Le Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 03:56:59PM +0100, Valentin Schneider a écrit : > On 20/11/24 18:30, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > > Le Wed, Nov 20, 2024 at 06:10:43PM +0100, Valentin Schneider a écrit : > >> On 20/11/24 15:23, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > >> > >> > Ah but there is CT_STATE_GUEST and I see the last patch also applies that to > >> > CT_STATE_IDLE. > >> > > >> > So that could be: > >> > > >> > bool ct_set_cpu_work(unsigned int cpu, unsigned int work) > >> > { > >> > struct context_tracking *ct = per_cpu_ptr(&context_tracking, cpu); > >> > unsigned int old; > >> > bool ret = false; > >> > > >> > preempt_disable(); > >> > > >> > old = atomic_read(&ct->state); > >> > > >> > /* CT_STATE_IDLE can be added to last patch here */ > >> > if (!(old & (CT_STATE_USER | CT_STATE_GUEST))) { > >> > old &= ~CT_STATE_MASK; > >> > old |= CT_STATE_USER; > >> > } > >> > >> Hmph, so that lets us leverage the cmpxchg for a !CT_STATE_KERNEL check, > >> but we get an extra loop if the target CPU exits kernelspace not to > >> userspace (e.g. vcpu or idle) in the meantime - not great, not terrible. > > > > The thing is, what you read with atomic_read() should be close to reality. > > If it already is != CT_STATE_KERNEL then you're good (minus racy changes). > > If it is CT_STATE_KERNEL then you still must do a failing cmpxchg() in any case, > > at least to make sure you didn't miss a context tracking change. So the best > > you can do is a bet. > > > >> > >> At the cost of one extra bit for the CT_STATE area, with CT_STATE_KERNEL=1 > >> we could do: > >> > >> old = atomic_read(&ct->state); > >> old &= ~CT_STATE_KERNEL; > > > > And perhaps also old |= CT_STATE_IDLE (I'm seeing the last patch now), > > so you at least get a chance of making it right (only ~CT_STATE_KERNEL > > will always fail) and CPUs usually spend most of their time idle. > > > > I'm thinking with: > > CT_STATE_IDLE = 0, > CT_STATE_USER = 1, > CT_STATE_GUEST = 2, > CT_STATE_KERNEL = 4, /* Keep that as a standalone bit */ Right! > > we can stick with old &= ~CT_STATE_KERNEL; and that'll let the cmpxchg > succeed for any of IDLE/USER/GUEST. Sure but if (old & CT_STATE_KERNEL), cmpxchg() will consistently fail. But you can make a bet that it has switched to CT_STATE_IDLE between the atomic_read() and the first atomic_cmpxchg(). This way you still have a tiny chance to succeed. That is: old = atomic_read(&ct->state); if (old & CT_STATE_KERNEl) old |= CT_STATE_IDLE; old &= ~CT_STATE_KERNEL; do { atomic_try_cmpxchg(...) Hmm?