On 12/18, Andrew Morton wrote:
>
> On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 01:34:16 +0300
> Oleg Nesterov <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > NOTE: I removed 'int cpu' parameter, flush_workqueue() locks/unlocks
> > workqueue_mutex unconditionally. It may be restored, but I think it
> > doesn't make much sense, we take the mutex for the very short time,
> > and the code becomes simpler.
> >
>
> Taking workqueue_mutex() unconditionally in flush_workqueue() means
> that we'll deadlock if a single-threaded workqueue callback handler calls
> flush_workqueue().
Well. But flush_workqueue() drops workqueue_mutex before going to sleep ?
flush_workqueue(single_threaded_wq);
...
mutex_lock(&workqueue_mutex);
...
mutex_unlock(&workqueue_mutex);
wait_for_completition();
handler runs,
calls flush_workqueue(),
workqueue_mutex is free
> It's an idiotic thing to do, but I think I spotted a site last week which
> does this. scsi? Not sure..
Ok, it is time to sleep. I'll look tomorrov and re-send if flush_cpu_workqueue()
really needs "bool workqueue_mutex_is_locked" parameter.
Oleg.
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