On Thu, Sep 20, 2007 at 08:24:58AM +0200, Nadia Derbey wrote:
> Jarek Poplawski wrote:
> >On 18-09-2007 16:55, Nadia Derbey wrote:
> >...
> >
> >>Well, reviewing the code I found another place where the
> >>rcu_read_unlock() was missing.
> >>I'm so sorry for the inconvenience. It's true that I should have tested
> >>with CONFIG_PREEMPT=y :-(
> >>Now, the ltp tests pass even with this option set...
> >>
> >>In attachment you'll find a patch thhat
> >>1) adds the missing rcu_read_unlock()
> >>2) replaces Andrew's fix with a new one: the rcu_read_lock() is now
> >>taken in ipc_lock() / ipc_lock_by_ptr() and released in ipc_unlock(),
> >>exactly as it was done in the ref code.
> >
> >
> >BTW, probably I miss something, but I wonder, how this RCU is working
> >here. E.g. in msg.c do_msgsnd() there is:
> >
> >msq = msg_lock_check(ns, msqid);
> >...
> >
> >msg_unlock(msq);
> >schedule();
> >
> >ipc_lock_by_ptr(&msq->q_perm);
> >
> >Since msq_lock_check() gets msq with ipc_lock_check() under
> >rcu_read_lock(), and then goes msg_unlock(msq) (i.e. ipc_unlock())
> >with rcu_read_unlock(), is it valid to use this with
> >ipc_lock_by_ptr() yet?
>
> Before Calling msg_unlock() they call ipc_rcu_getref() that increments a
> refcount in the rcu header for the msg structure. This guarantees that
> the the structure won't be freed before they relock it. Once the
> structure is relocked by ipc_lock_by_ptr(), they do the symmetric
> operation i.e. ipc_rcu_putref().
Yes, I've found this later too - sorry for bothering. I was mislead
by the code like this:
struct kern_ipc_perm *ipc_lock(struct ipc_ids *ids, int id)
{
struct kern_ipc_perm *out;
int lid = ipcid_to_idx(id);
rcu_read_lock();
out = idr_find(&ids->ipcs_idr, lid);
if (out == NULL) {
rcu_read_unlock();
return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL);
}
which seems to suggest "out" is an RCU protected pointer, so, I
thought these refcounts were for something else. But, after looking
at how it's used it turns out to be ~90% wrong: probably 9 out of 10
places use refcouning around this, so, these rcu_read_locks() don't
work here at all. So, probably I miss something again, but IMHO,
these rcu_read_locks/unlocks could be removed here or in
ipc_lock_by_ptr() and it should be enough to use them directly, where
really needed, e.g., in msg.c do_msgrcv().
BTW, I've found this comment, which, at least for me, explains very
good, what's going on here:
/* Lockless receive, part 3:
* Acquire the queue spinlock.
*/
ipc_lock_by_ptr(&msq->q_perm);
Thanks,
Jarek P.
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