> Without this fix, I get an IO error in this test:
>
> # dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/null iflag=direct & \
>   while killall -SIGUSR1 dd; do sleep 0.1; done & \
>   echo mem > /sys/power/state ; \
>   sleep 5; killall dd  # stop after 5 seconds

linux-block insisted they wanted this, based on my reproducer above.
If you start wondering why you wouldn't base it on scsi_debug with a new
"quiesce" option, that makes two of us.

Thread: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/891e334c-cf19-032c-b996-59ac166fc...@gmail.com

Signed-off-by: Alan Jenkins <alan.christopher.jenk...@gmail.com>
---
v2: fix sense of conditional test for HAVE_BARE_METAL_SCSI.
    Also I had a few single-bracket tests, which wanted to be replaced
    with double-brackets to match the coding style.

 tests/scsi/004     | 235 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 tests/scsi/004.out |   7 ++
 2 files changed, 242 insertions(+)
 create mode 100755 tests/scsi/004
 create mode 100644 tests/scsi/004.out

diff --git a/tests/scsi/004 b/tests/scsi/004
new file mode 100755
index 0000000..ef42033
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tests/scsi/004
@@ -0,0 +1,235 @@
+#!/bin/bash
+#
+# Regression test for patch "block: do not use interruptible wait anywhere".
+#
+# > Without this fix, I get an IO error in this test:
+# >
+# > # dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/null iflag=direct & \
+# >   while killall -SIGUSR1 dd; do sleep 0.1; done & \
+# >   echo mem > /sys/power/state ; \
+# >   sleep 5; killall dd  # stop after 5 seconds
+#
+# AJ: linux-block insisted they wanted this, based on my reproducer above.
+# If you start wondering why you wouldn't base it on scsi_debug with a new
+# "quiesce" option, that makes two of us.
+# Thread: 
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/891e334c-cf19-032c-b996-59ac166fc...@gmail.com
+#
+#
+# RATIONALE for a suspend test:
+#
+# The original root cause issue was the behaviour around blk_queue_freeze().
+# It put tasks into an interruptible wait, which is wrong for block devices.
+#
+# The freeze feature is not directly exposed to userspace, so I can not test
+# it directly :(.  (It's used to "guarantee no request is in use, so we can
+# change any data structure of the queue afterward".  I.e. freeze, modify the
+# queue structure, unfreeze).
+#
+# However, this lead to a regression with a decent reproducer.  In v4.15 the
+# same interruptible wait was also used for SCSI suspend/resume.  SCSI resume
+# can take a second or so... hence we like to do it asynchronously.  This
+# means we can observe the wait at resume time, and we can test if it is
+# interruptible.
+#
+# Note `echo quiesce > /sys/class/scsi_device/*/device/state` can *not*
+# trigger the specific wait in the block layer.  That code path only
+# sets the SCSI device state; it does not set any block device state.
+# (It does not call into blk_queue_freeze() or blk_set_preempt_only();
+#  it literally just sets sdev->sdev_state to SDEV_QUIESCE).
+#
+#
+# Copyright (C) 2018 Alan Jenkins
+#
+# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+# (at your option) any later version.
+#
+# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
+# GNU General Public License for more details.
+#
+# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
+# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+
+DESCRIPTION="check SCSI blockdev suspend is not interruptible"
+
+QUICK=1
+
+requires() {
+       # I can't expect to hit the window using bash, if the device is
+       # emulated by cpu.
+       #
+       # Maybe annoying for Xen dom0, but I'm guessing it's not common.
+       if grep -q ^flags.*\ hypervisor /proc/cpuinfo &&
+          (( !HAVE_BARE_METAL_SCSI )); then
+               SKIP_REASON=\
+"Hypervisor detected, but this test wants bare-metal SCSI timings.
+If you have a pass-through device, you may set HAVE_BARE_METAL_SCSI=1."
+               return 1
+       fi
+
+       # "If a user has disabled async probing a likely reason
+       #  is due to a storage enclosure that does not inject
+       #  staggered spin-ups. For safety, make resume
+       #  synchronous as well in that case."
+       if ! scan="$(cat /sys/module/scsi_mod/parameters/scan)"; then
+               SKIP_REASON="Could not read 
'/sys/module/scsi_mod/parameters/scan'"
+               return 1
+       fi
+       if [[ "$scan" != async ]]; then
+               SKIP_REASON="This test does not work if you have set 
'scsi_mod.scan=sync'"
+               return 1
+       fi
+
+       if ! cat /sys/power/pm_test > /dev/null; then
+               SKIP_REASON="Error reading pm_test.  Maybe kernel lacks 
CONFIG_PM_TEST?"
+               return 1
+       fi
+
+       _have_fio
+}
+
+do_test_device() ( # run whole function in a subshell
+
+       sysfs_pm_test_delay=/sys/module/suspend/parameters/pm_test_delay
+       saved_pm_test_delay=
+       dd_pid=
+       subshell_pid=
+
+       fail() {
+               echo "$*"
+               exit 1
+       }
+
+       cleanup_pid() {
+               local pid="$1"
+
+               # Suppress shell messages, about killed process
+               exec 3>&1 4>&2
+               exec >>"$FULL" 2>&1
+
+               kill "$pid" >&3 2>&4
+
+               # Don't try to re-redirect output from `wait` just in case,
+               # if `wait` is executed in a subshell then it cannot work.
+               wait "$pid"
+
+               # Restore stdout/stderr
+               exec >&3 2>&4
+               exec 3>&- 4>&-
+       }
+
+       cleanup() {
+               if [[ -n "$subshell_pid" ]]; then
+                       echo "Killing sub-shell..."
+                       cleanup_pid "$subshell_pid"
+               fi
+               if [[ -n "$dd_pid" ]]; then
+                       echo "Killing dd..."
+                       cleanup_pid "$dd_pid"
+               fi
+
+               echo "Resetting pm_test"
+               echo none > /sys/power/pm_test
+
+               echo "Resetting pm_test_delay"
+               if [[ -n "$saved_pm_test_delay" ]]; then
+                       echo "$saved_pm_test_delay" > "$sysfs_pm_test_delay"
+               fi
+       }
+       trap cleanup EXIT
+
+       # Have not tested on devices which require larger IO,
+       # but let's not die if we see one.
+       bs="$(_test_dev_queue_get hw_sector_size)"
+
+       # Start dd, as a background process which submits IOs
+       # and yells when one fails.  We want to test the block
+       # layer, so we use direct IO to avoid being served
+       # from page cache.
+       #
+       # I tried using fio with the exact same IO pattern,
+       # sadly it was not 100% reliable at reproducing this
+       # issue.
+       #
+       dd iflag=direct if="$TEST_DEV" of=/dev/null bs=$bs status=none &
+       dd_pid=$!
+
+#      fio --output="$FULL" --loops=65535 \
+#          --thread --exitall_on_error \
+#          --direct=1 \
+#          --bs=$bs --rw=read --name=reads \
+#          --filename="$TEST_DEV" &
+#      fio_pid=$!
+
+       # Keep sending signals to 'dd'.  Give it 1ms between
+       # signals so it gets a chance to actually submit IOs.
+       #
+       # In theory this script is probably subject to various
+       # pid re-use races.  But I started in sh... so far
+       # blktests does not depend on python... also direct IO
+       # is best to reproduce this, which is not built in to
+       # python.
+       (
+               while kill -STOP $dd_pid 2>/dev/null &&
+                     kill -CONT $dd_pid 2>/dev/null; do
+
+                       sleep 0.001
+               done
+
+               # Wait to be killed. Simplifies cleanup.
+               while true; do
+                       sleep 1
+               done
+       ) &
+       subshell_pid=$!
+
+       if ! echo devices > /sys/power/pm_test; then
+               fail "error setting pm_test"
+       fi
+
+       if ! saved_pm_test_delay="$(cat "$sysfs_pm_test_delay")"; then
+               fail "error reading pm_test_delay"
+       fi
+       if ! echo 0 > "$sysfs_pm_test_delay"; then
+               fail "error setting pm_test_delay"
+       fi
+
+       # Log that we're suspending.  User might not have guessed,
+       # or maybe suspend (or pm_test suspend) is broken on this system.
+       echo "Simulating suspend/resume now"
+       echo mem > /sys/power/state
+
+       # Now wait for TEST_DEV to resume asynchronously
+       dd iflag=direct if="$TEST_DEV" of=/dev/null count=1 status=none
+
+       # Wait another second.  This might be useful in the case dd got blocked 
on a
+       # page fault during the suspend; it will have a second to get sorted 
out,
+       # so it can potentially receive an IO error and exit.
+       sleep 1
+
+       if ! kill -0 $dd_pid 2>/dev/null; then
+               # dd exited before we entered cleanup.
+               # Read its exit status
+               wait $dd_pid
+               ret=$?
+               dd_pid=
+
+               if [[ $ret == 0 ]]; then
+                       echo "'dd' exited early, without error."
+                       echo "Is your scsi device implausibly fast or small?"
+               else
+                       # Test should already fail at this point due to
+                       # error messages, but let's log it while we're here.
+                       echo "'dd' exited with error $ret"
+               fi
+       fi
+) # end subshell function
+
+test_device() {
+       echo "Running ${TEST_NAME}"
+       do_test_device
+       echo "Test complete"
+}
diff --git a/tests/scsi/004.out b/tests/scsi/004.out
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4085f62
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tests/scsi/004.out
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+Running scsi/004
+Simulating suspend/resume now
+Killing sub-shell...
+Killing dd...
+Resetting pm_test
+Resetting pm_test_delay
+Test complete
-- 
2.14.3

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