On Wed, Oct 3, 2012 at 10:37 AM, Thomas Hellstrom <thellstrom@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:It simply calls the unlock lockdep annotation function if it breaksSo if I understand you correctly, the reservation changes in TTM areHm, I have to admit that idea hasn't crossed my mind, but it's indeed
motivated by the
fact that otherwise, in the generic reservation code, lockdep can only be
annotated for a trylock and not a waiting lock, when it *is* in fact a
waiting lock.
I'm completely unfamiliar with setting up lockdep annotations, but the
only
place a
deadlock might occur is if the trylock fails and we do a
wait_for_unreserve().
Isn't it possible to annotate the call to wait_for_unreserve() just like
an
interruptible waiting lock
(that is always interrupted, but at least any deadlock will be catched?).
a hole in our current reservation lockdep annotations - since we're
blocking for the unreserve, other threads could potential block
waiting on us to release a lock we're holding already, resulting in a
deadlock.
Since no other locking primitive that I know of has this
wait_for_unlocked interface, I don't know how we could map this in
lockdep. One idea is to grab the lock and release it again immediately
(only in the annotations, not the real lock ofc). But I need to check
the lockdep code to see whether that doesn't trip it up.
I imagine doing the same as mutex_lock_interruptible() does in the
interrupted path should work...
out. So doing a lock/unlock cycle in wait_unreserve should do what we
want.
And to properly annotate the ttm reserve paths we could just add an
unconditional wait_unreserve call at the beginning like you suggested
(maybe with #ifdef CONFIG_PROVE_LOCKING in case ppl freak out about
the added atomic read in the uncontended case).
-Daniel