seqcount usage in xt_replace_table()
From: Anatol Pomozov
Date: Tue Jan 08 2019 - 14:43:03 EST
Hello folks,
A bit of context what I am doing. I am trying to port KTSAN (Kernel
Thread Sanitizer) tool to v4.20. That tool tracks shared data usage
and makes sure it is accessed in a thread-safe manner.
seqlock is a synchronization primitive used by Linux kernel. KTSAN
annotates read_seqbegin()/read_seqretry() and tracks what data been
accessed in its critical section.
During KTSAN port I found and interesting seqcount usage introduced in
commit 80055dab5de0c8677bc148c4717ddfc753a9148e
If I read this commit correctly xt_replace_table() does not use
seqlock in a canonical way to specify a critical section. Instead the
code reads the counter and waits until it gets to a specific value.
Now I want KTSAN to play with this code nicely. I need to tell KTSAN
something like "this raw_read_seqcount() does not start a critical
section, just ignore it". So temporary I introduced
raw_read_seqcount_nocritical() function that is ignored by KTSAN. Is
it a good solution?
Or maybe xt_replace_table() can be enhanced? When I hear that
something waits until an event happens on all CPUs I think about
wait_event() function. Would it be better for xt_replace_table() to
introduce an atomic counter that is decremented by CPUs, and the main
CPU waits until the counter gets zero?
WDYT?