On 20/03/24 19:17, Valentin Schneider wrote: > On 20/03/24 15:03, Daniel Vacek wrote: >> Hi Valentin, >> >> On Mon, Mar 18, 2024 at 6:34 PM Valentin Schneider <vschneid@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On 18/03/24 12:17, Daniel Vacek wrote: >>> > Bill Peters reported CPU hangs while offlining/onlining CPUs on s390. >>> > >>> > Analyzing the vmcore data shows `stop_one_cpu_nowait()` in `affine_move_task()` >>> > can fail when racing with off-/on-lining resulting in a deadlock waiting for >>> > the pending migration stop work completion which is never done. >>> > >>> > Fix this by correctly handling such a condition. >>> > >>> >>> IIUC the problem is that the dest_cpu and its stopper thread can be taken >>> down by take_cpu_down(), and affine_move_task() currently isn't aware of >>> that. I thought we had tested this vs hotplug, but oh well... >> >> I'm sorry, I should have provided more context in the first place. The machine >> is an LPAR with 2 CPUs and CPU 0 was onlining (hotplugging?) CPU 1. The traces >> show this scenario: >> >> CPU 0 | CPU 1 >> | >> cpuplugd task 1429 | >> holds the `cpu_hotplug_lock` | >> for writing in _cpu_up+0x16a | >> blocked on `cpuhp_state:1.done_up` | >> completion in __cpuhp_kick_ap+0x76 | >> | >> | cpuhp/1 task 17 >> |supposed to complete bringup of the CPU >> | (`cpuhp_state:1.done_up`) in cpuhp_thread_fun+0x108 >> |blocked on `wq_pool_attach_mutex` >> | in workqueue_online_cpu+0x9e >> | >> xfs-conv/dm-0 task 745 | >> holds the `wq_pool_attach_mutex` | >> in worker_attach_to_pool+0x66 \ >> blocked on `task->migration_pending->done`| >> completion in affine_move_task+0x10a/ >> >> ~~~ >> crash> b 1429 >> PID: 1429 TASK: 99398000 CPU: 0 COMMAND: "cpuplugd" >> #0 [997df970] __schedule+0x34c at 3089c424 >> #1 [997df9e0] schedule+0x7e at 3089cafe >> #2 [997dfa20] schedule_timeout+0x26e at 308a1d8e >> [inlined] do_wait_for_common >> [inlined] __wait_for_common >> #3 [997dfad8] wait_for_common+0x14a at 3089d902 >> [ret call] wait_for_completion+0x1a at 3089d96a >> >> [inlined] wait_for_ap_thread <<< blocked on `cpuhp_state:1.done_up` completion >> [ret call] __cpuhp_kick_ap+0x76 at 300c610e >> #4 [997dfb58] cpuhp_kick_ap+0xc4 at 300c61dc >> [inlined] bringup_wait_for_ap >> [ret call] bringup_cpu+0xea at 300c6402 >> #5 [997dfba8] cpuhp_invoke_callback+0xcc at 300c4f14 >> #6 [997dfc40] _cpu_up+0x16a at 300c798a <<< holds the `cpu_hotplug_lock` for writing >> #7 [997dfc98] do_cpu_up+0xc6 at 300c7b66 >> #8 [997dfcd8] cpu_subsys_online+0x58 at 305a0a00 >> #9 [997dfd28] device_online+0x9e at 30598e7e >> #10 [997dfd68] online_store+0x88 at 30598f28 >> #11 [997dfda8] kernfs_fop_write+0xdc at 3040276c >> #12 [997dfdf8] vfs_write+0xa8 at 30354760 >> #13 [997dfe58] ksys_write+0x62 at 30354a32 >> >> crash> cpuhp_cpu_state.state cpuhp_state:a | paste - - >> [0]: 1aef424e0 state = CPUHP_ONLINE, # (195) >> [1]: 1aef654e0 state = CPUHP_AP_WORKQUEUE_ONLINE, # (159) >> >> crash> cpuhp_cpu_state.bringup,thread,done_up.done cpuhp_state:1 -d | paste - - - - >> [1]: 1aef654e0 bringup = true, thread = 0x81134400, done_up.done = 0, <<< >> >> crash> b 17 >> PID: 17 TASK: 81134400 CPU: 1 COMMAND: "cpuhp/1" >> #0 [81143b68] __schedule+0x34c at 3089c424 >> #1 [81143bd8] schedule+0x7e at 3089cafe >> #2 [81143c18] schedule_preempt_disabled+0x2a at 3089cfba >> #3 [81143c30] __mutex_lock+0x320 at 3089df60 >> >> #4 [81143cb0] workqueue_online_cpu+0x9e at 300e847e <<< blocked on `wq_pool_attach_mutex` >> #5 [81143d20] cpuhp_invoke_callback+0xcc at 300c4f14 >> #6 [81143db8] cpuhp_thread_fun+0x108 at 300c6848 <<< supposed to complete the bring-up of the CPU (`cpuhp_state:1.done_up`) >> >> crash> b 745 >> PID: 745 TASK: 82359100 CPU: 0 COMMAND: "xfs-conv/dm-0" >> #0 [8b4bfa20] __schedule+0x34c at 3089c424 >> #1 [8b4bfa90] schedule+0x7e at 3089cafe >> #2 [8b4bfad0] schedule_timeout+0x26e at 308a1d8e >> [inlined] do_wait_for_common >> [inlined] __wait_for_common >> #3 [8b4bfb88] wait_for_common+0x14a at 3089d902 >> [ret call] wait_for_completion+0x1a at 3089d96a >> >> #4 [8b4bfc08] affine_move_task+0x10a at 300fb51a <<< blocked on `task->migration_pending->done` completion >> #5 [8b4bfd08] __set_cpus_allowed_ptr+0x12e at 300fb926 >> [ret call] set_cpus_allowed_ptr+0xa at 300fba32 >> #6 [8b4bfd78] worker_attach_to_pool+0x66 at 300e1dae <<< holds the `wq_pool_attach_mutex` >> #7 [8b4bfdc8] rescuer_thread+0x12c at 300e5bac >> >> crash> rx 8b4bfea0 >> 8b4bfea0: [863373c0:kmalloc-192] >> >> crash> worker.task,rescue_wq 863373c0 >> task = 0x82359100, >> rescue_wq = 0x8aa44400, >> >> crash> list -s pool_workqueue.pool pool_workqueue.mayday_node -hO workqueue_struct.maydays 0x8aa44400 | paste - - >> 1fffff7f751900 pool = 0x1aef56a00, >> >> crash> worker_pool.attrs 0x1aef56a00 >> attrs = 0x80088180, >> >> crash> workqueue_attrs.cpumask[0].bits 0x80088180 >> cpumask[0].bits = {0x1, 0x0, ... >> >> crash> cpumask.bits __cpu_active_mask >> bits = {0x1, 0x0, ... >> >> crash> cpumask.bits __cpu_online_mask >> bits = {0x3, 0x0, ... >> >> crash> task_struct.migration_pending,flags 0x82359100 >> migration_pending = 0x8b4bfce8, >> flags = 0x4208060, >> ^ PF_KTHREAD >> >> crash> pd distribute_cpu_mask_prev:0 >> per_cpu(distribute_cpu_mask_prev, 0) = 0 >> >> crash> set_affinity_pending.refs.refs.counter,arg,stop_pending,done.done 0x8b4bfce8 -d >> refs.refs.counter = 1 >> arg = { >> task = 0x82359100, >> dest_cpu = 0, >> pending = 0x8b4bfce8 >> } >> stop_pending = 1, >> done.done = 0, >> ~~~ >> >> In other words the `set_cpus_allowed_ptr()` is called from a worker thread which >> tries to migrate. The worker pool is only allowed on CPU 0 and that was supposed >> to be the destination as per the stack structure. In this case I thought it's OK >> to leave the task on the old CPU > > AFAICT if a call to set_cpus_allowed_ptr() ends up in affine_move_task() > and down to the stopper call, that means the task isn't allowed on its > current CPU and needs to be moved. > >> and the Bill's testing scenario was successful >> with the proposed patch. IIUC, it's exercising the hotplug due to load-balancing. >> >> This was on RHEL 8.8.z kernel. I see upstream changed a bit so I'm not sure it's >> still reproducible. Also, I'm not sure why this only happens on s390 and not on >> x86. I imagine the CPU hotplug slightly differs? Anyways this seems to be timing >> sensitive and the timing will differ greatly for sure. >> > > Thanks for the extra context! > > Double checking what I wrote before, I forgot RCU considers preempt-off > sections as read-side critical sections. __set_cpus_allowed_ptr() already > has preemption disabled all the way from reading the cpu_active_mask to the > stop_one_cpu_nowait() call via task_rq_lock() + preempt_disable(). > > IOW we have: > > __set_cpus_allowed_ptr() > task_rq_lock() <-- PREEMPT OFF > __set_cpus_allowed_ptr_locked() > cpu_valid_mask = cpu_active_mask; > dest_cpu = cpumask_any_and_distribute(cpu_valid_mask, ctx->new_mask); > affine_move_task() > preempt_disable(); > task_rq_unlock(); > stop_one_cpu_nowait(); <-- preemption still OFF > > And, considering: > > sched_cpu_deactivate() > set_cpu_active(cpu, false); > synchronize_rcu(); > > Then, if __set_cpus_allowed_ptr() observes a CPU as being in the > cpu_active_mask and uses that one as a destination CPU, said CPU cannot > reach CPUHP_TEARDOWN_CPU:take_cpu_down() and park the stopper thread > because its hotplug machinery will wait on the synchronize_rcu() in > CPUHP_AP_ACTIVE:sched_cpu_deactivate(). > > So "in theory", this shouldn't happen upstream. Eh nevermind, in your stacktrace the relevant task is a rescuer thread which is a kthread, so the cpu_valid_mask in use there is cpu_online_mask, not cpu_valid_mask... Back to reading code :-)