Date: Wed, 4 Aug 2010 14:55:25 -0400 From: John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> To: mdf@freebsd.org Cc: freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: sched_pin() versus PCPU_GET Message-ID: <201008041455.26066.jhb@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <AANLkTi=YjbBdZp9KuGUmMuYUmWyx_n%2BykikPSMMMo=j9@mail.gmail.com> References: <AANLkTikY20TxyeyqO5zP3zC-azb748kV-MdevPfm%2B8cq@mail.gmail.com> <201008041026.17553.jhb@freebsd.org> <AANLkTi=YjbBdZp9KuGUmMuYUmWyx_n%2BykikPSMMMo=j9@mail.gmail.com>
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On Wednesday, August 04, 2010 12:20:31 pm mdf@freebsd.org wrote: > On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 2:26 PM, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> wrote: > > On Tuesday, August 03, 2010 9:46:16 pm mdf@freebsd.org wrote: > >> On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 2:31 PM, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> wrote: > >> > On Friday, July 30, 2010 10:08:22 am John Baldwin wrote: > >> >> On Thursday, July 29, 2010 7:39:02 pm mdf@freebsd.org wrote: > >> >> > We've seen a few instances at work where witness_warn() in ast() > >> >> > indicates the sched lock is still held, but the place it claims i= t was > >> >> > held by is in fact sometimes not possible to keep the lock, like: > >> >> > > >> >> > thread_lock(td); > >> >> > td->td_flags &=3D ~TDF_SELECT; > >> >> > thread_unlock(td); > >> >> > > >> >> > What I was wondering is, even though the assembly I see in objdum= p -S > >> >> > for witness_warn has the increment of td_pinned before the PCPU_G= ET: > >> >> > > >> >> > ffffffff802db210: 65 48 8b 1c 25 00 00 mov %gs:0x0,%rbx > >> >> > ffffffff802db217: 00 00 > >> >> > ffffffff802db219: ff 83 04 01 00 00 incl 0x104(%rbx) > >> >> > * Pin the thread in order to avoid problems with thread migr= ation. > >> >> > * Once that all verifies are passed about spinlocks ownershi= p, > >> >> > * the thread is in a safe path and it can be unpinned. > >> >> > */ > >> >> > sched_pin(); > >> >> > lock_list =3D PCPU_GET(spinlocks); > >> >> > ffffffff802db21f: 65 48 8b 04 25 48 00 mov %gs:0x48,%rax > >> >> > ffffffff802db226: 00 00 > >> >> > if (lock_list !=3D NULL && lock_list->ll_count !=3D 0) { > >> >> > ffffffff802db228: 48 85 c0 test %rax,%rax > >> >> > * Pin the thread in order to avoid problems with thread migr= ation. > >> >> > * Once that all verifies are passed about spinlocks ownershi= p, > >> >> > * the thread is in a safe path and it can be unpinned. > >> >> > */ > >> >> > sched_pin(); > >> >> > lock_list =3D PCPU_GET(spinlocks); > >> >> > ffffffff802db22b: 48 89 85 f0 fe ff ff mov %rax,-0x110(%r= bp) > >> >> > ffffffff802db232: 48 89 85 f8 fe ff ff mov %rax,-0x108(%r= bp) > >> >> > if (lock_list !=3D NULL && lock_list->ll_count !=3D 0) { > >> >> > ffffffff802db239: 0f 84 ff 00 00 00 je ffffffff802db3= 3e > >> >> > <witness_warn+0x30e> > >> >> > ffffffff802db23f: 44 8b 60 50 mov 0x50(%rax),%r1= 2d > >> >> > > >> >> > is it possible for the hardware to do any re-ordering here? > >> >> > > >> >> > The reason I'm suspicious is not just that the code doesn't have a > >> >> > lock leak at the indicated point, but in one instance I can see i= n the > >> >> > dump that the lock_list local from witness_warn is from the pcpu > >> >> > structure for CPU 0 (and I was warned about sched lock 0), but the > >> >> > thread id in panic_cpu is 2. So clearly the thread was being mig= rated > >> >> > right around panic time. > >> >> > > >> >> > This is the amd64 kernel on stable/7. I'm not sure exactly what = kind > >> >> > of hardware; it's a 4-way Intel chip from about 3 or 4 years ago = IIRC. > >> >> > > >> >> > So... do we need some kind of barrier in the code for sched_pin()= for > >> >> > it to really do what it claims? Could the hardware have re-order= ed > >> >> > the "mov %gs:0x48,%rax" PCPU_GET to before the sched_pin() > >> >> > increment? > >> >> > >> >> Hmmm, I think it might be able to because they refer to different l= ocations. > >> >> > >> >> Note this rule in section 8.2.2 of Volume 3A: > >> >> > >> >> =95 Reads may be reordered with older writes to different locatio= ns but not > >> >> with older writes to the same location. > >> >> > >> >> It is certainly true that sparc64 could reorder with RMO. I believ= e ia64 > >> >> could reorder as well. Since sched_pin/unpin are frequently used t= o provide > >> >> this sort of synchronization, we could use memory barriers in pin/u= npin > >> >> like so: > >> >> > >> >> sched_pin() > >> >> { > >> >> td->td_pinned =3D atomic_load_acq_int(&td->td_pinned) + 1; > >> >> } > >> >> > >> >> sched_unpin() > >> >> { > >> >> atomic_store_rel_int(&td->td_pinned, td->td_pinned - 1); > >> >> } > >> >> > >> >> We could also just use atomic_add_acq_int() and atomic_sub_rel_int(= ), but they > >> >> are slightly more heavyweight, though it would be more clear what i= s happening > >> >> I think. > >> > > >> > However, to actually get a race you'd have to have an interrupt fire= and > >> > migrate you so that the speculative read was from the other CPU. Ho= wever, I > >> > don't think the speculative read would be preserved in that case. T= he CPU > >> > has to return to a specific PC when it returns from the interrupt an= d it has > >> > no way of storing the state for what speculative reordering it might= be > >> > doing, so presumably it is thrown away? I suppose it is possible th= at it > >> > actually retires both instructions (but reordered) and then returns = to the PC > >> > value after the read of listlocks after the interrupt. However, in = that case > >> > the scheduler would not migrate as it would see td_pinned !=3D 0. T= o get the > >> > race you have to have the interrupt take effect prior to modifying t= d_pinned, > >> > so I think the processor would have to discard the reordered read of > >> > listlocks so it could safely resume execution at the 'incl' instruct= ion. > >> > > >> > The other nit there on x86 at least is that the incl instruction is = doing > >> > both a read and a write and another rule in the section 8.2.2 is thi= s: > >> > > >> > =95 Reads are not reordered with other reads. > >> > > >> > That would seem to prevent the read of listlocks from passing the re= ad of > >> > td_pinned in the incl instruction on x86. > >> > >> I wonder how that's interpreted in the microcode, though? I.e. if the > >> incr instruction decodes to load, add, store, does the h/w allow the > >> later reads to pass the final store? > > > > Well, the architecture is defined in terms of the ISA, not the microcod= e, per > > se, so I think it would have to treat the read for the incl as being an= earlier > > read than 'spinlocks'. > > > >> I added the following: > >> > >> sched_pin(); > >> lock_list =3D PCPU_GET(spinlocks); > >> if (lock_list !=3D NULL && lock_list->ll_count !=3D 0) { > >> + /* XXX debug for bug 67957 */ > >> + mfence(); > >> + lle =3D PCPU_GET(spinlocks); > >> + if (lle !=3D lock_list) { > >> + panic("Bug 67957: had lock list %p, now %p\n", > >> + lock_list, lle); > >> + } > >> + /* XXX end debug */ > >> sched_unpin(); > >> > >> /* > >> > >> ... and the panic triggered. I think it's more likely that some > >> barrier is needed in sched_pin() than that %gs is getting corrupted > >> but can always be dereferenced. > > > > Actually, I would beg to differ in that case. If PCPU_GET(spinlocks) > > returns non-NULL, then it means that you hold a spin lock, >=20 > ll_count is 0 for the "correct" pc_spinlocks and non-zero for the > "wrong" one, though. So I think it can be non-NULL but the current > thread/CPU doesn't hold a spinlock. Hmm, does the 'lock_list' pointer value in the dump match 'lock_list' from another CPU? =2D-=20 John Baldwin
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