On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 5:06 PM, Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > So I'm poking around the preemption code and stumbled upon: > > drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_gem.c: set_need_resched(); > drivers/gpu/drm/ttm/ttm_bo_vm.c: set_need_resched(); > drivers/gpu/drm/ttm/ttm_bo_vm.c: set_need_resched(); > drivers/gpu/drm/udl/udl_gem.c: set_need_resched(); > > All these sites basically do: > > while (!trylock()) > yield(); > > which is a horrible and broken locking pattern. > > Firstly its deadlock prone, suppose the faulting process is a FIFOn+1 > task that preempted the lock holder at FIFOn. > > Secondly the implementation is worse than usual by abusing > VM_FAULT_NOPAGE, which is supposed to install a PTE so that the fault > doesn't retry, but you're using it as a get out of fault path. And > you're using set_need_resched() which is not something a driver should > _ever_ touch. > > Now I'm going to take away set_need_resched() -- and while you can > 'reimplement' it using set_thread_flag() you're not going to do that > because it will be broken due to changes to the preempt code. > > So please as to fix ASAP and don't allow anybody to trick you into > merging silly things like that again ;-) The set_need_resched in i915_gem.c:i915_gem_fault can actually be removed. It was there to give the error handler a chance to sneak in and reset the hw/sw tracking when the gpu is dead. That hack goes back to the days when the locking around our error handler was somewhere between nonexistent and totally broken, nowadays we keep things from live-locking by a bit of magic in i915_mutex_lock_interruptible. I'll whip up a patch to rip this out. I'll also check that our testsuite properly exercises this path (needs a bit of work on a quick look for better coverage). The one in ttm is just bonghits to shut up lockdep: ttm can recurse into it's own pagefault handler and then deadlock, the trylock just keeps lockdep quiet. We've had that bug arise in drm/i915 due to some fun userspace did and now have testcases for them. The right solution to fix this is to use copy_to|from_user_atomic in ttm everywhere it holds locks and have slowpaths which drops locks, copies stuff into a temp allocation and then continues. At least that's how we've fixed all those inversions in i915-gem. I'm not volunteering to fix this ;-) The one in udl just looks like copypasta from i915, without any justification (at least I don't see any) for why it's there. Probably can die, too, since there isn't any gpu to reset on usb display-link devices ... Cheers, Daniel -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation +41 (0) 79 365 57 48 - http://blog.ffwll.ch _______________________________________________ Intel-gfx mailing list Intel-gfx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/intel-gfx