Message ID | 1345608229-5707-1-git-send-email-sboyd@codeaurora.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On 8/21/2012 9:03 PM, Stephen Boyd wrote: > Nothing stops a process from hotplugging in a CPU concurrently > with a sys_reboot() call. In such a situation we could have > ipi_cpu_stop() mark a cpu as 'offline' and _cpu_up() ignore the > fact that the CPU is not really offline and call the > CPU_UP_PREPARE notifier. When this happens stop_machine code will > complain that the cpu thread already exists and BUG_ON(). > > CPU0 CPU1 > > sys_reboot() > kernel_restart() > machine_restart() > machine_shutdown() > smp_send_stop() > ... ipi_cpu_stop() > set_cpu_online(1, false) > local_irq_disable() > while(1) > <PREEMPT> > cpu_up() > _cpu_up() > if (!cpu_online(1)) > __cpu_notify(CPU_UP_PREPARE...) > > cpu_stop_cpu_callback() > BUG_ON(stopper->thread) > > This is easily reproducible by hotplugging in and out in a tight > loop while also rebooting. > > Since the CPU is not really offline and hasn't gone through the > proper steps to be marked as such, let's mark the CPU as inactive. > This is just as easily testable as online and avoids any possibility > of _cpu_up() trying to bring the CPU back online when it never was > offline to begin with. > > Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org> > --- > > Perhaps we can take the hotplug lock in the sys_reboot() case but I > don't think that actually fixes everything. For example, in cases > where machine_shutdown() is called from emergency_restart() we would > have to take the hotplug lock which doesn't really seem feasible. Any comments on this patch?
On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 09:03:49PM -0700, Stephen Boyd wrote: > Nothing stops a process from hotplugging in a CPU concurrently > with a sys_reboot() call. In such a situation we could have > ipi_cpu_stop() mark a cpu as 'offline' and _cpu_up() ignore the > fact that the CPU is not really offline and call the > CPU_UP_PREPARE notifier. When this happens stop_machine code will > complain that the cpu thread already exists and BUG_ON(). This puts us at odds with x86, which is a bad thing without first investigating whether a generic solution which fixes all arches would be more appropriate. A better solution may be to mark those CPUs as being not-present, which will prevent them being hot-plugged back.
On 8/29/2012 4:53 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote: > On Tue, Aug 21, 2012 at 09:03:49PM -0700, Stephen Boyd wrote: >> Nothing stops a process from hotplugging in a CPU concurrently >> with a sys_reboot() call. In such a situation we could have >> ipi_cpu_stop() mark a cpu as 'offline' and _cpu_up() ignore the >> fact that the CPU is not really offline and call the >> CPU_UP_PREPARE notifier. When this happens stop_machine code will >> complain that the cpu thread already exists and BUG_ON(). > This puts us at odds with x86, which is a bad thing without first > investigating whether a generic solution which fixes all arches would > be more appropriate. I went this way because it seems that we stop CPUs in architecture specific code instead of doing it generically (although we have smp_send_stop()?). It would be nice if we could generalize the cpu stopping code so that reboot at the architectual level doesn't have to do this. > > A better solution may be to mark those CPUs as being not-present, > which will prevent them being hot-plugged back. That sounds fine to me. I can s/active/present/ for v2 if we can get some kind of consensus. I was also thinking we could stop using these functions entirely and have some private stopped CPUs map that we check instead.
diff --git a/arch/arm/kernel/smp.c b/arch/arm/kernel/smp.c index ebd8ad2..836b771 100644 --- a/arch/arm/kernel/smp.c +++ b/arch/arm/kernel/smp.c @@ -478,7 +478,7 @@ static void ipi_cpu_stop(unsigned int cpu) raw_spin_unlock(&stop_lock); } - set_cpu_online(cpu, false); + set_cpu_active(cpu, false); local_fiq_disable(); local_irq_disable(); @@ -568,10 +568,10 @@ void smp_send_stop(void) /* Wait up to one second for other CPUs to stop */ timeout = USEC_PER_SEC; - while (num_online_cpus() > 1 && timeout--) + while (num_active_cpus() > 1 && timeout--) udelay(1); - if (num_online_cpus() > 1) + if (num_active_cpus() > 1) pr_warning("SMP: failed to stop secondary CPUs\n"); smp_kill_cpus(&mask);
Nothing stops a process from hotplugging in a CPU concurrently with a sys_reboot() call. In such a situation we could have ipi_cpu_stop() mark a cpu as 'offline' and _cpu_up() ignore the fact that the CPU is not really offline and call the CPU_UP_PREPARE notifier. When this happens stop_machine code will complain that the cpu thread already exists and BUG_ON(). CPU0 CPU1 sys_reboot() kernel_restart() machine_restart() machine_shutdown() smp_send_stop() ... ipi_cpu_stop() set_cpu_online(1, false) local_irq_disable() while(1) <PREEMPT> cpu_up() _cpu_up() if (!cpu_online(1)) __cpu_notify(CPU_UP_PREPARE...) cpu_stop_cpu_callback() BUG_ON(stopper->thread) This is easily reproducible by hotplugging in and out in a tight loop while also rebooting. Since the CPU is not really offline and hasn't gone through the proper steps to be marked as such, let's mark the CPU as inactive. This is just as easily testable as online and avoids any possibility of _cpu_up() trying to bring the CPU back online when it never was offline to begin with. Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org> --- Perhaps we can take the hotplug lock in the sys_reboot() case but I don't think that actually fixes everything. For example, in cases where machine_shutdown() is called from emergency_restart() we would have to take the hotplug lock which doesn't really seem feasible. arch/arm/kernel/smp.c | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)