Am 01.12.21 um 12:04 schrieb Thomas Hellström (Intel):

On 12/1/21 11:32, Christian König wrote:
Am 01.12.21 um 11:15 schrieb Thomas Hellström (Intel):
[SNIP]

What we could do is to avoid all this by not calling the callback with the lock held in the first place.

If that's possible that might be a good idea, pls also see below.

The problem with that is dma_fence_signal_locked()/dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(). If we could avoid using that or at least allow it to drop the lock then we could call the callback without holding it.

Somebody would need to audit the drivers and see if holding the lock is really necessary anywhere.




/Thomas

Oh, and a follow up question:

If there was a way to break the recursion on final put() (using the same basic approach as patch 2 in this series uses to break recursion in enable_signaling()), so that none of these containers did require any special treatment, would it be worth pursuing? I guess it might be possible by having the callbacks drop the references rather than the loop in the final put. + a couple of changes in code iterating over the fence pointers.

That won't really help, you just move the recursion from the final put into the callback.

How do we recurse from the callback? The introduced fence_put() of individual fence pointers doesn't recurse anymore (at most 1 level), and any callback recursion is broken by the irq_work?

Yeah, but then you would need to take another lock to avoid racing with dma_fence_array_signaled().


I figure the big amount of work would be to adjust code that iterates over the individual fence pointers to recognize that they are rcu protected.

Could be that we could solve this with RCU, but that sounds like a lot of churn for no gain at all.

In other words even with the problems solved I think it would be a really bad idea to allow chaining of dma_fence_array objects.

Yes, that was really the question, Is it worth pursuing this? I'm not really suggesting we should allow this as an intentional feature. I'm worried, however, that if we allow these containers to start floating around cross-driver (or even internally) disguised as ordinary dma_fences, they would require a lot of driver special casing, or else completely unexpeced WARN_ON()s and lockdep splats would start to turn up, scaring people off from using them. And that would be a breeding ground for hairy driver-private constructs.

Well the question is why we would want to do it?

If it's to avoid inter driver lock dependencies by avoiding to call the callback with the spinlock held, then yes please. We had tons of problems with that, resulting in irq_work and work_item delegation all over the place.

Yes, that sounds like something desirable, but in these containers, what's causing the lock dependencies is the enable_signaling() callback that is typically called locked.



If it's to allow nesting of dma_fence_array instances, then it's most likely a really bad idea even if we fix all the locking order problems.

Well I think my use-case where I hit a dead end may illustrate what worries me here:

1) We use a dma-fence-array to coalesce all dependencies for ttm object migration. 2) We use a dma-fence-chain to order the resulting dm_fence into a timeline because the TTM resource manager code requires that.

Initially seemingly harmless to me.

But after a sequence evict->alloc->clear, the dma-fence-chain feeds into the dma-fence-array for the clearing operation. Code still works fine, and no deep recursion, no warnings. But if I were to add another driver to the system that instead feeds a dma-fence-array into a dma-fence-chain, this would give me a lockdep splat.

So then if somebody were to come up with the splendid idea of using a dma-fence-chain to initially coalesce fences, I'd hit the same problem or risk illegaly joining two dma-fence-chains together.

To fix this, I would need to look at the incoming fences and iterate over any dma-fence-array or dma-fence-chain that is fed into the dma-fence-array to flatten out the input. In fact all dma-fence-array users would need to do that, and even dma-fence-chain users watching out for not joining chains together or accidently add an array that perhaps came as a disguised dma-fence from antother driver.

So the purpose to me would be to allow these containers as input to eachother without a lot of in-driver special-casing, be it by breaking recursion on built-in flattening to avoid

a) Hitting issues in the future or with existing interoperating drivers.
b) Avoid driver-private containers that also might break the interoperability. (For example the i915 currently driver-private dma_fence_work avoid all these problems, but we're attempting to address issues in common code rather than re-inventing stuff internally).

I don't think that a dma_fence_array or dma_fence_chain is the right thing to begin with in those use cases.

When you want to coalesce the dependencies for a job you could either use an xarray like Daniel did for the scheduler or some hashtable like we use in amdgpu. But I don't see the need for exposing the dma_fence interface for those.

And why do you use dma_fence_chain to generate a timeline for TTM? That should come naturally because all the moves must be ordered.

Regards,
Christian.



Reply via email to