On Tue, Aug 08, 2023 at 03:10:01PM -0400, Waiman Long wrote:Right. I am not planning to use RCU anyway.
On 8/8/23 08:29, Robin Murphy wrote:I thought we decided that we couldn't use RCU in:
On 2023-08-07 16:44, Waiman Long wrote:I guess we can use rcu_read_lock/rcu_read_unlock and
The following circular locking dependency was reported when runningDo we strictly need this? I'd hope that the outer release/acquire of
cpus online/offline test on an arm64 system.
[ 84.195923] Chain exists of:
dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock --> cpu_hotplug_lock -->
cpuhp_state-down
[ 84.207305] Possible unsafe locking scenario:
[ 84.213212] CPU0 CPU1
[ 84.217729] ---- ----
[ 84.222247] lock(cpuhp_state-down);
[ 84.225899] lock(cpu_hotplug_lock);
[ 84.232068] lock(cpuhp_state-down);
[ 84.238237] lock(dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock);
[ 84.242236]
*** DEADLOCK ***
The problematic locking order seems to be
lock(dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock) --> lock(cpu_hotplug_lock)
This locking order happens when dmc620_pmu_get_irq() calls
cpuhp_state_add_instance_nocalls(). Since dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock is used
for protecting the dmc620_pmu_irqs structure only, we don't actually
need
to hold the lock when adding a new instance to the CPU hotplug
subsystem.
Fix this possible deadlock scenario by adding a new
dmc620_pmu_get_irq_lock for protecting the call to
__dmc620_pmu_get_irq()
and taking dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock inside __dmc620_pmu_get_irq()
only when dmc620_pmu_irqs is being searched or modified. As a
result, cpuhp_state_add_instance_nocalls() won't be called with
dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock held and cpu_hotplug_lock won't be acquired after
dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock.
Suggested-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@xxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
drivers/perf/arm_dmc620_pmu.c | 18 ++++++++++++++----
1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/perf/arm_dmc620_pmu.c
b/drivers/perf/arm_dmc620_pmu.c
index 9d0f01c4455a..895971915f2d 100644
--- a/drivers/perf/arm_dmc620_pmu.c
+++ b/drivers/perf/arm_dmc620_pmu.c
@@ -68,6 +68,7 @@
static LIST_HEAD(dmc620_pmu_irqs);
static DEFINE_MUTEX(dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock);
+static DEFINE_MUTEX(dmc620_pmu_get_irq_lock);
struct dmc620_pmu_irq {
struct hlist_node node;
@@ -421,11 +422,18 @@ static irqreturn_t dmc620_pmu_handle_irq(int
irq_num, void *data)
static struct dmc620_pmu_irq *__dmc620_pmu_get_irq(int irq_num)
{
struct dmc620_pmu_irq *irq;
+ bool found = false;
int ret;
+ mutex_lock(&dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock);
dmc620_get_pmu_irqs_lock already means we can't observe an invalid value
of irq->irq_num, and the refcount op should be atomic in itself, no?
Fair enough if there's some other subtlety I'm missing - I do trust that
you're more experienced in locking and barrier semantics than I am! -
and if it comes to it I'd agree that simple extra locking is preferable
to getting into explicit memory barriers here. locking
list_for_each_entry_rcu() to avoid taking dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock here.
https://lore.kernel.org/r/2f56057b-08ef-c3a6-8300-33f36d2c3916@xxxxxxx
?
Please do that and I'll pick the patch up for 6.6.One other nit either way, could we clarify the names to be somethingI think it is a good to rename dmc620_pmu_irqs_lock to
like irqs_list_lock and irqs_users_lock? The split locking scheme
doesn't exactly lend itself to being super-obvious, especially if we do
end up nesting both locks, so I think naming them after what they
semantically protect seems the most readable option. Otherwise, this
does pretty much look like what I originally had in mind.
dmc620_pmu_irqs_list_lock. For the other lock, its purpose is to make sure
that only one user can get to __dmc620_pmu_get_irq(), may be
dmc620_irqs_get_lock. I can add some comment to clarify the nesting
relationship.