Re: [PATCH] sched/fair: do not announce throttled next buddy in dequeue_task_fair

From: Xunlei Pang
Date: Tue Jul 12 2016 - 21:59:25 EST


On 2016/07/13 at 09:50, Wanpeng Li wrote:
> 2016-07-13 1:25 GMT+08:00 <bsegall@xxxxxxxxxx>:
>> Konstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>
>>> On 11.07.2016 15:12, Xunlei Pang wrote:
>>>> On 2016/07/11 at 17:54, Wanpeng Li wrote:
>>>>> Hi Konstantin, Xunlei,
>>>>> 2016-07-11 16:42 GMT+08:00 Xunlei Pang <xpang@xxxxxxxxxx>:
>>>>>> On 2016/07/11 at 16:22, Xunlei Pang wrote:
>>>>>>> On 2016/07/11 at 15:25, Wanpeng Li wrote:
>>>>>>>> 2016-06-16 20:57 GMT+08:00 Konstantin Khlebnikov <khlebnikov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
>>>>>>>>> Hierarchy could be already throttled at this point. Throttled next
>>>>>>>>> buddy could trigger null pointer dereference in pick_next_task_fair().
>>>>>>>> There is cfs_rq->next check in pick_next_entity(), so how can null
>>>>>>>> pointer dereference happen?
>>>>>>> I guess it's the following code leading to a NULL se returned:
>>>>>> s/NULL/empty-entity cfs_rq se/
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> pick_next_entity():
>>>>>>> if (cfs_rq->next && wakeup_preempt_entity(cfs_rq->next, left) < 1)
>>>>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>>> I think this will return false.
>>>> With the wrong throttled_hierarchy(), I think this can happen. But after we have the
>>>> corrected throttled_hierarchy() patch, I can't see how it is possible.
>>>>
>>>> dequeue_task_fair():
>>>> if (task_sleep && parent_entity(se))
>>>> set_next_buddy(parent_entity(se));
>>>>
>>>> How does dequeue_task_fair() with DEQUEUE_SLEEP set(true task_sleep) happen to a throttled hierarchy?
>>>> IOW, a task belongs to a throttled hierarchy is running?
>>>>
>>>> Maybe Konstantin knows the reason.
>>> This function (dequeue_task_fair) check throttling but at point it could skip several
>>> levels and announce as next buddy actually throttled entry.
>>> Probably this bug hadn't happened but this's really hard to prove that this is impossible.
>>> ->set_curr_task(), PI-boost or some tricky migration in balancer could break this easily.
>> sched_setscheduler can call put_prev_task, which then can cause a
>> throttle outside of __schedule(), then the task blocks normally and
>> deactivate_task(DEQUEUE_SLEEP) happens and you lose.
> The cfs_rq_throttled() check in dequeue_task_fair() will capture the
> cfs_rq which is throttled in sched_setscheduler::put_prev_task path,
> so nothing lost, where I miss?

cfs_rq_throttled() returns false for child cgroups in the throttled hierarchy, so
throttled_hierarchy() should be relied on in such cases.

Regards,
Xunlei