Re: [PATCH 2/2] tracing/events/lockdep: move tracepoints withinrecursive protection

From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Thu Apr 16 2009 - 13:20:39 EST


On Thu, 2009-04-16 at 13:03 -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Apr 2009, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 2009-04-16 at 12:15 -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> > > plain text document attachment
> > > (0002-tracing-events-lockdep-move-tracepoints-within-recu.patch)
> > > From: Steven Rostedt <srostedt@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > >
> > > With the current location of the tracepoints in lockdep, the system
> > > can hard lockup in minutes when the tracepoints are enabled.
> > >
> > > Moving the tracepoints outside inside the lockdep protection solves
> > > the issue.
> >
> > NAK
> >
> > the idea is to eventually move lockdep on top of the tracepoints. The
> > tracer should grow to be more robust and handle recursion itself.
> >
> > Its likely a case of the tracer using a spinlock or mutex in the
> > tracepoint code. When I did the tracepoints I converted one such to a
> > raw_spinlock_t in the trace_print code.
>
> Note, that the ring buffer and events are made to be recursive. That is,
> it allows one event to trace within another event.

But surely not in the same context. You could do a 4 level recursion
protection like I did in perf-counter, not allowing recursion in:

nmi, irq, softirq, process - context.

That allows you to trace an irq while you're tracing something in
process context, etc.. But not allow recursion on the same level.

> If the tracepoint is
> triggered by something within the trace point handler, then we are
> screwed. That needs to be fixed.

Exactly the thing you want to detect and warn about, preferably with a
nice stack trace.

> I have not seen what is triggering back into locking. The ring buffer and
> what I can see by the event code, does not grab any locks besides raw
> ones.

Well, it used to all work, so something snuck in.

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