Date: Mon, 17 Dec 2012 13:37:22 +0100 From: Martin Matuska <mm@FreeBSD.org> To: Andriy Gapon <avg@FreeBSD.org> Cc: freebsd-fs@FreeBSD.org, freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.org, olivier <olivier777a7@gmail.com> Subject: Re: NFS/ZFS hangs after upgrading from 9.0-RELEASE to -STABLE Message-ID: <50CF1202.9070805@FreeBSD.org> In-Reply-To: <50CA1639.1010409@FreeBSD.org> References: <CALC5%2B1Ptc=c_hxfc_On9iDN4AC_Xmrfdbc1NgyJH2ZxP6fE0Aw@mail.gmail.com> <50C9AFC6.6080902@FreeBSD.org> <CALC5%2B1MRurpbznOYrnE%2BK%2B=BEuj80iqJUbYkLN7SKFwtKqbE1Q@mail.gmail.com> <50CA1639.1010409@FreeBSD.org>
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On 13.12.2012 18:54, Andriy Gapon wrote: > on 13/12/2012 19:46 olivier said the following: >> Thanks. I'll be sure to follow your suggestions next time this happens. >> >> I have a naive question/suggestion though. I see from browsing past discussions on >> ZFS problems that it has been suggested a number of times that problems that >> appear to originate in ZFS in fact come from lower layers; in particular because >> of driver bugs or disks in the process of failing. It seems that it can take a lot >> of time to troubleshoot such problems. I accept that ZFS behavior correctly leaves >> dealing with timeouts to lower layers, but it seems to me that the ZFS layer would >> be a great place to warn the user about issues and provide some information to >> troubleshoot them. >> >> For example, if some I/O requests get lost because of a buggy driver, the driver >> itself might not be the best place to identify those lost requests. But perhaps we >> could have a compile time option in ZFS code that spits out a warning if it gets >> stuck waiting for a particular request to come back for more than say 10 seconds, >> and identifies the problematic disk? I'm sure there would be cases where these >> warnings would be unwarranted, and I imagine that changes in the code to provide >> such warnings would impact performance; so one certainly would not want that code >> active by default. But someone in my position could certainly recompile the kernel >> with a ZFS debugging option turned on to figure out the problem. >> >> I understand that ZFS code comes from upstream, and that you guys probably want to >> keep FreeBSD-specific changes minimal. If that's a big problem, even just a patch >> provided "as such" that does not make it into the FreeBSD code base might be >> extremely useful. I wish I could help write something like that, but I know very >> little about the kernel or ZFS. I would certainly be willing to help with testing. > Google for "zfs deadman". This is already committed upstream and I think that it > is imported into FreeBSD, but I am not sure... Maybe it's imported just into the > vendor area and is not merged yet. > So, when enabled this logic would panic a system as a way of letting know that > something is wrong. You can read in the links why panic was selected for this job. > > And speaking FreeBSD-centric - I think that our CAM layer would be a perfect place > to detect such issues in non-ZFS-specific way. > I can try to merge the ZFS deadman stuff (r242732) to HEAD, but I guess this will be something for a 1-month MFC period. Afterwards, a 9-STABLE patch can be easily created. https://www.illumos.org/issues/3246 https://hg.openindiana.org/upstream/illumos/illumos-gate/rev/921a99998bb4 Cheers, mm -- Martin Matuska FreeBSD committer http://blog.vx.sk
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