On Thu, 29 Jan 2009 12:13:32 +1030 Rusty Russell <rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thursday 29 January 2009 06:14:40 Andrew Morton wrote: > > It's vulnerable to the same deadlock, I think? Suppose we have: > ... > > - A calls work_on_cpu() and takes woc_mutex. > > > > - Before function_which_takes_L() has started to execute, task B takes L > > then calls work_on_cpu() and task B blocks on woc_mutex. > > > > - Now function_which_takes_L() runs, and blocks on L > > Agreed, but now it's a fairly simple case. Both sides have to take lock L, and both have to call work_on_cpu. > > Workqueues are more generic and widespread, and an amazing amount of stuff gets called from them. That's why I felt uncomfortable with removing the one known problematic caller. > hm. it's a bit of a timebomb. y'know, the original way in which acpi-cpufreq did this is starting to look attractive. Migrate self to that CPU then just call the dang function. Slow, but no deadlocks (I think)? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe cpufreq" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html