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Date:      Thu, 31 Mar 2011 13:54:53 -0700
From:      Julian Elischer <julian@freebsd.org>
To:        John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
Cc:        Attilio Rao <attilio@freebsd.org>, freebsd-current@freebsd.org, Svatopluk Kraus <onwahe@gmail.com>
Subject:   Re: schedcpu() in /sys/kern/sched_4bsd.c calls thread_lock() on	thread with un-initialized td_lock
Message-ID:  <4D94EA1D.9010708@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <201103311437.19682.jhb@freebsd.org>
References:  <AANLkTimEiOW%2BkSZD6n1MHiRou3UWibU6Oy3fr9RO4_O4@mail.gmail.com>	<201103311418.31658.jhb@freebsd.org>	<AANLkTin7jzwh2CVouWfK7j7576MSjDVLAY%2B--_LTJX_Z@mail.gmail.com> <201103311437.19682.jhb@freebsd.org>

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On 3/31/11 11:37 AM, John Baldwin wrote:
> On Thursday, March 31, 2011 2:20:11 pm Attilio Rao wrote:
>> 2011/3/31 John Baldwin<jhb@freebsd.org>:
>>> On Thursday, March 31, 2011 12:34:31 pm Attilio Rao wrote:
>>>> 2011/3/31 John Baldwin<jhb@freebsd.org>:
>>>>> On Thursday, March 31, 2011 7:32:26 am Svatopluk Kraus wrote:
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>
>>>>>>    I've got a page fault (because of NULL td_lock) in
>>>>>> thread_lock_flags() called from schedcpu() in /sys/kern/sched_4bsd.c
>>>>>> file. During process fork, new thread is linked to new process which
>>>>>> is linked to allproc list and both allproc_lock and new process lock
>>>>>> are unlocked before sched_fork() is called, where new thread td_lock
>>>>>> is initialized. Only PRS_NEW process status is on sentry but not
>>>>>> checked in schedcpu().
>>>>> I think this should fix it:
>>>>>
>>>>> Index: sched_4bsd.c
>>>>> ===================================================================
>>>>> --- sched_4bsd.c        (revision 220190)
>>>>> +++ sched_4bsd.c        (working copy)
>>>>> @@ -463,6 +463,10 @@ schedcpu(void)
>>>>>         sx_slock(&allproc_lock);
>>>>>         FOREACH_PROC_IN_SYSTEM(p) {
>>>>>                 PROC_LOCK(p);
>>>>> +               if (p->p_state == PRS_NEW) {
>>>>> +                       PROC_UNLOCK(p);
>>>>> +                       continue;
>>>>> +               }
>>>>>                 FOREACH_THREAD_IN_PROC(p, td) {
>>>>>                         awake = 0;
>>>>>                         thread_lock(td);
>>>>>
>>>> I don't really think this fix is right because otherwise, when using
>>>> sched_4bsd anytime we are going to scan the thread list within a proc
>>>> we need to check for PRS_NEW.
>>>>
>>>> We likely need to change the init scheme for the td_lock by having a
>>>> scheduler primitive setting it and doing that on thread_init() UMA
>>>> constructor, or similar approach.
>>> But the thread state isn't valid anyway.  4BSD shouldn't be touching the
>>> thread since it is in an incomplete / undefined state.
>> Yep, in this case I'd then want to just add the threads to proc once
>> they are fully initialized.
>>
>> It is pointless (and dangerous) to replicate this check all over,
>> besides we want scheduler agnostic code, which means every iterations
>> of p_threads will need to check for a valid state of threads.
> Yes, we do have to check for PRS_NEW in many places with the current approach,
> but we need some way to reserve the PID to avoid duplicates and unless we
> expand the scope of allproc in fork by a whole lot or stop using the allproc
> list to track "pids in use", we will be stuck with some sort of "process
> is still being built" sentry.
>
the pid used to be reserved in the pid hash
it was not put into the proc list until it was set up.
I know you don't believe me but that's how it was around 2000 I'm 
pretty sure of it.






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