On 2025-02-06 17:17:41 [+0900], Sergey Senozhatsky wrote: > > Okay. So there are requirements for the sleeping lock. A mutex isn't > > fitting the requirement because it is too large I guess. > > Correct. I would nice to state this why a generic locking implementation can not be used. From what I have seen it should play along with RT nicely. > > > > > static void zram_slot_lock(struct zram *zram, u32 index) > > > > > { > > > > > unsigned long *lock = &zram->table[index].flags; > > > > > > > > > > WARN_ON_ONCE(!preemptible()); > > > > > > > > you want might_sleep() here instead. preemptible() works only on > > > > preemptible kernels. And might_sleep() is already provided by > > > > wait_on_bit_lock(). So this can go. > > > > > > wait_on_bit_lock() has might_sleep(). > > > > My point exactly. This makes the WARN_ON_ONCE() obsolete. > > Right, might_sleep() can be disabled, as far as I understand, > via CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP, unlike WARN_ON_ONCE(). But I > can drop it and then just rely on might_sleep(), should be > enough. It should be enough. mutex_lock(), down() and so on relies solely on it. As I said, preemptible() only works on preemptible kernels if it comes to the preemption counter on and !preemptible kernels with enabled debugging. Sebastian