Home
last modified time | relevance | path

Searched hist:"4 c984154" (Results 1 – 1 of 1) sorted by relevance

/openbmc/linux/drivers/nvme/host/
H A Dfc.c4c984154 Wed Jun 13 16:07:37 CDT 2018 James Smart <jsmart2021@gmail.com> nvme-fc: change controllers first connect to use reconnect path

Current code follows the framework that has been in the transports
from the beginning where initial link-side controller connect occurs
as part of "creating the controller". Thus that first connect fully
talks to the controller and obtains values that can then be used in
for blk-mq setup, etc. It also means that everything about the
controller is fully know before the "create controller" call returns.

This has several weaknesses:
- The initial create_ctrl call made by the cli will block for a long
time as wire transactions are performed synchronously. This delay
becomes longer if errors occur or connectivity is lost and retries
need to be performed.
- Code wise, it means there is a separate connect path for initial
controller connect vs the (same) steps used in the reconnect path.
- And as there's separate paths, it means there's separate error
handling and retry logic. It also plays havoc with the NEW state
(should transition out of it after successful initial connect) vs
the RESETTING and CONNECTING (reconnect) states that want to be
transitioned to on error.
- As there's separate paths, to recover from errors and disruptions,
it requires separate recovery/retry paths as well and can severely
convolute the controller state.

This patch reworks the fc transport to use the same connect paths
for the initial connection as it uses for reconnect. This makes a
single path for error recovery and handling.

This patch:
- Removes the driving of the initial connect and replaces it with
a state transition to CONNECTING and initiating the reconnect
thread. A dummy state transition of RESETTING had to be traversed
as a direct transtion of NEW->CONNECTING is not allowed. Given
that the controller is "new", the RESETTING transition is a simple
no-op. Once in the reconnecting thread, the normal behaviors of
ctrl_loss_tmo (max_retries * connect_delay) and dev_loss_tmo will
apply before the controller is torn down.
- Only if the state transitions couldn't be traversed and the
reconnect thread not scheduled, will the controller be torn down
while in create_ctrl.
- The prior code used the controller state of NEW to indicate
whether request queues had been initialized or not. For the admin
queue, the request queue is always created, so there's no need to
check a state. For IO queues, change to tracking whether a successful
io request queue create has occurred (e.g. 1st successful connect).
- The initial controller id is initialized to the dynamic controller
id used in the initial connect message. It will be overwritten by
the real controller id once the controller is connected on the wire.

Signed-off-by: James Smart <james.smart@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
4c984154 Wed Jun 13 16:07:37 CDT 2018 James Smart <jsmart2021@gmail.com> nvme-fc: change controllers first connect to use reconnect path

Current code follows the framework that has been in the transports
from the beginning where initial link-side controller connect occurs
as part of "creating the controller". Thus that first connect fully
talks to the controller and obtains values that can then be used in
for blk-mq setup, etc. It also means that everything about the
controller is fully know before the "create controller" call returns.

This has several weaknesses:
- The initial create_ctrl call made by the cli will block for a long
time as wire transactions are performed synchronously. This delay
becomes longer if errors occur or connectivity is lost and retries
need to be performed.
- Code wise, it means there is a separate connect path for initial
controller connect vs the (same) steps used in the reconnect path.
- And as there's separate paths, it means there's separate error
handling and retry logic. It also plays havoc with the NEW state
(should transition out of it after successful initial connect) vs
the RESETTING and CONNECTING (reconnect) states that want to be
transitioned to on error.
- As there's separate paths, to recover from errors and disruptions,
it requires separate recovery/retry paths as well and can severely
convolute the controller state.

This patch reworks the fc transport to use the same connect paths
for the initial connection as it uses for reconnect. This makes a
single path for error recovery and handling.

This patch:
- Removes the driving of the initial connect and replaces it with
a state transition to CONNECTING and initiating the reconnect
thread. A dummy state transition of RESETTING had to be traversed
as a direct transtion of NEW->CONNECTING is not allowed. Given
that the controller is "new", the RESETTING transition is a simple
no-op. Once in the reconnecting thread, the normal behaviors of
ctrl_loss_tmo (max_retries * connect_delay) and dev_loss_tmo will
apply before the controller is torn down.
- Only if the state transitions couldn't be traversed and the
reconnect thread not scheduled, will the controller be torn down
while in create_ctrl.
- The prior code used the controller state of NEW to indicate
whether request queues had been initialized or not. For the admin
queue, the request queue is always created, so there's no need to
check a state. For IO queues, change to tracking whether a successful
io request queue create has occurred (e.g. 1st successful connect).
- The initial controller id is initialized to the dynamic controller
id used in the initial connect message. It will be overwritten by
the real controller id once the controller is connected on the wire.

Signed-off-by: James Smart <james.smart@broadcom.com>
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>