Re: [PATCH 7/9] liblockdep: Support using LD_PRELOAD

From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Wed May 08 2013 - 06:24:19 EST


On Tue, Apr 30, 2013 at 02:54:38PM -0400, Sasha Levin wrote:
> +
> +static struct rb_node **__get_lock_node(void *lock, struct rb_node **parent)
> +{

> +}
> +
> +/**
> + * __get_lock - find or create a lock instance
> + * @lock: pointer to a pthread lock function
> + *
> + * Try to find an existing lock in the rbtree using the provided pointer. If
> + * one wasn't found - create it.
> + */
> +static struct lock_lookup *__get_lock(void *lock)
> +{

> +}

This needs something like:

static void __del_lock(void *lock);

Since now you're repeating yourself in pthread_{rwlock,mutex}_destroy() :-)

> +int pthread_mutex_lock(pthread_mutex_t *mutex)
> +{
> + int r;
> +
> + try_init_preload();

You seem consistently whitespace challenged on this line.

> +
> + lock_acquire(&__get_lock(mutex)->dep_map, 0, 0, 0, 2, NULL,
> + (unsigned long)_THIS_IP_);
> + /*
> + * Here's the thing with pthread mutexes: unlike the kernel variant,
> + * they can fail.
> + *
> + * This means that the behaviour here is a bit different from what's
> + * going on in the kernel: there we just tell lockdep that we took the
> + * lock before actually taking it, but here we must deal with the case
> + * that locking failed.

mutex_lock_{interruptible,killable}() could be argued to be able to fail too.
And if you look at __mutex_lock_common() you'll see that it does the exact same
thing -- that is release on fail.

> + * To do that we'll "release" the lock if locking failed - this way
> + * we'll get lockdep doing the correct checks when we try to take
> + * the lock, and if that fails - we'll be back to the correct
> + * state by releasing it.
> + */
> + r = ll_pthread_mutex_lock(mutex);
> + if (r)
> + lock_release(&__get_lock(mutex)->dep_map, 0, (unsigned long)_THIS_IP_);
> +
> + return r;
> +}
> +
> +int pthread_mutex_trylock(pthread_mutex_t *mutex)
> +{
> + int r;
> +
> + try_init_preload();

See..

> + lock_acquire(&__get_lock(mutex)->dep_map, 0, 1, 0, 2, NULL, (unsigned long)_THIS_IP_);
> + r = ll_pthread_mutex_trylock(mutex);
> + if (r)
> + lock_release(&__get_lock(mutex)->dep_map, 0, (unsigned long)_THIS_IP_);
> +
> + return r;
> +}

> +__attribute__((constructor)) static void init_preload(void)
> +{
> + static bool preload_started;
> +
> + if (preload_done)
> + return;
> +
> + /*
> + * Some programs attempt to initialize and use locks in their
> + * allocation path. This means that a call to malloc() would
> + * result in locks being initialized and locked.
> + *
> + * Why is it an issue for us? dlsym() below will try allocating to
> + * give us the original function. Since this allocation will result
> + * in a locking operations, we have to let pthread deal with it,
> + * but we can't! we don't have the pointer to the original API
> + * since we're inside dlsym() trying to get it :(
> + *
> + * We can work around it by telling the program that locking was
> + * really okay, and just initialize those locks when we're fully
> + * up and running (this is ok because this all happens during
> + * initialization phase, when we have just one thread). But
> + * this is a big TODO at this point.
> + */

Fun.. got any example programs that trigger this?

> + if (preload_started) {
> + printf(
> + "LOCKDEP error: It seems that the program you are trying to "
> + "debug is initializing locks in it's allocation path.\n"
> + "This means that liblockdep cannot reliably analyze this "
> + "program since we need the allocator to work before we can "
> + "debug locks.\nSorry!\n");
> +
> + exit(1);
> + }
> +
> + preload_started = true;
> +
> + ll_pthread_mutex_init = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_mutex_init");
> + ll_pthread_mutex_lock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_mutex_lock");
> + ll_pthread_mutex_trylock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_mutex_trylock");
> + ll_pthread_mutex_unlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_mutex_unlock");
> + ll_pthread_mutex_destroy = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_mutex_destroy");
> +
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_init = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_init");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_destroy = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_destroy");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_rdlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_rdlock");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_tryrdlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_tryrdlock");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_wrlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_wrlock");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_trywrlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_trywrlock");
> + ll_pthread_rwlock_unlock = dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "pthread_rwlock_unlock");
> +
> + lockdep_init();
> +
> + preload_done = true;
> +}
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