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Re: [PATCH 2/6] migration: Kick postcopy threads on cancel


From: Peter Xu
Subject: Re: [PATCH 2/6] migration: Kick postcopy threads on cancel
Date: Thu, 5 Dec 2024 10:03:58 -0500

On Thu, Dec 05, 2024 at 10:18:53AM -0300, Fabiano Rosas wrote:
> Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com> writes:
> 
> > On Wed, Dec 04, 2024 at 03:51:27PM -0500, Peter Xu wrote:
> >> On Wed, Dec 04, 2024 at 08:02:31PM +0000, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> >> > I would say the difference is like a graceful shutdown vs pulling the
> >> > power plug in a bare metal machine
> >> > 
> >> > 'cancel' is intended to be graceful. It should leave you with a 
> >> > functional
> >> > QEMU (or refuse to run if unsafe).
> >> > 
> >> > 'yank' is intended to be forceful, letting you get out of bad situations
> >> > that would otherwise require you to kill the entire QEMU process, but
> >> > still with possible associated risk data loss to the QEMU backends.
> >> > 
> >> > They have overlap, but are none the less different.
> >> 
> >> The question is more about whether yank should be used at all for
> >> migration only, not about the rest instances.
> >> 
> >> My answer is yank should never be used for migration, because
> >> "migrate_cancel" also unplugs the power plug.. It's not anything more
> >> enforced.  It's only doing less always.
> >> 
> >> E.g. migration_yank_iochannel() is exactly what we do with
> >> qmp_migrate_cancel() in the first place, only that migrate_cancel only does
> >> it on the main channel (on both qemufiles even if ioc is one), however it
> >> should be suffice, and behave the same way, as strong as "yank".
> >
> > I recall at the time the yank stuff was introduced, one of the scenarios
> > they were concerned about was related to locks held by QEMU code. eg that
> > there are scenarios where migrate_cancel may not be processed promptly
> > enough due to being stalled on mutexes held by other concurrently running
> > threads. Now I would expect any such long duration stalls on migration
> > mutexes to be bugs, but the intent of yank is to give a recovery mechanism
> > that can workaround such bugs.  The yank QMP command only interacts with
> > its own local mutexes.
> 
> Ok, so that could only mean a thread stuck in recv() while holding the
> BQL. I don't think we have any other locks which would stop
> migrate_cancel from making progress or other stall situations that could
> be helped by a shutdown(). Note that most of locks around qemu_file were
> a late addition. I don't think that scenario is possible today. I'll
> have to do some tests.

And if that is a real difference, I'd think whether we should simply make
migrate_cancel be oob-capable too.. IOW, I still think it'll be good to
stick with always one API to cancel a migration, no matter which it is.  If
we want to move over to yank then I think we should move all migrate_cancel
operations into yank and deprecate "migrate_cancel', but that sounds
overkill.

There's only one thing that might not be oob-compatible there so far, which
is bdrv_activate_all().  But I plan to remove it very soon (so that disks
will be activated in the migration thread instead, just like failure cases).

> 
> On that note, how is yank supposed to be accessed? I don't see support
> in libvirt. Is there a way to hook into QMP after the fact somehow?
> 

-- 
Peter Xu




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