On Tue, Jul 10, 2018 at 12:26:34PM +0800, Huacai Chen wrote: > Hi, Paul and Peter, > > I think we find the real root cause, READ_ONCE() doesn't need any > barriers, the problematic code is queued_spin_lock_slowpath() in > kernel/locking/qspinlock.c: > > if (old & _Q_TAIL_MASK) { > prev = decode_tail(old); > > /* Link @node into the waitqueue. */ > WRITE_ONCE(prev->next, node); > > pv_wait_node(node, prev); > arch_mcs_spin_lock_contended(&node->locked); > > /* > * While waiting for the MCS lock, the next pointer may have > * been set by another lock waiter. We optimistically load > * the next pointer & prefetch the cacheline for writing > * to reduce latency in the upcoming MCS unlock operation. > */ > next = READ_ONCE(node->next); > if (next) > prefetchw(next); > } > > After WRITE_ONCE(prev->next, node); arch_mcs_spin_lock_contended() > enter a READ_ONCE() loop, so the effect of WRITE_ONCE() is invisible > by other cores because of the write buffer. And _that_ is a hardware bug. Also please explain how that is different from the ARM bug mentioned elsewhere. > As a result, > arch_mcs_spin_lock_contended() will wait for ever because the waiters > of prev->next will wait for ever. I think the right way to fix this is > flush SFB after this WRITE_ONCE(), but I don't have a good solution: > 1, MIPS has wbflush() which can be used to flush SFB, but other archs > don't have; Sane archs don't need this. > 2, Every arch has mb(), and add mb() after WRITE_ONCE() can actually > solve Loongson's problem, but in syntax, mb() is different from > wbflush(); Still wrong, because any non-broken arch doesn't need that flush to begin with. > 3, Maybe we can define a Loongson-specific WRITE_ONCE(), but not every > WRITE_ONCE() need wbflush(), we only need wbflush() between > WRITE_ONCE() and a READ_ONCE() loop. No no no no ... So now explain why the cpu_relax() hack that arm did doesn't work for you?