Re: [PATCH 4/4] cpuset,mm: use rwlock to protect task->mempolicyand mems_allowed

From: Miao Xie
Date: Thu Mar 11 2010 - 02:57:33 EST


on 2010-3-11 13:30, Nick Piggin wrote:
>>>> The problem is following:
>>>> The size of nodemask_t is greater than the size of long integer, so loading
>>>> and storing of nodemask_t are not atomic operations. If task->mems_allowed
>>>> don't intersect with new_mask, such as the first word of the mask is empty
>>>> and only the first word of new_mask is not empty. When the allocator
>>>> loads a word of the mask before
>>>>
>>>> current->mems_allowed |= new_mask;
>>>>
>>>> and then loads another word of the mask after
>>>>
>>>> current->mems_allowed = new_mask;
>>>>
>>>> the allocator gets an empty nodemask.
>>>
>>> Couldn't that be solved by having the reader read the nodemask twice
>>> and compare them? In the normal case there's no race, so the second
>>> read is straight from L1 cache and is very cheap. In the unlikely case
>>> of a race, the reader would keep trying until it got two consistent
>>> values in a row.
>>
>> I think this method can't fix the problem because we can guarantee the second
>> read is after the update of mask completes.
>
> Any problem with using a seqlock?
>
> The other thing you could do is store a pointer to the nodemask, and
> allocate a new nodemask when changing it, issue a smp_wmb(), and then
> store the new pointer. Read side only needs a smp_read_barrier_depends()

Comparing with my second version patch, I think both of these methods will cause worse
performance and the changing of code is more.

Thanks
Miao

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/