Message ID | 20130122073416.13822.96504.stgit@srivatsabhat.in.ibm.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 01:04:23PM +0530, Srivatsa S. Bhat wrote: > CPU hotplug (which will be the first user of per-CPU rwlocks) has a special > requirement with respect to locking: the writer, after acquiring the per-CPU > rwlock for write, must be allowed to take the same lock for read, without > deadlocking and without getting complaints from lockdep. In comparison, this > is similar to what get_online_cpus()/put_online_cpus() does today: it allows > a hotplug writer (who holds the cpu_hotplug.lock mutex) to invoke it without > locking issues, because it silently returns if the caller is the hotplug > writer itself. > > This can be easily achieved with per-CPU rwlocks as well (even without a > "is this a writer?" check) by incrementing the per-CPU refcount of the writer > immediately after taking the global rwlock for write, and then decrementing > the per-CPU refcount before releasing the global rwlock. > This ensures that any reader that comes along on that CPU while the writer is > active (on that same CPU), notices the non-zero value of the nested counter > and assumes that it is a nested read-side critical section and proceeds by > just incrementing the refcount. Thus we prevent the reader from taking the > global rwlock for read, which prevents the writer from deadlocking itself. > > Add that support and teach lockdep about this special locking scheme so > that it knows that this sort of usage is valid. Also add the required lockdep > annotations to enable it to detect common locking problems with per-CPU > rwlocks. Very nice! The write-side interrupt disabling ensures that the task stays on CPU, as required. One request: Could we please have a comment explaining the reasons for the writer incrementing and decrementing the reader reference count? It looked really really strange to me until I came back and read the commit log. ;-) Thanx, Paul > Cc: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> > Signed-off-by: Srivatsa S. Bhat <srivatsa.bhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com> > --- > > lib/percpu-rwlock.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/lib/percpu-rwlock.c b/lib/percpu-rwlock.c > index a8d177a..054a50a 100644 > --- a/lib/percpu-rwlock.c > +++ b/lib/percpu-rwlock.c > @@ -84,6 +84,10 @@ void percpu_read_lock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) > > if (likely(!writer_active(pcpu_rwlock))) { > this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); > + > + /* Pretend that we take global_rwlock for lockdep */ > + rwlock_acquire_read(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, > + 0, 0, _RET_IP_); > } else { > /* Writer is active, so switch to global rwlock. */ > > @@ -108,6 +112,12 @@ void percpu_read_lock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) > if (!writer_active(pcpu_rwlock)) { > this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); > read_unlock(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock); > + > + /* > + * Pretend that we take global_rwlock for lockdep > + */ > + rwlock_acquire_read(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, > + 0, 0, _RET_IP_); > } > } > } > @@ -128,6 +138,14 @@ void percpu_read_unlock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) > if (reader_nested_percpu(pcpu_rwlock)) { > this_cpu_dec(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); > smp_wmb(); /* Paired with smp_rmb() in sync_reader() */ > + > + /* > + * If this is the last decrement, then it is time to pretend > + * to lockdep that we are releasing the read lock. > + */ > + if (!reader_nested_percpu(pcpu_rwlock)) > + rwlock_release(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, > + 1, _RET_IP_); > } else { > read_unlock(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock); > } > @@ -205,11 +223,14 @@ void percpu_write_lock_irqsave(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock, > announce_writer_active(pcpu_rwlock); > sync_all_readers(pcpu_rwlock); > write_lock_irqsave(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock, *flags); > + this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); > } > > void percpu_write_unlock_irqrestore(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock, > unsigned long *flags) > { > + this_cpu_dec(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); > + > /* > * Inform all readers that we are done, so that they can switch back > * to their per-cpu refcounts. (We don't need to wait for them to >
On 02/09/2013 05:17 AM, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 01:04:23PM +0530, Srivatsa S. Bhat wrote: >> CPU hotplug (which will be the first user of per-CPU rwlocks) has a special >> requirement with respect to locking: the writer, after acquiring the per-CPU >> rwlock for write, must be allowed to take the same lock for read, without >> deadlocking and without getting complaints from lockdep. In comparison, this >> is similar to what get_online_cpus()/put_online_cpus() does today: it allows >> a hotplug writer (who holds the cpu_hotplug.lock mutex) to invoke it without >> locking issues, because it silently returns if the caller is the hotplug >> writer itself. >> >> This can be easily achieved with per-CPU rwlocks as well (even without a >> "is this a writer?" check) by incrementing the per-CPU refcount of the writer >> immediately after taking the global rwlock for write, and then decrementing >> the per-CPU refcount before releasing the global rwlock. >> This ensures that any reader that comes along on that CPU while the writer is >> active (on that same CPU), notices the non-zero value of the nested counter >> and assumes that it is a nested read-side critical section and proceeds by >> just incrementing the refcount. Thus we prevent the reader from taking the >> global rwlock for read, which prevents the writer from deadlocking itself. >> >> Add that support and teach lockdep about this special locking scheme so >> that it knows that this sort of usage is valid. Also add the required lockdep >> annotations to enable it to detect common locking problems with per-CPU >> rwlocks. > > Very nice! The write-side interrupt disabling ensures that the task > stays on CPU, as required. > > One request: Could we please have a comment explaining the reasons for > the writer incrementing and decrementing the reader reference count? > > It looked really really strange to me until I came back and read the > commit log. ;-) > Sure :-) Regards, Srivatsa S. Bhat
diff --git a/lib/percpu-rwlock.c b/lib/percpu-rwlock.c index a8d177a..054a50a 100644 --- a/lib/percpu-rwlock.c +++ b/lib/percpu-rwlock.c @@ -84,6 +84,10 @@ void percpu_read_lock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) if (likely(!writer_active(pcpu_rwlock))) { this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); + + /* Pretend that we take global_rwlock for lockdep */ + rwlock_acquire_read(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, + 0, 0, _RET_IP_); } else { /* Writer is active, so switch to global rwlock. */ @@ -108,6 +112,12 @@ void percpu_read_lock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) if (!writer_active(pcpu_rwlock)) { this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); read_unlock(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock); + + /* + * Pretend that we take global_rwlock for lockdep + */ + rwlock_acquire_read(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, + 0, 0, _RET_IP_); } } } @@ -128,6 +138,14 @@ void percpu_read_unlock_irqsafe(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock) if (reader_nested_percpu(pcpu_rwlock)) { this_cpu_dec(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); smp_wmb(); /* Paired with smp_rmb() in sync_reader() */ + + /* + * If this is the last decrement, then it is time to pretend + * to lockdep that we are releasing the read lock. + */ + if (!reader_nested_percpu(pcpu_rwlock)) + rwlock_release(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock.dep_map, + 1, _RET_IP_); } else { read_unlock(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock); } @@ -205,11 +223,14 @@ void percpu_write_lock_irqsave(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock, announce_writer_active(pcpu_rwlock); sync_all_readers(pcpu_rwlock); write_lock_irqsave(&pcpu_rwlock->global_rwlock, *flags); + this_cpu_inc(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); } void percpu_write_unlock_irqrestore(struct percpu_rwlock *pcpu_rwlock, unsigned long *flags) { + this_cpu_dec(*pcpu_rwlock->reader_refcnt); + /* * Inform all readers that we are done, so that they can switch back * to their per-cpu refcounts. (We don't need to wait for them to
CPU hotplug (which will be the first user of per-CPU rwlocks) has a special requirement with respect to locking: the writer, after acquiring the per-CPU rwlock for write, must be allowed to take the same lock for read, without deadlocking and without getting complaints from lockdep. In comparison, this is similar to what get_online_cpus()/put_online_cpus() does today: it allows a hotplug writer (who holds the cpu_hotplug.lock mutex) to invoke it without locking issues, because it silently returns if the caller is the hotplug writer itself. This can be easily achieved with per-CPU rwlocks as well (even without a "is this a writer?" check) by incrementing the per-CPU refcount of the writer immediately after taking the global rwlock for write, and then decrementing the per-CPU refcount before releasing the global rwlock. This ensures that any reader that comes along on that CPU while the writer is active (on that same CPU), notices the non-zero value of the nested counter and assumes that it is a nested read-side critical section and proceeds by just incrementing the refcount. Thus we prevent the reader from taking the global rwlock for read, which prevents the writer from deadlocking itself. Add that support and teach lockdep about this special locking scheme so that it knows that this sort of usage is valid. Also add the required lockdep annotations to enable it to detect common locking problems with per-CPU rwlocks. Cc: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Srivatsa S. Bhat <srivatsa.bhat@linux.vnet.ibm.com> --- lib/percpu-rwlock.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+)