On 2/28/2024 5:58 PM, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 02:48:44PM -0800, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: >> On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 2:31 PM Steven Rostedt <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> On Wed, 28 Feb 2024 14:19:11 -0800 >>> "Paul E. McKenney" <paulmck@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Well, to your initial point, cond_resched() does eventually invoke >>>>>> preempt_schedule_common(), so you are quite correct that as far as >>>>>> Tasks RCU is concerned, cond_resched() is not a quiescent state. >>>>> >>>>> Thanks for confirming. :-) >>>> >>>> However, given that the current Tasks RCU use cases wait for trampolines >>>> to be evacuated, Tasks RCU could make the choice that cond_resched() >>>> be a quiescent state, for example, by adjusting rcu_all_qs() and >>>> .rcu_urgent_qs accordingly. >>>> >>>> But this seems less pressing given the chance that cond_resched() might >>>> go away in favor of lazy preemption. >>> >>> Although cond_resched() is technically a "preemption point" and not truly a >>> voluntary schedule, I would be happy to state that it's not allowed to be >>> called from trampolines, or their callbacks. Now the question is, does BPF >>> programs ever call cond_resched()? I don't think they do. >>> >>> [ Added Alexei ] >> >> I'm a bit lost in this thread :) >> Just answering the above question. >> bpf progs never call cond_resched() directly. >> But there are sleepable (aka faultable) bpf progs that >> can call some helper or kfunc that may call cond_resched() >> in some path. >> sleepable bpf progs are protected by rcu_tasks_trace. >> That's a very different one vs rcu_tasks. > > Suppose that the various cond_resched() invocations scattered throughout > the kernel acted as RCU Tasks quiescent states, so that as soon as a > given task executed a cond_resched(), synchronize_rcu_tasks() might > return or call_rcu_tasks() might invoke its callback. > > Would that cause BPF any trouble? > > My guess is "no", because it looks like BPF is using RCU Tasks (as you > say, as opposed to RCU Tasks Trace) only to wait for execution to leave a > trampoline. But I trust you much more than I trust myself on this topic! But it uses RCU Tasks Trace as well (for sleepable bpf programs), not just Tasks? Looks like that's what Alexei said above as well, and I confirmed it in bpf/trampoline.c /* The trampoline without fexit and fmod_ret progs doesn't call original * function and doesn't use percpu_ref. * Use call_rcu_tasks_trace() to wait for sleepable progs to finish. * Then use call_rcu_tasks() to wait for the rest of trampoline asm * and normal progs. */ call_rcu_tasks_trace(&im->rcu, __bpf_tramp_image_put_rcu_tasks); The code comment says it uses both. Thanks, - Joel