Re: WARNING in 2.6.25-07422-gb66e1f1
From: Dan Williams
Date: Fri May 09 2008 - 01:00:05 EST
On Thu, May 8, 2008 at 7:15 PM, Neil Brown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Thursday May 8, dan.j.williams@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> > @@ -133,8 +137,10 @@ static linear_conf_t *linear_conf(mddev_t *mddev, int raid_disks)
> >
> > disk->rdev = rdev;
> >
> > + spin_lock(&conf->device_lock);
> > blk_queue_stack_limits(mddev->queue,
> > rdev->bdev->bd_disk->queue);
> > + spin_unlock(&conf->device_lock);
> > /* as we don't honour merge_bvec_fn, we must never risk
> > * violating it, so limit ->max_sector to one PAGE, as
> > * a one page request is never in violation.
>
> This shouldn't be necessary.
> There is no actual race here -- mddev->queue->queue_flags is not going to be
> accessed by anyone else until do_md_run does
> mddev->queue->make_request_fn = mddev->pers->make_request;
> which is much later.
> So we only need to be sure that "queue_is_locked" doesn't complain.
> And as q->queue_lock is still NULL at this point, it won't complain.
>
> I think that the *only* change that is needs is to put
>
>
> > + /* blk-core uses queue_lock to verify protection of the queue flags */
> > + mddev->queue->queue_lock = &conf->device_lock;
>
> after each
>
> > + spin_lock_init(&conf->device_lock);
>
> i.e. in raid1.c, raid10.c and raid5.c
>
> ??
Yes, locking shouldn't be needed at those points; however, the warning
still fires because blk_queue_stack_limits() is using
queue_flag_clear() instead of queue_flag_unlocked(). Taking a look at
converting it to queue_flag_clear_unlocked() uncovered a couple more
overlooked sites (multipath.c:multipath_add_disk and
raid1.c:raid1_add_disk) where ->run has already been called...
The options I am thinking of all seem ugly:
1/ keep the unnecessary locking in MD
2/ make blk_queue_stack_limits() use queue_flag_clear_unlocked() even
though it needs to be locked sometimes
3/ conditionally use queue_flag_clear_unlocked if !t->queue_lock
--
Dan
I'm having a h
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/