Re: [Question] report a race condition between CPU hotplug state machine and hrtimer 'sched_cfs_period_timer' for cfs bandwidth throttling

From: Vincent Guittot
Date: Thu Jun 29 2023 - 04:32:54 EST


On Thu, 29 Jun 2023 at 00:01, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jun 28 2023 at 14:35, Vincent Guittot wrote:
> > On Wed, 28 Jun 2023 at 14:03, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> No, because this is fundamentally wrong.
> >>
> >> If the CPU is on the way out, then the scheduler hotplug machinery
> >> has to handle the period timer so that the problem Xiongfeng analyzed
> >> does not happen in the first place.
> >
> > But the hrtimer was enqueued before it starts to offline the cpu
>
> It does not really matter when it was enqueued. The important point is
> that it was enqueued on that outgoing CPU for whatever reason.
>
> > Then, hrtimers_dead_cpu should take care of migrating the hrtimer out
> > of the outgoing cpu but :
> > - it must run on another target cpu to migrate the hrtimer.
> > - it runs in the context of the caller which can be throttled.
>
> Sure. I completely understand the problem. The hrtimer hotplug callback
> does not run because the task is stuck and waits for the timer to
> expire. Circular dependency.
>
> >> sched_cpu_wait_empty() would be the obvious place to cleanup armed CFS
> >> timers, but let me look into whether we can migrate hrtimers early in
> >> general.
> >
> > but for that we must check if the timer is enqueued on the outgoing
> > cpu and we then need to choose a target cpu.
>
> You're right. I somehow assumed that cfs knows where it queued stuff,
> but obviously it does not.

scheduler doesn't know where hrtimer enqueues the timer

>
> I think we can avoid all that by simply taking that user space task out
> of the picture completely, which avoids debating whether there are other
> possible weird conditions to consider alltogether.

yes, the offline sequence should not be impacted by the caller context

>
> Something like the untested below should just work.
>
> Thanks,
>
> tglx
> ---
> --- a/kernel/cpu.c
> +++ b/kernel/cpu.c
> @@ -1490,6 +1490,13 @@ static int cpu_down(unsigned int cpu, en
> return err;
> }
>
> +static long __cpu_device_down(void *arg)
> +{
> + struct device *dev = arg;
> +
> + return cpu_down(dev->id, CPUHP_OFFLINE);
> +}
> +
> /**
> * cpu_device_down - Bring down a cpu device
> * @dev: Pointer to the cpu device to offline
> @@ -1502,7 +1509,12 @@ static int cpu_down(unsigned int cpu, en
> */
> int cpu_device_down(struct device *dev)
> {
> - return cpu_down(dev->id, CPUHP_OFFLINE);
> + unsigned int cpu = cpumask_any_but(cpu_online_mask, dev->id);
> +
> + if (cpu >= nr_cpu_ids)
> + return -EBUSY;
> +
> + return work_on_cpu(cpu, __cpu_device_down, dev);

The comment for work_on_cpu :

* It is up to the caller to ensure that the cpu doesn't go offline.
* The caller must not hold any locks which would prevent @fn from completing.

make me wonder if this should be done only once the hotplug lock is
taken so the selected cpu will not go offline

> }
>
> int remove_cpu(unsigned int cpu)