Re: [Linux-ia64] reader-writer livelock problem

From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge (jeremy@goop.org)
Date: Fri Nov 08 2002 - 12:38:25 EST


On Fri, 2002-11-08 at 09:25, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> There's another reason for not doing it that way: allowing readers to keep
> interrupts on even in the presense of interrupt uses of readers.
>
> If you do the "pending writes stop readers" approach, you get
>
> cpu1 cpu2
>
> read_lock() - get
>
> write_lock_irq() - pending
>
> irq happens
> - read_lock() - deadlock
>
> and that means that you need to make readers protect against interrupts
> even if the interrupts only read themselves.

Even without interrupts that would be a bug. It isn't ever safe to
attempt to retake a read lock if you already hold it, because you may
deadlock with a pending writer. Fair multi-reader locks aren't
recursive locks.

> NOTE! I'm not saying the existing practice is necessarily a good tradeoff,
> and maybe we should just make sure to find all such cases and turn the
> read_lock() calls into read_lock_irqsave() and then make the rw-locks
> block readers on pending writers. But it's certainly more work and cause
> for subtler problems than just naively changing the rw implementation.

Yes, I'd agree. It would definitely be a behavioural change with
respect to the legality of retaking a lock for reading, which would
probably be quite irritating to find (since they'd only cause a problem
if they actually coincide with an attempted write lock).

> Actually, giving this som emore thought, I really suspect that the
> simplest solution is to alloc a separate "fair_read_lock()", and paths
> that need to care about fairness (and know they don't have the irq
> issue)
> can use that, slowly porting users over one by one...

Do you mean have a separate lock type, or have two different read_lock
operations on the current type?

        J

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