Re: [PATCH RFC 08/26] locking: Remove spin_unlock_wait() generic definitions

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Mon Jul 03 2017 - 20:55:01 EST


On Mon, Jul 03, 2017 at 05:39:36PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 03, 2017 at 03:49:42PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> > On Mon, Jul 3, 2017 at 3:30 PM, Paul E. McKenney
> > <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > That certainly is one interesting function, isn't it? I wonder what
> > > happens if you replace the raw_spin_is_locked() calls with an
> > > unlock under a trylock check? ;-)
> >
> > Deadlock due to interrupts again?
>
> Unless I am missing something subtle, the kgdb_cpu_enter() function in
> question has a local_irq_save() over the "interesting" portion of its
> workings, so interrupt-handler self-deadlock should not happen.
>
> > Didn't your spin_unlock_wait() patches teach you anything? Checking
> > state is fundamentally different from taking the lock. Even a trylock.
>
> That was an embarrassing bug, no two ways about it. :-/
>
> > I guess you could try with the irqsave versions. But no, we're not doing that.
>
> Again, no need in this case.
>
> But I agree with Will's assessment of this function...
>
> The raw_spin_is_locked() looks to be asking if -any- CPU holds the
> dbg_slave_lock, and the answer could of course change immediately
> on return from raw_spin_is_locked(). Perhaps the theory is that
> if other CPU holds the lock, this CPU is supposed to be subjected to
> kgdb_roundup_cpus(). Except that the CPU that held dbg_slave_lock might
> be just about to release that lock. Odd.
>
> Seems like there should be a get_online_cpus() somewhere, but maybe
> that constraint is to be manually enforced.

Except that invoking get_online_cpus() from an exception handler would
be of course be a spectacularly bad idea. I would feel better if the
num_online_cpus() was under the local_irq_save(), but perhaps this code
is relying on the stop_machine(). Except that it appears we could
deadlock with offline waiting for stop_machine() to complete and kdbg
waiting for all CPUs to report, including those in stop_machine().

Looks like the current situation is "Don't use kdbg if there is any
possibility of CPU-hotplug operations." Not necessarily an unreasonable
restriction.

But I need to let me eyes heal a bit before looking at this more.

Thanx, Paul