On Sat, Aug 17, 2024 at 09:33:34AM GMT, Chen Ridong <chenridong@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The reason for this issue is cgroup_mutex and cpu_hotplug_lock are > acquired in different tasks, which may lead to deadlock. > It can lead to a deadlock through the following steps: > 1. A large number of cpusets are deleted asynchronously, which puts a > large number of cgroup_bpf_release works into system_wq. The max_active > of system_wq is WQ_DFL_ACTIVE(256). Consequently, all active works are > cgroup_bpf_release works, and many cgroup_bpf_release works will be put > into inactive queue. As illustrated in the diagram, there are 256 (in > the acvtive queue) + n (in the inactive queue) works. > 2. Setting watchdog_thresh will hold cpu_hotplug_lock.read and put > smp_call_on_cpu work into system_wq. However step 1 has already filled > system_wq, 'sscs.work' is put into inactive queue. 'sscs.work' has > to wait until the works that were put into the inacvtive queue earlier > have executed (n cgroup_bpf_release), so it will be blocked for a while. > 3. Cpu offline requires cpu_hotplug_lock.write, which is blocked by step 2. > 4. Cpusets that were deleted at step 1 put cgroup_release works into > cgroup_destroy_wq. They are competing to get cgroup_mutex all the time. > When cgroup_metux is acqured by work at css_killed_work_fn, it will > call cpuset_css_offline, which needs to acqure cpu_hotplug_lock.read. > However, cpuset_css_offline will be blocked for step 3. > 5. At this moment, there are 256 works in active queue that are > cgroup_bpf_release, they are attempting to acquire cgroup_mutex, and as > a result, all of them are blocked. Consequently, sscs.work can not be > executed. Ultimately, this situation leads to four processes being > blocked, forming a deadlock. > > system_wq(step1) WatchDog(step2) cpu offline(step3) cgroup_destroy_wq(step4) > ... > 2000+ cgroups deleted asyn > 256 actives + n inactives > __lockup_detector_reconfigure > P(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) > put sscs.work into system_wq > 256 + n + 1(sscs.work) > sscs.work wait to be executed > warting sscs.work finish > percpu_down_write > P(cpu_hotplug_lock.write) > ...blocking... > css_killed_work_fn > P(cgroup_mutex) > cpuset_css_offline > P(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) > ...blocking... > 256 cgroup_bpf_release > mutex_lock(&cgroup_mutex); > ..blocking... Thanks, Ridong, for laying this out. Let me try to extract the core of the deps above. The correct lock ordering is: cgroup_mutex then cpu_hotplug_lock. However, the smp_call_on_cpu() under cpus_read_lock may lead to a deadlock (ABBA over those two locks). This is OK thread T system_wq worker lock(cgroup_mutex) (II) ... unlock(cgroup_mutex) down(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) smp_call_on_cpu queue_work_on(cpu, system_wq, scss) (I) scss.func wait_for_completion(scss) up(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) However, there is no ordering between (I) and (II) so they can also happen in opposite thread T system_wq worker down(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) smp_call_on_cpu queue_work_on(cpu, system_wq, scss) (I) lock(cgroup_mutex) (II) ... unlock(cgroup_mutex) scss.func wait_for_completion(scss) up(cpu_hotplug_lock.read) And here the thread T + system_wq worker effectively call cpu_hotplug_lock and cgroup_mutex in the wrong order. (And since they're two threads, it won't be caught by lockdep.) By that reasoning any holder of cgroup_mutex on system_wq makes system susceptible to a deadlock (in presence of cpu_hotplug_lock waiting writers + cpuset operations). And the two work items must meet in same worker's processing hence probability is low (zero?) with less than WQ_DFL_ACTIVE items. (And more generally, any lock that is ordered before cpu_hotplug_lock should not be taken in system_wq work functions. Or at least such works items should not saturate WQ_DFL_ACTIVE workers.) Wrt other uses of cgroup_mutex, I only see bpf_map_free_in_work queue_work(system_unbound_wq) bpf_map_free_deferred ops->map_free == cgroup_storage_map_free cgroup_lock() which is safe since it uses a different workqueue than system_wq. > To fix the problem, place cgroup_bpf_release works on cgroup_destroy_wq, > which can break the loop and solve the problem. Yes, it moves the problematic cgroup_mutex holder away from system_wq and cgroup_destroy_wq could not cause similar problems because there are no explicit waiter for particular work items or its flushing. > System wqs are for misc things which shouldn't create a large number > of concurrent work items. If something is going to generate > >WQ_DFL_ACTIVE(256) concurrent work > items, it should use its own dedicated workqueue. Actually, I'm not sure (because I lack workqueue knowledge) if producing less than WQ_DFL_ACTIVE work items completely eliminates the chance of two offending work items producing the wrong lock ordering. > Fixes: 4bfc0bb2c60e ("bpf: decouple the lifetime of cgroup_bpf from cgroup itself") I'm now indifferent whether this is needed (perhaps in the sense it is the _latest_ of multiple changes that contributed to possibility of this deadlock scenario). > Link: https://lore.kernel.org/cgroups/e90c32d2-2a85-4f28-9154-09c7d320cb60@xxxxxxxxxx/T/#t > Signed-off-by: Chen Ridong <chenridong@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > kernel/bpf/cgroup.c | 2 +- > kernel/cgroup/cgroup-internal.h | 1 + > kernel/cgroup/cgroup.c | 2 +- > 3 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) I have convinved myself now that you can put Reviewed-by: Michal Koutný <mkoutny@xxxxxxxx> Regards, Michal
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature