Re: [PATCH] Documentation: Remove misleading examples of the barriers in wake_*()

From: Oleg Nesterov
Date: Thu Sep 17 2015 - 13:04:13 EST


On 09/17, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
>
> Included in it are some of the details on this subject, because a wakeup
> has two prior states that are of importance, the tasks own prior state
> and the wakeup state, both should be considered in the 'program order'
> flow.

Great. Just one question,

> + * BLOCKING -- aka. SLEEP + WAKEUP
> + *
> + * For blocking things are a little more interesting, because when we dequeue
> + * the task, we don't need to acquire the old rq lock in order to migrate it.
> + *
> + * Say CPU0 does a wait_event() and CPU1 does the wake() and migrates the task
> + * to CPU2 (the most complex example):
> + *
> + * CPU0 (schedule) CPU1 (try_to_wake_up) CPU2 (sched_ttwu_pending)
> + *
> + * X->state = UNINTERRUPTIBLE
> + * MB
> + * if (cond)
> + * break
> + * cond = true
> + *
> + * WMB WMB (aka smp_mb__before_spinlock)

Yes, both CPU's do WMB-aka-smp_mb__before_spinlock...

But afaics in this particular case we do not really need them?
So perhaps we should not even mention them?

Because (if I am right) this can confuse the reader who will try
to understand how/where do we rely on these barriers.

Oleg.

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/