Re: Question about a8ea6fc9b089 ("sched: Stop PF_NO_SETAFFINITY from being inherited by various init system threads")

From: Valentin Schneider
Date: Fri Jun 11 2021 - 10:19:39 EST


On 11/06/21 06:52, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 11, 2021 at 11:12:29AM +0100, Valentin Schneider wrote:
>>
>> The way I see 570a752b7a9b is that, if a task is pinned to a single CPU but
>> doesn't have PF_NO_SETAFFINITY, then userspace can unpin it. This means it
>> ought to have entered check_preemption_disabled() with preemption disabled
>> - right now it may be pinned, but that can change at any minute, and
>> whatever code it is running needs to cope with that.
>
> Thank you for catching me up on this topic!
>
>> Could you share some details on which tasks you are hitting this with?
>
> Let's start with ref_scale_reader() in kernel/rcu/refscale.c. This
> is for fine-grained in-kernel benchmarking, so it really wants kthreads
> running this function to be pinned.
>
> I took a look at kthread_bind(), but it is not intended to be called by
> the kthread itself. Looking elsewhere in the kernel, it looks like I
> just do this right after invoking set_cpus_allowed_ptr():
>
> current->flags != PF_NO_SETAFFINITY;
>
> Or am I missing a better way to handle this?

Looking at ref_scale_reader(), ISTM the initial configuration (affinity,
niceness) should be done by its parent thread, not by itself. i.e.:

p = kthread_create(ref_scale_reader);
kthread_bind(p, cpu); // Does the pinning + sets PF_NO_SETAFFINITY
set_user_nice(p, MAX_NICE);
wake_up_process(p);

(kthread_create_on_cpu() is also an option)

>From what I can see, torture_create_kthread() immediately wakes the
newly-created kthread, we'd need a version that calls kthread_create()
instead of kthread_run() for the above. Would that be an issue?

>
> Thanx, Paul