On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 01:31:57AM +0200, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote: > On Wed, Jun 12, 2024 at 03:37:55PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 12, 2024 at 02:33:05PM -0700, Jakub Kicinski wrote: > > > On Sun, 9 Jun 2024 10:27:12 +0200 Julia Lawall wrote: > > > > Since SLOB was removed, it is not necessary to use call_rcu > > > > when the callback only performs kmem_cache_free. Use > > > > kfree_rcu() directly. > > > > > > > > The changes were done using the following Coccinelle semantic patch. > > > > This semantic patch is designed to ignore cases where the callback > > > > function is used in another way. > > > > > > How does the discussion on: > > > [PATCH] Revert "batman-adv: prefer kfree_rcu() over call_rcu() with free-only callbacks" > > > https://lore.kernel.org/all/20240612133357.2596-1-linus.luessing@xxxxxxxxx/ > > > reflect on this series? IIUC we should hold off.. > > > > We do need to hold off for the ones in kernel modules (such as 07/14) > > where the kmem_cache is destroyed during module unload. > > > > OK, I might as well go through them... > > > > [PATCH 01/14] wireguard: allowedips: replace call_rcu by kfree_rcu for simple kmem_cache_free callback > > Needs to wait, see wg_allowedips_slab_uninit(). > > Right, this has exactly the same pattern as the batman-adv issue: > > void wg_allowedips_slab_uninit(void) > { > rcu_barrier(); > kmem_cache_destroy(node_cache); > } > > I'll hold off on sending that up until this matter is resolved. BTW, I think this whole thing might be caused by: a35d16905efc ("rcu: Add basic support for kfree_rcu() batching") The commit message there mentions: There is an implication with rcu_barrier() with this patch. Since the kfree_rcu() calls can be batched, and may not be handed yet to the RCU machinery in fact, the monitor may not have even run yet to do the queue_rcu_work(), there seems no easy way of implementing rcu_barrier() to wait for those kfree_rcu()s that are already made. So this means a kfree_rcu() followed by an rcu_barrier() does not imply that memory will be freed once rcu_barrier() returns. Before that, a kfree_rcu() used to just add a normal call_rcu() into the list, but with the function offset < 4096 as a special marker. So the kfree_rcu() calls would be treated alongside the other call_rcu() ones and thus affected by rcu_barrier(). Looks like that behavior is no more since this commit. Rather than getting rid of the batching, which seems good for efficiency, I wonder if the right fix to this would be adding a `should_destroy` boolean to kmem_cache, which kmem_cache_destroy() sets to true. And then right after it checks `if (number_of_allocations == 0) actually_destroy()`, and likewise on each kmem_cache_free(), it could check `if (should_destroy && number_of_allocations == 0) actually_destroy()`. This way, the work is delayed until it's safe to do so. This might also mitigate other lurking bugs of bad code that calls kmem_cache_destroy() before kmem_cache_free(). Jason