Hey, Op 14-02-13 11:22, Arnd Bergmann schreef: > On Thursday 07 February 2013, Maarten Lankhorst wrote: > > Hi Maarten, > > I cannot help a lot on this patch set, but there are a few things that > I noticed when reading it. > >> Functions: >> ---------- >> >> mutex_reserve_lock, and mutex_reserve_lock_interruptible: >> Lock a buffer with a reservation_id set. reservation_id must not be >> set to 0, since this is a special value that means no reservation_id. > I think the entire description should go into a file in the Documentation > directory, to make it easier to find without looking up the git history. > > For the purpose of documenting this, it feels a little strange to > talk about "buffers" here. Obviously this is what you are using the > locks for, but it sounds like that is not the only possible use > case. It is the idea it will end up in Documentation, however I had a hard time even getting people to review the code, so I found it easier to keep code and documentation in sync by keeping it into the commit log when I was amending things. But yes it's the use case I use it for. The generic use case would be if you had a number of equal locks you want to take in an arbitrary order without deadlocking or a lock protecting all those locks*. *) In the eyes of lockdep you still take one of those locks, and nest all those locks you take into that lock. >> These functions will return -EDEADLK instead of -EAGAIN if >> reservation_id is the same as the reservation_id that's attempted to >> lock the mutex with, since in that case you presumably attempted to >> lock the same lock twice. > Since the user always has to check the return value, would it be > possible to provide only the interruptible kind of this function > but not the non-interruptible one? In general, interruptible locks > are obviously harder to use, but they are much user friendlier when > something goes wrong. I agree that in general you want to use the interruptible versions as much as possible, but there are some cases in ttm where it is desirable to lock non-interruptibly. >> mutex_reserve_lock_slow and mutex_reserve_lock_intr_slow: >> Similar to mutex_reserve_lock, except it won't backoff with -EAGAIN. >> This is useful when mutex_reserve_lock failed with -EAGAIN, and you >> unreserved all buffers so no deadlock can occur. > Are these meant to be used a lot? If not, maybe prefix them with __mutex_ > instead of mutex_. It is a common path in case of contestion. The example lock_execbuf from the commit log used it. When you use the mutex_reserve_lock calls, you'll have to add calls to the *_slow variants too when those return -EAGAIN. >> diff --git a/include/linux/mutex.h b/include/linux/mutex.h >> index 9121595..602c247 100644 >> --- a/include/linux/mutex.h >> +++ b/include/linux/mutex.h >> @@ -62,6 +62,11 @@ struct mutex { >> #endif >> }; >> >> +struct ticket_mutex { >> + struct mutex base; >> + atomic_long_t reservation_id; >> +}; > Have you considered changing the meaning of the "count" member > of the mutex in the case where a ticket mutex is used? That would > let you use an unmodified structure. I have considered it, but I never found a good way to make that happen. mutex_lock and mutex_unlock are currently still used when only a single buffer needs to be locked. Thanks for the review! ~Maarten _______________________________________________ dri-devel mailing list dri-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dri-devel