Re: [PATCH-v2 0/4] target: Eliminate se_port + t10_alua_tg_pt_gp_member

From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Wed May 27 2015 - 16:37:03 EST


On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 10:13:02PM -0700, Nicholas A. Bellinger wrote:
> On Tue, 2015-05-26 at 14:44 +0200, Bart Van Assche wrote:
> > On 05/26/15 08:57, Nicholas A. Bellinger wrote:
> > > - Add various rcu_dereference and lockless_dereference RCU notation
> >
> > Hello Nic,
> >
> > Feedback from an RCU expert (which I'm not) would be appreciated here.
> > But my understanding is that lockless_dereference(p) should be used for
> > a pointer p that has *not* been annotated as an RCU pointer. I think in
> > the for-next branch of the target repository that this macro is used to
> > access RCU-annotated pointers. Is that why sparse complains about how
> > lockless_dereference() is used in the target tree ?
> >
>
> Was curious about this myself.. Thanks for raising the question!
>
> The intention of lockless_dereference() in both this and preceding
> series is for __rcu protected pointers that are accessed outside of
> rcu_read_lock() protection, and who's lifetime is controlled by a:
>
> - struct kref
> - struct percpu_ref
> - struct config_group symlink
> - RCU updater path with some manner of mutex or spinlock held
>
> This is supposed to be following Paul's comment in rcupdate.h:
>
> * Similar to rcu_dereference(), but for situations where the pointed-to
> * object's lifetime is managed by something other than RCU. That
> * "something other" might be reference counting or simple immortality.
>
> Paul, would you be to kind to clarify the intention for us..?

The lockless_dereference() primitive is to be used for pointers that
are -not- marked with __rcu. In fact, the sparse tool should yell
at you if you use lockless_dereference() on an __rcu-marked pointer.
You could use smp_store_release() to update the pointer when inserting
new data. If you are using one of the lists, then the _rcu variant of the
list-insert macro should be used (list_add_rcu()), because that is needed
to make sure that the reader sees a properly initialized new element.

If you have a pointer that is sometimes protected by RCU and other times
protected by something else, you still use one of the rcu_dereference()
macros to access it. For example, if a given RCU-protected pointer is
protected either by RCU or by some lock, you might write common code
that is called from either context as follows:

p = rcu_dereference_check(pointer, lockdep_is_held(&some_lock));

Does that help, or am I missing your point?

Thanx, Paul

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