Re: [RESEND] [PATCH v2] [BUGFIX] x86/x86_64: fix CPU offliningtriggered "inactive" device IRQ interrruption

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Sun Jun 07 2009 - 05:54:48 EST



* Gary Hade <garyhade@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Wed, Jun 03, 2009 at 04:55:26AM -0700, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> > Gary Hade <garyhade@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> >
> > > Impact: Eliminates a race that can leave the system in an
> > > unusable state
> > >
> > > During rapid offlining of multiple CPUs there is a chance
> > > that an IRQ affinity move destination CPU will be offlined
> > > before the IRQ affinity move initiated during the offlining
> > > of a previous CPU completes. This can happen when the device
> > > is not very active and thus fails to generate the IRQ that is
> > > needed to complete the IRQ affinity move before the move
> > > destination CPU is offlined. When this happens there is an
> > > -EBUSY return from __assign_irq_vector() during the offlining
> > > of the IRQ move destination CPU which prevents initiation of
> > > a new IRQ affinity move operation to an online CPU. This
> > > leaves the IRQ affinity set to an offlined CPU.
> > >
> > > I have been able to reproduce the problem on some of our
> > > systems using the following script. When the system is idle
> > > the problem often reproduces during the first CPU offlining
> > > sequence.
> >
> > Nacked-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > fixup_irqs() is broken for allowing such a thing.
>
> When fixup_irqs() calls the set_affinity function:
> ...
> if (desc->chip->set_affinity)
> desc->chip->set_affinity(irq, affinity);
> ...
> it receives no feedback so it obviously expects the set_affinity
> function or it's called functions to do the right thing by preventing
> or correctly handling any problems that should arise. In the case of
> this bug there is obviously a problem happening during the set_affinity
> function call that needs to be resolved and/or properly handled.
>
> When you made your "x86_64 irq: Safely cleanup an irq after moving it."
> changes (re: http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/2/23/92) you added the check
> to __assign_irq_vector() that causes it to return -EBUSY if the
> migration of the IRQ is still in progress:
> + if ((cfg->move_in_progress) || cfg->move_cleanup_count)
> + return -EBUSY;
> +
> However, you did not add any code to other functions on the
> call stack to properly deal with this error. When doing this
> you may have assumed (as I may have also assumed) that the underlying
> code was solid enough that the handling was not needed. Unfortunately,
> you apparently did not anticipate the case where an idle or relatively
> idle device may not generate the IRQ needed to complete the move
> before the CPU that is still handling that IRQ is offlined.
>
> My fix only addresses the issue that caused the -EBUSY return
> and subsequent mess. It does not address the omitted handling
> for this error condition. If we were to add the handling to
> fixup_irq() and the arch and non-arch specific functions above
> it on the call stack as you may be suggesting, it would be quite
> involved because of all the things that would need to be undone.
>
> I am not certain that my fix plugs the very last hole that could
> cause the -EBUSY return from __assign_irq_vector() so maybe we
> should at least add a warning or BUG_ON to make the unhandled
> error more obvious in the future. I would be happy to provide
> this via a separate patch.

A WARN_ON_ONCE() patch would certainly be nice, as a reminder and as
a prodder-tool.

Ingo
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