Re: 3.11-rc regression bisected: s2disk does not work (was Re:[PATCH v3 13/16] futex: use freezable blocking call)

From: Darren Hart
Date: Tue Jul 23 2013 - 14:25:01 EST


On Tue, 2013-07-23 at 20:08 +0200, Michael Leun wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Jul 2013 16:55:58 -0700
> Colin Cross <ccross@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Jul 22, 2013 at 4:02 PM, Michael Leun
> > <lkml20130126@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > On Mon, 6 May 2013 16:50:18 -0700
> > > Colin Cross <ccross@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > >> Avoid waking up every thread sleeping in a futex_wait call during
> > > [...]
> > >
> > > With 3.11-rc s2disk from suspend-utils stopped working: Frozen at
> > > displaying 0% of saving image to disk.
> > >
> > > echo "1" >/sys/power/state still works.
> > >
> > > Bisecting yielded 88c8004fd3a5fdd2378069de86b90b21110d33a4,
> > > reverting that from 3.11-rc2 makes s2disk working again.
> > >
> >
> > I think the expanded use of the freezable_* helpers is exposing an
> > existing bug in hibernation. The SNAPSHOT_FREEZE ioctl calls
> > freeze_processes(), which sets the global system_freezing_cnt and
> > pm_freezing. try_to_freeze_tasks then sends every process except
> > current a signal which causes them all to end up in the refrigerator.
> > The current task then returns back to userspace and continues its work
> > to suspend to disk. If that task ever hits a call to try_to_freeze()
> > in the kernel, it will see system_freezing_cnt and pm_freezing=true
> > and freeze, and suspend to disk will hang forever. It could hit
> > try_to_freeze() because of a signal delivered to the task, or from
> > calling any syscall that uses a freezable_* helper like the one I
> > added to sys_futex.
> >
> > I think the right solution is to add a flag to the freezing task that
> > marks it unfreezable. I think PF_NOFREEZE would work, although it is
> > normally used on kernel threads, can you see if the attached patch
> > helps?
>
> That patch helps.
>
> BTW, the only machine I can reproduce this bug with is an i7-3630QM
> notebook. Cannot reproduce on an Core Duo U1400 and cannot reproduce on
> an i7 M 620.
>
> Are the sysreq backtraces still wanted? If so, any tip, how I could get
> them saved?

Typically by setting up a serial console or a netconsole and saving the
log from the attached terminal emulator (such as screen or minicom).

Is this what you are asking?


--
Darren Hart
Intel Open Source Technology Center
Yocto Project - Linux Kernel


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