On Thu, Jul 16, 2020 at 02:58:41PM -0400, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: > ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 12:03 PM, Mathieu Desnoyers mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 11:46 AM, Mathieu Desnoyers > > mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > >> ----- On Jul 16, 2020, at 12:42 AM, Nicholas Piggin npiggin@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > >>> I should be more complete here, especially since I was complaining > >>> about unclear barrier comment :) > >>> > >>> > >>> CPU0 CPU1 > >>> a. user stuff 1. user stuff > >>> b. membarrier() 2. enter kernel > >>> c. smp_mb() 3. smp_mb__after_spinlock(); // in __schedule > >>> d. read rq->curr 4. rq->curr switched to kthread > >>> e. is kthread, skip IPI 5. switch_to kthread > >>> f. return to user 6. rq->curr switched to user thread > >>> g. user stuff 7. switch_to user thread > >>> 8. exit kernel > >>> 9. more user stuff > >>> > >>> What you're really ordering is a, g vs 1, 9 right? > >>> > >>> In other words, 9 must see a if it sees g, g must see 1 if it saw 9, > >>> etc. > >>> > >>> Userspace does not care where the barriers are exactly or what kernel > >>> memory accesses might be being ordered by them, so long as there is a > >>> mb somewhere between a and g, and 1 and 9. Right? > >> > >> This is correct. > > > > Actually, sorry, the above is not quite right. It's been a while > > since I looked into the details of membarrier. > > > > The smp_mb() at the beginning of membarrier() needs to be paired with a > > smp_mb() _after_ rq->curr is switched back to the user thread, so the > > memory barrier is between store to rq->curr and following user-space > > accesses. > > > > The smp_mb() at the end of membarrier() needs to be paired with the > > smp_mb__after_spinlock() at the beginning of schedule, which is > > between accesses to userspace memory and switching rq->curr to kthread. > > > > As to *why* this ordering is needed, I'd have to dig through additional > > scenarios from https://lwn.net/Articles/573436/. Or maybe Paul remembers ? > > Thinking further about this, I'm beginning to consider that maybe we have been > overly cautious by requiring memory barriers before and after store to rq->curr. > > If CPU0 observes a CPU1's rq->curr->mm which differs from its own process (current) > while running the membarrier system call, it necessarily means that CPU1 had > to issue smp_mb__after_spinlock when entering the scheduler, between any user-space > loads/stores and update of rq->curr. > > Requiring a memory barrier between update of rq->curr (back to current process's > thread) and following user-space memory accesses does not seem to guarantee > anything more than what the initial barrier at the beginning of __schedule already > provides, because the guarantees are only about accesses to user-space memory. > > Therefore, with the memory barrier at the beginning of __schedule, just observing that > CPU1's rq->curr differs from current should guarantee that a memory barrier was issued > between any sequentially consistent instructions belonging to the current process on > CPU1. > > Or am I missing/misremembering an important point here ? Is it correct to say that the switch_to operations in 5 and 7 include memory barriers? If they do, then skipping the IPI should be okay. The reason is as follows: The guarantee you need to enforce is that anything written by CPU0 before the membarrier() will be visible to CPU1 after it returns to user mode. Let's say that a writes to X and 9 reads from X. Then we have an instance of the Store Buffer pattern: CPU0 CPU1 a. Write X 6. Write rq->curr for user thread c. smp_mb() 7. switch_to memory barrier d. Read rq->curr 9. Read X In this pattern, the memory barriers make it impossible for both reads to miss their corresponding writes. Since d does fail to read 6 (it sees the earlier value stored by 4), 9 must read a. The other guarantee you need is that g on CPU0 will observe anything written by CPU1 in 1. This is easier to see, using the fact that 3 is a memory barrier and d reads from 4. Alan Stern