Re: [PATCH printk v3 00/40] reduce console_lock scope

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On 2022-11-07 09:15, John Ogness wrote:
[...]

The base commit for this series is from Paul McKenney's RCU tree
and provides an NMI-safe SRCU implementation [1]. Without the
NMI-safe SRCU implementation, this series is not less safe than
mainline. But we will need the NMI-safe SRCU implementation for
atomic consoles anyway, so we might as well get it in
now. Especially since it _does_ increase the reliability for
mainline in the panic path.

So, your email got me to review the SRCU nmi-safe series:

[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu.git/log/?h=srcunmisafe.2022.10.21a

Especially this commit:

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/paulmck/linux-rcu.git/commit/?h=srcunmisafe.2022.10.21a&id=5d0f5953b60f5f7a278085b55ddc73e2932f4c33

I disagree with the overall approach taken there, which is to create
yet another SRCU flavor, this time with explicit "nmi-safe" read-locks.
This adds complexity to the kernel APIs and I think we can be clever
about this and make SRCU nmi-safe without requiring a whole new incompatible
API.

You can find the basic idea needed to achieve this in the libside RCU
user-space implementation. I needed to introduce a split-counter concept
to support rseq vs atomics to keep track of per-cpu grace period counters.
The "rseq" counter is the fast-path, but if rseq fails, the abort handler
uses the atomic counter instead.

https://github.com/compudj/side/blob/main/src/rcu.h#L23

struct side_rcu_percpu_count {
	uintptr_t begin;
	uintptr_t rseq_begin;
	uintptr_t end;
	uintptr_t rseq_end;
}  __attribute__((__aligned__(SIDE_CACHE_LINE_SIZE)));

The idea is to "split" each percpu counter into two counters, one for rseq,
and the other for atomics. When a grace period wants to observe the value of
a percpu counter, it simply sums the two counters:

https://github.com/compudj/side/blob/main/src/rcu.c#L112

The same idea can be applied to SRCU in the kernel: one counter for percpu ops,
and the other counter for nmi context, so basically:

srcu_read_lock()

if (likely(!in_nmi()))
  increment the percpu-ops lock counter
else
  increment the atomic lock counter

srcu_read_unlock()

if (likely(!in_nmi()))
  increment the percpu-ops unlock counter
else
  increment the atomic unlock counter

Then in the grace period sum the percpu-ops and the atomic values whenever
each counter value is read.

This would allow SRCU to be NMI-safe without requiring the callers to
explicitly state whether they need to be nmi-safe or not, and would only
take the overhead of the atomics in the NMI handlers rather than for all
users which happen to use SRCU read locks shared with nmi handlers.

Thoughts ?

Thanks,

Mathieu

--
Mathieu Desnoyers
EfficiOS Inc.
https://www.efficios.com




[Index of Archives]     [Linux SoC Development]     [Linux Rockchip Development]     [Linux for Synopsys ARC Processors]    
  • [Linux on Unisoc (RDA Micro) SoCs]     [Linux Actions SoC]     [Linux USB Development]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Linux SCSI]     [Yosemite News]

  •   Powered by Linux