On Tue, Feb 22, 2022 at 09:27:23AM +0100, Jan Kara wrote: > On Thu 17-02-22 20:10:03, Byungchul Park wrote: > > [ 7.009608] =================================================== > > [ 7.009613] DEPT: Circular dependency has been detected. > > [ 7.009614] 5.17.0-rc1-00014-g8a599299c0cb-dirty #30 Tainted: G W > > [ 7.009616] --------------------------------------------------- > > [ 7.009617] summary > > [ 7.009618] --------------------------------------------------- > > [ 7.009618] *** DEADLOCK *** > > [ 7.009618] > > [ 7.009619] context A > > [ 7.009619] [S] (unknown)(&(bit_wait_table + i)->dmap:0) > > [ 7.009621] [W] down_write(&ei->i_data_sem:0) > > [ 7.009623] [E] event(&(bit_wait_table + i)->dmap:0) > > [ 7.009624] > > [ 7.009625] context B > > [ 7.009625] [S] down_read(&ei->i_data_sem:0) > > [ 7.009626] [W] wait(&(bit_wait_table + i)->dmap:0) > > [ 7.009627] [E] up_read(&ei->i_data_sem:0) > > [ 7.009628] > > Looking into this I have noticed that Dept here tracks bitlocks (buffer > locks in particular) but it apparently treats locks on all buffers as one > locking class so it conflates lock on superblock buffer with a lock on > extent tree block buffer. These are wastly different locks with different > locking constraints. So to avoid false positives in filesystems we will > need to add annotations to differentiate locks on different buffers (based > on what the block is used for). Similarly how we e.g. annotate i_rwsem for Exactly yes. All synchronization objects should be classfied by what it is used for. Even though it's already classified by the location of the code initializing the object - roughly and normally saying we can expect those have the same constraint, we are actually assigning different constraints according to the subtle design esp. in file systems. It would also help the code have better documentation ;-) I'm willing to add annotations for that to fs. > different inodes. > > Honza > -- > Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> > SUSE Labs, CR