On Wed, May 31, 2023 at 09:51:41AM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote: > On 30.05.23 18:22, Luis Chamberlain wrote: > > On Mon, May 29, 2023 at 09:55:15PM -0400, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > On Mon, May 29, 2023 at 11:18 AM Johan Hovold <johan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > I took a closer look at some of the modules that failed to load and > > > > noticed a pattern in that they have dependencies that are needed by more > > > > than one device. > > > > > > Ok, this is a "maybe something like this" RFC series of two patches - > > > one trivial one to re-organize things a bit so that we can then do the > > > real one which uses a filter based on the inode pointer to return an > > > "idempotent return value" for module loads that share the same inode. > > > > > > It's entirely untested, and since I'm on the road I'm going to not > > > really be able to test it. It compiles for me, and the code looks > > > fairly straightforward, but it's probably buggy. > > > > > > It's very loosely based on Luis' attempt, but it > > > (a) is internal to module loading > > > (b) uses a reliable cookie > > > (c) doesn't leave the cookie around randomly for later > > > (d) has seen absolutely no testing > > > > > > Put another way: if somebody wants to play with this, please treat it > > > as a starting point, not the final thing. You might need to debug > > > things, and fix silly mistakes. > > > > > > The idea is to just have a simple hash list of currently executing > > > module loads, protected by a trivial spinlock. Every module loader > > > adds itself to the right hash list, and if they were the *first* one > > > (ie no other pending module loads for that inode), will actually do > > > the module load. > > > > > > Everybody who *isn't* the first one will just wait for completion and > > > return the same error code that the first one returned. > > > > That's also a hell much more snazzier MODULE_DEBUG_AUTOLOAD_DUPS if we > > ever wanted to do something similar there if we wanted to also > > join request_module() calls, instead of it hiding under debug. > > > > > This is technically bogus. The first one might fail due to arguments. > > > > For boot it's fine, as I can't think of boot wanting to support trying > > to load a module with different arguments but who knows. But I can't > > see it sensible to issue concurrent multiple requests for modules > > with different arguments without waiting in userspace for the first > > to fail. > > > > Even post-boot, doing that sounds rather insane, but it would certainly > > be a compromise and should probably be clearly documented. I think just > > a comment acknolwedging that corner case seems sensible. > > > > Because we won't be able to get the arguments until we process the > > module, so it would be too late for this optimization on kread. So it is > > why I had also stuck to the original feature being in kread, as then it > > provides a uniq kread call and the caller is aware of it. But indeed I > > had not considered the effects of arguments. > > > > Lucas, any thoughts from modules kmod userspace perspective into > > supporting anyone likely issuing concurrent modules requests with > > differing arguments? > > > > > So the cookie shouldn't be just the inode, it should be the inode and > > > a hash of the arguments or something like that. > > > > Personally I think it's a fine optimization without the arguments. > > > > > But it is what it is, > > > and apart from possible show-stopper bugs this is no worse than the > > > failed "exclusive write deny" attempt. IOW - maybe worth trying? > > > > The only thing I can think of is allowing threads other than the > > first one to complete before the one that actually loaded the > > module. I thought about this race for module auto-loading, see > > the comment in kmod_dup_request_announce(), so that just > > further delays the completion to other thread with a stupid > > queue_work(). That seems more important for module auto-loading > > duplicates than for boot finit_module() duplicates. But not sure > > if odering matters in the end due to a preemtible kernel and maybe > > that concern is hysteria. > > > > > And if *that* didn't sell people on this patch series, I don't know > > > what will. I should be in marketing! Two drink minimums, here I come! > > > > Sold: > > > > on 255 vcpus 0 duplicates found with this setup: > > > > root@kmod ~ # cat /sys/kernel/debug/modules/stats > > Mods ever loaded 66 > > Mods failed on kread 0 > > Mods failed on decompress 0 > > Mods failed on becoming 0 > > Mods failed on load 0 > > Total module size 11268096 > > Total mod text size 4149248 > > Failed kread bytes 0 > > Failed decompress bytes 0 > > Failed becoming bytes 0 > > Failed kmod bytes 0 > > Virtual mem wasted bytes 0 > > Average mod size 170729 > > Average mod text size 62868 > > > > So: > > > > Tested-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> > > > > In terms of bootup timing: > > > > Before: > > Startup finished in 41.653s (kernel) + 44.305s (userspace) = 1min 25.958s > > graphical.target reached after 44.178s in userspace. > > After: > > Startup finished in 23.995s (kernel) + 40.350s (userspace) = 1min 4.345s > > graphical.target reached after 40.226s in userspace. > > I'll try grabbing the system where we saw the KASAN-related issues [1] and > give it a churn with and without the two patches. Might take a bit (~1 day), > unfortunately. > > [1] https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20221013180518.217405-1-david@xxxxxxxxxx Great, don't forget: diff --git a/kernel/module/main.c b/kernel/module/main.c index 82b0dcc1fe77..222015093eeb 100644 --- a/kernel/module/main.c +++ b/kernel/module/main.c @@ -3066,7 +3066,7 @@ struct idempotent { #define IDEM_HASH_BITS 8 static struct hlist_head idem_hash[1 << IDEM_HASH_BITS]; -static struct spinlock idem_lock; +static DEFINE_SPINLOCK(idem_lock); static bool idempotent(struct idempotent *u, const void *cookie) {