On Tue, Nov 17, 2020 at 09:38:45AM +0100, Paolo Abeni wrote: > Hello, > > Thank you for the feedback! > > On Mon, 2020-11-16 at 23:27 +0100, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote: > > > @@ -1606,10 +1607,12 @@ bool lock_sock_fast(struct sock *sk); > > > */ > > > static inline void unlock_sock_fast(struct sock *sk, bool slow) > > > { > > > - if (slow) > > > + if (slow) { > > > release_sock(sk); > > > - else > > > + __release(&sk->sk_lock.slock); > > > > The correct solution would be to annotate the declaration of > > release_sock() with '__releases(&sk->sk_lock.slock)'. > > If I add such annotation to release_sock(), I'll get several sparse > warnings for context imbalance (on each lock_sock()/release_sock() > pair), unless I also add an '__acquires()' annotation to lock_sock(). > > The above does not look correct to me ?!? When release_sock() completes > the socket spin lock is not held. Yes, that's fine, but I suppose it somehow releases the mutex that is taken in lock_sock_fast() when returning true, right? > The annotation added above is > somewhat an artifact to let unlock_sock_fast() matches lock_sock_fast() > from sparse perspective. I intentionally avoided changing > the release_sock() annotation to avoid introducing more artifacts. > > The proposed schema is not 100% accurate, as it will also allow e.g. a > really-not-fitting bh_lock_sock()/unlock_sock_fast() pair, but I could > not come-up with anything better. > > Can we go with the schema I proposed? Well, I suppose it's a first step. But can you then add a '__releases(...)' to unlock_sock_fast()? It's not needed by sparse because it's an inline function and sparse can then deduce it but it will help to see the pairing with lock_sock_fast() is OK. -- Luc