Re: [PATCH] firmware loader: don't cancel _nowait requests when helper is not yet available

From: Rafael J. Wysocki
Date: Mon Mar 19 2012 - 07:20:45 EST


On Monday, March 19, 2012, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> On 3/18/2012 5:01 AM, Rafael J. Wysocki wrote:
> > On Sunday, March 18, 2012, Stephen Boyd wrote:
> >
> >> Ok. I like where nowait() is going in the other part of the thread but
> >> I'm still confused about when request_firmware() is correct to use. It
> >> seems that the function is inherently racy with freezing. Does every
> >> user of request_firmware() need to synchronize with freezing?
> >>
> >> For example, if one CPU is in the middle of a driver probe that makes a
> >> request_firmware() call and another CPU is starting to suspend we will
> >> have a race between usermodehelpers being disabled and the
> >> request_firmware() call acquiring the usermodehelper rwsem. If the
> >> suspending CPU wins the race it will disable usermodehelpers and the
> >> request_firmware() call will return -EBUSY and warn.
> > Yes, it will.
>
> That sounds wrong then, no? Why don't we have request_firmware() do a
> read_lock on the usermodehelpers sem and then have suspend do a write
> lock, disable usermodehelpers, wait for any users to finish, freeze
> processes and then unlock the write lock? That way we don't hit a case
> where request_firmware() races with suspend, and we don't have to change
> the warning or conditional.

So, you're postulating that the freezing of tasks be done under
umhelper_sem write-locked, right?

That would lead to freezing failures if a user space task waited in
request_firmware() for umhelper_sem to become available for read-locking
and unfortunately we don't have an interruptible variant of down_read().

However, we may catch request_firmware() and try to freeze the task
calling it instead. I'll try to prototype something along these lines later
today (on top of the three "firmware_class" patches I posted yesterday).

Thanks,
Rafael
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