Re: [PATCH] scsi: ata: Fix a race condition between scsi error handler and ahci interrupt

From: Li Nan
Date: Thu Aug 17 2023 - 03:42:58 EST




在 2023/8/15 10:41, Damien Le Moal 写道:
On 8/14/23 22:20, Li Nan wrote:

在 2023/8/14 15:50, Damien Le Moal 写道:
On 8/14/23 15:41, Li Nan wrote:
This is definitely not correct because EH may have been scheduled for a non
fatal action like a device revalidate or to get sense data for successful
commands. With this change, the port will NOT be frozen when a hard error IRQ
comes while EH is waiting to start, that is, while EH waits for all commands to
complete first.


Yeah, we should find a better way to fix it. Do you have any suggesstions?

Furthermore, if you get an IRQ that requires the port to be frozen, it means
that you had a failed command. In that case, the drive is in error state per
ATA specs and stops all communication until a read log 10h command is issued.
So you should never ever see 2 error IRQs one after the other. If you do, it
very likely means that you have buggy hardware.

How do you get into this situation ? What adapter and disk are you using ?


> How do you get into this situation ?
The first IRQ is io error, the second IRQ is disk link flash break.

What does "link flash break" mean ?


> What adapter and disk are you using ?
It is a disk developed by our company, but we think the same issue
exists when using other disks.

As I said, I find this situation highly suspect because if the first IRQ was to
signal an IO error that the drive reported, then per ATA specifications, the
drive should be in error mode and should NOT have transmitted any other FIS
after the SDB FIS that signaled the error. Nothing at all should come after that
error SDB FIS, until the host issues a read log 10h to get thee drive out of
error state.

If this is a prototype device, I would recommend that you take an ATA bus trace
and verify the FIS traffic. Something fishy is going on with the drive in my
opinion.


Thank you for your patient explanation. I'm sorry I didn't explain the
problem clearly before. After discussing with my colleagues who know
more about dirvers, Let me re-describe the problem.

The problem`s situation is the SATA link is quickly disconnected and
connected. For example, when an I/O error is processed in error handling
thread, the disk is manually removed and inserted, and the AHCI chip
reports a hot plug interrupt.

This scenario is not just an NCQ error, but a disk is removed and
quickly inserted before the error processing is completed. For the error
handling process, the disk status needs to be restored after the error
handling is complete.

In your original email, you showed:

interrupt scsi_eh

ahci_error_intr
=>ata_port_freeze
=>__ata_port_freeze
=>ahci_freeze (turn IRQ off)
=>ata_port_abort
=>ata_port_schedule_eh
=>shost->host_eh_scheduled++;
host_eh_scheduled = 1
scsi_error_handler
=>ata_scsi_error
=>ata_scsi_port_error_handler
=>ahci_error_handler
. =>sata_pmp_error_handler
. =>ata_eh_thaw_port
. =>ahci_thaw (turn IRQ on)
ahci_error_intr .
=>ata_port_freeze .
=>__ata_port_freeze .
=>ahci_freeze (turn IRQ off) .
=>ata_port_abort .
=>ata_port_schedule_eh .
=>shost->host_eh_scheduled++; .
host_eh_scheduled = 2 .

But here, I do not understand how host_eh_scheduled can be incremented since the
shost state should still be SHOST_RECOVERY until scsi_restart_operations() is
called at the end of scsi_error_handler(), which is after ata_std_end_eh() is
executed toward the end of ata_scsi_port_error_handler().

Yeah, shost state is still SHOST_RECOVERY during this period. But I don't think this will affect host_eh_scheduled++.
In scsi_host_set_state(), if (state == old state), it will return 0. So:
ata_port_schedule_eh
ata_std_sched_eh
scsi_schedule_eh
if (scsi_host_set_state(shost, SHOST_RECOVERY) == 0) -> true
shost->host_eh_scheduled++

Not sure how what you are showing here can happen. Can you have a closer look ?

=>ata_std_end_eh
=>host->host_eh_scheduled = 0;

In any case, for you particular failure pattern, given that the disk "goes away"
while EH is running, I would expect the commands executed during EH (e.g. read
log 10h) to timeout, which would cause a reset and a revalidate after that. The


If we remove the disk when EH is abount to end (after 'ahci_thaw'), the
commands which needed to be executed on the disk has already been
completed, and EH will not time out.

reset should clear the port interrupt error bits, which should allow everything
to recover after aborting all commands caught by the first EH run.


--
Thanks,
Nan