Hi Marcelo, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
>Hi Guillaume, > >On Wed, Jun 29, 2005 at 11:32:19AM -0400, Guillaume Autran wrote: > > >>Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote: >> >> >> >>>On Tue, 2005-06-28 at 09:42 -0400, Guillaume Autran wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>> >>>>Hi, >>>> >>>>I happen to notice a race condition in the mmu_context code for the 8xx >>>>with very few context (16 MMU contexts) and kernel preemption enable. It >>>>is hard to reproduce has it shows only when many processes are >>>>created/destroy and the system is doing a lot of IRQ processing. >>>> >>>>In short, one process is trying to steal a context that is in the >>>>process of being freed (mm->context == NO_CONTEXT) but not completely >>>>freed (nr_free_contexts == 0). >>>>The steal_context() function does not do anything and the process stays >>>>in the loop forever. >>>> >>>>Anyway, I got a patch that fixes this part. Does not seem to affect >>>>scheduling latency at all. >>>> >>>>Comments are appreciated. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>Your patch seems to do a hell lot more than fixing this race ... What >>>about just calling preempt_disable() in destroy_context() instead ? >>> >>> >>> >>> >>I'm still a bit confused with "kernel preemption". One thing for sure is >>that disabling kernel preemption does indeed fix my problem. >>So, my question is, what if a task in the middle of being schedule gets >>preempted by an IRQ handler, where will this task restart execution ? >>Back at the beginning of schedule or where it left of ? >> >> > >Execution is resumed exactly where it has been interrupted. > In that case, what happen when a higher priority task steal the context of the lower priority task after get_mmu_context() but before set_mmu_context() ? Then when the lower priority task resumes, its context may no longer be valid... Do I get this right ? >>The idea behind my patch was to get rid of that nr_free_contexts counter >>that is (I thing) redundant with the context_map. >> >> > >Apparently its there to avoid the spinlock exactly on !FEW_CONTEXTS machines. > >I suppose that what happens is that get_mmu_context() gets preempted after >stealing >a context (so nr_free_contexts = 0), but before setting next_mmu_context to >the >next entry > >next_mmu_context = (ctx + 1) & LAST_CONTEXT; > >So if the now running higher prio tasks calls switch_mm() (which is likely to >happen) >it loops forever on atomic_dec_if_positive(&nr_free_contexts), while >steal_context() >sees "mm->context == CONTEXT". > >I think that you should try "preempt_disable()/preempt_enable" pair at entry >and >exit of get_mmu_context() - I suppose around destroy_context() is not enough >(you >can try that also). > >spinlock ends up calling preempt_disable(). > > > I'm going to do like this instead of my previous attempt: /* Setup new userspace context */ preempt_disable(); get_mmu_context(next); set_context(next->context, next->pgd); preempt_enable(); To make sure we don't loose our context in between. Thanks. Guillaume. -- ======================================= Guillaume Autran Senior Software Engineer MRV Communications, Inc. Tel: (978) 952-4932 office E-mail: gautran at mrv.com ======================================= -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://ozlabs.org/pipermail/linuxppc-embedded/attachments/20050629/c63ec893/attachment.htm