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    [PATCH] dm: Fix deadlock under high i/o load in raid1 setup. · c06aad85
    Daniel Kobras authored
    On an nForce4-equipped machine with two SATA disk in raid1 setup using dmraid,
    we experienced frequent deadlock of the system under high i/o load.  'cat
    /dev/zero > ~/zero' was the most reliable way to reproduce them: Randomly
    after a few GB, 'cp' would be left in 'D' state along with kjournald and
    kmirrord.  The functions cp and kjournald were blocked in did vary, but
    kmirrord's wchan always pointed to 'mempool_alloc()'.  We've seen this pattern
    on 2.6.15 and 2.6.17 kernels.  http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/4/20/142
    
     indicates
    that this problem has been around even before.
    
    So much for the facts, here's my interpretation: mempool_alloc() first tries
    to atomically allocate the requested memory, or falls back to hand out
    preallocated chunks from the mempool.  If both fail, it puts the calling
    process (kmirrord in this case) on a private waitqueue until somebody refills
    the pool.  Where the only 'somebody' is kmirrord itself, so we have a
    deadlock.
    
    I worked around this problem by falling back to a (blocking) kmalloc when
    before kmirrord would have ended up on the waitqueue.  This defeats part of
    the benefits of using the mempool, but at least keeps the system running.  And
    it could be done with a two-line change.  Note that mempool_alloc() clears the
    GFP_NOIO flag internally, and only uses it to decide whether to wait or return
    an error if immediate allocation fails, so the attached patch doesn't change
    behaviour in the non-deadlocking case.  Path is against current git
    (2.6.18-rc4), but should apply to earlier versions as well.  I've tested on
    2.6.15, where this patch makes the difference between random lockup and a
    stable system.
    
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDaniel Kobras <kobras@linux.de>
    Acked-by: default avatarAlasdair G Kergon <agk@redhat.com>
    Cc: <stable@kernel.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAndrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
    c06aad85