Re: [PATCH 3/4] pci aer: fix deadlock in do_recovery
From: Sinan Kaya
Date: Fri Sep 29 2017 - 09:32:52 EST
On 9/28/2017 7:46 PM, Govindarajulu Varadarajan wrote:
>> How about releasing the device_lock here on CPU0?>
>
> pci_device_add() is called by driver's pci probe function. device_lock(dev)
> should be held before calling pci driver probe function.
I see. The goal of the lock held here is to protect probe() operation from
being disrupted. I also don't think we can change this.
>
>> or in other words keep device_lock as short as possible?
>
> The problem is not the duration device_lock is held. It is the order two locks
> are aquired. We cannot control or implement a restriction that during
> device_lock() is held, driver probe should not call pci function which aquires
> pci_bus_sem. And in case of pci aer, aer handler needs to call driver err_handler()
> for which we need to hold device_lock() before calling err_handler(). In order
> to find all the devices on a pci bus, we should hold pci_bus_sem to do
> pci_walk_bus().
I was reacting to this to see if there is a better way to do this.
"Only fix I could think of is to lock &pci_bus_sem and try locking all
device->mutex under that pci_bus. If it fails, unlock all device->mutex
and &pci_bus_sem and try again."
How about gracefully returning from report_error_detected() when we cannot obtain
the device_lock() by replacing it with device_trylock()?
aer_pci_walk_bus() can still poll like you did until it gets the lock. At least,
we don't get to introduce a new API, new lock semantics and code refactoring.
__pci_bus_trylock() looked very powerful and also dangerously flexible to
introduce new bugs to me.
For instance, you called it like this.
+ down_read(&pci_bus_sem);
+ locked = __pci_bus_trylock(bus, pci_device_trylock,
+ pci_device_unlock);
pci_bus_trylock() would obtain device + cfg locks whereas pci_device_trylock() only
obtains the device lock. Can it race against cfg lock? It depends on the caller.
Very subtle difference.
--
Sinan Kaya
Qualcomm Datacenter Technologies, Inc. as an affiliate of Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.
Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. is a member of the Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project.