On Sun, Oct 04, 2020 at 03:22:09PM +0000, Alex Belits wrote: > > On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 16:44 +0200, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > > > @@ -268,7 +269,8 @@ static void tick_nohz_full_kick(void) > > > */ > > > void tick_nohz_full_kick_cpu(int cpu) > > > { > > > - if (!tick_nohz_full_cpu(cpu)) > > > + smp_rmb(); > > > > What is it ordering? > > ll_isol_flags will be read in task_isolation_on_cpu(), that accrss > should be ordered against writing in > task_isolation_kernel_enter(), fast_task_isolation_cpu_cleanup() > and task_isolation_start(). > > Since task_isolation_on_cpu() is often called for multiple CPUs in a > sequence, it would be wasteful to include a barrier inside it. Then I think you meant a full barrier: smp_mb() > > > > + if (!tick_nohz_full_cpu(cpu) || task_isolation_on_cpu(cpu)) > > > return; > > > > You can't simply ignore an IPI. There is always a reason for a > > nohz_full CPU > > to be kicked. Something triggered a tick dependency. It can be posix > > cpu timers > > for example, or anything. > > I realize that this is unusual, however the idea is that while the task > is running in isolated mode in userspace, we assume that from this CPUs > point of view whatever is happening in kernel, can wait until CPU is > back in kernel and when it first enters kernel from this mode, it > should "catch up" with everything that happened in its absence. > task_isolation_kernel_enter() is supposed to do that, so by the time > anything should be done involving the rest of the kernel, CPU is back > to normal. You can't assume that. If something needs the tick, this can't wait. If the user did something wrong, such as setting a posix cpu timer to an isolated task, that's his fault and the kernel has to stick with correctness and kick that task out of isolation mode. > > It is application's responsibility to avoid triggering things that > break its isolation Precisely. > so the application assumes that everything that > involves entering kernel will not be available while it is isolated. We can't do things that way and just ignore IPIs. You need to solve the source of the noise, not the symptoms. Thanks.