Re: [PATCH] scsi: sd: stop SSD (non-rotational) disks before reboot

From: Henrique de Moraes Holschuh
Date: Sun Jun 28 2020 - 15:42:17 EST


On Sun, 28 Jun 2020, Simon Arlott wrote:
> On 23/06/2020 21:42, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > [1] I have long lost the will and energy to pursue this, so *this* is a
> > throw-away anecdote for anyone that cares: I reported here a few years
> > ago that many models of *SATA* based SSDs from Crucial/Micron, Samsung
> > and Intel were complaining (through their SMART attributes) that Linux
> > was causing unsafe shutdowns.
> >
> > https://lkml.org/lkml/2017/4/10/1181
> >
> > TL;DR: wait one *extra* second after the SSD acknowleged the STOP
> > command as complete before you trust the SSD device is safe to be
> > powered down (i.e. before reboot, suspend, poweroff/shutdown, and device
> > removal/detach). This worked around the issue for every vendor and
> > model of SSD we tested.
>
> Looking through that thread, it looks like a simple 1 second delay on
> shutdown/reboot patch hasn't been proposed yet?

It should work, yes. And it likely would help with whatever $RANDOM
other hardware that has the same issues but has no way to make itself
noticed, so *I* would appreciate it as something I could tell the kernel
to *always* do.

But for "sd" devices, it would be likely more complete to also ensure
the delay for device removal (not just on reboot and power off).

> In my case none of the SSDs are recording unexpected power loss if they
> are stopped before the reboot, but the reboot won't necessarily be
> instantaneous after the last stop command returns.

Yes, it is a race. If either the SSD happens to need less "extra" time,
or the computer takes a bit longer to reboot/power off, all is well.
Otherwise, the SSD loses the race, and gets powered down at an
inappropriate time.

--
Henrique Holschuh