On 11 September 2013 18:48, Rafael J. Wysocki <rjw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 02:08:44 PM Viresh Kumar wrote: >> That looked like a straight forward issue/bug to me and so I haven't >> gotten deep into it.. > > Which you should always do when you're going to deal with concurrency issues. > Even if they appear to be obvious, they often are far from that, like in this > case. /me Nods >> Scenario 2: >> -------------- >> Governor is changing freq and has called __cpufreq_driver_target(). >> At the same time we are changing scaling_{min|max}_freq from >> sysfs, which would eventually end up calling governors: >> CPUFREQ_GOV_LIMITS notification, that will also call: >> __cpufreq_driver_target().. >> >> So, we eventually have two concurrent calls to ->target() and we >> don't really know how hardware will behave in this case.. Most of >> the implementations of ->target() routines just go and change >> freq/voltage without checking if we are already in progress of doing >> that (i.e. based on expectation that this call is not re entrant).. >> >> Now anything can happen at hardware level, which I don't have >> all insight of :( > > That is more theoretical, however. Maybe we can get more deeper into it then :) Platform have something like this in their target() A. If new freq is more than old: Increase voltage B. Change freq C. If new freq is less than old: decrease voltage Now, two concurrent calls to target are X and Y, where X is trying to increase freq and Y is trying to decrease it.. And this is the sequence that followed due to races.. X.A: voltage increased for larger freq Y.A: nothing happened here Y.B: freq decreased Y.C: voltage decreased X.B: freq increased X.C: nothing happened.. We ended up setting a freq which is not supported by the voltage we have set.. That will probably make clock to CPU unstable and system wouldn't be workable anymore... And so I think even this case must also get some space in the changelog :) -- 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