On Mon, Dec 05, 2011 at 10:43:15AM -0800, Tejun Heo wrote: > Hello, Frederic. > > On Fri, Dec 02, 2011 at 05:28:03PM +0100, Frederic Weisbecker wrote: > > But I don't think it's very useful to protect against irq_exit_thread(), > > what happens there is purely of internal irq interest. > > > > Then right after, PF_EXITING is set before any interesting change. > > Isn't it possible to simply lock this flag setting? IIRC, as soon > > as the PF_EXITING flag is set, you ignore the task for attachment. > > I think that's technically possible but it does introduce another > class of tasks - the dying ones. e.g. If a task has PF_EXITING set > and the containing process is migrating, we'll have to migrate all > tasks but the dying one and cgroup ->exit callbacks can be called on > the lonely task after the migration is complete. It's kinda messy and > if someone makes a wrong assumption there, the bug is gonna be even > more difficult to reproduce / track down than now. Yes, smaller scope > locking is nicer but I would like to avoid api weirdities like that. I don't understand what you mean. On your patches, you only process tasks that don't have PF_EXITING, ie: you don't include these in the flex array on cgroup_attach_proc(). So that still applies in my proposal. >From the exit path we would have: exit_signal() { lock_threadgroup_change(task); task->flags |= PF_EXITING; lock_threadgroup(task); } exit all the rest: mm, etc... Then from cgroup_attach_proc(): lock_threadgroup(task); for_each_thread(task) { if (!(task->flags & PF_EXITING)) include in flex array } Am I forgetting something? _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm