Re: [patch] fix the 2nd buffer race properly

From: Nick Piggin
Date: Wed Apr 27 2005 - 19:10:59 EST


Andrew Morton wrote:
Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

When running
fsstress -v -d $DIR/tmp -n 1000 -p 1000 -l 2
on an ext2 filesystem with 1024 byte block size, on SMP i386 with 4096 byte
page size over loopback to an image file on a tmpfs filesystem, I would
very quickly hit
BUG_ON(!buffer_async_write(bh));
in fs/buffer.c:end_buffer_async_write

It seems that more than one request would be submitted for a given bh
at a time.

What would happen is the following:
2 threads doing __mpage_writepages on the same page.
Thread 1 - lock the page first, and enter __block_write_full_page.
Thread 1 - (eg.) mark_buffer_async_write on the first 2 buffers.
Thread 1 - set page writeback, unlock page.
Thread 2 - lock page, wait on page writeback
Thread 1 - submit_bh on the first 2 buffers.
=> both requests complete, none of the page buffers are async_write,
end_page_writeback is called.
Thread 2 - wakes up. enters __block_write_full_page.
Thread 2 - mark_buffer_async_write on (eg.) the last buffer
Thread 1 - finds the last buffer has async_write set, submit_bh on that.
Thread 2 - submit_bh on the last buffer.
=> oops.


ah-hah. Thanks.

There are two situations:

a) Thread 2 comes in and tries to write a buffer which thread1 didn't write:

Yes, thread 1 will get confused and will try to write thread 2's buffer.

b) Thread 2 comes in and tries to write a buffer which thread 1 is
writing. (Say, the buffer was redirtied by
munmap->__set_page_dirty_buffers, which doesn't lock the page or the
buffers)


I don't think b) happens, because thread 1 has to have finished all
its writes before the page will end writeback and thread 2 can go
anywhere.

Thread 2 will fail the test_set_buffer_locked() and will redirty the page.

That's all a bit too complex. How's about this instead?


Well you really don't need to hold the page locked for that long.
block_read_full_page, nobh_prepare_write both use the same sort of
array of buffer heads logic - I think it makes sense not to touch
any buffers after submitting them all for IO...?

--
SUSE Labs, Novell Inc.

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