This patch is only appropriate for stable kernels v4.16 - v4.19
Since commit
9b30889c548a ("SUNRPC: Ensure we always close the socket after
a connection shuts down"), and until commit
c544577daddb ("SUNRPC: Clean up
transport write space handling"), it is possible for the NFS client to spin
in the following tight loop:
269.964083: rpc_task_run_action: task:43@0 flags=5a81 state=0005 status=0 action=call_bind [sunrpc]
269.964083: rpc_task_run_action: task:43@0 flags=5a81 state=0005 status=0 action=call_connect [sunrpc]
269.964083: rpc_task_run_action: task:43@0 flags=5a81 state=0005 status=0 action=call_transmit [sunrpc]
269.964085: xprt_transmit: peer=[10.0.1.82]:2049 xid=0x761d3f77 status=-32
269.964085: rpc_task_run_action: task:43@0 flags=5a81 state=0005 status=-32 action=call_transmit_status [sunrpc]
269.964085: rpc_task_run_action: task:43@0 flags=5a81 state=0005 status=-32 action=call_status [sunrpc]
269.964085: rpc_call_status: task:43@0 status=-32
The issue is that the path through call_transmit_status does not release
the XPRT_LOCK when the transmit result is -EPIPE, so the socket cannot be
properly shut down.
The below commit fixed things up in mainline by unconditionally calling
xprt_end_transmit() and releasing the XPRT_LOCK after every pass through
call_transmit. However, the entirety of this commit is not appropriate for
stable kernels because its original inclusion was part of a series that
modifies the sunrpc code to use a different queueing model. As a result,
there are machinations within this patch that are not needed for a stable
fix and will not make sense without a larger backport of the mainline
series.
In this patch, we take the slightly modified bit of the mainline patch
below, which is to release the XPRT_LOCK on transmission error should we
detect that the transport is waiting to close.
commit
c544577daddb618c7dd5fa7fb98d6a41782f020e upstream
Author: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@hammerspace.com>
Date: Mon Sep 3 23:39:27 2018 -0400
SUNRPC: Clean up transport write space handling
Treat socket write space handling in the same way we now treat transport
congestion: by denying the XPRT_LOCK until the transport signals that it
has free buffer space.
Signed-off-by: Trond Myklebust <trond.myklebust@hammerspace.com>
The original discussion of the problem is here:
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-nfs/
20181212135157.4489-1-dwysocha@redhat.com/T/#t
This passes my usual cthon and xfstests on NFS as applied on v4.19 mainline.
Reported-by: Dave Wysochanski <dwysocha@redhat.com>
Suggested-by: Trond Myklebust <trondmy@hammerspace.com>
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Coddington <bcodding@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
return test_and_set_bit(XPRT_CONNECTING, &xprt->state);
}
+static inline int xprt_close_wait(struct rpc_xprt *xprt)
+{
+ return test_bit(XPRT_CLOSE_WAIT, &xprt->state);
+}
+
static inline void xprt_set_bound(struct rpc_xprt *xprt)
{
test_and_set_bit(XPRT_BOUND, &xprt->state);
static void
call_transmit_status(struct rpc_task *task)
{
+ struct rpc_xprt *xprt = task->tk_rqstp->rq_xprt;
task->tk_action = call_status;
/*
* Common case: success. Force the compiler to put this
- * test first.
+ * test first. Or, if any error and xprt_close_wait,
+ * release the xprt lock so the socket can close.
*/
- if (task->tk_status == 0) {
+ if (task->tk_status == 0 || xprt_close_wait(xprt)) {
xprt_end_transmit(task);
rpc_task_force_reencode(task);
return;