Message ID | ZfOhB9ZByTZcBy4u@lothringen (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Accepted |
Commit | 4b6f4c5a67c07417bf29d896c76f513a4be07516 |
Headers | show |
Series | timer/migration: Remove buggy early return on deactivation [was Re: Unexplained long boot delays [Was Re: [GIT PULL] RCU changes for v6.9]] | expand |
On Fri, Mar 15, 2024 at 02:14:47AM +0100, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > This isn't proper to single level hierarchy though. A similar issue, > although slightly different, may arise on multi-level: > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = GRP0:0 > active = GRP0:0 > nextevt = T0:0i, T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = 0 migrator = NONE > active = 0 active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle The "idle" below "0" above should be "active"...
On 3/14/2024 6:14 PM, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > On Thu, Mar 14, 2024 at 03:05:53PM -0700, Boqun Feng wrote: >> I notice CPU3 didn't have its own non-deferrable timer queued (local or >> global), so could the following happen? >> >> timer_base_try_to_set_idle(): >> __get_next_timer_interrupt(): >> fetch_next_timer_interrupt(): >> // nextevt_local == nextevt_global == basej + NEXT_TIMER_MAX_DELTA >> // tevt->local == tevt->gloabl = KTIME_MAX >> timer_use_tmigr(): >> tmigr_cpu_deactivate(): >> __tmigr_cpu_deactivate(): >> // tmc->cpuevt.ignore untouched still == true >> walk_groups(&tmigr_inactive_up, ...): >> tmigr_inactive_up(): >> data->remote = true; >> tmigr_update_events(): >> if (child) { // child is NULL >> ... >> } else { >> first_childevt = evt = data->evt; >> >> if (evt->ignore && !remote) >> return true; // no remote tick is picked. >> ... >> } > > Nice catch! Florian can you try the following? > > From b0e335371ed758f68bf4f501246298c98a615b04 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 > From: Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> > Date: Fri, 15 Mar 2024 00:21:01 +0100 > Subject: [PATCH] timer/migration: Remove buggy early return on deactivation > > When a CPU enters into idle and deactivates itself from the timer > migration hierarchy without any global timer of its own to propagate, > the group event of that CPU is set to "ignore" and tmigr_update_events() > accordingly performs an early return without considering timers queued > by other CPUs. > > If the hierarchy has a single level, and the CPU is the last one to > enter idle, it will ignore others' global timers, as in the following > layout: > > [GRP0:0] > migrator = 0 > active = 0 > nextevt = T0i > / \ > 0 1 > active (T0i) idle (T1) > > 0) CPU 0 is active thus its event is ignored (the letter 'i') and so are > upper levels' events. CPU 1 is idle and has the timer T1 enqueued. > > [GRP0:0] > migrator = NONE > active = NONE > nextevt = T0i > / \ > 0 1 > idle (T0i) idle (T1) > > 1) CPU 0 goes idle without global event queued. Therefore KTIME_MAX is > pushed as its next expiry and its own event kept as "ignore". As a result > tmigr_update_events() ignores T1 and CPU 0 goes to idle with T1 > unhandled. > > This isn't proper to single level hierarchy though. A similar issue, > although slightly different, may arise on multi-level: > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = GRP0:0 > active = GRP0:0 > nextevt = T0:0i, T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = 0 migrator = NONE > active = 0 active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 0) CPU 0 is active thus its event is ignored (the letter 'i') and so are > upper levels' events. CPU 1 is idle and has the timer T1 enqueued. > CPU 2 also has a timer. The expiry order is T0 (ignored) < T1 < T2 > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = GRP0:0 > active = GRP0:0 > nextevt = T0:0i, T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = NONE migrator = NONE > active = NONE active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 1) CPU 0 goes idle without global event queued. Therefore KTIME_MAX is > pushed as its next expiry and its own event kept as "ignore". As a result > tmigr_update_events() ignores T1. The change only propagated up to 1st > level so far. > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = NONE > active = NONE > nextevt = T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = NONE migrator = NONE > active = NONE active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 2) The change now propagates up to the top. tmigr_update_events() finds > that the child event is ignored and thus removes it. The top level next > event is now T2 which is returned to CPU 0 as its next effective expiry > to take account for as the global idle migrator. However T1 has been > ignored along the way, leaving it unhandled. > > Fix those issues with removing the buggy related early return. Ignored > child events must not prevent from evaluating the other events within > the same group. > > Reported-by: Boqun Feng <boqun.feng@gmail.com> > Reported-by: Florian Fainelli <f.fainelli@gmail.com> Gave it a good 20 cold boots and suspend to DRAM cycles and none of those triggered the reported behavior: Reported-by: Florian Fainelli <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> Tested-by: Florian Fainelli <florian.fainelli@broadcom.com> Thanks for the quick fix Frederic!
Hi Frederic, I'm sorry sending my concerns late, but I was on sick leave. Keep in mind, it is definitely possible that my brain is not yet in the timer migration hierarchy mood after the sick leave :) so please correct me whenever I'm wrong. Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> writes: > On Thu, Mar 14, 2024 at 03:05:53PM -0700, Boqun Feng wrote: >> I notice CPU3 didn't have its own non-deferrable timer queued (local or >> global), so could the following happen? >> >> timer_base_try_to_set_idle(): >> __get_next_timer_interrupt(): >> fetch_next_timer_interrupt(): >> // nextevt_local == nextevt_global == basej + NEXT_TIMER_MAX_DELTA >> // tevt->local == tevt->gloabl = KTIME_MAX >> timer_use_tmigr(): >> tmigr_cpu_deactivate(): >> __tmigr_cpu_deactivate(): >> // tmc->cpuevt.ignore untouched still == true >> walk_groups(&tmigr_inactive_up, ...): >> tmigr_inactive_up(): >> data->remote = true; >> tmigr_update_events(): >> if (child) { // child is NULL >> ... >> } else { >> first_childevt = evt = data->evt; >> >> if (evt->ignore && !remote) >> return true; // no remote tick is picked. >> ... >> } > > Nice catch! Florian can you try the following? > > From b0e335371ed758f68bf4f501246298c98a615b04 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 > From: Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> > Date: Fri, 15 Mar 2024 00:21:01 +0100 > Subject: [PATCH] timer/migration: Remove buggy early return on deactivation > > When a CPU enters into idle and deactivates itself from the timer > migration hierarchy without any global timer of its own to propagate, > the group event of that CPU is set to "ignore" and tmigr_update_events() > accordingly performs an early return without considering timers queued > by other CPUs. > > If the hierarchy has a single level, and the CPU is the last one to > enter idle, it will ignore others' global timers, as in the following > layout: > > [GRP0:0] > migrator = 0 > active = 0 > nextevt = T0i > / \ > 0 1 > active (T0i) idle (T1) > > 0) CPU 0 is active thus its event is ignored (the letter 'i') and so are > upper levels' events. CPU 1 is idle and has the timer T1 enqueued. > > [GRP0:0] > migrator = NONE > active = NONE > nextevt = T0i > / \ > 0 1 > idle (T0i) idle (T1) > > 1) CPU 0 goes idle without global event queued. Therefore KTIME_MAX is > pushed as its next expiry and its own event kept as "ignore". As a result > tmigr_update_events() ignores T1 and CPU 0 goes to idle with T1 > unhandled. This is broken - indeed. > This isn't proper to single level hierarchy though. A similar issue, > although slightly different, may arise on multi-level: > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = GRP0:0 > active = GRP0:0 > nextevt = T0:0i, T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = 0 migrator = NONE > active = 0 active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 0) CPU 0 is active thus its event is ignored (the letter 'i') and so are > upper levels' events. CPU 1 is idle and has the timer T1 enqueued. > CPU 2 also has a timer. The expiry order is T0 (ignored) < T1 < T2 > > [GRP1:0] > migrator = GRP0:0 > active = GRP0:0 > nextevt = T0:0i, T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = NONE migrator = NONE > active = NONE active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 1) CPU 0 goes idle without global event queued. Therefore KTIME_MAX is > pushed as its next expiry and its own event kept as "ignore". As a result > tmigr_update_events() ignores T1. The change only propagated up to 1st > level so far. Right. T0 doesn't has to be enqueued into the timer queue of GRP0:0 as this timer could be ignored. So nothing changes directly in GRP0:0. > [GRP1:0] > migrator = NONE > active = NONE > nextevt = T0:1 > / \ > [GRP0:0] [GRP0:1] > migrator = NONE migrator = NONE > active = NONE active = NONE > nextevt = T0i nextevt = T2 > / \ / \ > 0 (T0i) 1 (T1) 2 (T2) 3 > idle idle idle idle > > 2) The change now propagates up to the top. tmigr_update_events() finds > that the child event is ignored and thus removes it. The top level next > event is now T2 which is returned to CPU 0 as its next effective expiry > to take account for as the global idle migrator. However T1 has been > ignored along the way, leaving it unhandled. Now propagation goes on as GRP0:0 is completely idle. When executing tmigr_update_events() in the next step of walking the hierarchy via tmigr_inactive_up(), the arguments for tmigr_update_events() are set in the following way: group = GRP1:0 child = GRP0:0 Then at the begin of tmigr_update_events() the group event of child is updated - so all ignored events are removed (T0i), and the child->groupevt and child->next_expiry is updated with T1. This reevaluated child->groupevt is then queued/updated in the GRP1:0 timerqueue. So T1 will be handled! As there is no parent, the top level group event is updated (see goto label "check_toplvl") and T1 will be still the first event. > Fix those issues with removing the buggy related early return. Ignored > child events must not prevent from evaluating the other events within > the same group. I would prefere to keep this early return but skip it, when there is !group->parent (only a single level in hierarchy). Then it would prevent taking the group lock and making some random event updates which are done nevertheless on the next iteration of the hierarchy walk. Thanks, Anna-Maria
Le Tue, Mar 26, 2024 at 05:41:00PM +0100, Anna-Maria Behnsen a écrit : > Frederic Weisbecker <frederic@kernel.org> writes: > Now propagation goes on as GRP0:0 is completely idle. When executing > tmigr_update_events() in the next step of walking the hierarchy via > tmigr_inactive_up(), the arguments for tmigr_update_events() are set in > the following way: > > group = GRP1:0 > child = GRP0:0 > > Then at the begin of tmigr_update_events() the group event of child is > updated - so all ignored events are removed (T0i), and the > child->groupevt and child->next_expiry is updated with T1. This > reevaluated child->groupevt is then queued/updated in the GRP1:0 > timerqueue. > > So T1 will be handled! > > As there is no parent, the top level group event is updated (see goto > label "check_toplvl") and T1 will be still the first event. Bah! Good point, I got confused there... > > > Fix those issues with removing the buggy related early return. Ignored > > child events must not prevent from evaluating the other events within > > the same group. > > I would prefere to keep this early return but skip it, when there is > !group->parent (only a single level in hierarchy). > > Then it would prevent taking the group lock and making some random > event updates which are done nevertheless on the next iteration of the > hierarchy walk. Ok sounds like a good plan! Thanks. > > Thanks, > > Anna-Maria >
diff --git a/kernel/time/timer_migration.c b/kernel/time/timer_migration.c index 8f49b6b96dfd..611cd904f035 100644 --- a/kernel/time/timer_migration.c +++ b/kernel/time/timer_migration.c @@ -751,26 +751,6 @@ bool tmigr_update_events(struct tmigr_group *group, struct tmigr_group *child, first_childevt = evt = data->evt; - /* - * Walking the hierarchy is required in any case when a - * remote expiry was done before. This ensures to not lose - * already queued events in non active groups (see section - * "Required event and timerqueue update after a remote - * expiry" in the documentation at the top). - * - * The two call sites which are executed without a remote expiry - * before, are not prevented from propagating changes through - * the hierarchy by the return: - * - When entering this path by tmigr_new_timer(), @evt->ignore - * is never set. - * - tmigr_inactive_up() takes care of the propagation by - * itself and ignores the return value. But an immediate - * return is required because nothing has to be done in this - * level as the event could be ignored. - */ - if (evt->ignore && !remote) - return true; - raw_spin_lock(&group->lock); childstate.state = 0;