Re: [PATCH v1 1/2] Add polling support to pidfd

From: Oleg Nesterov
Date: Tue Apr 30 2019 - 08:08:21 EST


On 04/30, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
>
> > > pidfd_poll() can race with the exiting task, miss exit_code != 0, and return
> > > zero. However, do_poll() won't block after that and pidfd_poll() will be called
> > > again.
> >
> > Here also I didn't follow what you mean. If exit_code is read as 0 in
> > pidfd_poll(), then in do_poll() the count will be 0 and it will block in
> > poll_schedule_timeout(). Right?
>
> No. Please note the pwq->triggered check and please read __pollwake().
>
> But if you want to understand this you can forget about poll/select. It is
> a bit complicated, in particular because it has to do set_current_state()
> right before schedule() and thus it plays games with pwq->triggered. But in
> essence this doesn't differ too much from the plain wait_event-like code
> (although you can also look at wait_woken/woken_wake_function).
>
> If remove_wait_queue() could happem before wake_up_all() (like in your pseudo-
> code above), then pidfd_poll() or any other ->poll() method could miss _both_
> the condition and wakeup. But sys_poll() doesn't do this, so it is fine to miss
> the condition and rely on wake_up_all() which ensures we won't block and the
> next iteration must see condition == T.

Oh, just in case... If it is not clear, of course I am talking about the case
when wake_up_call() was already called when we check the condition. Otherwise
everything is simple.

Oleg.