On Tue, Jan 02, 2024 at 10:19:47AM +0800, Aiqun Yu (Maria) wrote: > On 12/29/2023 6:20 AM, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > > On Wed, Dec 13, 2023 at 12:27:05PM -0600, Eric W. Biederman wrote: > > > Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > > I think the right way to fix this is to pass a boolean flag to > > > > queued_write_lock_slowpath() to let it know whether it can re-enable > > > > interrupts while checking whether _QW_WAITING is set. > > > > > > Yes. It seems to make sense to distinguish between write_lock_irq and > > > write_lock_irqsave and fix this for all of write_lock_irq. > > > > I wasn't planning on doing anything here, but Hillf kind of pushed me into > > it. I think it needs to be something like this. Compile tested only. > > If it ends up getting used, > Happy new year! Thank you! I know your new year is a few weeks away still ;-) > > -void __lockfunc queued_write_lock_slowpath(struct qrwlock *lock) > > +void __lockfunc queued_write_lock_slowpath(struct qrwlock *lock, bool irq) > > { > > int cnts; > > @@ -82,7 +83,11 @@ void __lockfunc queued_write_lock_slowpath(struct qrwlock *lock) > Also a new state showed up after the current design: > 1. locked flag with _QW_WAITING, while irq enabled. > 2. And this state will be only in interrupt context. > 3. lock->wait_lock is hold by the write waiter. > So per my understanding, a different behavior also needed to be done in > queued_write_lock_slowpath: > when (unlikely(in_interrupt())) , get the lock directly. I don't think so. Remember that write_lock_irq() can only be called in process context, and when interrupts are enabled. > So needed to be done in release path. This is to address Hillf's concern on > possibility of deadlock. Hillf's concern is invalid. > > /* When no more readers or writers, set the locked flag */ > > do { > > + if (irq) > > + local_irq_enable(); > I think write_lock_irqsave also needs to be take account. So > loal_irq_save(flags) should be take into account here. If we did want to support the same kind of spinning with interrupts enabled for write_lock_irqsave(), we'd want to pass the flags in and do local_irq_restore(), but I don't know how we'd support write_lock_irq() if we did that -- can we rely on passing in 0 for flags meaning "reenable" on all architectures? And ~0 meaning "don't reenable" on all architectures? That all seems complicated, so I didn't do that.