Re: [bisected] Clocksource tsc unstable git
From: Heiko Carstens
Date: Tue Nov 09 2010 - 07:58:57 EST
On Wed, Oct 27, 2010 at 09:36:55PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Wed, 2010-10-27 at 20:26 +0200, markus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> >
> > 34f971f6f7988be4d014eec3e3526bee6d007ffa is the first bad commit
> > commit 34f971f6f7988be4d014eec3e3526bee6d007ffa
> > Author: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxx>
> > Date: Wed Sep 22 13:53:15 2010 +0200
> >
> > sched: Create special class for stop/migrate work
> >
> > In order to separate the stop/migrate work thread from the SCHED_FIFO
> > implementation, create a special class for it that is of higher priority than
> > SCHED_FIFO itself.
> >
> > This currently solves a problem where cpu-hotplug consumes so much cpu-time
> > that the SCHED_FIFO class gets throttled, but has the bandwidth replenishment
> > timer pending on the now dead cpu.
> >
> > It is also required for when we add the planned deadline scheduling class above
> > SCHED_FIFO, as the stop/migrate thread still needs to transcent those tasks.
> >
> > Tested-by: Heiko Carstens <heiko.carstens@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@xxxxxxxxx>
> > LKML-Reference: <1285165776.2275.1022.camel@laptop>
> > Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@xxxxxxx>
> >
> > Reverting the commit solves the kvm hang issue.
> > (If this issue is related to my original tsc problem is of course open for
> > debate, but I have a strong hunch it is.)
>
> Too weird,.. what does the hang look like?
>
> Can you generate a sysrq-t dump? The thing I'm looking for is the
> migration/# thread being runnable but not being current.
>
> How can I reproduce this?
I think there is a bug in pick_next_task_stop() in sched_stopclass.c:
If a stop-task scheduling class task (well... the migration thread ;) sets
its state to TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE and then gets preempted it will never
scheduled again, because pick_next_task_stop() ignores all tasks with a
state != TASK_RUNNING:
static struct task_struct *pick_next_task_stop(struct rq *rq)
{
struct task_struct *stop = rq->stop;
if (stop && stop->state == TASK_RUNNING)
return stop;
return NULL;
}
At least I have two dumps of machines where all cpus but one are running
the migration thread. Only the last one runs usual user space processes but
has a preempted migration thread:
>> trace 0x7e50cd40
================================================================
STACK TRACE FOR TASK: 0x7e50cd40 (migration/9)
STACK:
0 schedule+1204 [0x55f754]
1 preempt_schedule+102 [0x56031e]
2 _raw_spin_unlock_irq+118 [0x563fa6]
3 cpu_stopper_thread+144 [0x1ad854]
4 kthread+166 [0x1685aa]
5 kernel_thread_starter+6 [0x106bea]
================================================================
struct task_struct {
state = 0x1 /* TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE */
...
I would guess something like the below would probably fix it.
Does that make any sense or did I miss something obvious?
diff --git a/kernel/sched_stoptask.c b/kernel/sched_stoptask.c
index 45bddc0..d5cf344 100644
--- a/kernel/sched_stoptask.c
+++ b/kernel/sched_stoptask.c
@@ -26,7 +26,8 @@ static struct task_struct *pick_next_task_stop(struct rq *rq)
{
struct task_struct *stop = rq->stop;
- if (stop && stop->state == TASK_RUNNING)
+ /* got preempted if on_rq == 1 -- ignore */
+ if (stop && ((stop->state == TASK_RUNNING) || stop->se.on_rq))
return stop;
return NULL;
--
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