Re: [PATCH] [2/2] Don't complain about disabled irqs when the system has paniced

From: Andi Kleen
Date: Tue Sep 02 2008 - 10:57:40 EST


On Tue, Sep 02, 2008 at 04:45:17PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Tue, 2008-09-02 at 16:40 +0200, Andi Kleen wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 02, 2008 at 04:28:03PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > On Tue, 2008-09-02 at 15:49 +0200, Andi Kleen wrote:
> > > > panic calls smp_send_stop which eventually calls smp_call_function_*.
> > > > smp_call_function warns about disabled interrupts. But it's legal
> > > > to call panic in this case. When this happens panic() prints
> > > > several ugly backtraces. So don't check for disabled interrupts
> > > > in panic state.
> > >
> > > While it might be legal for panic to be called from such contexts, I
> > > understand those warnings are there to warn of deadlocks.
> > >
> > > So with the below patch you allow panic to deadlock if I understand
> > > things correctly.
> >
> > Please describe the deadlock exactly. I don't think it can deadlock
> > in this case.
>
> Then why are those warnings there? The deadlock is for the CSD_FLAG_WAIT
> case, which can always happen due to the static csd data fallback.
>
> The deadlock scenario is long the lines of two such smp_call_function*()
> both under irq disabled calling each other with CSD_FLAG_WAIT set.
> Neither remote cpu will handle the IPI due to irqs being disabled, so
> we'll wait at-infinitum for completion.

First smp_send_stop does not wait (or at least not pass the
wait flag, it will still wait for the first ack like everyone else)

I don't claim to understand the new kernel/smp.c code (it seems to me quite
overdesigned and complicated and I admit I got lost in it somewhere),
but I think your scenario would rely on a global lock and presumably there
is none in the new code?

>
> > Besides do you prefer to not allow panic from interrupts/machine
> > checks etc. anymore?
>
> However did I imply that, I just said your fix looked iffy.

Well it would be the only alternative. Or have a timeout (I had
such a hack a long time ago) but that has also other issues.

In fact for smp_send_stop() it would be far better to just use an NMI,
but we unfortunately have a few BIOS that do not support NMI properly.

I think for 2.6.27 at least this is the best fix. At least keeping
panic that broken is no option I would say.

-Andi
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