On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 12:48 PM, Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 09:46:08 -0700 Dima Zavin <dmitriyz@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> In codepaths that use the begin/retry interface for reading >> mems_allowed_seq with irqs disabled, there exists a race condition that >> stalls the patch process after only modifying a subset of the >> static_branch call sites. >> >> This problem manifested itself as a dead lock in the slub >> allocator, inside get_any_partial. The loop reads >> mems_allowed_seq value (via read_mems_allowed_begin), >> performs the defrag operation, and then verifies the consistency >> of mem_allowed via the read_mems_allowed_retry and the cookie >> returned by xxx_begin. The issue here is that both begin and retry >> first check if cpusets are enabled via cpusets_enabled() static branch. >> This branch can be rewritted dynamically (via cpuset_inc) if a new >> cpuset is created. The x86 jump label code fully synchronizes across >> all CPUs for every entry it rewrites. If it rewrites only one of the >> callsites (specifically the one in read_mems_allowed_retry) and then >> waits for the smp_call_function(do_sync_core) to complete while a CPU is >> inside the begin/retry section with IRQs off and the mems_allowed value >> is changed, we can hang. This is because begin() will always return 0 >> (since it wasn't patched yet) while retry() will test the 0 against >> the actual value of the seq counter. >> >> The fix is to cache the value that's returned by cpusets_enabled() at the >> top of the loop, and only operate on the seqcount (both begin and retry) if >> it was true. > > Tricky. Hence we should have a nice code comment somewhere describing > all of this. > >> --- a/include/linux/cpuset.h >> +++ b/include/linux/cpuset.h >> @@ -16,6 +16,11 @@ >> #include <linux/mm.h> >> #include <linux/jump_label.h> >> >> +struct cpuset_mems_cookie { >> + unsigned int seq; >> + bool was_enabled; >> +}; > > At cpuset_mems_cookie would be a good site - why it exists, what it > does, when it is used and how. Will do. I actually had a comment here but removed it in lieu of commit message :) Will put it back. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>