Message ID | 20150811170401.GA26904@redhat.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On Tue 11-08-15 19:04:01, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > 1. wait_event(frozen < level) without rwsem_acquire_read() is just > wrong from lockdep perspective. If we are going to deadlock > because the caller is buggy, lockdep detect this problem. > > 2. __sb_start_write() can race with thaw_super() + freeze_super(), > and after "goto retry" the 2nd acquire_freeze_lock() is wrong. > > 3. The "tell lockdep we are doing trylock" hack doesn't look nice. > > I think this is correct, but this logic should be more explicit. > Yes, the recursive read_lock() is fine if we hold the lock on a > higher level. But we do not need to fool lockdep. If we can not > deadlock in this case then try-lock must not fail and we can use > use wait == F throughout this code. > > Note: as Dave Chinner explains, the "trylock" hack and the fat comment > can be probably removed. But this needs a separate change and it will > be trivial: just kill __sb_start_write() and rename do_sb_start_write() > back to __sb_start_write(). > > Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com> Just a nit below... > + if (wait) > + rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, 0, ip); If we provided also __sb_writers_acquire() helper (in addition to _nowait) variant, we could use these helpers in __sb_start_write() / __sb_end_write() as well which would look better to me when we already have them. Once this is updated, feel free to add: Reviewed-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.com> Honza
On 08/13, Jan Kara wrote: > > On Tue 11-08-15 19:04:01, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > 1. wait_event(frozen < level) without rwsem_acquire_read() is just > > wrong from lockdep perspective. If we are going to deadlock > > because the caller is buggy, lockdep detect this problem. > > > > 2. __sb_start_write() can race with thaw_super() + freeze_super(), > > and after "goto retry" the 2nd acquire_freeze_lock() is wrong. > > > > 3. The "tell lockdep we are doing trylock" hack doesn't look nice. > > > > I think this is correct, but this logic should be more explicit. > > Yes, the recursive read_lock() is fine if we hold the lock on a > > higher level. But we do not need to fool lockdep. If we can not > > deadlock in this case then try-lock must not fail and we can use > > use wait == F throughout this code. > > > > Note: as Dave Chinner explains, the "trylock" hack and the fat comment > > can be probably removed. But this needs a separate change and it will > > be trivial: just kill __sb_start_write() and rename do_sb_start_write() > > back to __sb_start_write(). > > > > Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com> > > Just a nit below... > > > + if (wait) > > + rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, 0, ip); > > If we provided also __sb_writers_acquire() helper (in addition to _nowait) > variant, we could use these helpers in __sb_start_write() / > __sb_end_write() as well which would look better to me when we already have > them. Why? This code goes away after 8/8. Oleg. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Thu 13-08-15 15:22:23, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > On 08/13, Jan Kara wrote: > > > > On Tue 11-08-15 19:04:01, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > > 1. wait_event(frozen < level) without rwsem_acquire_read() is just > > > wrong from lockdep perspective. If we are going to deadlock > > > because the caller is buggy, lockdep detect this problem. > > > > > > 2. __sb_start_write() can race with thaw_super() + freeze_super(), > > > and after "goto retry" the 2nd acquire_freeze_lock() is wrong. > > > > > > 3. The "tell lockdep we are doing trylock" hack doesn't look nice. > > > > > > I think this is correct, but this logic should be more explicit. > > > Yes, the recursive read_lock() is fine if we hold the lock on a > > > higher level. But we do not need to fool lockdep. If we can not > > > deadlock in this case then try-lock must not fail and we can use > > > use wait == F throughout this code. > > > > > > Note: as Dave Chinner explains, the "trylock" hack and the fat comment > > > can be probably removed. But this needs a separate change and it will > > > be trivial: just kill __sb_start_write() and rename do_sb_start_write() > > > back to __sb_start_write(). > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com> > > > > Just a nit below... > > > > > + if (wait) > > > + rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, 0, ip); > > > > If we provided also __sb_writers_acquire() helper (in addition to _nowait) > > variant, we could use these helpers in __sb_start_write() / > > __sb_end_write() as well which would look better to me when we already have > > them. > > Why? This code goes away after 8/8. Right, OK. Objection retracted :). Honza
diff --git a/fs/super.c b/fs/super.c index 928c20f..d0fdd49 100644 --- a/fs/super.c +++ b/fs/super.c @@ -1158,38 +1158,11 @@ void __sb_end_write(struct super_block *sb, int level) } EXPORT_SYMBOL(__sb_end_write); -#ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP -/* - * We want lockdep to tell us about possible deadlocks with freezing but - * it's it bit tricky to properly instrument it. Getting a freeze protection - * works as getting a read lock but there are subtle problems. XFS for example - * gets freeze protection on internal level twice in some cases, which is OK - * only because we already hold a freeze protection also on higher level. Due - * to these cases we have to tell lockdep we are doing trylock when we - * already hold a freeze protection for a higher freeze level. - */ -static void acquire_freeze_lock(struct super_block *sb, int level, bool trylock, +static int do_sb_start_write(struct super_block *sb, int level, bool wait, unsigned long ip) { - int i; - - if (!trylock) { - for (i = 0; i < level - 1; i++) - if (lock_is_held(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[i])) { - trylock = true; - break; - } - } - rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, trylock, ip); -} -#endif - -/* - * This is an internal function, please use sb_start_{write,pagefault,intwrite} - * instead. - */ -int __sb_start_write(struct super_block *sb, int level, bool wait) -{ + if (wait) + rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, 0, ip); retry: if (unlikely(sb->s_writers.frozen >= level)) { if (!wait) @@ -1198,9 +1171,6 @@ retry: sb->s_writers.frozen < level); } -#ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP - acquire_freeze_lock(sb, level, !wait, _RET_IP_); -#endif percpu_counter_inc(&sb->s_writers.counter[level-1]); /* * Make sure counter is updated before we check for frozen. @@ -1211,8 +1181,45 @@ retry: __sb_end_write(sb, level); goto retry; } + + if (!wait) + rwsem_acquire_read(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[level-1], 0, 1, ip); return 1; } + +/* + * This is an internal function, please use sb_start_{write,pagefault,intwrite} + * instead. + */ +int __sb_start_write(struct super_block *sb, int level, bool wait) +{ + bool force_trylock = false; + int ret; + +#ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP + /* + * We want lockdep to tell us about possible deadlocks with freezing + * but it's it bit tricky to properly instrument it. Getting a freeze + * protection works as getting a read lock but there are subtle + * problems. XFS for example gets freeze protection on internal level + * twice in some cases, which is OK only because we already hold a + * freeze protection also on higher level. Due to these cases we have + * to use wait == F (trylock mode) which must not fail. + */ + if (wait) { + int i; + + for (i = 0; i < level - 1; i++) + if (lock_is_held(&sb->s_writers.lock_map[i])) { + force_trylock = true; + break; + } + } +#endif + ret = do_sb_start_write(sb, level, wait && !force_trylock, _RET_IP_); + WARN_ON(force_trylock & !ret); + return ret; +} EXPORT_SYMBOL(__sb_start_write); /**
1. wait_event(frozen < level) without rwsem_acquire_read() is just wrong from lockdep perspective. If we are going to deadlock because the caller is buggy, lockdep detect this problem. 2. __sb_start_write() can race with thaw_super() + freeze_super(), and after "goto retry" the 2nd acquire_freeze_lock() is wrong. 3. The "tell lockdep we are doing trylock" hack doesn't look nice. I think this is correct, but this logic should be more explicit. Yes, the recursive read_lock() is fine if we hold the lock on a higher level. But we do not need to fool lockdep. If we can not deadlock in this case then try-lock must not fail and we can use use wait == F throughout this code. Note: as Dave Chinner explains, the "trylock" hack and the fat comment can be probably removed. But this needs a separate change and it will be trivial: just kill __sb_start_write() and rename do_sb_start_write() back to __sb_start_write(). Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com> --- fs/super.c | 73 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------------------- 1 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-)