Hey, Op 03-10-12 09:45, Thomas Hellstrom schreef: > On 10/02/2012 10:03 AM, Daniel Vetter wrote: >> On Tue, Oct 02, 2012 at 08:46:32AM +0200, Thomas Hellstrom wrote: >>> On 10/01/2012 11:47 AM, Maarten Lankhorst wrote: >>>> I was doing a evil hack where I 'released' lru_lock to lockdep before doing the annotation >>>> for a blocking acquire, and left trylock annotations as they were. This made lockdep do the >>>> right thing. >>> I've never looked into how lockdep works. Is this something that can >>> be done permanently or just for testing >>> purposes? Although not related to this, is it possible to do >>> something similar to the trylock reversal in the >>> fault() code where mmap_sem() and reserve() change order using a >>> reserve trylock? >> lockdep just requires a bunch of annotations, is a compile-time configure >> option CONFIG_PROVE_LOCKING and if disabled, has zero overhead. And it's >> rather awesome in detected deadlocks and handling crazy locking schemes >> correctly: >> - correctly handles trylocks >> - correctly handles nested locking (i.e. grabbing a global lock, then >> grabbing subordinate locks in an unordered sequence since the global >> lock ensures that no deadlocks can happen). >> - any kinds of inversions with special contexts like hardirq, softirq >> - same for page-reclaim, i.e. it will yell if you could (potentially) >> deadlock because your shrinker grabs a lock that you hold while calling >> kmalloc. >> - there are special annotates for various subsystems, e.g. to check for >> del_timer_sync vs. locks held by that timer. Or the console_lock >> annotations I've just recently submitted. >> - all that with a really flexible set of annotation primitives that afaics >> should work for almost any insane locking scheme. The fact that Maarten >> could come up with proper reservation annotations without any changes to >> lockdep testifies this (he only had to fix a tiny thing to make it a bit >> more strict in a corner case). >> >> In short I think it's made of awesome. The only downside is that it lacks >> documentation, you have to read the code to understand it :( >> >> The reason I've suggested to Maarten to abolish the trylock_reservation >> within the lru_lock is that in that way lockdep only ever sees the >> trylock, and hence is less strict about complainig about deadlocks. But >> semantically it's an unconditional reserve. Maarten had some horrible >> hacks that leaked the lockdep annotations out of the new reservation code, >> which allowed ttm to be properly annotated. But those also reduced the >> usefulness for any other users of the reservation code, and so Maarten >> looked into whether he could remove that trylock dance in ttm. >> >> Imo having excellent lockdep support for cross-device reservations is a >> requirment, and ending up with less strict annotations for either ttm >> based drivers or other drivers is not good. And imo the ugly layering that >> Maarten had in his first proof-of-concept also indicates that something is >> amiss in the design. >> >> > So if I understand you correctly, the reservation changes in TTM are motivated by the > fact that otherwise, in the generic reservation code, lockdep can only be > annotated for a trylock and not a waiting lock, when it *is* in fact a waiting lock. > > I'm completely unfamiliar with setting up lockdep annotations, but the only place a > deadlock might occur is if the trylock fails and we do a wait_for_unreserve(). > Isn't it possible to annotate the call to wait_for_unreserve() just like an interruptible waiting lock > (that is always interrupted, but at least any deadlock will be catched?). That would not find all bugs, lockdep is meant to find even theoretical bugs, so annotating it as a waiting lock makes more sense. Otherwise lockdep will only barf when the initial trylock fails. ~Maarten -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html