Don't recurse back into the driver even if the unplug threshold is met,
when the driver asks for a requeue. This is both silly from a logical
point of view (requeues typically happen due to driver/hardware
shortage), and also dangerous since we could hit an endless request_fn
-> requeue -> unplug -> request_fn loop and crash on stack overrun.
Also limit blk_run_queue() to one level of recursion, similar to how
blk_start_queue() works.
This patch fixed a real problem with SLES10 and lpfc, and it could hit
any SCSI lld that returns non-zero from it's ->queuecommand() handler.
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
{
struct list_head *pos;
unsigned ordseq;
+ int unplug_it = 1;
blk_add_trace_rq(q, rq, BLK_TA_INSERT);
}
list_add_tail(&rq->queuelist, pos);
+ /*
+ * most requeues happen because of a busy condition, don't
+ * force unplug of the queue for that case.
+ */
+ unplug_it = 0;
break;
default:
BUG();
}
- if (blk_queue_plugged(q)) {
+ if (unplug_it && blk_queue_plugged(q)) {
int nrq = q->rq.count[READ] + q->rq.count[WRITE]
- q->in_flight;
spin_lock_irqsave(q->queue_lock, flags);
blk_remove_plug(q);
- if (!elv_queue_empty(q))
- q->request_fn(q);
+
+ /*
+ * Only recurse once to avoid overrunning the stack, let the unplug
+ * handling reinvoke the handler shortly if we already got there.
+ */
+ if (!elv_queue_empty(q)) {
+ if (!test_and_set_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_REENTER, &q->queue_flags)) {
+ q->request_fn(q);
+ clear_bit(QUEUE_FLAG_REENTER, &q->queue_flags);
+ } else {
+ blk_plug_device(q);
+ kblockd_schedule_work(&q->unplug_work);
+ }
+ }
+
spin_unlock_irqrestore(q->queue_lock, flags);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(blk_run_queue);