Message ID | 20170406232347.988-1-aarcange@redhat.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 01:23:44AM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > Waiting a RCU grace period only guarantees the work gets queued, but > until after the queued workqueue returns, there's no guarantee the > memory was actually freed. So flush the work to provide better > guarantees to the reclaim code in addition of waiting a RCU grace > period to pass. We are not allowed to call flush_work() from the shrinker, the workqueue doesn't have and can't have the right reclaim flags. -Chris
On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 11:02:11AM +0100, Chris Wilson wrote: > On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 01:23:44AM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > > Waiting a RCU grace period only guarantees the work gets queued, but > > until after the queued workqueue returns, there's no guarantee the > > memory was actually freed. So flush the work to provide better > > guarantees to the reclaim code in addition of waiting a RCU grace > > period to pass. > > We are not allowed to call flush_work() from the shrinker, the workqueue > doesn't have and can't have the right reclaim flags. I figured the flush_work had to be conditional to "unlock" being true too in the i915 shrinker (not only synchronize_rcu_expedited()), and I already fixed that bit, but I didn't think it would be a problem to wait for the workqueue as long as reclaim didn't recurse on the struct_mutex (it is a problem if unlock is false of course as we would be back to square one). I didn't get further hangs and I assume I've been running a couple of synchronize_rcu_expedited() and flush_work (I should add dynamic tracing to be sure). Also note, I didn't get any lockdep warning when I reproduced the workqueue hang in 4.11-rc5 so at least as far as lockdep is concerned there's no problem to call synchronize_rcu_expedited and it couldn't notice we were holding the struct_mutex while waiting for the new workqueue to run. Also note recursing on the lock (unlock false case) is something nothing else does, I'm not sure if it's worth the risk and if you shouldn't just call mutex_trylock in the shrinker instead of mutex_trylock_recursive. One thing was to recurse on the lock internally in the same context, but recursing through the whole reclaim is more dubious as safe. You could start dropping objects and wiping vmas and stuff in the middle of some kmalloc/alloc_pages that doesn't expect it and then crash for other reasons. So this reclaim recursion model of the shinker is quite unique and quite challenging to proof as safe if you keep using mutex_trylock_recursive in i915_gem_shrinker_scan. Lock recursion in all other places could be dropped without runtime downsides, the only place mutex_trylock_recursive makes a design difference and makes sense to be used is in i915_gem_shrinker_scan, the rest are implementation issues not fundamental shrinker design and it'd be nice if those other mutex_trylock_recursive would all be removed and the only one that is left is in i915_gem_shrinker_scan and nowhere else (or to drop it also from i915_gem_shrinker_scan). mutex_trylock_recursive() should also be patched to use READ_ONCE(__mutex_owner(lock)) because currently it breaks C. In the whole kernel i915 and msm drm are the only two users of such function in fact. Another thing is what value return from i915_gem_shrinker_scan when unlock is false, and we can't possibly wait for the memory to be freed let alone for a rcu grace period. For various reasons I think it's safer to return the current "free" even if we could also return "0" in such case. There are different tradeoffs, returning "free" is less likely to trigger an early OOM as the VM thinks it's still making progress and in fact it will get more free memory shortly, while returning SHRINK_STOP would also be an option and it would insist more on the other slabs so it would be more reliable at freeing memory timely, but it would be more at risk of early OOM. I think returning "free" is the better tradeoff of the two, but I suggest to add a comment as it's not exactly obvious what is better. Thanks, Andrea
On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 03:06:00PM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 11:02:11AM +0100, Chris Wilson wrote: > > On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 01:23:44AM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > > > Waiting a RCU grace period only guarantees the work gets queued, but > > > until after the queued workqueue returns, there's no guarantee the > > > memory was actually freed. So flush the work to provide better > > > guarantees to the reclaim code in addition of waiting a RCU grace > > > period to pass. > > > > We are not allowed to call flush_work() from the shrinker, the workqueue > > doesn't have and can't have the right reclaim flags. > > I figured the flush_work had to be conditional to "unlock" being true > too in the i915 shrinker (not only synchronize_rcu_expedited()), and I > already fixed that bit, but I didn't think it would be a problem to > wait for the workqueue as long as reclaim didn't recurse on the > struct_mutex (it is a problem if unlock is false of course as we would > be back to square one). I didn't get further hangs and I assume I've > been running a couple of synchronize_rcu_expedited() and flush_work (I > should add dynamic tracing to be sure). Not getting hangs is a good sign, but lockdep doesn't like it: [ 460.684901] WARNING: CPU: 1 PID: 172 at kernel/workqueue.c:2418 check_flush_dependency+0x92/0x130 [ 460.684924] workqueue: PF_MEMALLOC task 172(kworker/1:1H) is flushing !WQ_MEM_RECLAIM events:__i915_gem_free_work [i915] If I allocated the workqueue with WQ_MEM_RELCAIM, it complains bitterly as well. > Also note, I didn't get any lockdep warning when I reproduced the > workqueue hang in 4.11-rc5 so at least as far as lockdep is concerned > there's no problem to call synchronize_rcu_expedited and it couldn't > notice we were holding the struct_mutex while waiting for the new > workqueue to run. Yes, that is concerning. I think it's due to the coupling via the struct completion that is not being picked up lockdep, and I hope the "crossrelease" patches would fix the lack of warnings. > Also note recursing on the lock (unlock false case) is something > nothing else does, I'm not sure if it's worth the risk and if you > shouldn't just call mutex_trylock in the shrinker instead of > mutex_trylock_recursive. One thing was to recurse on the lock > internally in the same context, but recursing through the whole > reclaim is more dubious as safe. We know. We don't use trylock in order to reduce the frequency of users' oom. Peter added mutex_trylock_recursive() because we already were doing recursive locking in the shrinker and although we know we shouldn't, getting rid of the recursion is something we are doing, but slowly. > You could start dropping objects and wiping vmas and stuff in the > middle of some kmalloc/alloc_pages that doesn't expect it and then > crash for other reasons. So this reclaim recursion model of the > shinker is quite unique and quite challenging to proof as safe if you > keep using mutex_trylock_recursive in i915_gem_shrinker_scan. I know. Trying to stay on top of all the kmallocs under the struct_mutex and being aware that the shrinker can and will undo your objects as you work is a continual battle. And catches everyone working on i915.ko by surprise. Our policy to avoid surprises is based around pin before alloc. > Lock recursion in all other places could be dropped without runtime > downsides, the only place mutex_trylock_recursive makes a design > difference and makes sense to be used is in i915_gem_shrinker_scan, > the rest are implementation issues not fundamental shrinker design and > it'd be nice if those other mutex_trylock_recursive would all be > removed and the only one that is left is in i915_gem_shrinker_scan and > nowhere else (or to drop it also from i915_gem_shrinker_scan). We do need it for shrinker_count as well. If we just report 0 objects, the shrinker_scan callback will be skipped, iirc. All we do need it for direct calls to i915_gem_shrink() which themselves may or may not be underneath the struct_mutex at the time. > mutex_trylock_recursive() should also be patched to use > READ_ONCE(__mutex_owner(lock)) because currently it breaks C. I don't follow, static inline struct task_struct *__mutex_owner(struct mutex *lock) { return (struct task_struct *)(atomic_long_read(&lock->owner) & ~0x07); } The atomic read is equivalent to READ_ONCE(). What's broken here? (I guess strict aliasing and pointer cast?) > In the whole kernel i915 and msm drm are the only two users of such > function in fact. Yes, Peter will continue to remind us to fix our code and complain until it is. > Another thing is what value return from i915_gem_shrinker_scan when > unlock is false, and we can't possibly wait for the memory to be freed > let alone for a rcu grace period. For various reasons I think it's > safer to return the current "free" even if we could also return "0" in > such case. There are different tradeoffs, returning "free" is less > likely to trigger an early OOM as the VM thinks it's still making > progress and in fact it will get more free memory shortly, while > returning SHRINK_STOP would also be an option and it would insist more > on the other slabs so it would be more reliable at freeing memory > timely, but it would be more at risk of early OOM. I think returning > "free" is the better tradeoff of the two, but I suggest to add a > comment as it's not exactly obvious what is better. Ah. The RCU freeing is only for the small fry, the slabs from which requests and objects are allocated. It's the gigabytes of pages we have pinned that can be released by i915_gem_shrink() are what we count as freed, even though we only return them to the system and hope the lru anon page scanner will make available for reuse (if they are dirty, they will need to be swapped out, but some will be returned to the system directly by truncating the shmemfs filp backing an object.) -Chris
On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 04:30:11PM +0100, Chris Wilson wrote: > Not getting hangs is a good sign, but lockdep doesn't like it: > > [ 460.684901] WARNING: CPU: 1 PID: 172 at kernel/workqueue.c:2418 check_flush_dependency+0x92/0x130 > [ 460.684924] workqueue: PF_MEMALLOC task 172(kworker/1:1H) is flushing !WQ_MEM_RECLAIM events:__i915_gem_free_work [i915] > > If I allocated the workqueue with WQ_MEM_RELCAIM, it complains bitterly > as well. So in PF_MEMALLOC context we can't flush a workqueue with !WQ_MEM_RECLAIM. system_wq = alloc_workqueue("events", 0, 0); My point is synchronize_rcu_expedited will still push its work in the same system_wq workqueue... /* Marshall arguments & schedule the expedited grace period. */ rew.rew_func = func; rew.rew_rsp = rsp; rew.rew_s = s; INIT_WORK_ONSTACK(&rew.rew_work, wait_rcu_exp_gp); schedule_work(&rew.rew_work); It's also using schedule_work, so either the above is a false positive, or we've still a problem with synchronize_rcu_expedited, just a reproducible issue anymore after we stop running it under the struct_mutex. Even synchronize_sched will wait on the system_wq if synchronize_rcu_expedited has been issued in parallel by some other code, it's just there's no check for it because it's not invoking flush_work to wait. The deadlock happens if we flush_work() while holding any lock that may be taken by any of the workqueues that could be queued there. i915 makes sure to flush_work only if the struct_mutex was released (not my initial version) but we're not checking if any of the other system_wq workqueues could possibly taking a lock that may have been hold during the allocation that invoked reclaim, I suppose that is the problem left, but I don't see how flush_work is special about it, synchronize_rcu_expedited would still have the same issue no? (despite no lockdep warning) I suspect this means synchronize_rcu_expedited() is not usable in reclaim context and lockdep should warn if PF_MEMALLOC is set when synchronize_rcu_expedited/synchronize_sched/synchronize_rcu are called. Probably to fix this we should create a private workqueue for both RCU and i915 and stop sharing the system_wq with the rest of the system (and of course set WQ_MEM_RECLAIM in both workqueues). This makes sure when we call synchronize_rcu_expedited; flush_work from the shrinker, we won't risk waiting on other random work that may be taking locks that are hold by the code that invoked reclaim during an allocation. The macro bug of waiting on system_wq 100% of the time while always holding the struct_mutex is gone, but we need to perfect this further and stop using the system_wq for RCU and i915 shrinker work. > We do need it for shrinker_count as well. If we just report 0 objects, Yes the shrinker_count too. > the shrinker_scan callback will be skipped, iirc. All we do need it for > direct calls to i915_gem_shrink() which themselves may or may not be > underneath the struct_mutex at the time. Yes. > I don't follow, > > static inline struct task_struct *__mutex_owner(struct mutex *lock) > { > return (struct task_struct *)(atomic_long_read(&lock->owner) & ~0x07); > } > > The atomic read is equivalent to READ_ONCE(). What's broken here? (I > guess strict aliasing and pointer cast?) That was an oversight, atomic64_read does READ_ONCE internally (as it should of course being an atomic read). I didn't recall it uses atomic_long_read. Thanks, Andrea
On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 06:48:58PM +0200, Andrea Arcangeli wrote: > On Fri, Apr 07, 2017 at 04:30:11PM +0100, Chris Wilson wrote: > > Not getting hangs is a good sign, but lockdep doesn't like it: > > > > [ 460.684901] WARNING: CPU: 1 PID: 172 at kernel/workqueue.c:2418 check_flush_dependency+0x92/0x130 > > [ 460.684924] workqueue: PF_MEMALLOC task 172(kworker/1:1H) is flushing !WQ_MEM_RECLAIM events:__i915_gem_free_work [i915] > > > > If I allocated the workqueue with WQ_MEM_RELCAIM, it complains bitterly > > as well. > > So in PF_MEMALLOC context we can't flush a workqueue with > !WQ_MEM_RECLAIM. > > system_wq = alloc_workqueue("events", 0, 0); > > My point is synchronize_rcu_expedited will still push its work in > the same system_wq workqueue... > > /* Marshall arguments & schedule the expedited grace period. */ > rew.rew_func = func; > rew.rew_rsp = rsp; > rew.rew_s = s; > INIT_WORK_ONSTACK(&rew.rew_work, wait_rcu_exp_gp); > schedule_work(&rew.rew_work); > > It's also using schedule_work, so either the above is a false > positive, or we've still a problem with synchronize_rcu_expedited, > just a reproducible issue anymore after we stop running it under the > struct_mutex. We still do have a problem with using synchronize_rcu_expedited() from the shrinker as we maybe under someone else's mutex is that involved in its own RCU dance. > Even synchronize_sched will wait on the system_wq if > synchronize_rcu_expedited has been issued in parallel by some other > code, it's just there's no check for it because it's not invoking > flush_work to wait. Right. > The deadlock happens if we flush_work() while holding any lock that > may be taken by any of the workqueues that could be queued there. i915 > makes sure to flush_work only if the struct_mutex was released (not > my initial version) but we're not checking if any of the other > system_wq workqueues could possibly taking a lock that may have been > hold during the allocation that invoked reclaim, I suppose that is the > problem left, but I don't see how flush_work is special about it, > synchronize_rcu_expedited would still have the same issue no? (despite > no lockdep warning) > > I suspect this means synchronize_rcu_expedited() is not usable in > reclaim context and lockdep should warn if PF_MEMALLOC is set when > synchronize_rcu_expedited/synchronize_sched/synchronize_rcu are > called. Yes. > Probably to fix this we should create a private workqueue for both RCU > and i915 and stop sharing the system_wq with the rest of the system > (and of course set WQ_MEM_RECLAIM in both workqueues). This makes sure > when we call synchronize_rcu_expedited; flush_work from the shrinker, > we won't risk waiting on other random work that may be taking locks > that are hold by the code that invoked reclaim during an allocation. We simply do not need to do our own synchronize_rcu* -- it's only used to flush our slab frees on the off chance that (a) we have any and (b) we do manage to free a whole slab. It is not the bulk of the memory that we return to the system from the shrinker. In the other thread, I stated that we should simply remove it. The kswapd reclaim path should try to reclaim RCU slabs (by doing a synhronize_sched or equivalent). > The macro bug of waiting on system_wq 100% of the time while always > holding the struct_mutex is gone, but we need to perfect this further > and stop using the system_wq for RCU and i915 shrinker work. Agreed. My preference is to simply not do it and leave the dangling RCU to the core reclaim paths. -Chris
Am 07.04.2017 01:23 schrieb Andrea Arcangeli: > I'm also getting kernel hangs every couple of days. For me it's still > not fixed here in 4.11-rc5. It's hard to reproduce, the best > reproducer is to build lineageos 14.1 on host while running LTP in a > guest to stress the guest VM. > > Initially I thought it was related to the fact I upgraded the xf86 > intel driver just a few weeks ago (I deferred any upgrade of the > userland intel driver since last July because of a regression that > never got fixed and broke xterm for me). After I found a workaround > for the userland regression (appended at the end for reference) I > started getting kernel hangs but they are separate issues as far as I > can tell. > > It's not well tested so beware... (it survived a couple of builds and > some VM reclaim but that's it). > > The first patch 1/5 is the potential fix for the i915 kernel hang. The > rest are incremental improvements. > > And I've no great solution for when the shrinker was invoked with the > struct_mutex held and and recurse on the lock. I don't think we can > possibly wait in such case (other than flush work that the second > patch does) but then practically it shouldn't be a big deal, the big > RAM eater is unlikely to be i915 when the system is low on memory. > FWIW without having insight here, -rc6 seems to be good. No disturbing gpu hangs under load so far.
=== Userland workaround for unusable xterm after commit 3d3d18f086cdda72ee18a454db70ca72c6e3246c (unrelated to this kernel issue, just for reference of what I'm running in userland). diff --git a/src/sna/sna_accel.c b/src/sna/sna_accel.c index 11beb90..d349203 100644 --- a/src/sna/sna_accel.c +++ b/src/sna/sna_accel.c @@ -17430,11 +17430,15 @@ sna_flush_callback(CallbackListPtr *list, pointer user_data, pointer call_data) { struct sna *sna = user_data; +#if 0 if (!sna->needs_dri_flush) return; +#endif sna_accel_flush(sna); +#if 0 sna->needs_dri_flush = false; +#endif } static void