On Wed, 13 Aug 2008 11:12:48 -0700
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eric W. Biederman) wrote:

> Linus Torvalds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > On Wed, 13 Aug 2008, Huang Ying wrote:
> >>
> >> -  xchg(&kexec_lock, 0);
> >> +  locked = xchg(&kexec_lock, 0);
> >> +  BUG_ON(!locked);
> >
> > Why do you want to do this at all? 
> >
> > And why do you implement your locks with xchg() in the first place? That's 
> > total and utter crap.
> >
> > Hint: we have _real_ locking primitives in the kernel.
> 
> This part certainly.
> 
> The way the code should work, and the way it has in the past is:
> image = xchg(&kexec_image, NULL)
> if (!image)
>    return -EINVAL;
> 
> Very simple and very obvious and very easy to get right, and it has
> been that way for years.
> 

- We're talking about kexec_lock here, not kexec_image

- afacit all manipulations of kexec_image happen under kexec_lock, so
  they don't need to be atomic, do they?

- Is xchg() guaranteed to be atomic?  That's what atomic_xchg() is for.

- xchg() isn't guaranteed to exist on all architectures.  atomic_xchg() is.


Could someone please review and test this?  It's on top of 

kexec-jump-clean-up-ifdef-and-comments.patch
kexec-jump-rename-kexec_control_code_size-to-kexec_control_page_size.patch
kexec-jump-check-code-size-in-control-page.patch
kexec-jump-check-code-size-in-control-page-fix.patch
kexec-jump-remove-duplication-of-kexec_restart_prepare.patch
kexec-jump-in-sync-with-hibernation-implementation.patch
kexec-jump-__ftrace_enabled_save-restore.patch
kexec-jump-fix-for-ftrace.patch



Subject: kexec: use a bitop for locking rather than xchg()
From: Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Functionally the same, but more conventional.

Cc: Huang Ying <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: Vivek Goyal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Eric W. Biederman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---

 kernel/kexec.c |   41 +++++++++++++++++++++--------------------
 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+), 20 deletions(-)

diff -puN kernel/kexec.c~kexec-use-a-bitop-for-locking-rather-than-xchg 
kernel/kexec.c
--- a/kernel/kexec.c~kexec-use-a-bitop-for-locking-rather-than-xchg
+++ a/kernel/kexec.c
@@ -9,6 +9,7 @@
 #include <linux/capability.h>
 #include <linux/mm.h>
 #include <linux/file.h>
+#include <linux/bitops.h>
 #include <linux/slab.h>
 #include <linux/fs.h>
 #include <linux/kexec.h>
@@ -924,19 +925,28 @@ static int kimage_load_segment(struct ki
  */
 struct kimage *kexec_image;
 struct kimage *kexec_crash_image;
+
+static unsigned long kexec_bitlock;
+
 /*
- * A home grown binary mutex.
- * Nothing can wait so this mutex is safe to use
- * in interrupt context :)
+ * Return true if we acquired the lock
  */
-static int kexec_lock;
+static inline bool kexec_trylock(void)
+{
+       return !test_and_set_bit(0, &kexec_bitlock);
+}
+
+static void kexec_unlock(void)
+{
+       if (!test_and_clear_bit(0, &kexec_bitlock))
+               WARN_ON(1);
+}
 
 asmlinkage long sys_kexec_load(unsigned long entry, unsigned long nr_segments,
                                struct kexec_segment __user *segments,
                                unsigned long flags)
 {
        struct kimage **dest_image, *image;
-       int locked;
        int result;
 
        /* We only trust the superuser with rebooting the system. */
@@ -972,8 +982,7 @@ asmlinkage long sys_kexec_load(unsigned 
         *
         * KISS: always take the mutex.
         */
-       locked = xchg(&kexec_lock, 1);
-       if (locked)
+       if (!kexec_trylock())
                return -EBUSY;
 
        dest_image = &kexec_image;
@@ -1015,8 +1024,7 @@ asmlinkage long sys_kexec_load(unsigned 
        image = xchg(dest_image, image);
 
 out:
-       locked = xchg(&kexec_lock, 0); /* Release the mutex */
-       BUG_ON(!locked);
+       kexec_unlock();
        kimage_free(image);
 
        return result;
@@ -1063,9 +1071,6 @@ asmlinkage long compat_sys_kexec_load(un
 
 void crash_kexec(struct pt_regs *regs)
 {
-       int locked;
-
-
        /* Take the kexec_lock here to prevent sys_kexec_load
         * running on one cpu from replacing the crash kernel
         * we are using after a panic on a different cpu.
@@ -1074,8 +1079,7 @@ void crash_kexec(struct pt_regs *regs)
         * of memory the xchg(&kexec_crash_image) would be
         * sufficient.  But since I reuse the memory...
         */
-       locked = xchg(&kexec_lock, 1);
-       if (!locked) {
+       if (kexec_trylock()) {
                if (kexec_crash_image) {
                        struct pt_regs fixed_regs;
                        crash_setup_regs(&fixed_regs, regs);
@@ -1083,8 +1087,7 @@ void crash_kexec(struct pt_regs *regs)
                        machine_crash_shutdown(&fixed_regs);
                        machine_kexec(kexec_crash_image);
                }
-               locked = xchg(&kexec_lock, 0);
-               BUG_ON(!locked);
+               kexec_unlock();
        }
 }
 
@@ -1434,7 +1437,7 @@ int kernel_kexec(void)
 {
        int error = 0;
 
-       if (xchg(&kexec_lock, 1))
+       if (!kexec_trylock())
                return -EBUSY;
        if (!kexec_image) {
                error = -EINVAL;
@@ -1498,8 +1501,6 @@ int kernel_kexec(void)
 #endif
 
  Unlock:
-       if (!xchg(&kexec_lock, 0))
-               BUG();
-
+       kexec_unlock();
        return error;
 }
_


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