[Bug 2073846] Re: [SRU] Fix the session workqueue thread priority setting issue for newer Linux kernels (>=6.x)

Mustafa Kemal Gilor 2073846 at bugs.launchpad.net
Tue Jul 23 07:55:39 UTC 2024


Removed 'oracular' from targets as it seems to be updated to 2.1.10
already.

** No longer affects: open-iscsi (Ubuntu Oracular)

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Title:
  [SRU] Fix the session workqueue thread priority setting issue for
  newer Linux kernels (>=6.x)

Status in open-iscsi package in Ubuntu:
  In Progress
Status in open-iscsi source package in Noble:
  In Progress

Bug description:
  [ Impact ]

  The Linux SCSI driver uses `alloc_workqueue()` to create a kernel
  workqueue for session transmit work. This call would cause the kernel
  < 6.x to create a dedicated worker thread for the workqueue. The
  userspace library open-iscsi version < 2.1.10 then adjusts the
  workqueue thread's nice value for performance reasons when a new iSCSI
  session is initiated. The algorithm for that is roughly as follows
  (https://github.com/open-iscsi/open-
  iscsi/blob/2.1.9/usr/initiator.c#L1390) :

  - Check if the driver in use has a write work queue. If not, abort.
  - Open the /proc dir, and iterate over all dir entries:
  - Run "stat" over /proc/<n>/stat
  - Read the contents of "stat" file, which looks like the following:
  898582 (kworker/u512:1-iscsi_q_0) I 2 0 0 0 -1 69238880 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 20 0 1 0 52431895 0 0 18446744073709551615 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2147483647 0 1 0 0 17 28 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
  - Try to locate "(" with strchr, starting from the beginning. Skip the process if not found.
  - Try to locate ")" with strchr, starting from the position of "(". Skip the process if not found.
  - Check whether the string between "(" and ")" contains the following pattern "iscsi_q_%d"
  - Check the number %d matches with the host ID of the session.
  - If %d matches the session id, grab the PID of the current proc entry and call `setpriority()`

  So the algorithm assumes the following about the kernel workqueue
  thread:

  - It would be present in the /proc list
  - Its name would match the iscsi_q_%d pattern

  Due to the changes in how Linux workqueue threads work in v6.x, the
  priority setting approach won't work for the following reasons:

  - The `alloc_workqueue()` no longer creates a dedicated thread for the workqueue. The workqueue thread is shared between different workqueues.
  - The workqueue thread is dynamically renamed to the name of the workqueue that's actively running
  - The workqueue thread disappears from the /proc list when it's inactive

  The algorithm as-is does the following right now:

  - If the kernel workqueue thread *by luck* happens to be running the
  iscsi task, the name matches, and the priority is set. But that's not
  what the code wants to do since it also increases the priority for all
  the other tasks that are scheduled to the workqueue thread as well.

  - If not, the open-iscsi prints the following log message, and
  proceeds to operate as normal:

  ```
  iscsistart: Could not set session1 priority. READ/WRITE throughout and latency could be affected.
  ```

  The upstream has fixed this issue with the patch
  (https://github.com/open-iscsi/open-iscsi/pull/445). The patch sets
  the default nice value for `node.session.xmit_thread_priority` to `0`,
  and then skips the priority adjustment algorithm altogether when the
  priority is set to zero.

  This SRU proposes to backport this patch to the Ubuntu releases that
  use Linux kernel 6.8 and above by default, and have an open-iscsi
  version of less than (2.1.10).

  
  [ Test Plan ]

  # Launch a test VM:
  $> lxc launch ubuntu:noble --vm iscsi-test-noble

  # Obtain a shell from the VM:
  $> lxc shell iscsi-test-noble

  # Install 'tgt' and 'open-iscsi':
  $> sudo apt -y update && sudo apt -y install tgt open-iscsi 

  # Configure 'tgt':

  ## Step 1: Configure a LUN

  Add the following to '/etc/tgt/conf.d/iscsi.conf':

  <target iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1>
       backing-store /dev/sda
       initiator-address 127.0.0.1
       incominguser iscsi-user password
       outgoinguser iscsi-target secretpass
  </target>

  (change /dev/sda to an existing device's name if it's not present)

  ## Step 2: Restart 'tgt' to make changes effective:
  $> systemctl restart tgt

  ## Step 3: Check if 'tgt' has started serving the LUN:
  $> tgtadm --mode target --op show

  (output should be similar to below)
  Target 1: iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1
      System information:
          Driver: iscsi
          State: ready
      I_T nexus information:
      LUN information:
          LUN: 0
              Type: controller
              SCSI ID: IET     00010000
              SCSI SN: beaf10
              Size: 0 MB, Block size: 1
              Online: Yes
              Removable media: No
              Prevent removal: No
              Readonly: No
              SWP: No
              Thin-provisioning: No
              Backing store type: null
              Backing store path: None
              Backing store flags: 
      Account information:
          iscsi-user
          iscsi-target (outgoing)
      ACL information:
          127.0.0.1

  
  # Configure 'open-iscsi':

  ## Step 1: Check whether the LUN being served by 'tgt' is
  discoverable:

  $> iscsiadm -m discovery -t st -p 127.0.0.1
  # (should output the text below)
  127.0.0.1:3260,1 iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1

  ## Step 2: Configure open-iscsi to consume the target LUN:

  Add the following line to '/etc/iscsi/initiatorname.iscsi':

  InitiatorName=iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1

  ## Step 3: Modify the following file '/etc/iscsi/nodes/iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1/127.0.0.1,3260,1/default':
  # (the file must already exist, it should've been automatically created after the discovery)

  Append the following lines to the end of the file, and save:

  ```
  node.session.auth.authmethod = CHAP  
  node.session.auth.username = iscsi-user
  node.session.auth.password = password          
  node.session.auth.username_in = iscsi-target
  node.session.auth.password_in = secretpass         
  node.startup = automatic
  ```

  ## Step 4: Restart open-iscsi to make changes effective:

  $> systemctl restart open-iscsi.service iscsid

  ## Step 5: Check the outcome

  # (the service status should indicate that login to 'iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1' has been successful)
  systemctl status open-iscsi.service 
  ● open-iscsi.service - Login to default iSCSI targets
       Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/open-iscsi.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
       Active: active (exited) since Mon 2024-07-22 13:36:15 UTC; 4s ago
         Docs: man:iscsiadm(8)
               man:iscsid(8)
      Process: 3049 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/iscsiadm -m node --loginall=automatic (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
      Process: 3065 ExecStart=/usr/lib/open-iscsi/activate-storage.sh (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
     Main PID: 3065 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
          CPU: 4ms

  Jul 22 13:36:15 welcomed-bluebird systemd[1]: Starting open-iscsi.service - Login to default iSCSI targets...
  Jul 22 13:36:15 welcomed-bluebird iscsiadm[3049]: Logging in to [iface: default, target: iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1, portal: 127.0.0.1,3260]
  Jul 22 13:36:15 welcomed-bluebird iscsiadm[3049]: Login to [iface: default, target: iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1, portal: 127.0.0.1,3260] successful.
  Jul 22 13:36:15 welcomed-bluebird systemd[1]: Finished open-iscsi.service - Login to default iSCSI targets

  # (the command should list an active connection to the 'iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1')
  $> iscsiadm -m session -o show
  tcp: [1] 127.0.0.1:3260,1 iqn.2020-07.example.com:lun1 (non-flash)

  
  # Observe iscsid complaining about priority:

  cat /var/log/syslog | grep "Could not set"
  2024-07-22T13:36:16.874243+00:00 welcomed-bluebird iscsid: Could not set session1 priority. READ/WRITE throughout and latency could be affected.
  2024-07-22T13:38:31.002732+00:00 welcomed-bluebird iscsid: Could not set session1 priority. READ/WRITE throughout and latency could be affected.

  
  # TODO: Add fix ppa steps here

  [ Where problems could occur ]

  The change prevents a priority change that shouldn't happen in the
  first place. That might affect some workloads unknowingly depending on
  it. On the other hand, the nice setting happens intermittently (i.e.
  by luck) so the behavior right now can't be depended on anyway. The
  patch only touches the priority setting code so I wouldn't expect any
  serious breakage.

  
   * Think about what the upload changes in the software. Imagine the change is
     wrong or breaks something else: how would this show up?

   * It is assumed that any SRU candidate patch is well-tested before
     upload and has a low overall risk of regression, but it's important
     to make the effort to think about what ''could'' happen in the
     event of a regression.

   * This must '''never''' be "None" or "Low", or entirely an argument as to why
     your upload is low risk.

   * This both shows the SRU team that the risks have been considered,
     and provides guidance to testers in regression-testing the SRU.

  [ Other Info ]

  The other releases that is running a 6.x kernel installed with other
  means (e.g. hw-enablement, availability) may set the
  `node.session.xmit_thread_priority` from `-20` to `0` in
  `/etc/iscsid.conf` as a workaround:

  node.session.xmit_thread_priority = 0

  which is the default priorty for the workqueue threads.

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