Re: [RFC PATCH kernel 1/2] irq: Add reference counting to IRQ mappings

From: Alexey Kardashevskiy
Date: Thu Oct 29 2020 - 03:39:42 EST




On 28/10/2020 03:09, Marc Zyngier wrote:
Hi Alexey,

On 2020-10-27 09:06, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote:
PCI devices share 4 legacy INTx interrupts from the same PCI host bridge.
Device drivers map/unmap hardware interrupts via irq_create_mapping()/
irq_dispose_mapping(). The problem with that these interrupts are
shared and when performing hot unplug, we need to unmap the interrupt
only when the last device is released.

This reuses already existing irq_desc::kobj for this purpose.
The refcounter is naturally 1 when the descriptor is allocated already;
this adds kobject_get() in places where already existing mapped virq
is returned.

That's quite interesting, as I was about to revive a patch series that
rework the irqdomain subsystem to directly cache irq_desc instead of
raw interrupt numbers. And for that, I needed some form of refcounting...


This reorganizes irq_dispose_mapping() to release the kobj and let
the release callback do the cleanup.

If some driver or platform does its own reference counting, this expects
those parties to call irq_find_mapping() and call irq_dispose_mapping()
for every irq_create_fwspec_mapping()/irq_create_mapping().

Signed-off-by: Alexey Kardashevskiy <aik@xxxxxxxxx>
---
 kernel/irq/irqdesc.c   | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++------------
 kernel/irq/irqdomain.c | 27 +++++++++++++--------------
 2 files changed, 36 insertions(+), 26 deletions(-)

diff --git a/kernel/irq/irqdesc.c b/kernel/irq/irqdesc.c
index 1a7723604399..dae096238500 100644
--- a/kernel/irq/irqdesc.c
+++ b/kernel/irq/irqdesc.c
@@ -419,20 +419,39 @@ static struct irq_desc *alloc_desc(int irq, int
node, unsigned int flags,
     return NULL;
 }

+static void delayed_free_desc(struct rcu_head *rhp);
 static void irq_kobj_release(struct kobject *kobj)
 {
     struct irq_desc *desc = container_of(kobj, struct irq_desc, kobj);
+    struct irq_domain *domain;
+    unsigned int virq = desc->irq_data.irq;

-    free_masks(desc);
-    free_percpu(desc->kstat_irqs);
-    kfree(desc);
+    domain = desc->irq_data.domain;
+    if (domain) {
+        if (irq_domain_is_hierarchy(domain)) {
+            irq_domain_free_irqs(virq, 1);

How does this work with hierarchical domains? Each domain should
contribute as a reference on the irq_desc. But if you got here,
it means the refcount has already dropped to 0.

So either there is nothing to free here, or you don't track the
references implied by the hierarchy. I suspect the latter.

This is correct, I did not look at hierarchy yet, looking now...



+        } else {
+            irq_domain_disassociate(domain, virq);
+            irq_free_desc(virq);
+        }
+    }
+
+    /*
+     * We free the descriptor, masks and stat fields via RCU. That
+     * allows demultiplex interrupts to do rcu based management of
+     * the child interrupts.
+     * This also allows us to use rcu in kstat_irqs_usr().
+     */
+    call_rcu(&desc->rcu, delayed_free_desc);
 }

 static void delayed_free_desc(struct rcu_head *rhp)
 {
     struct irq_desc *desc = container_of(rhp, struct irq_desc, rcu);

-    kobject_put(&desc->kobj);
+    free_masks(desc);
+    free_percpu(desc->kstat_irqs);
+    kfree(desc);
 }

 static void free_desc(unsigned int irq)
@@ -453,14 +472,6 @@ static void free_desc(unsigned int irq)
      */
     irq_sysfs_del(desc);
     delete_irq_desc(irq);
-
-    /*
-     * We free the descriptor, masks and stat fields via RCU. That
-     * allows demultiplex interrupts to do rcu based management of
-     * the child interrupts.
-     * This also allows us to use rcu in kstat_irqs_usr().
-     */
-    call_rcu(&desc->rcu, delayed_free_desc);
 }

 static int alloc_descs(unsigned int start, unsigned int cnt, int node,
diff --git a/kernel/irq/irqdomain.c b/kernel/irq/irqdomain.c
index cf8b374b892d..02733ddc321f 100644
--- a/kernel/irq/irqdomain.c
+++ b/kernel/irq/irqdomain.c
@@ -638,6 +638,7 @@ unsigned int irq_create_mapping(struct irq_domain *domain,
 {
     struct device_node *of_node;
     int virq;
+    struct irq_desc *desc;

     pr_debug("irq_create_mapping(0x%p, 0x%lx)\n", domain, hwirq);

@@ -655,7 +656,9 @@ unsigned int irq_create_mapping(struct irq_domain *domain,
     /* Check if mapping already exists */
     virq = irq_find_mapping(domain, hwirq);
     if (virq) {
+        desc = irq_to_desc(virq);
         pr_debug("-> existing mapping on virq %d\n", virq);
+        kobject_get(&desc->kobj);

My worry with this is that there is probably a significant amount of
code out there that relies on multiple calls to irq_create_mapping()
with the same parameters not to have any side effects. They would
expect a subsequent irq_dispose_mapping() to drop the translation
altogether, and that's obviously not the case here.

Have you audited the various call sites to see what could break?


The vast majority calls one of irq..create_mapping in init/probe and then calls irq_dispose_mapping() right there if probing failed or when the driver is unloaded. I could not spot any reference counting anywhere, everyone seems to call irq_dispose_mapping() per every irq_of_parse_and_map() (or friends).

Then there is a minority (such as the code I am fixing in powerpc/pseries) but it is either broken (such as pseries/pci which does not call irq_dispose_mapping at all) or it is 1 disposal per 1 mapping (PPC KVM).

I did not spend awful amount of time though, git grep irq_dispose_mapping gives 200 lines...



         return virq;
     }

@@ -751,6 +754,7 @@ unsigned int irq_create_fwspec_mapping(struct
irq_fwspec *fwspec)
     irq_hw_number_t hwirq;
     unsigned int type = IRQ_TYPE_NONE;
     int virq;
+    struct irq_desc *desc;

     if (fwspec->fwnode) {
         domain = irq_find_matching_fwspec(fwspec, DOMAIN_BUS_WIRED);
@@ -787,8 +791,11 @@ unsigned int irq_create_fwspec_mapping(struct
irq_fwspec *fwspec)
          * current trigger type then we are done so return the
          * interrupt number.
          */
-        if (type == IRQ_TYPE_NONE || type == irq_get_trigger_type(virq))
+        if (type == IRQ_TYPE_NONE || type == irq_get_trigger_type(virq)) {
+            desc = irq_to_desc(virq);
+            kobject_get(&desc->kobj);
             return virq;
+        }

         /*
          * If the trigger type has not been set yet, then set
@@ -800,6 +807,8 @@ unsigned int irq_create_fwspec_mapping(struct
irq_fwspec *fwspec)
                 return 0;

             irqd_set_trigger_type(irq_data, type);
+            desc = irq_to_desc(virq);
+            kobject_get(&desc->kobj);
             return virq;
         }

@@ -852,22 +861,12 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(irq_create_of_mapping);
  */
 void irq_dispose_mapping(unsigned int virq)
 {
-    struct irq_data *irq_data = irq_get_irq_data(virq);
-    struct irq_domain *domain;
+    struct irq_desc *desc = irq_to_desc(virq);

-    if (!virq || !irq_data)
+    if (!virq || !desc)
         return;

-    domain = irq_data->domain;
-    if (WARN_ON(domain == NULL))
-        return;
-
-    if (irq_domain_is_hierarchy(domain)) {
-        irq_domain_free_irqs(virq, 1);
-    } else {
-        irq_domain_disassociate(domain, virq);
-        irq_free_desc(virq);
-    }
+    kobject_put(&desc->kobj);
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(irq_dispose_mapping);

Thanks,

        M.

--
Alexey