| |
| SCSI EH |
| ====================================== |
| |
| This document describes SCSI midlayer error handling infrastructure. |
| Please refer to Documentation/scsi/scsi_mid_low_api.txt for more |
| information regarding SCSI midlayer. |
| |
| TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| |
| [1] How SCSI commands travel through the midlayer and to EH |
| [1-1] struct scsi_cmnd |
| [1-2] How do scmd's get completed? |
| [1-2-1] Completing a scmd w/ scsi_done |
| [1-2-2] Completing a scmd w/ timeout |
| [1-3] How EH takes over |
| [2] How SCSI EH works |
| [2-1] EH through fine-grained callbacks |
| [2-1-1] Overview |
| [2-1-2] Flow of scmds through EH |
| [2-1-3] Flow of control |
| [2-2] EH through hostt->eh_strategy_handler() |
| [2-2-1] Pre hostt->eh_strategy_handler() SCSI midlayer conditions |
| [2-2-2] Post hostt->eh_strategy_handler() SCSI midlayer conditions |
| [2-2-3] Things to consider |
| |
| |
| [1] How SCSI commands travel through the midlayer and to EH |
| |
| [1-1] struct scsi_cmnd |
| |
| Each SCSI command is represented with struct scsi_cmnd (== scmd). A |
| scmd has two list_head's to link itself into lists. The two are |
| scmd->list and scmd->eh_entry. The former is used for free list or |
| per-device allocated scmd list and not of much interest to this EH |
| discussion. The latter is used for completion and EH lists and unless |
| otherwise stated scmds are always linked using scmd->eh_entry in this |
| discussion. |
| |
| |
| [1-2] How do scmd's get completed? |
| |
| Once LLDD gets hold of a scmd, either the LLDD will complete the |
| command by calling scsi_done callback passed from midlayer when |
| invoking hostt->queuecommand() or SCSI midlayer will time it out. |
| |
| |
| [1-2-1] Completing a scmd w/ scsi_done |
| |
| For all non-EH commands, scsi_done() is the completion callback. It |
| does the following. |
| |
| 1. Delete timeout timer. If it fails, it means that timeout timer |
| has expired and is going to finish the command. Just return. |
| |
| 2. Link scmd to per-cpu scsi_done_q using scmd->en_entry |
| |
| 3. Raise SCSI_SOFTIRQ |
| |
| SCSI_SOFTIRQ handler scsi_softirq calls scsi_decide_disposition() to |
| determine what to do with the command. scsi_decide_disposition() |
| looks at the scmd->result value and sense data to determine what to do |
| with the command. |
| |
| - SUCCESS |
| scsi_finish_command() is invoked for the command. The |
| function does some maintenance choirs and notify completion by |
| calling scmd->done() callback, which, for fs requests, would |
| be HLD completion callback - sd:sd_rw_intr, sr:rw_intr, |
| st:st_intr. |
| |
| - NEEDS_RETRY |
| - ADD_TO_MLQUEUE |
| scmd is requeued to blk queue. |
| |
| - otherwise |
| scsi_eh_scmd_add(scmd, 0) is invoked for the command. See |
| [1-3] for details of this funciton. |
| |
| |
| [1-2-2] Completing a scmd w/ timeout |
| |
| The timeout handler is scsi_times_out(). When a timeout occurs, this |
| function |
| |
| 1. invokes optional hostt->eh_timedout() callback. Return value can |
| be one of |
| |
| - EH_HANDLED |
| This indicates that eh_timedout() dealt with the timeout. The |
| scmd is passed to __scsi_done() and thus linked into per-cpu |
| scsi_done_q. Normal command completion described in [1-2-1] |
| follows. |
| |
| - EH_RESET_TIMER |
| This indicates that more time is required to finish the |
| command. Timer is restarted. This action is counted as a |
| retry and only allowed scmd->allowed + 1(!) times. Once the |
| limit is reached, action for EH_NOT_HANDLED is taken instead. |
| |
| *NOTE* This action is racy as the LLDD could finish the scmd |
| after the timeout has expired but before it's added back. In |
| such cases, scsi_done() would think that timeout has occurred |
| and return without doing anything. We lose completion and the |
| command will time out again. |
| |
| - EH_NOT_HANDLED |
| This is the same as when eh_timedout() callback doesn't exist. |
| Step #2 is taken. |
| |
| 2. scsi_eh_scmd_add(scmd, SCSI_EH_CANCEL_CMD) is invoked for the |
| command. See [1-3] for more information. |
| |
| |
| [1-3] How EH takes over |
| |
| scmds enter EH via scsi_eh_scmd_add(), which does the following. |
| |
| 1. Turns on scmd->eh_eflags as requested. It's 0 for error |
| completions and SCSI_EH_CANCEL_CMD for timeouts. |
| |
| 2. Links scmd->eh_entry to shost->eh_cmd_q |
| |
| 3. Sets SHOST_RECOVERY bit in shost->shost_state |
| |
| 4. Increments shost->host_failed |
| |
| 5. Wakes up SCSI EH thread if shost->host_busy == shost->host_failed |
| |
| As can be seen above, once any scmd is added to shost->eh_cmd_q, |
| SHOST_RECOVERY shost_state bit is turned on. This prevents any new |
| scmd to be issued from blk queue to the host; eventually, all scmds on |
| the host either complete normally, fail and get added to eh_cmd_q, or |
| time out and get added to shost->eh_cmd_q. |
| |
| If all scmds either complete or fail, the number of in-flight scmds |
| becomes equal to the number of failed scmds - i.e. shost->host_busy == |
| shost->host_failed. This wakes up SCSI EH thread. So, once woken up, |
| SCSI EH thread can expect that all in-flight commands have failed and |
| are linked on shost->eh_cmd_q. |
| |
| Note that this does not mean lower layers are quiescent. If a LLDD |
| completed a scmd with error status, the LLDD and lower layers are |
| assumed to forget about the scmd at that point. However, if a scmd |
| has timed out, unless hostt->eh_timedout() made lower layers forget |
| about the scmd, which currently no LLDD does, the command is still |
| active as long as lower layers are concerned and completion could |
| occur at any time. Of course, all such completions are ignored as the |
| timer has already expired. |
| |
| We'll talk about how SCSI EH takes actions to abort - make LLDD |
| forget about - timed out scmds later. |
| |
| |
| [2] How SCSI EH works |
| |
| LLDD's can implement SCSI EH actions in one of the following two |
| ways. |
| |
| - Fine-grained EH callbacks |
| LLDD can implement fine-grained EH callbacks and let SCSI |
| midlayer drive error handling and call appropriate callbacks. |
| This will be dicussed further in [2-1]. |
| |
| - eh_strategy_handler() callback |
| This is one big callback which should perform whole error |
| handling. As such, it should do all choirs SCSI midlayer |
| performs during recovery. This will be discussed in [2-2]. |
| |
| Once recovery is complete, SCSI EH resumes normal operation by |
| calling scsi_restart_operations(), which |
| |
| 1. Checks if door locking is needed and locks door. |
| |
| 2. Clears SHOST_RECOVERY shost_state bit |
| |
| 3. Wakes up waiters on shost->host_wait. This occurs if someone |
| calls scsi_block_when_processing_errors() on the host. |
| (*QUESTION* why is it needed? All operations will be blocked |
| anyway after it reaches blk queue.) |
| |
| 4. Kicks queues in all devices on the host in the asses |
| |
| |
| [2-1] EH through fine-grained callbacks |
| |
| [2-1-1] Overview |
| |
| If eh_strategy_handler() is not present, SCSI midlayer takes charge |
| of driving error handling. EH's goals are two - make LLDD, host and |
| device forget about timed out scmds and make them ready for new |
| commands. A scmd is said to be recovered if the scmd is forgotten by |
| lower layers and lower layers are ready to process or fail the scmd |
| again. |
| |
| To achieve these goals, EH performs recovery actions with increasing |
| severity. Some actions are performed by issueing SCSI commands and |
| others are performed by invoking one of the following fine-grained |
| hostt EH callbacks. Callbacks may be omitted and omitted ones are |
| considered to fail always. |
| |
| int (* eh_abort_handler)(struct scsi_cmnd *); |
| int (* eh_device_reset_handler)(struct scsi_cmnd *); |
| int (* eh_bus_reset_handler)(struct scsi_cmnd *); |
| int (* eh_host_reset_handler)(struct scsi_cmnd *); |
| |
| Higher-severity actions are taken only when lower-severity actions |
| cannot recover some of failed scmds. Also, note that failure of the |
| highest-severity action means EH failure and results in offlining of |
| all unrecovered devices. |
| |
| During recovery, the following rules are followed |
| |
| - Recovery actions are performed on failed scmds on the to do list, |
| eh_work_q. If a recovery action succeeds for a scmd, recovered |
| scmds are removed from eh_work_q. |
| |
| Note that single recovery action on a scmd can recover multiple |
| scmds. e.g. resetting a device recovers all failed scmds on the |
| device. |
| |
| - Higher severity actions are taken iff eh_work_q is not empty after |
| lower severity actions are complete. |
| |
| - EH reuses failed scmds to issue commands for recovery. For |
| timed-out scmds, SCSI EH ensures that LLDD forgets about a scmd |
| before reusing it for EH commands. |
| |
| When a scmd is recovered, the scmd is moved from eh_work_q to EH |
| local eh_done_q using scsi_eh_finish_cmd(). After all scmds are |
| recovered (eh_work_q is empty), scsi_eh_flush_done_q() is invoked to |
| either retry or error-finish (notify upper layer of failure) recovered |
| scmds. |
| |
| scmds are retried iff its sdev is still online (not offlined during |
| EH), REQ_FAILFAST is not set and ++scmd->retries is less than |
| scmd->allowed. |
| |
| |
| [2-1-2] Flow of scmds through EH |
| |
| 1. Error completion / time out |
| ACTION: scsi_eh_scmd_add() is invoked for scmd |
| - set scmd->eh_eflags |
| - add scmd to shost->eh_cmd_q |
| - set SHOST_RECOVERY |
| - shost->host_failed++ |
| LOCKING: shost->host_lock |
| |
| 2. EH starts |
| ACTION: move all scmds to EH's local eh_work_q. shost->eh_cmd_q |
| is cleared. |
| LOCKING: shost->host_lock (not strictly necessary, just for |
| consistency) |
| |
| 3. scmd recovered |
| ACTION: scsi_eh_finish_cmd() is invoked to EH-finish scmd |
| - shost->host_failed-- |
| - clear scmd->eh_eflags |
| - scsi_setup_cmd_retry() |
| - move from local eh_work_q to local eh_done_q |
| LOCKING: none |
| |
| 4. EH completes |
| ACTION: scsi_eh_flush_done_q() retries scmds or notifies upper |
| layer of failure. |
| - scmd is removed from eh_done_q and scmd->eh_entry is cleared |
| - if retry is necessary, scmd is requeued using |
| scsi_queue_insert() |
| - otherwise, scsi_finish_command() is invoked for scmd |
| LOCKING: queue or finish function performs appropriate locking |
| |
| |
| [2-1-3] Flow of control |
| |
| EH through fine-grained callbacks start from scsi_unjam_host(). |
| |
| <<scsi_unjam_host>> |
| |
| 1. Lock shost->host_lock, splice_init shost->eh_cmd_q into local |
| eh_work_q and unlock host_lock. Note that shost->eh_cmd_q is |
| cleared by this action. |
| |
| 2. Invoke scsi_eh_get_sense. |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_get_sense>> |
| |
| This action is taken for each error-completed |
| (!SCSI_EH_CANCEL_CMD) commands without valid sense data. Most |
| SCSI transports/LLDDs automatically acquire sense data on |
| command failures (autosense). Autosense is recommended for |
| performance reasons and as sense information could get out of |
| sync inbetween occurrence of CHECK CONDITION and this action. |
| |
| Note that if autosense is not supported, scmd->sense_buffer |
| contains invalid sense data when error-completing the scmd |
| with scsi_done(). scsi_decide_disposition() always returns |
| FAILED in such cases thus invoking SCSI EH. When the scmd |
| reaches here, sense data is acquired and |
| scsi_decide_disposition() is called again. |
| |
| 1. Invoke scsi_request_sense() which issues REQUEST_SENSE |
| command. If fails, no action. Note that taking no action |
| causes higher-severity recovery to be taken for the scmd. |
| |
| 2. Invoke scsi_decide_disposition() on the scmd |
| |
| - SUCCESS |
| scmd->retries is set to scmd->allowed preventing |
| scsi_eh_flush_done_q() from retrying the scmd and |
| scsi_eh_finish_cmd() is invoked. |
| |
| - NEEDS_RETRY |
| scsi_eh_finish_cmd() invoked |
| |
| - otherwise |
| No action. |
| |
| 3. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_abort_cmds(). |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_abort_cmds>> |
| |
| This action is taken for each timed out command. |
| hostt->eh_abort_handler() is invoked for each scmd. The |
| handler returns SUCCESS if it has succeeded to make LLDD and |
| all related hardware forget about the scmd. |
| |
| If a timedout scmd is successfully aborted and the sdev is |
| either offline or ready, scsi_eh_finish_cmd() is invoked for |
| the scmd. Otherwise, the scmd is left in eh_work_q for |
| higher-severity actions. |
| |
| Note that both offline and ready status mean that the sdev is |
| ready to process new scmds, where processing also implies |
| immediate failing; thus, if a sdev is in one of the two |
| states, no further recovery action is needed. |
| |
| Device readiness is tested using scsi_eh_tur() which issues |
| TEST_UNIT_READY command. Note that the scmd must have been |
| aborted successfully before reusing it for TEST_UNIT_READY. |
| |
| 4. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_ready_devs() |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_ready_devs>> |
| |
| This function takes four increasingly more severe measures to |
| make failed sdevs ready for new commands. |
| |
| 1. Invoke scsi_eh_stu() |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_stu>> |
| |
| For each sdev which has failed scmds with valid sense data |
| of which scsi_check_sense()'s verdict is FAILED, |
| START_STOP_UNIT command is issued w/ start=1. Note that |
| as we explicitly choose error-completed scmds, it is known |
| that lower layers have forgotten about the scmd and we can |
| reuse it for STU. |
| |
| If STU succeeds and the sdev is either offline or ready, |
| all failed scmds on the sdev are EH-finished with |
| scsi_eh_finish_cmd(). |
| |
| *NOTE* If hostt->eh_abort_handler() isn't implemented or |
| failed, we may still have timed out scmds at this point |
| and STU doesn't make lower layers forget about those |
| scmds. Yet, this function EH-finish all scmds on the sdev |
| if STU succeeds leaving lower layers in an inconsistent |
| state. It seems that STU action should be taken only when |
| a sdev has no timed out scmd. |
| |
| 2. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_bus_device_reset(). |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_bus_device_reset>> |
| |
| This action is very similar to scsi_eh_stu() except that, |
| instead of issuing STU, hostt->eh_device_reset_handler() |
| is used. Also, as we're not issuing SCSI commands and |
| resetting clears all scmds on the sdev, there is no need |
| to choose error-completed scmds. |
| |
| 3. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_bus_reset() |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_bus_reset>> |
| |
| hostt->eh_bus_reset_handler() is invoked for each channel |
| with failed scmds. If bus reset succeeds, all failed |
| scmds on all ready or offline sdevs on the channel are |
| EH-finished. |
| |
| 4. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_host_reset() |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_host_reset>> |
| |
| This is the last resort. hostt->eh_host_reset_handler() |
| is invoked. If host reset succeeds, all failed scmds on |
| all ready or offline sdevs on the host are EH-finished. |
| |
| 5. If !list_empty(&eh_work_q), invoke scsi_eh_offline_sdevs() |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_offline_sdevs>> |
| |
| Take all sdevs which still have unrecovered scmds offline |
| and EH-finish the scmds. |
| |
| 5. Invoke scsi_eh_flush_done_q(). |
| |
| <<scsi_eh_flush_done_q>> |
| |
| At this point all scmds are recovered (or given up) and |
| put on eh_done_q by scsi_eh_finish_cmd(). This function |
| flushes eh_done_q by either retrying or notifying upper |
| layer of failure of the scmds. |
| |
| |
| [2-2] EH through hostt->eh_strategy_handler() |
| |
| hostt->eh_strategy_handler() is invoked in the place of |
| scsi_unjam_host() and it is responsible for whole recovery process. |
| On completion, the handler should have made lower layers forget about |
| all failed scmds and either ready for new commands or offline. Also, |
| it should perform SCSI EH maintenance choirs to maintain integrity of |
| SCSI midlayer. IOW, of the steps described in [2-1-2], all steps |
| except for #1 must be implemented by eh_strategy_handler(). |
| |
| |
| [2-2-1] Pre hostt->eh_strategy_handler() SCSI midlayer conditions |
| |
| The following conditions are true on entry to the handler. |
| |
| - Each failed scmd's eh_flags field is set appropriately. |
| |
| - Each failed scmd is linked on scmd->eh_cmd_q by scmd->eh_entry. |
| |
| - SHOST_RECOVERY is set. |
| |
| - shost->host_failed == shost->host_busy |
| |
| |
| [2-2-2] Post hostt->eh_strategy_handler() SCSI midlayer conditions |
| |
| The following conditions must be true on exit from the handler. |
| |
| - shost->host_failed is zero. |
| |
| - Each scmd's eh_eflags field is cleared. |
| |
| - Each scmd is in such a state that scsi_setup_cmd_retry() on the |
| scmd doesn't make any difference. |
| |
| - shost->eh_cmd_q is cleared. |
| |
| - Each scmd->eh_entry is cleared. |
| |
| - Either scsi_queue_insert() or scsi_finish_command() is called on |
| each scmd. Note that the handler is free to use scmd->retries and |
| ->allowed to limit the number of retries. |
| |
| |
| [2-2-3] Things to consider |
| |
| - Know that timed out scmds are still active on lower layers. Make |
| lower layers forget about them before doing anything else with |
| those scmds. |
| |
| - For consistency, when accessing/modifying shost data structure, |
| grab shost->host_lock. |
| |
| - On completion, each failed sdev must have forgotten about all |
| active scmds. |
| |
| - On completion, each failed sdev must be ready for new commands or |
| offline. |
| |
| |
| -- |
| Tejun Heo |
| htejun@gmail.com |
| 11th September 2005 |