On Fri, Nov 26 2021 at 23:16, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Fri, Nov 26, 2021 at 06:09:10PM +0100, Peter Zijlstra wrote: >> >> - if (unlikely(ti_work & EXIT_TO_USER_MODE_WORK)) >> + if (unlikely(ti_work & (EXIT_TO_USER_MODE_WORK | _TIF_UMCG))) >> ti_work = exit_to_user_mode_loop(regs, ti_work); >> >> arch_exit_to_user_mode_prepare(regs, ti_work); > > Thomas, since you're looking at this. I'm not quite sure I got this > right. The intent is that when _TIF_UMCG is set (and it is never cleared > until the task unregisters) it is called at least once. Right. > The thinking is that if umcg_wait() gets interrupted, we'll drop out, > handle the signal and then resume the wait, which can obviously happen > any number of times. Right. > It's just that I'm never quite sure where signal crud happens; I'm > assuming handle_signal_work() simply mucks about with regs (sets sp and > ip etc.. to the signal stack) and drops out of kernel mode, and on > re-entry we do this whole merry cycle once again. But I never actually > dug that deep. Yes. It sets up the signal frame and once the loop is left because there are no more TIF flags to handle it drops back to user space into the signal handler. That returns to the kernel via sys_[rt_]sigreturn() which undoes the regs damage either by restoring the previous state or fiddling it to restart the syscall instead of dropping back to user space. So yes, this should work, but I hate the sticky nature of TIF_UMCG. I have no real good idea how to avoid that yet, but let me think about it some more. Thanks, tglx