[Scst-devel] [ofa-general] WinOF_2_0_5/SRP initiator: slow reads and eventually hangs

Vladislav Bolkhovitin vst at vlnb.net
Tue Sep 1 12:02:17 PDT 2009


I'd suggest you to enable lockdep on the target. Google for more details 
how to do it.

Also you should additional enable "mgmt_minor" SCST core trace level and 
only it. Don't enable "all", its output useful only in very special 
circumstances. Usually to investigate a problem like yours, the default 
flags in the debug build + "mgmt_minor" are sufficient.

Vlad

Chris Worley, on 09/01/2009 03:04 AM wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 12:15 AM, Bart Van
> Assche<bart.vanassche at gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Tue, Aug 11, 2009 at 11:52 PM, Chris Worley<worleys at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I setup my target exactly as you prescribe... but my initiator is
>>> still Windows (version of WInOF at top): performance as relayed by
>>> IOMeter starts high and the average slowly decreases.  Watching the
>>> instantaneous throughput, there seem to be longer and longer lags of
>>> poor performance. between moments of good performance.  I need to run
>>> this against a Linux initiator to see if the problems are w/ WinOF.
>>>
>>> Using OFED 1.4.1 (w/ the stock RHEL kernel) on the target, the
>>> performance was steady and getting close to acceptable.  In a 15 hour
>>> test that cycles through sequential and random LBA's and R/W mixes
>>> from block sizes from 1MB to 512B, it worked well and got decent
>>> performance until it hit 1KB sequential reads which hung IOMeter; no
>>> messages on the Linux side (all looked okay).  IBSRP on the Windows
>>> side just said "a reset to device was issued" every 15 to 30 seconds
>>> after the problem started. I reloaded the IB stack on the Linux side,
>>> and was able to get it restarted.
>>>
>>> Still a lot of combinations to test.
>> Which trace settings are you using on the target ? Enabling the proper
>> trace settings via /proc/scsi_tgt/trace_level might reveal whether you
>> are e.g. hitting the QUEUE_FULL condition. See also scst/README.
> 
> I've found a good kernel/scst mix to easily repeat this; I can get it
> to repeatedly hang w/ 8K block transfers running Ubuntu 9.04 w/ the
> 2.6.27-14-server kernel on _both_ target and initiator (i.e. no WinOF
> or OFED at all) and SCST rev 1062 on the target using one drive
> (performance is >600MB/s, >80K IOPS, on the 8KB block sizes being
> used).
> 
> Although the problem doesn't occur in Windows until blocks are <2KB
> and the RHEL5.2/OFED configuration does not repeat the issue using a
> Linux initiator, it seems like a very similar hang, so I'm hoping it's
> the same issue.
> 
> To repeat the issue, I run 8KB block random reads w/ 64 threads,
> running AIO calls w/ a depth of 64 (using "fio" on the initiator):
> 
> # fio --rw=randrw --bs=8k --rwmixread=100 --numjobs=64 --iodepth=64
> --sync=0 --direct=1 --randrepeat=0 --ioengine=libaio
> --filename=/dev/sdn --name=test --loops=10000 --size=16091503001
> 
> The "size" represents 10% of the drive.  It doesn't seem to ever
> happen on writes, but I've seen it happen on mixed reads/writes.
> 
> With tracing set to "default", there was still nothing in the target
> logs at the time of the hang.
> 
> With tracing set thusly on the target:
> 
> echo "all" >/proc/scsi_tgt/trace_level
> echo "all" >/proc/scsi_tgt/vdisk/trace_level
> 
> The last few lines of dmesg look like:
> 
> [255354.313411]    0: 28 00 01 84 54 90 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
>  (...T...........
> [255354.313420] [0]: scst: scst_cmd_init_done:214:tag=62, lun=0, CDB
> len=16, queue_type=1 (cmd ffff880102b4a568)
> [255354.313443] [26358]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880102b4a3a0), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> [255354.313420] [0]: scst_cmd_init_done:216:Recieving CDB:
> [255354.313452] [8602]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880102b49e48 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff880132579f60, sg[0].page
> ffffe200042b7180)
> [255354.313457] [8604]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880102b4a010 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff8802e9806f60, sg[0].page
> ffffe2000bc129c0)
> [255354.313426]  (h)___0__1__2__3__4__5__6__7__8__9__A__B__C__D__E__F
> [255354.313426]    0: 28 00 01 bc 5d 10 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
>  (...]...........
> [255354.313468] [26358]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880102b4a568), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> [255354.313484] [8602]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880102b4a1d8 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff8802e98064c0, sg[0].page
> ffffe2000bc633c0)
> [255354.313551] [8604]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880102b4a3a0 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff88018a877060, sg[0].page
> ffffe20004300200)
> [255354.313556] [8602]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880102b4a568 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff880142581100, sg[0].page
> ffffe20004066d40)
> 
> ... and there's a section like:
> 
> [255354.310177]    0: 28 00 01 25 df 50 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
>  (..%.P..........
> [255354.310177] [0]: scst: scst_cmd_init_done:214:tag=57, lun=0, CDB
> len=16, queue_type=1 (cmd ffff8801642e2730)
> [255354.310177] [0]: scst_cmd_init_done:216:Recieving CDB:
> [255354.310177]  (h)___0__1__2__3__4__5__6__7__8__9__A__B__C__D__E__F
> [255354.310177]    0: 28 00 01 5e 22 c0 00 00 10 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
>  (..^"...........
> [255354.310966] [26369]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880168a9e3a0), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> [255354.310973] [26361]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880168a9e010), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> [255354.310980] [26365]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880168a9e1d8), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> [255354.310986] [26359]: scst: scst_pre_parse:417:op_name <READ(10)>
> (cmd ffff880168a9de48), direction=2 (expected 2, set yes),
> transfer_len=16 (expected len 8192), flags=1
> ...
> [255354.311221] [8604]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880168a9e1d8 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff880173ca8060, sg[0].page
> ffffe20004325d00)
> [255354.311226] [8602]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880168a9ee50 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff880173ca8c40, sg[0].page
> ffffe20005847ec0)
> [255354.311233] [8604]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880168a9dc80 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff8802f0143c40, sg[0].page
> ffffe2000bc04880)
> [255354.311238] [8602]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880168a9e568 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff8802f08361a0, sg[0].page
> ffffe2000bbf2400)
> [255354.311242] [8604]: scst: scst_xmit_response:3004:Xmitting data
> for cmd ffff880168a9d560 (sg_cnt 0, sg ffff88010acd74c0, sg[0].page
> ffffe200047e7280)
> 
> ... but, prior to that, messages are unreadably garbled, as in:
> 
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: t]9l ft48 r(09 ,83_5p  s20 sg:303
> _00s3]c_=cs  _00ad0000e_003a6_0031_4(ea5 9arg )_2As_05s_8[7:c8[f3 _178
> 087gff0 .R nt]9i0tmpd1:ft st06s68 5i9[301602_106)o6 _001e4 0<s0 3>)0
> .3E3_28a9102 pft0>e_o[.eo[<_2n05 98_0f8_i xpe1f0 D<98s np8one:21_0
> 30f3006=e_ ax R8gs=h62]= 2.pd_ pad555mlf
> 1_]f8=.05lf i7gxs_ac3 m_0c0:]5i3087[_ 5e sg,00[dc3e,_ 0[ ( 1<[t]F]
> ..eb 4t_ ah1,_1_]10.h45_]2,5__12C5o 37 d_.)b_g4f850s, t1e c80.ite.8pE
> ue2.4f[.ft0 5c5_1effft 5530 f len=16, 5v03,em_cs4e 05fc78.5r5. n
> ,45ft45ff<if_:4fnd5c<ts54c078f9]_0c0a0efee04f[,1n 0 __5deff588=f82
> .t)m9.8)9.8077=s  _C 3 i8 .tlsf5_[0s0 (2u fu 4
> 5fco5fnr.n0a05_34f__4fd_4n Bs60fn4pB.tor7=s
> _i8s7=0_.tl:c>l3e0.51_654.30350en.m C30 C3 e f.dtm0=2_1e0n]6qe  d.>_
> 76 d=f _esr_tp 9_50.tnf50[cs.,
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: e .0 5 B , 45 0<s382 3_
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel:  c2< s0< cm38cf58.[f10 002< c3De
> _)088m8 9c5299pected__F
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: tran50 pt48)=8]=s59etl5pe4e6d)0c6
> ei_2(e_<3cc_ ea51es_0_sras A >cmdtesafe4 3[m 3.rer7:[ 1b00s5
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: ] 2a015ffs.35fff  B__ a
> 6cmd9spre3se9_2e3806(3_csA_  1 ns38ge0sre0
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: <g data  sf9_ _ 6d  0se5245f_26._2
> .,76.9<g fe t_]t6:(E...:s5D.s0_<Rte46>0330B005]08s3 __ r40r._5x,<Re08
> :2ec_ :06cs1_0ti1d l:253064enfe7]0 abd5 0f>196.t b 7.(008ni]
> 0s09.r650t, <24]__ s1=in03 s0p c2>>[4ein.1:ooD..ps210a>[25534_r6,:t
> n4.]4(8 e2 .r c 2n1g9360]10>(  00 00 00 00[fd[2
> [2g_re53  le_6c_md8t_ftc883tf03c  m_0 :8r8fmd63m3:0] 25 c6>[2n_e:fa2e84_0
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: c,
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: .=0>5f=1s5=1d6_(de:d
> 2l_25:0edg25fm>ff40 l440 e,AFg l)AF0 0o[1088. 1aggB
> 0n=d9(16a.5oeX6csf00s0: ._, (=10es_(1 7 5c___oR5st_42p3d 7
> C9d=5_:(3__7mD4_ 0m4_ed
> 04,5.,[s55.d4c,,25=,c8__q,[(meet9303_mr0ue9m0u_032__fy2se
> Aug 31 22:37:00 nameme kernel: >  y>i
> 
> ... so other suggestions on trace settings would be appreciated.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Chris
>> Bart.
>>
> 
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