Am 26.03.21 um 15:55 schrieb Jens Axboe: > On 3/26/21 8:53 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >> On 3/26/21 8:45 AM, Stefan Metzmacher wrote: >>> Am 26.03.21 um 15:43 schrieb Stefan Metzmacher: >>>> Am 26.03.21 um 15:38 schrieb Jens Axboe: >>>>> On 3/26/21 7:59 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>>>> On 3/26/21 7:54 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>>>>>> The KILL after STOP deadlock still exists. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In which tree? Sounds like you're still on the old one with that >>>>>>> incremental you sent, which wasn't complete. >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Does io_wq_manager() exits without cleaning up on SIGKILL? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> No, it should kill up in all cases. I'll try your stop + kill, I just >>>>>>> tested both of them separately and didn't observe anything. I also ran >>>>>>> your io_uring-cp example (and found a bug in the example, fixed and >>>>>>> pushed), fwiw. >>>>>> >>>>>> I can reproduce this one! I'll take a closer look. >>>>> >>>>> OK, that one is actually pretty straight forward - we rely on cleaning >>>>> up on exit, but for fatal cases, get_signal() will call do_exit() for us >>>>> and never return. So we might need a special case in there to deal with >>>>> that, or some other way of ensuring that fatal signal gets processed >>>>> correctly for IO threads. >>>> >>>> And if (fatal_signal_pending(current)) doesn't prevent get_signal() from being called? >>> >>> Ah, we're still in the first get_signal() from SIGSTOP, correct? >> >> Yes exactly, we're waiting in there being stopped. So we either need to >> check to something ala: >> >> relock: >> + if (current->flags & PF_IO_WORKER && fatal_signal_pending(current)) >> + return false; >> >> to catch it upfront and from the relock case, or add: >> >> fatal: >> + if (current->flags & PF_IO_WORKER) >> + return false; >> >> to catch it in the fatal section. > > Can you try this? Not crazy about adding a special case, but I don't > think there's any way around this one. And should be pretty cheap, as > we're already pulling in ->flags right above anyway. > > diff --git a/kernel/signal.c b/kernel/signal.c > index 5ad8566534e7..5b75fbe3d2d6 100644 > --- a/kernel/signal.c > +++ b/kernel/signal.c > @@ -2752,6 +2752,15 @@ bool get_signal(struct ksignal *ksig) > */ > current->flags |= PF_SIGNALED; > > + /* > + * PF_IO_WORKER threads will catch and exit on fatal signals > + * themselves. They have cleanup that must be performed, so > + * we cannot call do_exit() on their behalf. coredumps also > + * do not apply to them. > + */ > + if (current->flags & PF_IO_WORKER) > + return false; > + > if (sig_kernel_coredump(signr)) { > if (print_fatal_signals) > print_fatal_signal(ksig->info.si_signo); > I guess not before next week, but if it resolves the problem for you, I guess it would be good to get this into rc5. metze