Re: [PATCH/RFC 0/5] Support loop-back NFS mounts - take 2

From: Dave Chinner
Date: Wed Apr 23 2014 - 21:21:32 EST


On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 12:40:58PM +1000, NeilBrown wrote:
> This is a somewhat shorter patchset for loop-back NFS support than
> last time, thanks to the excellent feedback and particularly to Dave
> Chinner. Thanks.
>
> Avoiding the wait-for-congestion which can trigger a livelock is much
> the same, though I've reduced the cases in which the wait is
> by-passed.
> I did this using current->backing_dev_info which is otherwise serving
> no purpose on the current kernel.
>
> Avoiding the deadlocks has been turned on its head.
> Instead of nfsd checking if it is a loop-back mount and setting
> PF_FSTRANS, which then needs lots of changes too PF_FSTRANS and
> __GFP_FS handling, it is now NFS which checks for a loop-back
> filesystem.
>
> There is more verbosity in that patch (Fifth of Five) but the essence
> is that nfs_release_page will now not wait indefinitely for a COMMIT
> request to complete when sent to the local host. It still waits a
> little while as some delay can be important. But it won't wait
> forever.
> The duration of "a little while" is currently 100ms, though I do
> wonder if a bigger number would serve just as well.
>
> Unlike the previous series, this set should remove deadlocks that
> could happen during the actual fail-over process. This is achieved by
> having nfs_release_page monitor the connection and if it changes from
> a remote to a local connection, or just disconnects, then it will
> timeout. It currently polls every second, though this probably could
> be longer too. It only needs to be the same order of magnitude as the
> time it takes node failure to be detected and failover to happen, and
> I suspect that is closer to 1 minute. So maybe a 10 or 20 second poll
> interval would be just as good.
>
> Implementing this timeout requires some horrible code as the
> wait_on_bit functions don't support timeouts. If the general approach
> is found acceptable I'll explore ways to improve the timeout code.
>
> Comments, criticism, etc very welcome as always,

Looks much less intrusive to me, and doesn't appear to affect any
other filesystem or the recursion patterns of memory reclaim,
so I like it very much more than the previous patchset. Nice work!
:)

The code changes are really outside my area of expertise now, so I
don't really feel qualified to review the changes. However, consider
the overall approach:

Acked-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@xxxxxxxxxx>

Cheers,

Dave.
--
Dave Chinner
david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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