the second reset try
>>    even if it needs to spin up.  What takes the longest is the third
> ..
> 
> I think that 10 seconds timeout is just *slightly* too short.
> There are drives here somewhere, that always fail the first attempt
> because they take about 12 seconds to spin-up and begin communicating.

Also, ATAPI sometimes takes quite a while to respond, I've seen, when 
media is in the driver.

	Jeff




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29 21:12     ` Jeff Garzik
@ 2008-03-29 23:35       ` Tejun Heo
  2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Tejun Heo @ 2008-03-29 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jeff Garzik
  Cc: Mark Lord, Andi Kleen, Alan Cox, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Jeff Garzik wrote:
> Mark Lord wrote:
>> Tejun Heo wrote:
>> ..
>>
>>>    So, to handle the common cases better, libata EH times out resets
>>>    quickly.  The first two tries are 10 seconds each and most devices
>>>    get reset properly before it hits the end of the second reset try
>>>    even if it needs to spin up.  What takes the longest is the third
>> ..
>>
>> I think that 10 seconds timeout is just *slightly* too short.
>> There are drives here somewhere, that always fail the first attempt
>> because they take about 12 seconds to spin-up and begin communicating.
> 
> Also, ATAPI sometimes takes quite a while to respond, I've seen, when 
> media is in the driver.

The goal there was to get, say, 90% of devices in the first reset and 
then the rest of sane ones in the second reset and idiots in the third 
reset.  As long as resets don't interfere with the device preparing for 
readiness as is the case for harddrive spinning up, this works just 
fine.  If there are devices which have to restart prepping for readiness 
on each reset, this can be a problem (those fall into the idiot category).

I personally have never seen such a device yet but if there's an ATAPI 
device which doesn't respond to reset till it has spun up the media and 
recognized it, it could be a problem.  I have to say that would be a 
pretty stupid way to implement reset.  Jeff, do you remember which drive 
it was?

-- 
tejun

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-29 21:12     ` Jeff Garzik
  2008-03-29 23:35       ` Tejun Heo
@ 2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
  2008-03-30  7:33         ` Jeff Garzik
  2008-03-30 11:03         ` Tejun Heo
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-03-30  7:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Jeff Garzik
  Cc: Mark Lord, Tejun Heo, Andi Kleen, Alan Cox,
	IDE/ATA development list, ric

> Also, ATAPI sometimes takes quite a while to respond, I've seen, when 
> media is in the driver.

Surely ATAPI could get other defaults than disks?

-Andi

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
@ 2008-03-30  7:33         ` Jeff Garzik
  2008-03-30 11:03         ` Tejun Heo
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Jeff Garzik @ 2008-03-30  7:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andi Kleen; +Cc: Mark Lord, Tejun Heo, Alan Cox, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Andi Kleen wrote:
>> Also, ATAPI sometimes takes quite a while to respond, I've seen, when 
>> media is in the driver.
> 
> Surely ATAPI could get other defaults than disks?

Absolutely.

I was just posting a reminder, since there have been mistakes in the 
past where ATA and ATAPI were given the same defaults, only to find out 
later that was a mistake for ATAPI (since ATA is more often tested, 
usually).

	Jeff




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

* Re: Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about
  2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
  2008-03-30  7:33         ` Jeff Garzik
@ 2008-03-30 11:03         ` Tejun Heo
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Tejun Heo @ 2008-03-30 11:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andi Kleen
  Cc: Jeff Garzik, Mark Lord, Alan Cox, IDE/ATA development list, ric

Andi Kleen wrote:
>> Also, ATAPI sometimes takes quite a while to respond, I've seen, when 
>> media is in the driver.
> 
> Surely ATAPI could get other defaults than disks?

The driver doesn't know if it's an ATA or ATAPI during probing reset but 
after detection, yeah, we can use 10s, 10s, 15s timing for ATAs.

-- 
tejun

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2008-03-30 11:03 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
     [not found] <20080328093055.GA16736@basil.nowhere.org>
2008-03-29  7:16 ` Analysis of EH on Andi's dying disk and stuff to discuss about Tejun Heo
2008-03-29 15:34   ` Ric Wheeler
2008-03-29 20:49     ` Mark Lord
2008-03-29 20:53   ` Mark Lord
2008-03-29 21:12     ` Jeff Garzik
2008-03-29 23:35       ` Tejun Heo
2008-03-30  7:03       ` Andi Kleen
2008-03-30  7:33         ` Jeff Garzik
2008-03-30 11:03         ` Tejun Heo

This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).