Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Tue, 12 Dec 2006 17:45:19 -0500
From:      John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>
To:        "Attilio Rao" <attilio@freebsd.org>
Cc:        Kostik Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com>, Suleiman Souhlal <ssouhlal@freebsd.org>, freebsd-current@freebsd.org, tegge@freebsd.org, bde@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: kqueue LOR
Message-ID:  <200612121745.20915.jhb@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <3bbf2fe10612121334n12459019sb657a226615fc4b6@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <456950AF.3090308@sh.cvut.cz> <200612121614.18502.jhb@freebsd.org> <3bbf2fe10612121334n12459019sb657a226615fc4b6@mail.gmail.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Tuesday 12 December 2006 16:34, Attilio Rao wrote:
> 2006/12/12, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>:
> > On Tuesday 12 December 2006 15:13, Attilio Rao wrote:
> > > 2006/12/12, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org>:
> > > > On Tuesday 12 December 2006 13:43, Suleiman Souhlal wrote:
> > > > > Attilio Rao wrote:
> > > > > > 2006/12/12, Kostik Belousov <kostikbel@gmail.com>:
> > > > > >
> > > > > >> On Tue, Dec 12, 2006 at 12:44:54AM -0800, Suleiman Souhlal wrote:
> > > > > >> > Kostik Belousov wrote:
> > > > > >> > >On Sun, Nov 26, 2006 at 09:30:39AM +0100, V??clav Haisman 
wrote:
> > > > > >> > >
> > > > > >> > >>Hi,
> > > > > >> > >>the attached lor.txt contains LOR I got this yesterday. It is
> > > > > >> FreeBSD 6.1
> > > > > >> > >>with relatively recent kernel, from last week or so.
> > > > > >> > >>
> > > > > >> > >>--
> > > > > >> > >>VH
> > > > > >> > >
> > > > > >> > >
> > > > > >> > >>+lock order reversal:
> > > > > >> > >>+ 1st 0xc537f300 kqueue (kqueue) @
> > > > > >> /usr/src/sys/kern/kern_event.c:1547
> > > > > >> > >>+ 2nd 0xc45c22dc struct mount mtx (struct mount mtx) @
> > > > > >> > >>/usr/src/sys/ufs/ufs/ufs_vnops.c:138
> > > > > >> > >>+KDB: stack backtrace:
> > > > > >> > 
>>+kdb_backtrace(c07f9879,c45c22dc,c07fd31c,c07fd31c,c080c7b2,...)
> > at
> > > > > >> > >>kdb_backtrace+0x2f
> > > > > >> > >>+witness_checkorder(c45c22dc,9,c080c7b2,8a,c07fc6bd,...) at
> > > > > >> > >>witness_checkorder+0x5fe
> > > > > >> > >>+_mtx_lock_flags(c45c22dc,0,c080c7b2,8a,e790ba20,...) at
> > > > > >> > >>_mtx_lock_flags+0x32
> > > > > >> > >>+ufs_itimes(c47a0dd0,c47a0e90,e790ba78,c060e1cc,c47a0dd0,...) 
at
> > > > > >> > >>ufs_itimes+0x6c
> > > > > >> > 
>>+ufs_getattr(e790ba54,e790baec,c0622af6,c0896f40,e790ba54,...) at
> > > > > >> > >>ufs_getattr+0x20
> > > > > >> >
> > >>+VOP_GETATTR_APV(c0896f40,e790ba54,c08a5760,c47a0dd0,e790ba74,...) at
> > > > > >> > >>VOP_GETATTR_APV+0x3a
> > > > > >> > >>+filt_vfsread(c4cf261c,6,c07f445e,60b,0,...) at 
filt_vfsread+0x75
> > > > > >> > >>+knote(c4f57114,6,1,1f30c2af,1f30c2af,...) at knote+0x75
> > > > > >> > >>+VOP_WRITE_APV(c0896f40,e790bbec,c47a0dd0,227,e790bcb4,...) 
at
> > > > > >> > >>VOP_WRITE_APV+0x148
> > > > > >> > >>+vn_write(c45d5120,e790bcb4,c5802a00,0,c4b73a80,...) at
> > > > > >> vn_write+0x201
> > > > > >> > >>+dofilewrite(c4b73a80,1b,c45d5120,e790bcb4,ffffffff,...) at
> > > > > >> > >>dofilewrite+0x84
> > > > > >> > >>+kern_writev(c4b73a80,1b,e790bcb4,8220c71,0,...) at
> > kern_writev+0x65
> > > > > >> > >>+write(c4b73a80,e790bd04,c,c07d899c,3,...) at write+0x4f
> > > > > >> > >>+syscall(3b,3b,bfbf003b,0,bfbfeae4,...) at syscall+0x295
> > > > > >> > >>+Xint0x80_syscall() at Xint0x80_syscall+0x1f
> > > > > >> > >>+--- syscall (4, FreeBSD ELF32, write), eip = 0x2831d727, esp 
=
> > > > > >> > >>0xbfbfea1c, ebp = 0xbfbfea48 ---
> > > > > >> > >
> > > > > >> > >
> > > > > >> > >Thank you for the report. The LOR is caused by my commit into
> > > > > >> > >sys/ufs/ufs/ufs_vnops.c, rev. 1.280.
> > > > > >> >
> > > > > >> > Is the mount lock really required, if all we're doing is a 
single
> > > > > >> read of a
> > > > > >> > single word (mnt_kern_flags) (v_mount should be read-only for 
the
> > whole
> > > > > >> > lifetime of the vnode, I believe)? After all, reads of a single
> > word
> > > > > >> are
> > > > > >> > atomic on all our supported architectures.
> > > > > >> > The only situation I see where there MIGHT be problems are 
forced
> > > > > >> unmounts,
> > > > > >> > but I think there are bigger issues with those.
> > > > > >> > Sorry for noticing this email only now.
> > > > > >>
> > > > > >> The problem is real with snapshotting. Ignoring
> > > > > >> MNTK_SUSPEND/MNTK_SUSPENDED flags (in particular, reading stale 
value
> > of
> > > > > >> mnt_kern_flag) while setting IN_MODIFIED caused deadlock at ufs 
vnode
> > > > > >> inactivation time. This was the big trouble with nfsd and 
snapshots.
> > As
> > > > > >> such, I think that precise value of mmnt_kern_flag is critical 
there,
> > > > > >> and mount interlock is needed.
> > > > > >
> > > > > >
> > > > > > This can be avoided using a memory barrier when setting flags.
> > > > > > Even if memory barriers usage is not encouraged, some critical 
code
> > > > > > should really use them replacing a mutex semantic (if that worths 
it).
> > > > >
> > > > > Why is memory barrier usage not encouraged? As you said, they can be
> > used to
> > > > reduce the number of atomic (LOCKed) operations, in some cases.
> > > > >
> > > > > FWIW, Linux has rmb() (load mem barrier), wmb() (store mem barrier),
> > mb()
> > > > (load/store mem barrier), smp_rmb(), smp_wmb(), smp_mb() (mem barriers
> > only
> > > > needed on SMP), and barrier() (GCC barrier (__asm __volatile
> > (:::"memory"))
> > > > macros that I've personally found very useful.
> > > > > Admittedly, they are harder to use than atomic operations, but it 
might
> > > > still worth having something similar.
> > > >
> > > > Memory barriers just specify ordering, they don't ensure a cache flush 
so
> > > > another CPU reads up to date values.  You can use memory barriers in
> > > > conjunction with atomic operations on a variable to ensure that you 
can
> > > > safely read other variables (which is what locks do).  For example, in
> > this
> > > > case IIUC, you have a race that is because there is shared state 
between
> > two
> > > > fields, one in the mount structure, and one in the ufs i-node.  Memory
> > > > barriers alone won't prevent you from operating on those flags
> > > > non-consistently.  That is, you have two memory locations in play 
here,
> > and
> > > > atomic ops only work on a single one.  There isn't an atomic op to
> > do "read
> > > > from memory location A, check flag B, and if it's true write C to 
memory
> > > > location D".  Where would you put the membar in this case to ensure 
that
> > the
> > > > action always results in consistent behavior?
> > >
> > > Ah no, I misunderstood the problem.
> > > I was thinking it was about setting the flag A into location B if C is
> > > not present.
> >
> > That's the same problem, setting a flag in one word if a flag is set (or 
not
> > set) in another word.  Either way though you are dealing with two 
different
> > memory locations that need to be consistent with respect to one another.
> 
> No, I meant something like:
> 
> if (!(flag & FLAG1))
>         flag |= FLAG2;
> 
> which can be done nicely with a memory barrier.
> I didn't catch the problem was about 2 different locations...sorry.

Ah.  Even that can't be solved by membars alone.  What if you have:

	if (!(flag & FLAG1))
		flag |= FLAG2;

in one thread and in another:

	if (!(flag & FLAG2))
		flag |= FLAG1;

even if you put membar's in place, you can still get breakage (imagine flag 
being 0 initially and getting preempted in between test and set).  For this 
case you could use atomic_cmpset() in a loop without membars:

	do {
		x = flag;
		if (x & FLAG1)
			break;
	} while (!atomic_cmpset_int(&flag, x, x | FLAG2));

but often you have several variables linked together that need to be in a 
consistent state relative to each other, so you need to use a lock instead 
anyways.

-- 
John Baldwin



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?200612121745.20915.jhb>