----- On Jul 17, 2020, at 10:51 AM, Alan Stern stern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On Fri, Jul 17, 2020 at 09:39:25AM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >> ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 5:24 PM, Alan Stern stern@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> >> > On Thu, Jul 16, 2020 at 02:58:41PM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >> >> ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 12:03 PM, Mathieu Desnoyers >> >> mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> >> >> >> > ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 11:46 AM, Mathieu Desnoyers >> >> > mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> >> > >> >> >> ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 12:42 AM, Nicholas Piggin npiggin@xxxxxxxxx wrote: >> >> >>> I should be more complete here, especially since I was complaining >> >> >>> about unclear barrier comment :) >> >> >>> >> >> >>> >> >> >>> CPU0 CPU1 >> >> >>> a. user stuff 1. user stuff >> >> >>> b. membarrier() 2. enter kernel >> >> >>> c. smp_mb() 3. smp_mb__after_spinlock(); // in __schedule >> >> >>> d. read rq->curr 4. rq->curr switched to kthread >> >> >>> e. is kthread, skip IPI 5. switch_to kthread >> >> >>> f. return to user 6. rq->curr switched to user thread >> >> >>> g. user stuff 7. switch_to user thread >> >> >>> 8. exit kernel >> >> >>> 9. more user stuff > > ... > >> >> Requiring a memory barrier between update of rq->curr (back to current process's >> >> thread) and following user-space memory accesses does not seem to guarantee >> >> anything more than what the initial barrier at the beginning of __schedule >> >> already >> >> provides, because the guarantees are only about accesses to user-space memory. > > ... > >> > Is it correct to say that the switch_to operations in 5 and 7 include >> > memory barriers? If they do, then skipping the IPI should be okay. >> > >> > The reason is as follows: The guarantee you need to enforce is that >> > anything written by CPU0 before the membarrier() will be visible to CPU1 >> > after it returns to user mode. Let's say that a writes to X and 9 >> > reads from X. >> > >> > Then we have an instance of the Store Buffer pattern: >> > >> > CPU0 CPU1 >> > a. Write X 6. Write rq->curr for user thread >> > c. smp_mb() 7. switch_to memory barrier >> > d. Read rq->curr 9. Read X >> > >> > In this pattern, the memory barriers make it impossible for both reads >> > to miss their corresponding writes. Since d does fail to read 6 (it >> > sees the earlier value stored by 4), 9 must read a. >> > >> > The other guarantee you need is that g on CPU0 will observe anything >> > written by CPU1 in 1. This is easier to see, using the fact that 3 is a >> > memory barrier and d reads from 4. >> >> Right, and Nick's reply involving pairs of loads/stores on each side >> clarifies the situation even further. > > The key part of my reply was the question: "Is it correct to say that > the switch_to operations in 5 and 7 include memory barriers?" From the > text quoted above and from Nick's reply, it seems clear that they do > not. I remember that switch_mm implies it, but not switch_to. The scenario that triggered this discussion is when the scheduler does a lazy tlb entry/exit, which is basically switch from a user task to a kernel thread without changing the mm, and usually switching back afterwards. This optimization means the rq->curr mm temporarily differs, which prevent IPIs from being sent by membarrier, but without involving a switch_mm. This requires explicit memory barriers either on entry/exit of lazy tlb mode, or explicit barriers in the scheduler for those special-cases. > I agree with Nick: A memory barrier is needed somewhere between the > assignment at 6 and the return to user mode at 8. Otherwise you end up > with the Store Buffer pattern having a memory barrier on only one side, > and it is well known that this arrangement does not guarantee any > ordering. Yes, I see this now. I'm still trying to wrap my head around why the memory barrier at the end of membarrier() needs to be paired with a scheduler barrier though. > One thing I don't understand about all this: Any context switch has to > include a memory barrier somewhere, but both you and Nick seem to be > saying that steps 6 and 7 don't include (or don't need) any memory > barriers. What am I missing? All context switch have the smp_mb__before_spinlock at the beginning of __schedule(), which I suspect is what you refer to. However this barrier is before the store to rq->curr, not after. Thanks, Mathieu -- Mathieu Desnoyers EfficiOS Inc. http://www.efficios.com