Dave, On Tue, Apr 13 2021 at 08:15, Dave Chinner wrote: > On Mon, Apr 12, 2021 at 05:20:53PM +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: >> On Wed, Apr 07 2021 at 07:22, Dave Chinner wrote: >> > And, FWIW, I'm also aware of the problems that RT kernels have with >> > the use of bit spinlocks and being unable to turn them into sleeping >> > mutexes by preprocessor magic. I don't care about that either, >> > because dentry cache... >> >> In the dentry cache it's a non-issue. > > Incorrect. I'm impressed about your detailed knowledge of something you do not care about in the first place. >> RT does not have a problem with bit spinlocks per se, it depends on how >> they are used and what nests inside. Most of them are just kept as bit >> spinlocks because the lock held, and therefore preempt disabled times >> are small and no other on RT conflicting operations happen inside. >> >> In the case at hand this is going to be a problem because inode->i_lock >> nests inside the bit spinlock and we can't make inode->i_lock a raw >> spinlock because it protects way heavier weight code pathes as well. > > Yes, that's exactly the "problem" I'm refering to. And I don't care, > precisely because, well, dentry cache.... > > THat is, the dcache calls wake_up_all() from under the > hlist_bl_lock() in __d_lookup_done(). That ends up in > __wake_up_common_lock() which takes a spin lock embedded inside a > wait_queue_head. That's not a raw spinlock, either, so we already > have this "spinlock inside bit lock" situation with the dcache usage > of hlist_bl. Sure, but you are missing that RT solves that by substituting the wait_queue with a swait_queue, which does not suffer from that. But that can't be done for the inode::i_lock case for various reasons. > FYI, this dentry cache behaviour was added to the dentry cache in > 2016 by commit d9171b934526 ("parallel lookups machinery, part 4 > (and last)"), so it's not like it's a new thing, either. Really? I wasn't aware of that. Thanks for the education. > If you want to make hlist_bl RT safe, then re-implement it behind > the scenes for RT enabled kernels. All it takes is more memory > usage for the hash table + locks, but that's something that non-RT > people should not be burdened with caring about.... I'm well aware that anything outside of @fromorbit universe is not interesting to you, but I neverless want to take the opportunity to express my appreciation for your truly caring and collaborative attitude versus interests of others who unfortunately do no share that universe. Thanks, tglx