Hi Filipe,

On Mon, Oct 26, 2020 at 11:26:49AM +0000, Filipe Manana wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I've recently started to hit a warning followed by tasks hanging after
> attempts to freeze a filesystem. A git bisection pointed to the
> following commit:
> 
> commit 4d004099a668c41522242aa146a38cc4eb59cb1e
> Author: Peter Zijlstra <pet...@infradead.org>
> Date:   Fri Oct 2 11:04:21 2020 +0200
> 
>     lockdep: Fix lockdep recursion
> 
> This happens very reliably when running all xfstests with lockdep
> enabled, and the tested filesystem is btrfs (haven't tried other
> filesystems, but it shouldn't matter). The warning and task hangs always
> happen at either test generic/068 or test generic/390, and (oddly)
> always have to run all tests for it to trigger, running those tests
> individually on an infinite loop doesn't seem to trigger it (at least
> for a couple hours).
> 
> The warning triggered is at fs/super.c:__sb_start_write() which always
> results later in several tasks hanging on a percpu rw_sem:
> 
> https://pastebin.com/qnLvf94E
> 

In your dmesg, I see line:

        [ 9304.920151] INFO: lockdep is turned off.

, that means debug_locks is 0, that usually happens when lockdep find a
problem (i.e. a deadlock) and it turns itself off, because a problem is
found and it's pointless for lockdep to continue to run.

And I haven't found a lockdep splat in your dmesg, do you have a full
dmesg so that I can have a look?

This may be relevant because in commit 4d004099a66, we have

        @@ -5056,13 +5081,13 @@ noinstr int lock_is_held_type(const struct 
lockdep_map *lock, int read)
                unsigned long flags;
                int ret = 0;

        -       if (unlikely(current->lockdep_recursion))
        +       if (unlikely(!lockdep_enabled()))
                        return 1; /* avoid false negative lockdep_assert_held() 
*/

before this commit lock_is_held_type() and its friends may return false
if debug_locks==0, after this commit lock_is_held_type() and its friends
will always return true if debug_locks == 0. That could cause the
behavior here.

In case I'm correct, the following "fix" may be helpful. 

Regards,
Boqun

----------8
diff --git a/kernel/locking/lockdep.c b/kernel/locking/lockdep.c
index 3e99dfef8408..c0e27fb949ff 100644
--- a/kernel/locking/lockdep.c
+++ b/kernel/locking/lockdep.c
@@ -5471,7 +5464,7 @@ noinstr int lock_is_held_type(const struct lockdep_map 
*lock, int read)
        unsigned long flags;
        int ret = 0;
 
-       if (unlikely(!lockdep_enabled()))
+       if (unlikely(debug_locks && !lockdep_enabled()))
                return 1; /* avoid false negative lockdep_assert_held() */
 
        raw_local_irq_save(flags);



> What happens is percpu_rwsem_is_held() is apparently returning a false
> positive, so this makes __sb_start_write() do a
> percpu_down_read_trylock() on a percpu_rw_sem at a higher level, which
> is expected to always succeed, because if the calling task is holding a
> freeze percpu_rw_sem at level 1, it's supposed to be able to try_lock
> the semaphore at level 2, since the freeze semaphores are always
> acquired by increasing level order.
> 
> But the try_lock fails, it triggers the warning at __sb_start_write(),
> then its caller sb_start_pagefault() ignores the return value and
> callers such as btrfs_page_mkwrite() make the assumption the freeze
> semaphore was taken, proceed to do their stuff, and later call
> sb_end_pagefault(), which which will do an up_read() on the percpu_rwsem
> at level 2 despite not having not been able to down_read() the
> semaphore. This obviously corrupts the semaphore's read_count state, and
> later causes any task trying to down_write() it to hang forever.
> 
> After such a hang I ran a drgn script to confirm it:
> 
> $ cat dump_freeze_sems.py
> import sys
> import drgn
> from drgn import NULL, Object, cast, container_of, execscript, \
>     reinterpret, sizeof
> from drgn.helpers.linux import *
> 
> mnt_path = b'/home/fdmanana/btrfs-tests/scratch_1'
> 
> mnt = None
> for mnt in for_each_mount(prog, dst = mnt_path):
>     pass
> 
> if mnt is None:
>     sys.stderr.write(f'Error: mount point {mnt_path} not found\n')
>     sys.exit(1)
> 
> def dump_sem(level_enum):
>     level = level_enum.value_()
>     sem = mnt.mnt.mnt_sb.s_writers.rw_sem[level - 1]
>     print(f'freeze semaphore at level {level}, {str(level_enum)}')
>     print(f'    block {sem.block.counter.value_()}')
>     for i in for_each_possible_cpu(prog):
>         read_count = per_cpu_ptr(sem.read_count, i)
>         print(f'    read_count at cpu {i} = {read_count}')
>     print()
> 
> # dump semaphore read counts for all freeze levels (fs.h)
> dump_sem(prog['SB_FREEZE_WRITE'])
> dump_sem(prog['SB_FREEZE_PAGEFAULT'])
> dump_sem(prog['SB_FREEZE_FS'])
> 
> 
> $ drgn dump_freeze_sems.py
> freeze semaphore at level 1, (enum <anonymous>)SB_FREEZE_WRITE
>     block 1
>     read_count at cpu 0 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3ee00c74 = 3
>     read_count at cpu 1 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f200c74 = 4294967293
>     read_count at cpu 2 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f600c74 = 3
>     read_count at cpu 3 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3fa00c74 = 4294967293
> 
> freeze semaphore at level 2, (enum <anonymous>)SB_FREEZE_PAGEFAULT
>     block 1
>     read_count at cpu 0 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3ee00c78 = 0
>     read_count at cpu 1 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f200c78 = 4294967295
>     read_count at cpu 2 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f600c78 = 0
>     read_count at cpu 3 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3fa00c78 = 0
> 
> freeze semaphore at level 3, (enum <anonymous>)SB_FREEZE_FS
>     block 0
>     read_count at cpu 0 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3ee00c7c = 0
>     read_count at cpu 1 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f200c7c = 0
>     read_count at cpu 2 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3f600c7c = 0
>     read_count at cpu 3 = *(unsigned int *)0xffffc2ec3fa00c7c = 0
> 
> At levels 1 and 3, read_count sums to 0, so it's fine, but at level 2 it
> sums to -1. The system remains like that for hours at least, with no
> progress at all.
> 
> Is there a known regression with that lockdep commit?
> Anything I can do to help debug it in case it's not obvious?
> 
> Thanks.

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