On Sat 2021-07-03 08:32:02, John Ogness wrote: > On 2021-07-02, Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The standard printk() tries to flush the message to the console > > immediately. It tries to take the console lock. If the lock is > > already taken then the current owner is responsible for flushing > > even the new message. > > > > There is a small race window between checking whether a new message is > > available and releasing the console lock. It is solved by re-checking > > the state after releasing the console lock. If the check is positive > > then console_unlock() tries to take the lock again and process the new > > message as well. > > > > The commit 996e966640ddea7b535c ("printk: remove logbuf_lock") causes that > > console_seq is not longer read atomically. As a result, the re-check might > > be done with an inconsistent 64-bit index. > > > > Solve it by using the last sequence number that has been checked under > > the console lock. In the worst case, it will take the lock again only > > to realized that the new message has already been proceed. But it > > was possible even before. > > > > The variable next_seq is marked as __maybe_unused to call down compiler > > warning when CONFIG_PRINTK is not defined. > > As Sergey already pointed out, this patch is not fixing a real > problem. An inconsistent value (or an increased consistent value) would > mean that another printer is actively printing, and thus a retry is not > necessary anyway. Ah, I misunderstood that part. You are right. CPU_X might see wrong console_seq only when CPU_Y incremented console_seq. If CPU_X does not do retry because of racy console_seq. Then CPU_Y would do retry when yet another CPU added yet another new message in the meantime. > But this patch will avoid a KASAN message about an unmarked > (although safe) data race. Yup. OK, I am going to queue the patch for-5.15. There is no need to rush it for-4.14. Best Regards, Petr