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authorPaul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>2013-09-04 10:51:13 -0700
committerPaul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>2013-09-23 09:15:30 -0700
commit26cdfedf6a902345f8604ea8e0b7dd2566b37a46 (patch)
tree27ae87c5a6de2e1077c760d054558b9aa0834842 /kernel/rcutree.c
parent69c8d28c96445e28f081fcd987e34ea2afa65039 (diff)
downloadblackbird-op-linux-26cdfedf6a902345f8604ea8e0b7dd2566b37a46.tar.gz
blackbird-op-linux-26cdfedf6a902345f8604ea8e0b7dd2566b37a46.zip
rcu: Reject memory-order-induced stall-warning false positives
If a system is idle from an RCU perspective for longer than specified by CONFIG_RCU_CPU_STALL_TIMEOUT, and if one CPU starts a grace period just as a second checks for CPU stalls, and if this second CPU happens to see the old value of rsp->jiffies_stall, it will incorrectly report a CPU stall. This is quite rare, but apparently occurs deterministically on systems with about 6TB of memory. This commit therefore orders accesses to the data used to determine whether or not a CPU stall is in progress. Grace-period initialization and cleanup first increments rsp->completed to mark the end of the previous grace period, then records the current jiffies in rsp->gp_start, then records the jiffies at which a stall can be expected to occur in rsp->jiffies_stall, and finally increments rsp->gpnum to mark the start of the new grace period. Now, this ordering by itself does not prevent false positives. For example, if grace-period initialization was delayed between recording rsp->gp_start and rsp->jiffies_stall, the CPU stall warning code might still see an old value of rsp->jiffies_stall. Therefore, this commit also orders the CPU stall warning accesses as well, loading rsp->gpnum and jiffies, then rsp->jiffies_stall, then rsp->gp_start, and finally rsp->completed. This ordering means that the false-positive scenario in the previous paragraph would result in rsp->completed being greater than or equal to rsp->gpnum, which is never valid for a CPU stall, allowing the false positive to be rejected. Furthermore, any fetch that gets an old value of rsp->jiffies_stall must also get an old value of rsp->gpnum, which will again be rejected by the comparison of rsp->gpnum and rsp->completed. Situations where rsp->gp_start is later than rsp->jiffies_stall are also rejected, as are situations where jiffies is less than rsp->jiffies_stall. Although use of unsynchronized accesses means that there are likely still some false-positive scenarios (synchronization has proven to be a very bad idea on large systems), this should get rid of a large class of these scenarios. Reported-by: Fabian Herschel <fabian.herschel@suse.com> Reported-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Reviewed-by: Michal Hocko <mhocko@suse.cz> Tested-by: Jochen Striepe <jochen@tolot.escape.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/rcutree.c')
-rw-r--r--kernel/rcutree.c45
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/rcutree.c b/kernel/rcutree.c
index 49464aded7f7..b618d72bd8ec 100644
--- a/kernel/rcutree.c
+++ b/kernel/rcutree.c
@@ -804,8 +804,11 @@ static int rcu_implicit_dynticks_qs(struct rcu_data *rdp,
static void record_gp_stall_check_time(struct rcu_state *rsp)
{
- rsp->gp_start = jiffies;
- rsp->jiffies_stall = jiffies + rcu_jiffies_till_stall_check();
+ unsigned long j = ACCESS_ONCE(jiffies);
+
+ rsp->gp_start = j;
+ smp_wmb(); /* Record start time before stall time. */
+ rsp->jiffies_stall = j + rcu_jiffies_till_stall_check();
}
/*
@@ -934,17 +937,48 @@ static void print_cpu_stall(struct rcu_state *rsp)
static void check_cpu_stall(struct rcu_state *rsp, struct rcu_data *rdp)
{
+ unsigned long completed;
+ unsigned long gpnum;
+ unsigned long gps;
unsigned long j;
unsigned long js;
struct rcu_node *rnp;
- if (rcu_cpu_stall_suppress)
+ if (rcu_cpu_stall_suppress || !rcu_gp_in_progress(rsp))
return;
j = ACCESS_ONCE(jiffies);
+
+ /*
+ * Lots of memory barriers to reject false positives.
+ *
+ * The idea is to pick up rsp->gpnum, then rsp->jiffies_stall,
+ * then rsp->gp_start, and finally rsp->completed. These values
+ * are updated in the opposite order with memory barriers (or
+ * equivalent) during grace-period initialization and cleanup.
+ * Now, a false positive can occur if we get an new value of
+ * rsp->gp_start and a old value of rsp->jiffies_stall. But given
+ * the memory barriers, the only way that this can happen is if one
+ * grace period ends and another starts between these two fetches.
+ * Detect this by comparing rsp->completed with the previous fetch
+ * from rsp->gpnum.
+ *
+ * Given this check, comparisons of jiffies, rsp->jiffies_stall,
+ * and rsp->gp_start suffice to forestall false positives.
+ */
+ gpnum = ACCESS_ONCE(rsp->gpnum);
+ smp_rmb(); /* Pick up ->gpnum first... */
js = ACCESS_ONCE(rsp->jiffies_stall);
+ smp_rmb(); /* ...then ->jiffies_stall before the rest... */
+ gps = ACCESS_ONCE(rsp->gp_start);
+ smp_rmb(); /* ...and finally ->gp_start before ->completed. */
+ completed = ACCESS_ONCE(rsp->completed);
+ if (ULONG_CMP_GE(completed, gpnum) ||
+ ULONG_CMP_LT(j, js) ||
+ ULONG_CMP_GE(gps, js))
+ return; /* No stall or GP completed since entering function. */
rnp = rdp->mynode;
if (rcu_gp_in_progress(rsp) &&
- (ACCESS_ONCE(rnp->qsmask) & rdp->grpmask) && ULONG_CMP_GE(j, js)) {
+ (ACCESS_ONCE(rnp->qsmask) & rdp->grpmask)) {
/* We haven't checked in, so go dump stack. */
print_cpu_stall(rsp);
@@ -1317,9 +1351,10 @@ static int rcu_gp_init(struct rcu_state *rsp)
}
/* Advance to a new grace period and initialize state. */
+ record_gp_stall_check_time(rsp);
+ smp_wmb(); /* Record GP times before starting GP. */
rsp->gpnum++;
trace_rcu_grace_period(rsp->name, rsp->gpnum, TPS("start"));
- record_gp_stall_check_time(rsp);
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&rnp->lock);
/* Exclude any concurrent CPU-hotplug operations. */
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