On 06/07/23 00:23, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > Le Wed, Jul 05, 2023 at 07:12:53PM +0100, Valentin Schneider a écrit : >> +bool ct_set_cpu_work(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int work) >> +{ >> + struct context_tracking *ct = per_cpu_ptr(&context_tracking, cpu); >> + unsigned int old_work; >> + bool ret = false; >> + >> + preempt_disable(); >> + >> + old_work = atomic_read(&ct->work); >> + /* >> + * Try setting the work until either >> + * - the target CPU no longer accepts any more deferred work >> + * - the work has been set >> + */ >> + while (!(old_work & CONTEXT_WORK_DISABLED) && !ret) > > Isn't there a race here where you may have missed a CPU that just entered in > user and you eventually disturb it? > Yes, unfortunately. >> + ret = atomic_try_cmpxchg(&ct->work, &old_work, old_work | work); >> + >> + preempt_enable(); >> + return ret; >> +} > [...] >> @@ -100,14 +158,19 @@ static noinstr void ct_kernel_exit_state(int offset) >> */ >> static noinstr void ct_kernel_enter_state(int offset) >> { >> + struct context_tracking *ct = this_cpu_ptr(&context_tracking); >> int seq; >> + unsigned int work; >> >> + work = ct_work_fetch(ct); > > So this adds another fully ordered operation on user <-> kernel transition. > How many such IPIs can we expect? > Despite having spent quite a lot of time on that question, I think I still only have a hunch. Poking around RHEL systems, I'd say 99% of the problematic IPIs are instruction patching and TLB flushes. Staring at the code, there's quite a lot of smp_calls for which it's hard to say whether the target CPUs can actually be isolated or not (e.g. the CPU comes from a cpumask shoved in a struct that was built using data from another struct of uncertain origins), but then again some of them don't need to hook into context_tracking. Long story short: I /think/ we can consider that number to be fairly small, but there could be more lurking in the shadows. > If this is just about a dozen, can we stuff them in the state like in the > following? We can potentially add more of them especially on 64 bits we could > afford 30 different works, this is just shrinking the RCU extended quiescent > state counter space. Worst case that can happen is that RCU misses 65535 > idle/user <-> kernel transitions and delays a grace period... > I'm trying to grok how this impacts RCU, IIUC most of RCU mostly cares about the even/odd-ness of the thing, and rcu_gp_fqs() cares about the actual value but only to check if it has changed over time (rcu_dynticks_in_eqs_since() only does a !=). I'm rephrasing here to make sure I get it - is it then that the worst case here is 2^(dynticks_counter_size) transitions happen between saving the dynticks snapshot and checking it again, so RCU waits some more?