Re: INFO: possible circular locking dependency atcleanup_workqueue_thread

From: Oleg Nesterov
Date: Tue May 19 2009 - 14:56:51 EST


On 05/19, Johannes Berg wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2009-05-19 at 18:09 +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
>
> > > Right. But exactly this happens in the hibernate case --
> >
> > not sure I understand your "exactly this" ;)
> >
> > But your explanation of the deadlock below looks great!
>
> Yeah... I got side-tracked, I had a scenario in mind that actually
> needed cpu_add_remove_lock().
>
> > except I don't understand how cpu_add_remove_lock makes the difference...
> > And thus I can't understand why cpu_down() (called lockless) have the
> > same problems. Please see below.
> >
> > > Anyway, you can have a deadlock like this:
> > >
> > > CPU 3 CPU 2 CPU 1
> > > suspend/hibernate
> > > something:
> > > rtnl_lock() device_pm_lock()
> > > -> mutex_lock(&dpm_list_mtx)
> > >
> > > mutex_lock(&dpm_list_mtx)
> > >
> > > linkwatch_work
> > > -> rtnl_lock()
> > > disable_nonboot_cpus()
> >
> > let's suppose disable_nonboot_cpus() does not take cpu_add_remove_lock,
> >
> > > -> flush CPU 3 workqueue
> >
> > in this case the deadlock is still here?
> >
> > We can't flush because we hold the lock (dpm_list_mtx) which depends
> > on another lock taken by work->func(), the "classical" bug with flush.
> >
> > No?
>
> Yeah, it looks like cpu_add_remove_lock doesn't make a difference...
> It's just lockdep reporting a longer chain that also leads to a
> deadlock.

So. we should not call cpu_down/disable_nonboot_cpus under device_pm_lock().

At first glance this was changed by

PM: Change hibernation code ordering
4aecd6718939eb3c4145b248369b65f7483a8a02

PM: Change suspend code ordering
900af0d973856d6feb6fc088c2d0d3fde57707d3

commits. Rafael, could you take a look?


> OTOH just replace dpm_list_mtx with cpu_add_remove_lock and
> you have the same scenario...

Yes, but

> happens too, I guess, somehow.

Oh, I hope not ;) nobody should use cpu_maps_update_begin() except
cpu_down/up pathes. And workqueue.c, which uses it exactly because
we want to call _cpu_down()->flush_cpu_workqueue() without any other
locks held. But if the caller of cpu_down() holds some lock, then
we have the usual problems with the flush under lock.

Oleg.

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