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alistair23-linux/net/sunrpc/xprtrdma/rpc_rdma.c

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2003-2007 Network Appliance, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
* This software is available to you under a choice of one of two
* licenses. You may choose to be licensed under the terms of the GNU
* General Public License (GPL) Version 2, available from the file
* COPYING in the main directory of this source tree, or the BSD-type
* license below:
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
*
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided
* with the distribution.
*
* Neither the name of the Network Appliance, Inc. nor the names of
* its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products
* derived from this software without specific prior written
* permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
* "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
* A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
* OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
* SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
* DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
* THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
* (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
* OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/*
* rpc_rdma.c
*
* This file contains the guts of the RPC RDMA protocol, and
* does marshaling/unmarshaling, etc. It is also where interfacing
* to the Linux RPC framework lives.
*/
#include "xprt_rdma.h"
#include <linux/highmem.h>
#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SUNRPC_DEBUG)
# define RPCDBG_FACILITY RPCDBG_TRANS
#endif
enum rpcrdma_chunktype {
rpcrdma_noch = 0,
rpcrdma_readch,
rpcrdma_areadch,
rpcrdma_writech,
rpcrdma_replych
};
#if IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_SUNRPC_DEBUG)
static const char transfertypes[][12] = {
"pure inline", /* no chunks */
" read chunk", /* some argument via rdma read */
"*read chunk", /* entire request via rdma read */
"write chunk", /* some result via rdma write */
"reply chunk" /* entire reply via rdma write */
};
#endif
/* The client can send a request inline as long as the RPCRDMA header
* plus the RPC call fit under the transport's inline limit. If the
* combined call message size exceeds that limit, the client must use
* the read chunk list for this operation.
*/
static bool rpcrdma_args_inline(struct rpc_rqst *rqst)
{
unsigned int callsize = RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN + rqst->rq_snd_buf.len;
return callsize <= RPCRDMA_INLINE_WRITE_THRESHOLD(rqst);
}
/* The client can't know how large the actual reply will be. Thus it
* plans for the largest possible reply for that particular ULP
* operation. If the maximum combined reply message size exceeds that
* limit, the client must provide a write list or a reply chunk for
* this request.
*/
static bool rpcrdma_results_inline(struct rpc_rqst *rqst)
{
unsigned int repsize = RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN + rqst->rq_rcv_buf.buflen;
return repsize <= RPCRDMA_INLINE_READ_THRESHOLD(rqst);
}
xprtrdma: Fix XDR tail buffer marshalling Currently xprtrdma appends an extra chunk element to the RPC/RDMA read chunk list of each NFSv4 WRITE compound. The extra element contains the final GETATTR operation in the compound. The result is an extra RDMA READ operation to transfer a very short piece of each NFS WRITE compound (typically 16 bytes). This is inefficient. It is also incorrect. The client is sending the trailing GETATTR at the same Position as the preceding WRITE data payload. Whether or not RFC 5667 allows the GETATTR to appear in a read chunk, RFC 5666 requires that these two separate RPC arguments appear at two distinct Positions. It can also be argued that the GETATTR operation is not bulk data, and therefore RFC 5667 forbids its appearance in a read chunk at all. Although RFC 5667 is not precise about when using a read list with NFSv4 COMPOUND is allowed, the intent is that only data arguments not touched by NFS (ie, read and write payloads) are to be sent using RDMA READ or WRITE. The NFS client constructs GETATTR arguments itself, and therefore is required to send the trailing GETATTR operation as additional inline content, not as a data payload. NB: This change is not backwards compatible. Some older servers do not accept inline content following the read list. The Linux NFS server should handle this content correctly as of commit a97c331f9aa9 ("svcrdma: Handle additional inline content"). Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-08-03 11:04:17 -06:00
static int
rpcrdma_tail_pullup(struct xdr_buf *buf)
{
size_t tlen = buf->tail[0].iov_len;
size_t skip = tlen & 3;
/* Do not include the tail if it is only an XDR pad */
if (tlen < 4)
return 0;
/* xdr_write_pages() adds a pad at the beginning of the tail
* if the content in "buf->pages" is unaligned. Force the
* tail's actual content to land at the next XDR position
* after the head instead.
*/
if (skip) {
unsigned char *src, *dst;
unsigned int count;
src = buf->tail[0].iov_base;
dst = buf->head[0].iov_base;
dst += buf->head[0].iov_len;
src += skip;
tlen -= skip;
dprintk("RPC: %s: skip=%zu, memmove(%p, %p, %zu)\n",
__func__, skip, dst, src, tlen);
for (count = tlen; count; count--)
*dst++ = *src++;
}
return tlen;
}
xprtrdma: Segment head and tail XDR buffers on page boundaries A single memory allocation is used for the pair of buffers wherein the RPC client builds an RPC call message and decodes its matching reply. These buffers are sized based on the maximum possible size of the RPC call and reply messages for the operation in progress. This means that as the call buffer increases in size, the start of the reply buffer is pushed farther into the memory allocation. RPC requests are growing in size. It used to be that both the call and reply buffers fit inside a single page. But these days, thanks to NFSv4 (and especially security labels in NFSv4.2) the maximum call and reply sizes are large. NFSv4.0 OPEN, for example, now requires a 6KB allocation for a pair of call and reply buffers, and NFSv4 LOOKUP is not far behind. As the maximum size of a call increases, the reply buffer is pushed far enough into the buffer's memory allocation that a page boundary can appear in the middle of it. When the maximum possible reply size is larger than the client's RDMA receive buffers (currently 1KB), the client has to register a Reply chunk for the server to RDMA Write the reply into. The logic in rpcrdma_convert_iovs() assumes that xdr_buf head and tail buffers would always be contained on a single page. It supplies just one segment for the head and one for the tail. FMR, for example, registers up to a page boundary (only a portion of the reply buffer in the OPEN case above). But without additional segments, it doesn't register the rest of the buffer. When the server tries to write the OPEN reply, the RDMA Write fails with a remote access error since the client registered only part of the Reply chunk. rpcrdma_convert_iovs() must split the XDR buffer into multiple segments, each of which are guaranteed not to contain a page boundary. That way fmr_op_map is given the proper number of segments to register the whole reply buffer. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@broadcom.com> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagig@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2016-03-04 09:27:52 -07:00
/* Split "vec" on page boundaries into segments. FMR registers pages,
* not a byte range. Other modes coalesce these segments into a single
* MR when they can.
*/
static int
rpcrdma_convert_kvec(struct kvec *vec, struct rpcrdma_mr_seg *seg,
int n, int nsegs)
{
size_t page_offset;
u32 remaining;
char *base;
base = vec->iov_base;
page_offset = offset_in_page(base);
remaining = vec->iov_len;
while (remaining && n < nsegs) {
seg[n].mr_page = NULL;
seg[n].mr_offset = base;
seg[n].mr_len = min_t(u32, PAGE_SIZE - page_offset, remaining);
remaining -= seg[n].mr_len;
base += seg[n].mr_len;
++n;
page_offset = 0;
}
return n;
}
/*
* Chunk assembly from upper layer xdr_buf.
*
* Prepare the passed-in xdr_buf into representation as RPC/RDMA chunk
* elements. Segments are then coalesced when registered, if possible
* within the selected memreg mode.
*
* Returns positive number of segments converted, or a negative errno.
*/
static int
rpcrdma_convert_iovs(struct xdr_buf *xdrbuf, unsigned int pos,
enum rpcrdma_chunktype type, struct rpcrdma_mr_seg *seg, int nsegs)
{
int len, n = 0, p;
int page_base;
struct page **ppages;
xprtrdma: Segment head and tail XDR buffers on page boundaries A single memory allocation is used for the pair of buffers wherein the RPC client builds an RPC call message and decodes its matching reply. These buffers are sized based on the maximum possible size of the RPC call and reply messages for the operation in progress. This means that as the call buffer increases in size, the start of the reply buffer is pushed farther into the memory allocation. RPC requests are growing in size. It used to be that both the call and reply buffers fit inside a single page. But these days, thanks to NFSv4 (and especially security labels in NFSv4.2) the maximum call and reply sizes are large. NFSv4.0 OPEN, for example, now requires a 6KB allocation for a pair of call and reply buffers, and NFSv4 LOOKUP is not far behind. As the maximum size of a call increases, the reply buffer is pushed far enough into the buffer's memory allocation that a page boundary can appear in the middle of it. When the maximum possible reply size is larger than the client's RDMA receive buffers (currently 1KB), the client has to register a Reply chunk for the server to RDMA Write the reply into. The logic in rpcrdma_convert_iovs() assumes that xdr_buf head and tail buffers would always be contained on a single page. It supplies just one segment for the head and one for the tail. FMR, for example, registers up to a page boundary (only a portion of the reply buffer in the OPEN case above). But without additional segments, it doesn't register the rest of the buffer. When the server tries to write the OPEN reply, the RDMA Write fails with a remote access error since the client registered only part of the Reply chunk. rpcrdma_convert_iovs() must split the XDR buffer into multiple segments, each of which are guaranteed not to contain a page boundary. That way fmr_op_map is given the proper number of segments to register the whole reply buffer. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@broadcom.com> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagig@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2016-03-04 09:27:52 -07:00
if (pos == 0) {
n = rpcrdma_convert_kvec(&xdrbuf->head[0], seg, n, nsegs);
if (n == nsegs)
return -EIO;
}
len = xdrbuf->page_len;
ppages = xdrbuf->pages + (xdrbuf->page_base >> PAGE_SHIFT);
page_base = xdrbuf->page_base & ~PAGE_MASK;
p = 0;
while (len && n < nsegs) {
if (!ppages[p]) {
/* alloc the pagelist for receiving buffer */
ppages[p] = alloc_page(GFP_ATOMIC);
if (!ppages[p])
return -ENOMEM;
}
seg[n].mr_page = ppages[p];
seg[n].mr_offset = (void *)(unsigned long) page_base;
seg[n].mr_len = min_t(u32, PAGE_SIZE - page_base, len);
if (seg[n].mr_len > PAGE_SIZE)
return -EIO;
len -= seg[n].mr_len;
++n;
++p;
page_base = 0; /* page offset only applies to first page */
}
/* Message overflows the seg array */
if (len && n == nsegs)
return -EIO;
xprtrdma: Fix XDR tail buffer marshalling Currently xprtrdma appends an extra chunk element to the RPC/RDMA read chunk list of each NFSv4 WRITE compound. The extra element contains the final GETATTR operation in the compound. The result is an extra RDMA READ operation to transfer a very short piece of each NFS WRITE compound (typically 16 bytes). This is inefficient. It is also incorrect. The client is sending the trailing GETATTR at the same Position as the preceding WRITE data payload. Whether or not RFC 5667 allows the GETATTR to appear in a read chunk, RFC 5666 requires that these two separate RPC arguments appear at two distinct Positions. It can also be argued that the GETATTR operation is not bulk data, and therefore RFC 5667 forbids its appearance in a read chunk at all. Although RFC 5667 is not precise about when using a read list with NFSv4 COMPOUND is allowed, the intent is that only data arguments not touched by NFS (ie, read and write payloads) are to be sent using RDMA READ or WRITE. The NFS client constructs GETATTR arguments itself, and therefore is required to send the trailing GETATTR operation as additional inline content, not as a data payload. NB: This change is not backwards compatible. Some older servers do not accept inline content following the read list. The Linux NFS server should handle this content correctly as of commit a97c331f9aa9 ("svcrdma: Handle additional inline content"). Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-08-03 11:04:17 -06:00
/* When encoding the read list, the tail is always sent inline */
if (type == rpcrdma_readch)
return n;
if (xdrbuf->tail[0].iov_len) {
/* the rpcrdma protocol allows us to omit any trailing
* xdr pad bytes, saving the server an RDMA operation. */
if (xdrbuf->tail[0].iov_len < 4 && xprt_rdma_pad_optimize)
return n;
xprtrdma: Segment head and tail XDR buffers on page boundaries A single memory allocation is used for the pair of buffers wherein the RPC client builds an RPC call message and decodes its matching reply. These buffers are sized based on the maximum possible size of the RPC call and reply messages for the operation in progress. This means that as the call buffer increases in size, the start of the reply buffer is pushed farther into the memory allocation. RPC requests are growing in size. It used to be that both the call and reply buffers fit inside a single page. But these days, thanks to NFSv4 (and especially security labels in NFSv4.2) the maximum call and reply sizes are large. NFSv4.0 OPEN, for example, now requires a 6KB allocation for a pair of call and reply buffers, and NFSv4 LOOKUP is not far behind. As the maximum size of a call increases, the reply buffer is pushed far enough into the buffer's memory allocation that a page boundary can appear in the middle of it. When the maximum possible reply size is larger than the client's RDMA receive buffers (currently 1KB), the client has to register a Reply chunk for the server to RDMA Write the reply into. The logic in rpcrdma_convert_iovs() assumes that xdr_buf head and tail buffers would always be contained on a single page. It supplies just one segment for the head and one for the tail. FMR, for example, registers up to a page boundary (only a portion of the reply buffer in the OPEN case above). But without additional segments, it doesn't register the rest of the buffer. When the server tries to write the OPEN reply, the RDMA Write fails with a remote access error since the client registered only part of the Reply chunk. rpcrdma_convert_iovs() must split the XDR buffer into multiple segments, each of which are guaranteed not to contain a page boundary. That way fmr_op_map is given the proper number of segments to register the whole reply buffer. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@broadcom.com> Reviewed-by: Sagi Grimberg <sagig@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2016-03-04 09:27:52 -07:00
n = rpcrdma_convert_kvec(&xdrbuf->tail[0], seg, n, nsegs);
if (n == nsegs)
return -EIO;
}
return n;
}
/*
* Create read/write chunk lists, and reply chunks, for RDMA
*
* Assume check against THRESHOLD has been done, and chunks are required.
* Assume only encoding one list entry for read|write chunks. The NFSv3
* protocol is simple enough to allow this as it only has a single "bulk
* result" in each procedure - complicated NFSv4 COMPOUNDs are not. (The
* RDMA/Sessions NFSv4 proposal addresses this for future v4 revs.)
*
* When used for a single reply chunk (which is a special write
* chunk used for the entire reply, rather than just the data), it
* is used primarily for READDIR and READLINK which would otherwise
* be severely size-limited by a small rdma inline read max. The server
* response will come back as an RDMA Write, followed by a message
* of type RDMA_NOMSG carrying the xid and length. As a result, reply
* chunks do not provide data alignment, however they do not require
* "fixup" (moving the response to the upper layer buffer) either.
*
* Encoding key for single-list chunks (HLOO = Handle32 Length32 Offset64):
*
* Read chunklist (a linked list):
* N elements, position P (same P for all chunks of same arg!):
* 1 - PHLOO - 1 - PHLOO - ... - 1 - PHLOO - 0
*
* Write chunklist (a list of (one) counted array):
* N elements:
* 1 - N - HLOO - HLOO - ... - HLOO - 0
*
* Reply chunk (a counted array):
* N elements:
* 1 - N - HLOO - HLOO - ... - HLOO
*
* Returns positive RPC/RDMA header size, or negative errno.
*/
static ssize_t
rpcrdma_create_chunks(struct rpc_rqst *rqst, struct xdr_buf *target,
struct rpcrdma_msg *headerp, enum rpcrdma_chunktype type)
{
struct rpcrdma_req *req = rpcr_to_rdmar(rqst);
struct rpcrdma_xprt *r_xprt = rpcx_to_rdmax(rqst->rq_xprt);
int n, nsegs, nchunks = 0;
unsigned int pos;
struct rpcrdma_mr_seg *seg = req->rl_segments;
struct rpcrdma_read_chunk *cur_rchunk = NULL;
struct rpcrdma_write_array *warray = NULL;
struct rpcrdma_write_chunk *cur_wchunk = NULL;
__be32 *iptr = headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks;
int (*map)(struct rpcrdma_xprt *, struct rpcrdma_mr_seg *, int, bool);
if (type == rpcrdma_readch || type == rpcrdma_areadch) {
/* a read chunk - server will RDMA Read our memory */
cur_rchunk = (struct rpcrdma_read_chunk *) iptr;
} else {
/* a write or reply chunk - server will RDMA Write our memory */
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* encode a NULL read chunk list */
if (type == rpcrdma_replych)
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* a NULL write chunk list */
warray = (struct rpcrdma_write_array *) iptr;
cur_wchunk = (struct rpcrdma_write_chunk *) (warray + 1);
}
if (type == rpcrdma_replych || type == rpcrdma_areadch)
pos = 0;
else
pos = target->head[0].iov_len;
nsegs = rpcrdma_convert_iovs(target, pos, type, seg, RPCRDMA_MAX_SEGS);
if (nsegs < 0)
return nsegs;
map = r_xprt->rx_ia.ri_ops->ro_map;
do {
n = map(r_xprt, seg, nsegs, cur_wchunk != NULL);
if (n <= 0)
goto out;
if (cur_rchunk) { /* read */
cur_rchunk->rc_discrim = xdr_one;
/* all read chunks have the same "position" */
cur_rchunk->rc_position = cpu_to_be32(pos);
cur_rchunk->rc_target.rs_handle =
cpu_to_be32(seg->mr_rkey);
cur_rchunk->rc_target.rs_length =
cpu_to_be32(seg->mr_len);
xdr_encode_hyper(
(__be32 *)&cur_rchunk->rc_target.rs_offset,
seg->mr_base);
dprintk("RPC: %s: read chunk "
"elem %d@0x%llx:0x%x pos %u (%s)\n", __func__,
seg->mr_len, (unsigned long long)seg->mr_base,
seg->mr_rkey, pos, n < nsegs ? "more" : "last");
cur_rchunk++;
r_xprt->rx_stats.read_chunk_count++;
} else { /* write/reply */
cur_wchunk->wc_target.rs_handle =
cpu_to_be32(seg->mr_rkey);
cur_wchunk->wc_target.rs_length =
cpu_to_be32(seg->mr_len);
xdr_encode_hyper(
(__be32 *)&cur_wchunk->wc_target.rs_offset,
seg->mr_base);
dprintk("RPC: %s: %s chunk "
"elem %d@0x%llx:0x%x (%s)\n", __func__,
(type == rpcrdma_replych) ? "reply" : "write",
seg->mr_len, (unsigned long long)seg->mr_base,
seg->mr_rkey, n < nsegs ? "more" : "last");
cur_wchunk++;
if (type == rpcrdma_replych)
r_xprt->rx_stats.reply_chunk_count++;
else
r_xprt->rx_stats.write_chunk_count++;
r_xprt->rx_stats.total_rdma_request += seg->mr_len;
}
nchunks++;
seg += n;
nsegs -= n;
} while (nsegs);
/* success. all failures return above */
req->rl_nchunks = nchunks;
/*
* finish off header. If write, marshal discrim and nchunks.
*/
if (cur_rchunk) {
iptr = (__be32 *) cur_rchunk;
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* finish the read chunk list */
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* encode a NULL write chunk list */
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* encode a NULL reply chunk */
} else {
warray->wc_discrim = xdr_one;
warray->wc_nchunks = cpu_to_be32(nchunks);
iptr = (__be32 *) cur_wchunk;
if (type == rpcrdma_writech) {
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* finish the write chunk list */
*iptr++ = xdr_zero; /* encode a NULL reply chunk */
}
}
/*
* Return header size.
*/
return (unsigned char *)iptr - (unsigned char *)headerp;
out:
for (pos = 0; nchunks--;)
pos += r_xprt->rx_ia.ri_ops->ro_unmap(r_xprt,
&req->rl_segments[pos]);
return n;
}
/*
* Copy write data inline.
* This function is used for "small" requests. Data which is passed
* to RPC via iovecs (or page list) is copied directly into the
* pre-registered memory buffer for this request. For small amounts
* of data, this is efficient. The cutoff value is tunable.
*/
static void rpcrdma_inline_pullup(struct rpc_rqst *rqst)
{
int i, npages, curlen;
int copy_len;
unsigned char *srcp, *destp;
struct rpcrdma_xprt *r_xprt = rpcx_to_rdmax(rqst->rq_xprt);
int page_base;
struct page **ppages;
destp = rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_base;
curlen = rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_len;
destp += curlen;
dprintk("RPC: %s: destp 0x%p len %d hdrlen %d\n",
__func__, destp, rqst->rq_slen, curlen);
copy_len = rqst->rq_snd_buf.page_len;
if (rqst->rq_snd_buf.tail[0].iov_len) {
curlen = rqst->rq_snd_buf.tail[0].iov_len;
if (destp + copy_len != rqst->rq_snd_buf.tail[0].iov_base) {
memmove(destp + copy_len,
rqst->rq_snd_buf.tail[0].iov_base, curlen);
r_xprt->rx_stats.pullup_copy_count += curlen;
}
dprintk("RPC: %s: tail destp 0x%p len %d\n",
__func__, destp + copy_len, curlen);
rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_len += curlen;
}
r_xprt->rx_stats.pullup_copy_count += copy_len;
page_base = rqst->rq_snd_buf.page_base;
ppages = rqst->rq_snd_buf.pages + (page_base >> PAGE_SHIFT);
page_base &= ~PAGE_MASK;
npages = PAGE_ALIGN(page_base+copy_len) >> PAGE_SHIFT;
for (i = 0; copy_len && i < npages; i++) {
curlen = PAGE_SIZE - page_base;
if (curlen > copy_len)
curlen = copy_len;
dprintk("RPC: %s: page %d destp 0x%p len %d curlen %d\n",
__func__, i, destp, copy_len, curlen);
srcp = kmap_atomic(ppages[i]);
memcpy(destp, srcp+page_base, curlen);
kunmap_atomic(srcp);
rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_len += curlen;
destp += curlen;
copy_len -= curlen;
page_base = 0;
}
/* header now contains entire send message */
}
/*
* Marshal a request: the primary job of this routine is to choose
* the transfer modes. See comments below.
*
* Uses multiple RDMA IOVs for a request:
* [0] -- RPC RDMA header, which uses memory from the *start* of the
* preregistered buffer that already holds the RPC data in
* its middle.
* [1] -- the RPC header/data, marshaled by RPC and the NFS protocol.
* [2] -- optional padding.
* [3] -- if padded, header only in [1] and data here.
*
* Returns zero on success, otherwise a negative errno.
*/
int
rpcrdma_marshal_req(struct rpc_rqst *rqst)
{
struct rpc_xprt *xprt = rqst->rq_xprt;
struct rpcrdma_xprt *r_xprt = rpcx_to_rdmax(xprt);
struct rpcrdma_req *req = rpcr_to_rdmar(rqst);
char *base;
size_t rpclen;
ssize_t hdrlen;
enum rpcrdma_chunktype rtype, wtype;
struct rpcrdma_msg *headerp;
#if defined(CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL)
if (test_bit(RPC_BC_PA_IN_USE, &rqst->rq_bc_pa_state))
return rpcrdma_bc_marshal_reply(rqst);
#endif
/*
* rpclen gets amount of data in first buffer, which is the
* pre-registered buffer.
*/
base = rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_base;
rpclen = rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_len;
headerp = rdmab_to_msg(req->rl_rdmabuf);
/* don't byte-swap XID, it's already done in request */
headerp->rm_xid = rqst->rq_xid;
headerp->rm_vers = rpcrdma_version;
headerp->rm_credit = cpu_to_be32(r_xprt->rx_buf.rb_max_requests);
headerp->rm_type = rdma_msg;
/*
* Chunks needed for results?
*
* o Read ops return data as write chunk(s), header as inline.
* o If the expected result is under the inline threshold, all ops
* return as inline.
* o Large non-read ops return as a single reply chunk.
*/
if (rqst->rq_rcv_buf.flags & XDRBUF_READ)
wtype = rpcrdma_writech;
else if (rpcrdma_results_inline(rqst))
wtype = rpcrdma_noch;
else
wtype = rpcrdma_replych;
/*
* Chunks needed for arguments?
*
* o If the total request is under the inline threshold, all ops
* are sent as inline.
* o Large write ops transmit data as read chunk(s), header as
* inline.
* o Large non-write ops are sent with the entire message as a
* single read chunk (protocol 0-position special case).
*
* This assumes that the upper layer does not present a request
* that both has a data payload, and whose non-data arguments
* by themselves are larger than the inline threshold.
*/
if (rpcrdma_args_inline(rqst)) {
rtype = rpcrdma_noch;
} else if (rqst->rq_snd_buf.flags & XDRBUF_WRITE) {
rtype = rpcrdma_readch;
} else {
r_xprt->rx_stats.nomsg_call_count++;
headerp->rm_type = htonl(RDMA_NOMSG);
rtype = rpcrdma_areadch;
rpclen = 0;
}
/* The following simplification is not true forever */
if (rtype != rpcrdma_noch && wtype == rpcrdma_replych)
wtype = rpcrdma_noch;
if (rtype != rpcrdma_noch && wtype != rpcrdma_noch) {
dprintk("RPC: %s: cannot marshal multiple chunk lists\n",
__func__);
return -EIO;
}
hdrlen = RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN;
/*
* Pull up any extra send data into the preregistered buffer.
* When padding is in use and applies to the transfer, insert
* it and change the message type.
*/
if (rtype == rpcrdma_noch) {
rpcrdma_inline_pullup(rqst);
headerp->rm_body.rm_nochunks.rm_empty[0] = xdr_zero;
headerp->rm_body.rm_nochunks.rm_empty[1] = xdr_zero;
headerp->rm_body.rm_nochunks.rm_empty[2] = xdr_zero;
/* new length after pullup */
rpclen = rqst->rq_svec[0].iov_len;
xprtrdma: Fix XDR tail buffer marshalling Currently xprtrdma appends an extra chunk element to the RPC/RDMA read chunk list of each NFSv4 WRITE compound. The extra element contains the final GETATTR operation in the compound. The result is an extra RDMA READ operation to transfer a very short piece of each NFS WRITE compound (typically 16 bytes). This is inefficient. It is also incorrect. The client is sending the trailing GETATTR at the same Position as the preceding WRITE data payload. Whether or not RFC 5667 allows the GETATTR to appear in a read chunk, RFC 5666 requires that these two separate RPC arguments appear at two distinct Positions. It can also be argued that the GETATTR operation is not bulk data, and therefore RFC 5667 forbids its appearance in a read chunk at all. Although RFC 5667 is not precise about when using a read list with NFSv4 COMPOUND is allowed, the intent is that only data arguments not touched by NFS (ie, read and write payloads) are to be sent using RDMA READ or WRITE. The NFS client constructs GETATTR arguments itself, and therefore is required to send the trailing GETATTR operation as additional inline content, not as a data payload. NB: This change is not backwards compatible. Some older servers do not accept inline content following the read list. The Linux NFS server should handle this content correctly as of commit a97c331f9aa9 ("svcrdma: Handle additional inline content"). Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-08-03 11:04:17 -06:00
} else if (rtype == rpcrdma_readch)
rpclen += rpcrdma_tail_pullup(&rqst->rq_snd_buf);
if (rtype != rpcrdma_noch) {
hdrlen = rpcrdma_create_chunks(rqst, &rqst->rq_snd_buf,
headerp, rtype);
wtype = rtype; /* simplify dprintk */
} else if (wtype != rpcrdma_noch) {
hdrlen = rpcrdma_create_chunks(rqst, &rqst->rq_rcv_buf,
headerp, wtype);
}
if (hdrlen < 0)
return hdrlen;
dprintk("RPC: %s: %s: hdrlen %zd rpclen %zd"
" headerp 0x%p base 0x%p lkey 0x%x\n",
__func__, transfertypes[wtype], hdrlen, rpclen,
headerp, base, rdmab_lkey(req->rl_rdmabuf));
/*
* initialize send_iov's - normally only two: rdma chunk header and
* single preregistered RPC header buffer, but if padding is present,
* then use a preregistered (and zeroed) pad buffer between the RPC
* header and any write data. In all non-rdma cases, any following
* data has been copied into the RPC header buffer.
*/
req->rl_send_iov[0].addr = rdmab_addr(req->rl_rdmabuf);
req->rl_send_iov[0].length = hdrlen;
req->rl_send_iov[0].lkey = rdmab_lkey(req->rl_rdmabuf);
req->rl_niovs = 1;
if (rtype == rpcrdma_areadch)
return 0;
xprtrdma: Allocate RPC send buffer separately from struct rpcrdma_req Because internal memory registration is an expensive and synchronous operation, xprtrdma pre-registers send and receive buffers at mount time, and then re-uses them for each RPC. A "hardway" allocation is a memory allocation and registration that replaces a send buffer during the processing of an RPC. Hardway must be done if the RPC send buffer is too small to accommodate an RPC's call and reply headers. For xprtrdma, each RPC send buffer is currently part of struct rpcrdma_req so that xprt_rdma_free(), which is passed nothing but the address of an RPC send buffer, can find its matching struct rpcrdma_req and rpcrdma_rep quickly via container_of / offsetof. That means that hardway currently has to replace a whole rpcrmda_req when it replaces an RPC send buffer. This is often a fairly hefty chunk of contiguous memory due to the size of the rl_segments array and the fact that both the send and receive buffers are part of struct rpcrdma_req. Some obscure re-use of fields in rpcrdma_req is done so that xprt_rdma_free() can detect replaced rpcrdma_req structs, and restore the original. This commit breaks apart the RPC send buffer and struct rpcrdma_req so that increasing the size of the rl_segments array does not change the alignment of each RPC send buffer. (Increasing rl_segments is needed to bump up the maximum r/wsize for NFS/RDMA). This change opens up some interesting possibilities for improving the design of xprt_rdma_allocate(). xprt_rdma_allocate() is now the one place where RPC send buffers are allocated or re-allocated, and they are now always left in place by xprt_rdma_free(). A large re-allocation that includes both the rl_segments array and the RPC send buffer is no longer needed. Send buffer re-allocation becomes quite rare. Good send buffer alignment is guaranteed no matter what the size of the rl_segments array is. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-01-21 09:04:08 -07:00
req->rl_send_iov[1].addr = rdmab_addr(req->rl_sendbuf);
req->rl_send_iov[1].length = rpclen;
xprtrdma: Allocate RPC send buffer separately from struct rpcrdma_req Because internal memory registration is an expensive and synchronous operation, xprtrdma pre-registers send and receive buffers at mount time, and then re-uses them for each RPC. A "hardway" allocation is a memory allocation and registration that replaces a send buffer during the processing of an RPC. Hardway must be done if the RPC send buffer is too small to accommodate an RPC's call and reply headers. For xprtrdma, each RPC send buffer is currently part of struct rpcrdma_req so that xprt_rdma_free(), which is passed nothing but the address of an RPC send buffer, can find its matching struct rpcrdma_req and rpcrdma_rep quickly via container_of / offsetof. That means that hardway currently has to replace a whole rpcrmda_req when it replaces an RPC send buffer. This is often a fairly hefty chunk of contiguous memory due to the size of the rl_segments array and the fact that both the send and receive buffers are part of struct rpcrdma_req. Some obscure re-use of fields in rpcrdma_req is done so that xprt_rdma_free() can detect replaced rpcrdma_req structs, and restore the original. This commit breaks apart the RPC send buffer and struct rpcrdma_req so that increasing the size of the rl_segments array does not change the alignment of each RPC send buffer. (Increasing rl_segments is needed to bump up the maximum r/wsize for NFS/RDMA). This change opens up some interesting possibilities for improving the design of xprt_rdma_allocate(). xprt_rdma_allocate() is now the one place where RPC send buffers are allocated or re-allocated, and they are now always left in place by xprt_rdma_free(). A large re-allocation that includes both the rl_segments array and the RPC send buffer is no longer needed. Send buffer re-allocation becomes quite rare. Good send buffer alignment is guaranteed no matter what the size of the rl_segments array is. Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Steve Wise <swise@opengridcomputing.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-01-21 09:04:08 -07:00
req->rl_send_iov[1].lkey = rdmab_lkey(req->rl_sendbuf);
req->rl_niovs = 2;
return 0;
}
/*
* Chase down a received write or reply chunklist to get length
* RDMA'd by server. See map at rpcrdma_create_chunks()! :-)
*/
static int
rpcrdma_count_chunks(struct rpcrdma_rep *rep, unsigned int max, int wrchunk, __be32 **iptrp)
{
unsigned int i, total_len;
struct rpcrdma_write_chunk *cur_wchunk;
char *base = (char *)rdmab_to_msg(rep->rr_rdmabuf);
i = be32_to_cpu(**iptrp);
if (i > max)
return -1;
cur_wchunk = (struct rpcrdma_write_chunk *) (*iptrp + 1);
total_len = 0;
while (i--) {
struct rpcrdma_segment *seg = &cur_wchunk->wc_target;
ifdebug(FACILITY) {
u64 off;
xdr_decode_hyper((__be32 *)&seg->rs_offset, &off);
dprintk("RPC: %s: chunk %d@0x%llx:0x%x\n",
__func__,
be32_to_cpu(seg->rs_length),
(unsigned long long)off,
be32_to_cpu(seg->rs_handle));
}
total_len += be32_to_cpu(seg->rs_length);
++cur_wchunk;
}
/* check and adjust for properly terminated write chunk */
if (wrchunk) {
__be32 *w = (__be32 *) cur_wchunk;
if (*w++ != xdr_zero)
return -1;
cur_wchunk = (struct rpcrdma_write_chunk *) w;
}
if ((char *)cur_wchunk > base + rep->rr_len)
return -1;
*iptrp = (__be32 *) cur_wchunk;
return total_len;
}
/*
* Scatter inline received data back into provided iov's.
*/
static void
rpcrdma_inline_fixup(struct rpc_rqst *rqst, char *srcp, int copy_len, int pad)
{
int i, npages, curlen, olen;
char *destp;
struct page **ppages;
int page_base;
curlen = rqst->rq_rcv_buf.head[0].iov_len;
if (curlen > copy_len) { /* write chunk header fixup */
curlen = copy_len;
rqst->rq_rcv_buf.head[0].iov_len = curlen;
}
dprintk("RPC: %s: srcp 0x%p len %d hdrlen %d\n",
__func__, srcp, copy_len, curlen);
/* Shift pointer for first receive segment only */
rqst->rq_rcv_buf.head[0].iov_base = srcp;
srcp += curlen;
copy_len -= curlen;
olen = copy_len;
i = 0;
rpcx_to_rdmax(rqst->rq_xprt)->rx_stats.fixup_copy_count += olen;
page_base = rqst->rq_rcv_buf.page_base;
ppages = rqst->rq_rcv_buf.pages + (page_base >> PAGE_SHIFT);
page_base &= ~PAGE_MASK;
if (copy_len && rqst->rq_rcv_buf.page_len) {
npages = PAGE_ALIGN(page_base +
rqst->rq_rcv_buf.page_len) >> PAGE_SHIFT;
for (; i < npages; i++) {
curlen = PAGE_SIZE - page_base;
if (curlen > copy_len)
curlen = copy_len;
dprintk("RPC: %s: page %d"
" srcp 0x%p len %d curlen %d\n",
__func__, i, srcp, copy_len, curlen);
destp = kmap_atomic(ppages[i]);
memcpy(destp + page_base, srcp, curlen);
flush_dcache_page(ppages[i]);
kunmap_atomic(destp);
srcp += curlen;
copy_len -= curlen;
if (copy_len == 0)
break;
page_base = 0;
}
}
if (copy_len && rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len) {
curlen = copy_len;
if (curlen > rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len)
curlen = rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len;
if (rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_base != srcp)
memmove(rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_base, srcp, curlen);
dprintk("RPC: %s: tail srcp 0x%p len %d curlen %d\n",
__func__, srcp, copy_len, curlen);
rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len = curlen;
copy_len -= curlen; ++i;
} else
rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len = 0;
if (pad) {
/* implicit padding on terminal chunk */
unsigned char *p = rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_base;
while (pad--)
p[rqst->rq_rcv_buf.tail[0].iov_len++] = 0;
}
if (copy_len)
dprintk("RPC: %s: %d bytes in"
" %d extra segments (%d lost)\n",
__func__, olen, i, copy_len);
/* TBD avoid a warning from call_decode() */
rqst->rq_private_buf = rqst->rq_rcv_buf;
}
void
rpcrdma_connect_worker(struct work_struct *work)
{
struct rpcrdma_ep *ep =
container_of(work, struct rpcrdma_ep, rep_connect_worker.work);
struct rpcrdma_xprt *r_xprt =
container_of(ep, struct rpcrdma_xprt, rx_ep);
struct rpc_xprt *xprt = &r_xprt->rx_xprt;
spin_lock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
if (++xprt->connect_cookie == 0) /* maintain a reserved value */
++xprt->connect_cookie;
if (ep->rep_connected > 0) {
if (!xprt_test_and_set_connected(xprt))
xprt_wake_pending_tasks(xprt, 0);
} else {
if (xprt_test_and_clear_connected(xprt))
xprt_wake_pending_tasks(xprt, -ENOTCONN);
}
spin_unlock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
}
#if defined(CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL)
/* By convention, backchannel calls arrive via rdma_msg type
* messages, and never populate the chunk lists. This makes
* the RPC/RDMA header small and fixed in size, so it is
* straightforward to check the RPC header's direction field.
*/
static bool
rpcrdma_is_bcall(struct rpcrdma_msg *headerp)
{
__be32 *p = (__be32 *)headerp;
if (headerp->rm_type != rdma_msg)
return false;
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[0] != xdr_zero)
return false;
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1] != xdr_zero)
return false;
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[2] != xdr_zero)
return false;
/* sanity */
if (p[7] != headerp->rm_xid)
return false;
/* call direction */
if (p[8] != cpu_to_be32(RPC_CALL))
return false;
return true;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL */
/*
* This function is called when an async event is posted to
* the connection which changes the connection state. All it
* does at this point is mark the connection up/down, the rpc
* timers do the rest.
*/
void
rpcrdma_conn_func(struct rpcrdma_ep *ep)
{
schedule_delayed_work(&ep->rep_connect_worker, 0);
}
/* Process received RPC/RDMA messages.
*
* Errors must result in the RPC task either being awakened, or
* allowed to timeout, to discover the errors at that time.
*/
void
rpcrdma_reply_handler(struct rpcrdma_rep *rep)
{
struct rpcrdma_msg *headerp;
struct rpcrdma_req *req;
struct rpc_rqst *rqst;
struct rpcrdma_xprt *r_xprt = rep->rr_rxprt;
struct rpc_xprt *xprt = &r_xprt->rx_xprt;
__be32 *iptr;
int rdmalen, status, rmerr;
unsigned long cwnd;
dprintk("RPC: %s: incoming rep %p\n", __func__, rep);
if (rep->rr_len == RPCRDMA_BAD_LEN)
goto out_badstatus;
if (rep->rr_len < RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_ERR)
goto out_shortreply;
headerp = rdmab_to_msg(rep->rr_rdmabuf);
#if defined(CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL)
if (rpcrdma_is_bcall(headerp))
goto out_bcall;
#endif
/* Match incoming rpcrdma_rep to an rpcrdma_req to
* get context for handling any incoming chunks.
*/
spin_lock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
rqst = xprt_lookup_rqst(xprt, headerp->rm_xid);
if (!rqst)
goto out_nomatch;
req = rpcr_to_rdmar(rqst);
if (req->rl_reply)
goto out_duplicate;
xprtrdma: Invalidate in the RPC reply handler There is a window between the time the RPC reply handler wakes the waiting RPC task and when xprt_release() invokes ops->buf_free. During this time, memory regions containing the data payload may still be accessed by a broken or malicious server, but the RPC application has already been allowed access to the memory containing the RPC request's data payloads. The server should be fenced from client memory containing RPC data payloads _before_ the RPC application is allowed to continue. This change also more strongly enforces send queue accounting. There is a maximum number of RPC calls allowed to be outstanding. When an RPC/RDMA transport is set up, just enough send queue resources are allocated to handle registration, Send, and invalidation WRs for each those RPCs at the same time. Before, additional RPC calls could be dispatched while invalidation WRs were still consuming send WQEs. When invalidation WRs backed up, dispatching additional RPCs resulted in a send queue overrun. Now, the reply handler prevents RPC dispatch until invalidation is complete. This prevents RPC call dispatch until there are enough send queue resources to proceed. Still to do: If an RPC exits early (say, ^C), the reply handler has no opportunity to perform invalidation. Currently, xprt_rdma_free() still frees remaining RDMA resources, which could deadlock. Additional changes are needed to handle invalidation properly in this case. Reported-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgunthorpe@obsidianresearch.com> Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-12-16 15:23:11 -07:00
/* Sanity checking has passed. We are now committed
* to complete this transaction.
*/
list_del_init(&rqst->rq_list);
spin_unlock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
dprintk("RPC: %s: reply %p completes request %p (xid 0x%08x)\n",
__func__, rep, req, be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_xid));
/* from here on, the reply is no longer an orphan */
req->rl_reply = rep;
xprt->reestablish_timeout = 0;
if (headerp->rm_vers != rpcrdma_version)
goto out_badversion;
/* check for expected message types */
/* The order of some of these tests is important. */
switch (headerp->rm_type) {
case rdma_msg:
/* never expect read chunks */
/* never expect reply chunks (two ways to check) */
/* never expect write chunks without having offered RDMA */
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[0] != xdr_zero ||
(headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1] == xdr_zero &&
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[2] != xdr_zero) ||
(headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1] != xdr_zero &&
req->rl_nchunks == 0))
goto badheader;
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1] != xdr_zero) {
/* count any expected write chunks in read reply */
/* start at write chunk array count */
iptr = &headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[2];
rdmalen = rpcrdma_count_chunks(rep,
req->rl_nchunks, 1, &iptr);
/* check for validity, and no reply chunk after */
if (rdmalen < 0 || *iptr++ != xdr_zero)
goto badheader;
rep->rr_len -=
((unsigned char *)iptr - (unsigned char *)headerp);
status = rep->rr_len + rdmalen;
r_xprt->rx_stats.total_rdma_reply += rdmalen;
/* special case - last chunk may omit padding */
if (rdmalen &= 3) {
rdmalen = 4 - rdmalen;
status += rdmalen;
}
} else {
/* else ordinary inline */
rdmalen = 0;
iptr = (__be32 *)((unsigned char *)headerp +
RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN);
rep->rr_len -= RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN;
status = rep->rr_len;
}
/* Fix up the rpc results for upper layer */
rpcrdma_inline_fixup(rqst, (char *)iptr, rep->rr_len, rdmalen);
break;
case rdma_nomsg:
/* never expect read or write chunks, always reply chunks */
if (headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[0] != xdr_zero ||
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1] != xdr_zero ||
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[2] != xdr_one ||
req->rl_nchunks == 0)
goto badheader;
iptr = (__be32 *)((unsigned char *)headerp +
RPCRDMA_HDRLEN_MIN);
rdmalen = rpcrdma_count_chunks(rep, req->rl_nchunks, 0, &iptr);
if (rdmalen < 0)
goto badheader;
r_xprt->rx_stats.total_rdma_reply += rdmalen;
/* Reply chunk buffer already is the reply vector - no fixup. */
status = rdmalen;
break;
case rdma_error:
goto out_rdmaerr;
badheader:
default:
dprintk("%s: invalid rpcrdma reply header (type %d):"
" chunks[012] == %d %d %d"
" expected chunks <= %d\n",
__func__, be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_type),
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[0],
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[1],
headerp->rm_body.rm_chunks[2],
req->rl_nchunks);
status = -EIO;
r_xprt->rx_stats.bad_reply_count++;
break;
}
out:
xprtrdma: Invalidate in the RPC reply handler There is a window between the time the RPC reply handler wakes the waiting RPC task and when xprt_release() invokes ops->buf_free. During this time, memory regions containing the data payload may still be accessed by a broken or malicious server, but the RPC application has already been allowed access to the memory containing the RPC request's data payloads. The server should be fenced from client memory containing RPC data payloads _before_ the RPC application is allowed to continue. This change also more strongly enforces send queue accounting. There is a maximum number of RPC calls allowed to be outstanding. When an RPC/RDMA transport is set up, just enough send queue resources are allocated to handle registration, Send, and invalidation WRs for each those RPCs at the same time. Before, additional RPC calls could be dispatched while invalidation WRs were still consuming send WQEs. When invalidation WRs backed up, dispatching additional RPCs resulted in a send queue overrun. Now, the reply handler prevents RPC dispatch until invalidation is complete. This prevents RPC call dispatch until there are enough send queue resources to proceed. Still to do: If an RPC exits early (say, ^C), the reply handler has no opportunity to perform invalidation. Currently, xprt_rdma_free() still frees remaining RDMA resources, which could deadlock. Additional changes are needed to handle invalidation properly in this case. Reported-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgunthorpe@obsidianresearch.com> Signed-off-by: Chuck Lever <chuck.lever@oracle.com> Tested-by: Devesh Sharma <devesh.sharma@avagotech.com> Signed-off-by: Anna Schumaker <Anna.Schumaker@Netapp.com>
2015-12-16 15:23:11 -07:00
/* Invalidate and flush the data payloads before waking the
* waiting application. This guarantees the memory region is
* properly fenced from the server before the application
* accesses the data. It also ensures proper send flow
* control: waking the next RPC waits until this RPC has
* relinquished all its Send Queue entries.
*/
if (req->rl_nchunks)
r_xprt->rx_ia.ri_ops->ro_unmap_sync(r_xprt, req);
spin_lock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
cwnd = xprt->cwnd;
xprt->cwnd = atomic_read(&r_xprt->rx_buf.rb_credits) << RPC_CWNDSHIFT;
if (xprt->cwnd > cwnd)
xprt_release_rqst_cong(rqst->rq_task);
xprt_complete_rqst(rqst->rq_task, status);
spin_unlock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
dprintk("RPC: %s: xprt_complete_rqst(0x%p, 0x%p, %d)\n",
__func__, xprt, rqst, status);
return;
out_badstatus:
rpcrdma_recv_buffer_put(rep);
if (r_xprt->rx_ep.rep_connected == 1) {
r_xprt->rx_ep.rep_connected = -EIO;
rpcrdma_conn_func(&r_xprt->rx_ep);
}
return;
#if defined(CONFIG_SUNRPC_BACKCHANNEL)
out_bcall:
rpcrdma_bc_receive_call(r_xprt, rep);
return;
#endif
/* If the incoming reply terminated a pending RPC, the next
* RPC call will post a replacement receive buffer as it is
* being marshaled.
*/
out_badversion:
dprintk("RPC: %s: invalid version %d\n",
__func__, be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_vers));
status = -EIO;
r_xprt->rx_stats.bad_reply_count++;
goto out;
out_rdmaerr:
rmerr = be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_body.rm_error.rm_err);
switch (rmerr) {
case ERR_VERS:
pr_err("%s: server reports header version error (%u-%u)\n",
__func__,
be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_body.rm_error.rm_vers_low),
be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_body.rm_error.rm_vers_high));
break;
case ERR_CHUNK:
pr_err("%s: server reports header decoding error\n",
__func__);
break;
default:
pr_err("%s: server reports unknown error %d\n",
__func__, rmerr);
}
status = -EREMOTEIO;
r_xprt->rx_stats.bad_reply_count++;
goto out;
/* If no pending RPC transaction was matched, post a replacement
* receive buffer before returning.
*/
out_shortreply:
dprintk("RPC: %s: short/invalid reply\n", __func__);
goto repost;
out_nomatch:
spin_unlock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
dprintk("RPC: %s: no match for incoming xid 0x%08x len %d\n",
__func__, be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_xid),
rep->rr_len);
goto repost;
out_duplicate:
spin_unlock_bh(&xprt->transport_lock);
dprintk("RPC: %s: "
"duplicate reply %p to RPC request %p: xid 0x%08x\n",
__func__, rep, req, be32_to_cpu(headerp->rm_xid));
repost:
r_xprt->rx_stats.bad_reply_count++;
if (rpcrdma_ep_post_recv(&r_xprt->rx_ia, &r_xprt->rx_ep, rep))
rpcrdma_recv_buffer_put(rep);
}