On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 10:12:43AM -0700, Sodagudi Prasad wrote:Hi Peter and Thomas,
How about including below change as well? Currently, there is no way to
identify thread migrations completed or not. When we observe this issue,
the symptom was work queue lock up. It is better to have some timeout here
and induce the bug_on.
You'd trigger the soft-lockup or hung-task detector I think. And if not,
we ought to look at making it trigger at least one of those.
There is no way to identify the migration threads stuck or not.
Should be pretty obvious from the splat generated by the above, no?
--- a/kernel/stop_machine.c
+++ b/kernel/stop_machine.c
@@ -290,6 +290,7 @@ int stop_two_cpus(unsigned int cpu1, unsigned int cpu2,
cpu_stop_fn_t fn, void *
struct cpu_stop_done done;
struct cpu_stop_work work1, work2;
struct multi_stop_data msdata;
+ int ret;
msdata = (struct multi_stop_data){
.fn = fn,
@@ -312,7 +313,10 @@ int stop_two_cpus(unsigned int cpu1, unsigned int cpu2,
cpu_stop_fn_t fn, void *
if (cpu_stop_queue_two_works(cpu1, &work1, cpu2, &work2))
return -ENOENT;
- wait_for_completion(&done.completion);
+ ret = wait_for_completion_timeout(&done.completion,
msecs_to_jiffies(1000));
+ if (!ret)
+ BUG_ON(1);
+
That's a random timeout, which if you spuriously trigger it, will take
down your machine. That seems like a cure worse than the disease.