On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 08:36:44AM -0600, Keith Busch wrote: > On Thu, Jun 13, 2024 at 07:11:52PM +0530, Nilay Shroff wrote: > > On 6/13/24 18:26, Keith Busch wrote: > > > But that's not the problem for the rcu case. It's the last line that's > > > the problem: > > > > > > list->prev->next = list; > > > > > > We can't change forward pointers for any element being detached from > > > @head because a reader iterating the list may see that new pointer value > > > and end up in the wrong list, breaking iteration. A synchronize rcu > > > needs to happen before forward pointers can be mucked with, so it still > > > needs to be done in two steps. Oh bother... > > > > Agree and probably we may break it down using this API: > > static inline void list_cut_rcu(struct list_head *list, > > struct list_head *head, struct list_head *entry, > > void (*sync)(void)) > > { > > list->next = entry; > > list->prev = head->prev; > > __list_del(entry->prev, head); > > sync(); > > entry->prev = list; > > list->prev->next = list; > > } > > Yes, that's the pattern, but I think we need an _srcu() variant: the > "sync" callback needs to know the srcu_struct. Just make a helper function like this: static void my_synchronize_srcu(void) { synchronize_srcu(&my_srcu_struct); } Or am I missing something subtle here? Thanx, Paul