Re: [bisected] system hang after boot

From: Will Deacon
Date: Mon Nov 27 2017 - 08:00:02 EST


Hi Martin,

On Mon, Nov 27, 2017 at 01:49:18PM +0100, Martin Schwidefsky wrote:
> On Mon, 27 Nov 2017 11:49:48 +0000
> Will Deacon <will.deacon@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 09:22:17PM +0100, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > > On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 06:26:59PM +0000, Will Deacon wrote:
> > >
> > > > Now, I can't see what the break_lock is doing here other than causing
> > > > problems. Is there a good reason for it, or can you just try removing it
> > > > altogether? Patch below.
> > >
> > > The main use is spin_is_contended(), which in turn ends up used in
> > > __cond_resched_lock() through spin_needbreak().
> > >
> > > This allows better lock wait times for PREEMPT kernels on platforms
> > > where the lock implementation itself cannot provide 'contended' state.
> > >
> > > In that capacity the write-write race shouldn't be a problem though.
> >
> > I'm not sure why it isn't a problem: given that the break_lock variable
> > can read as 1 for a lock that is no longer contended and 0 for a lock that
> > is currently contended, then the __cond_resched_lock is likely to see a
> > value of 0 (i.e. spin_needbreak always return false) more often than no
> > since it's checked by the lock holder.
>
> Grepping for 'break_lock' the two locking blueprints are the only places
> where the field is written to. Unless I am blind, the associated unlock
> functions do *not* reset 'break_lock'.
>
> Without the raw_##op##_can_lock(lock) check the first of the blueprints
> now looks like this:
>
> void __lockfunc __raw_##op##_lock(locktype##_t *lock) \
> { \
> for (;;) { \
> preempt_disable(); \
> if (likely(do_raw_##op##_trylock(lock))) \
> break; \
> preempt_enable(); \
> \
> if (!(lock)->break_lock) \
> (lock)->break_lock = 1; \
> while ((lock)->break_lock) \
> arch_##op##_relax(&lock->raw_lock); \
> } \
> (lock)->break_lock = 0; \
> } \
>
> All it takes to create an endless loop is two CPUs, the first acquired the
> lock and the second tries to get the lock. After the unsuccessful trylock
> of the second CPU, the first CPU releases the lock and never tries to take
> it again. The second CPU will be stuck in an endless loop.

Yes, it basically relies on the lock holder never winning that race.
However, Peter's use-case just needs the lock-holder to be able to detect
contention (which is always best-effort anyway), so I think we can make that
"work" by removing the while loop above (see my subsequent diff sent to
Sebastian).

It's still questionable, because on a machine with store-buffers you really
want to order writes to break_lock against something else, but it might
happen to fall out depending on the details of the trylock() implementation.

> I guess my best course of action is to remove GENERIC_LOCKBREAK from
> arch/s390/Kconfig to avoid this construct altogether. Let us see what
> breaks if I do that ..

We could just consider ripping out GENERIC_LOCKBREAK entirely, but I was
hoping we could get a simpler fix in for now.

Will