iSCSI suffers from a deadlock in case a management command submitted via
the netlink socket sleeps on an allocation while holding the rx_queue_mutex
if that allocation causes a memory reclaim that writebacks to a failed
iSCSI device. The recovery procedure can never make progress to recover
the failed disk or abort outstanding IO operations to complete the reclaim
(since rx_queue_mutex is locked), thus locking the system.
Nevertheless, just marking all allocations under rx_queue_mutex as GFP_NOIO
(or locking the userspace process with something like PF_MEMALLOC_NOIO) is
not enough, since the iSCSI command code relies on other subsystems that
try to grab locked mutexes, whose threads are GFP_IO, leading to the same
deadlock. One instance where this situation can be observed is in the
backtraces below, stitched from multiple bugs reports, involving the kobj
uevent sent when a session is created.
The root of the problem is not the fact that iSCSI does GFP_IO allocations,
that is acceptable. The actual problem is that rx_queue_mutex has a very
large granularity, covering every unrelated netlink command execution at
the same time as the error recovery path.
The proposed fix leverages the recently added mechanism to stop failed
connections from the kernel, by enabling it to execute even though a
management command from the netlink socket is being run (rx_queue_mutex is
held), provided that the command is known to be safe. It splits the
rx_queue_mutex in two mutexes, one protecting from concurrent command
execution from the netlink socket, and one protecting stop_conn from racing
with other connection management operations that might conflict with it.
It is not very pretty, but it is the simplest way to resolve the deadlock.
I considered making it a lock per connection, but some external mutex would
still be needed to deal with iscsi_if_destroy_conn.
The patch was tested by forcing a memory shrinker (unrelated, but used
bufio/dm-verity) to reclaim iSCSI pages every time
ISCSI_UEVENT_CREATE_SESSION happens, which is reasonable to simulate
reclaims that might happen with GFP_KERNEL on that path. Then, a faulty
hung target causes a connection to fail during intensive IO, at the same
time a new session is added by iscsid.
The following stacktraces are stiches from several bug reports, showing a
case where the deadlock can happen.
iSCSI-write
holding: rx_queue_mutex
waiting: uevent_sock_mutex
kobject_uevent_env+0x1bd/0x419
kobject_uevent+0xb/0xd
device_add+0x48a/0x678
scsi_add_host_with_dma+0xc5/0x22d
iscsi_host_add+0x53/0x55
iscsi_sw_tcp_session_create+0xa6/0x129
iscsi_if_rx+0x100/0x1247
netlink_unicast+0x213/0x4f0
netlink_sendmsg+0x230/0x3c0
iscsi_fail iscsi_conn_failure
waiting: rx_queue_mutex
schedule_preempt_disabled+0x325/0x734
__mutex_lock_slowpath+0x18b/0x230
mutex_lock+0x22/0x40
iscsi_conn_failure+0x42/0x149
worker_thread+0x24a/0xbc0
EventManager_
holding: uevent_sock_mutex
waiting: dm_bufio_client->lock
dm_bufio_lock+0xe/0x10
shrink+0x34/0xf7
shrink_slab+0x177/0x5d0
do_try_to_free_pages+0x129/0x470
try_to_free_mem_cgroup_pages+0x14f/0x210
memcg_kmem_newpage_charge+0xa6d/0x13b0
__alloc_pages_nodemask+0x4a3/0x1a70
fallback_alloc+0x1b2/0x36c
__kmalloc_node_track_caller+0xb9/0x10d0
__alloc_skb+0x83/0x2f0
kobject_uevent_env+0x26b/0x419
dm_kobject_uevent+0x70/0x79
dev_suspend+0x1a9/0x1e7
ctl_ioctl+0x3e9/0x411
dm_ctl_ioctl+0x13/0x17
do_vfs_ioctl+0xb3/0x460
SyS_ioctl+0x5e/0x90
MemcgReclaimerD"
holding: dm_bufio_client->lock
waiting: stuck io to finish (needs iscsi_fail thread to progress)
schedule at ffffffffbd603618
io_schedule at ffffffffbd603ba4
do_io_schedule at ffffffffbdaf0d94
__wait_on_bit at ffffffffbd6008a6
out_of_line_wait_on_bit at ffffffffbd600960
wait_on_bit.constprop.10 at ffffffffbdaf0f17
__make_buffer_clean at ffffffffbdaf18ba
__cleanup_old_buffer at ffffffffbdaf192f
shrink at ffffffffbdaf19fd
do_shrink_slab at ffffffffbd6ec000
shrink_slab at ffffffffbd6ec24a
do_try_to_free_pages at ffffffffbd6eda09
try_to_free_mem_cgroup_pages at ffffffffbd6ede7e
mem_cgroup_resize_limit at ffffffffbd7024c0
mem_cgroup_write at ffffffffbd703149
cgroup_file_write at ffffffffbd6d9c6e
sys_write at ffffffffbd6662ea
system_call_fastpath at ffffffffbdbc34a2
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200520022959.1912856-1-krisman@collabora.com
Reported-by: Khazhismel Kumykov <khazhy@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Lee Duncan <lduncan@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@collabora.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>