On Fri, Aug 28, 2020 at 12:47:03PM -0400, Pavel Tatashin wrote:
> There appears to be another problem that is related to the
> cgroup_mutex -> mem_hotplug_lock deadlock described above.
> 
> In the original deadlock that I described, the workaround is to
> replace crash dump from piping to Linux traditional save to files
> method. However, after trying this workaround, I still observed
> hardware watchdog resets during machine  shutdown.
> 
> The new problem occurs for the following reason: upon shutdown systemd
> calls a service that hot-removes memory, and if hot-removing fails for
> some reason systemd kills that service after timeout. However, systemd
> is never able to kill the service, and we get hardware reset caused by
> watchdog or a hang during shutdown:
> 
> Thread #1: memory hot-remove systemd service
> Loops indefinitely, because if there is something still to be migrated
> this loop never terminates. However, this loop can be terminated via
> signal from systemd after timeout.
> __offline_pages()
>       do {
>           pfn = scan_movable_pages(pfn, end_pfn);
>                   # Returns 0, meaning there is nothing available to
>                   # migrate, no page is PageLRU(page)
>           ...
>           ret = walk_system_ram_range(start_pfn, end_pfn - start_pfn,
>                                             NULL, check_pages_isolated_cb);
>                   # Returns -EBUSY, meaning there is at least one PFN that
>                   # still has to be migrated.
>       } while (ret);
> 
> Thread #2: ccs killer kthread
>    css_killed_work_fn
>      cgroup_mutex  <- Grab this Mutex
>      mem_cgroup_css_offline
>        memcg_offline_kmem.part
>           memcg_deactivate_kmem_caches
>             get_online_mems
>               mem_hotplug_lock <- waits for Thread#1 to get read access
> 
> Thread #3: systemd
> ksys_read
>  vfs_read
>    __vfs_read
>      seq_read
>        proc_single_show
>          proc_cgroup_show
>            mutex_lock -> wait for cgroup_mutex that is owned by Thread #2
> 
> Thus, thread #3 systemd stuck, and unable to deliver timeout interrupt
> to thread #1.
> 
> The proper fix for both of the problems is to avoid cgroup_mutex ->
> mem_hotplug_lock ordering that was recently fixed in the mainline but
> still present in all stable branches. Unfortunately, I do not see a
> simple fix in how to remove mem_hotplug_lock from
> memcg_deactivate_kmem_caches without using Roman's series that is too
> big for stable.

We too are seeing this on Power systems when stress-testing memory
hotplug, but with the following call trace (from hung task timer)
instead of Thread #2 above:

__switch_to
__schedule
schedule
percpu_rwsem_wait
__percpu_down_read
get_online_mems
memcg_create_kmem_cache
memcg_kmem_cache_create_func
process_one_work
worker_thread
kthread
ret_from_kernel_thread

While I understand that Roman's new slab controller patchset will fix
this, I also wonder if infinitely looping in the memory unplug path
with mem_hotplug_lock held is the right thing to do? Earlier we had
a few other exit possibilities in this path (like max retries etc)
but those were removed by commits:

72b39cfc4d75: mm, memory_hotplug: do not fail offlining too early
ecde0f3e7f9e: mm, memory_hotplug: remove timeout from __offline_memory

Or, is the user-space test is expected to induce a signal back-off when
unplug doesn't complete within a reasonable amount of time?

Regards,
Bharata.

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