On Fri, Oct 15, 2021 at 02:56:59PM +0200, Christian König wrote: > > > Am 15.10.21 um 14:52 schrieb Maarten Lankhorst: > > Op 15-10-2021 om 14:07 schreef Christian König: > > > Am 15.10.21 um 13:57 schrieb Maarten Lankhorst: > > > > Commit 7fa828cb9265 ("dma-buf: use new iterator in dma_resv_test_signaled") > > > > accidentally forgot to test whether the dma-buf is actually signaled, breaking > > > > pretty much everything depending on it. > > > NAK, the dma_resv_for_each_fence_unlocked() returns only unsignaled fences. So the code is correct as it is. > > That seems like it might cause some unexpected behavior when that function is called with one of the fence locks held, if it calls dma_fence_signal(). > > > > Could it be changed to only test the signaled bit, in which case this patch would still be useful? > > That's exactly what I suggested as well, but Daniel was against that because > of concerns around barriers. I don't want open-coded bitmask tests, because the current code we have in dma-fence.c is missing barriers, and that doesn't get better if we spread that all around. But if you want this then wrap it in some static inline in dma-fence.h or so, that's fine. Just not open-coded outside of these files, like i915-gem code does a lot (which imo is just plain a disaster). > > Or at least add some lockdep annotations, that fence->lock might be taken. So any hangs would at least be easy to spot with lockdep. > > That should be trivial doable. might_lock is trivial to add, but it's more complicated. The spinlock is provided by the fence code, which means there's lots of different lockdep classes. A might_lock on fence->lock is better than nothing, but maybe not good enough. What we might need are a few more pieces: - a fake dma-fence spinlock lockdep key, maybe call it dma_fence_lock_key or so. - in dma_fence_init we lock dma_fence_lock_key, and then might_lock the actual spinlock passed as an argument. This establishes dependencies from that fake lock to all real fence spinlocks - anywhere we need a might lock we take dma_fence_lock_key instead The potential issue here is that this might result in lockdep splats in cases where fences somehow naturally nest (maybe drm/sched job fence vs hw fence). So perhaps too much. -Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch