On Wed, Feb 07, 2018 at 08:09:36AM -0800, Joel Fernandes wrote: > Hi Peter, > > On Wed, Feb 7, 2018 at 12:07 AM, Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Mon, Feb 05, 2018 at 04:49:03PM -0800, Joel Fernandes wrote: > > > >> [ 2115.359650] -(1)[106:kswapd0]================================= > >> [ 2115.359665] -(1)[106:kswapd0][ INFO: inconsistent lock state ] > >> [ 2115.359684] -(1)[106:kswapd0]4.9.60+ #2 Tainted: G W O > >> [ 2115.359699] -(1)[106:kswapd0]--------------------------------- > >> [ 2115.359715] -(1)[106:kswapd0]inconsistent {RECLAIM_FS-ON-W} -> > >> {IN-RECLAIM_FS-W} usage. > > > > Please don't wrap log output, this is unreadable :/ > > Sorry about that, here's the unwrapped output, I'll fix the commit > message in next rev: https://pastebin.com/e0BNGkaN So if you trim that leading garbage: "[ 2115.359650] -(1)[106:kswapd0]" you instantly have half you screen back. > > Also, the output is from an ancient kernel and doesn't match the current > > code. > > Right, however the driver hasn't changed and I don't see immediately > how lockdep handles this differently upstream, so I thought of fixing > it upstream. Well, the annotation got a complete rewrite. Granted, it _should_ be similar, but the output will be different. > The bail out happens when GFP_FS is *not* set. Argh, reading is hard. > Lockdep reports this issue when GFP_FS is infact set, and we enter > this path and acquire the lock. So lockdep seems to be doing the right > thing however by design it is reporting a false-positive. So I'm not seeing how its a false positive. fs/inode.c sets a different lock class per filesystem type. So recursing on an i_mutex within a filesystem does sound dodgy. > The real issue is that the lock being acquired is of the same lock > class and a different lock instance is acquired under GFP_FS that > happens to be of the same class. > > So the issue seems to me to be: > Process A kswapd > --------- ------ > acquire i_mutex Enter RECLAIM_FS > > Enter RECLAIM_FS acquire different i_mutex That's not a false positive, that's a 2 process way of writing i_mutex recursion. What are the rules of acquiring two i_mutexes within a filesystem? > Neil tried to fix this sometime back: > https://www.mail-archive.com/linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/msg623909.html > but it was kind of NAK'ed. So that got nacked because Neil tried to fix it in the vfs core. Also not entirely sure that's the same problem. -- 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>