Re: [PATCH rcu/dev 3/3] net: Use call_rcu_flush() for dst_destroy_rcu

From: Joel Fernandes
Date: Thu Nov 17 2022 - 16:19:48 EST




> On Nov 17, 2022, at 2:29 PM, Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 05:40:40PM +0000, Joel Fernandes wrote:
>>> On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 5:38 PM Joel Fernandes <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 5:17 PM Eric Dumazet <edumazet@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 7:58 AM Joel Fernandes <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hello Eric,
>>>>>
>>>>> On Wed, Nov 16, 2022 at 07:44:41PM -0800, Eric Dumazet wrote:
>>>>>> On Wed, Nov 16, 2022 at 7:16 PM Joel Fernandes (Google)
>>>>>> <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> In a networking test on ChromeOS, we find that using the new CONFIG_RCU_LAZY
>>>>>>> causes a networking test to fail in the teardown phase.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The failure happens during: ip netns del <name>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> And ? What happens then next ?
>>>>>
>>>>> The test is doing the 'ip netns del <name>' and then polling for the
>>>>> disappearance of a network interface name for upto 5 seconds. I believe it is
>>>>> using netlink to get a table of interfaces. That polling is timing out.
>>>>>
>>>>> Here is some more details from the test's owner (copy pasting from another
>>>>> bug report):
>>>>> In the cleanup, we remove the netns, and thus will cause the veth pair being
>>>>> removed automatically, so we use a poll to check that if the veth in the root
>>>>> netns still exists to know whether the cleanup is done.
>>>>>
>>>>> Here is a public link to the code that is failing (its in golang):
>>>>> https://source.chromium.org/chromiumos/chromiumos/codesearch/+/main:src/platform/tast-tests/src/chromiumos/tast/local/network/virtualnet/env/env.go;drc=6c2841d6cc3eadd23e07912ec331943ee33d7de8;l=161
>>>>>
>>>>> Here is a public link to the line of code in the actual test leading up to the above
>>>>> path (this is the test that is run:
>>>>> network.RoutingFallthrough.ipv4_only_primary) :
>>>>> https://source.chromium.org/chromiumos/chromiumos/codesearch/+/main:src/platform/tast-tests/src/chromiumos/tast/local/bundles/cros/network/routing_fallthrough.go;drc=8fbf2c53960bc8917a6a01fda5405cad7c17201e;l=52
>>>>>
>>>>>>> Using ftrace, I found the callbacks it was queuing which this series fixes. Use
>>>>>>> call_rcu_flush() to revert to the old behavior. With that, the test passes.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What is this test about ? What barrier was used to make it not flaky ?
>>>>>
>>>>> I provided the links above, let me know if you have any questions.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Was it depending on some undocumented RCU behavior ?
>>>>>
>>>>> This is a new RCU feature posted here for significant power-savings on
>>>>> battery-powered devices:
>>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/rcu/20221017140726.GG5600@paulmck-ThinkPad-P17-Gen-1/T/#m7a54809b8903b41538850194d67eb34f203c752a
>>>>>
>>>>> There is also an LPC presentation about the same, I can dig the link if you
>>>>> are interested.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Maybe adding a sysctl to force the flush would be better for functional tests ?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I would rather change the test(s), than adding call_rcu_flush(),
>>>>>> adding merge conflicts to future backports.
>>>>>
>>>>> I am not too sure about that, I think a user might expect the network
>>>>> interface to disappear from the networking tables quickly enough without
>>>>> dealing with barriers or kernel iternals. However, I added the authors of the
>>>>> test to this email in the hopes he can provide is point of views as well.
>>>>>
>>>>> The general approach we are taking with this sort of thing is to use
>>>>> call_rcu_flush() which is basically the same as call_rcu() for systems with
>>>>> CALL_RCU_LAZY=n. You can see some examples of that in the patch series link
>>>>> above. Just to note, CALL_RCU_LAZY depends on CONFIG_RCU_NOCB_CPU so its only
>>>>> Android and ChromeOS that are using it. I am adding Jie to share any input,
>>>>> he is from the networking team and knows this test well.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I do not know what is this RCU_LAZY thing, but IMO this should be opt-in
>>>
>>> You should read the links I sent you. We did already try opt-in,
>>> Thomas Gleixner made a point at LPC that we should not add new APIs
>>> for this purpose and confuse kernel developers.
>>>
>>>> For instance, only kfree_rcu() should use it.
>>>
>>> No. Most of the call_rcu() usages are for freeing memory, so the
>>> consensus is we should apply this as opt out and fix issues along the
>>> way. We already did a lot of research/diligence on seeing which users
>>> need conversion.
>>>
>>>> We can not review hundreds of call_rcu() call sites and decide if
>>>> adding arbitrary delays cou hurt .
>>>
>>> That work has already been done as much as possible, please read the
>>> links I sent.
>>
>> Also just to add, this test is a bit weird / corner case, as in anyone
>> expecting a quick response from call_rcu() is broken by design.
>> However, for these callbacks, it does not matter much which API they
>> use as they are quite infrequent for power savings.
>
> The "broken by design" is a bit strong. Some of those call_rcu()
> invocations have been around for the better part of 20 years, after all.
>
> That aside, I do hope that we can arrive at something that will enhance
> battery lifetime while avoiding unnecessary disruption. But we are
> unlikely to be able to completely avoid disruption. As this email
> thread illustrates. ;-)

Another approach, with these 3 patches could be to keep the call_rcu() but add an rcu_barrier() after them. I think people running ip del netns should not have to wait for their RCU cb to take too long to run and remove user visible state. But I would need suggestions from networking experts which CBs of these 3, to do this for. Or for all of them.

Alternatively, we can also patch just the test with a new knob that does rcu_barrier. But I dislike that as it does not fix it for all users. Probably the ip utilities will also need a patch then.

Thanks,

- Joel


>
> Thanx, Paul