Re: rcu_read_lock lost its compiler barrier

From: Alan Stern
Date: Tue Jun 04 2019 - 10:48:15 EST


On Mon, 3 Jun 2019, Paul E. McKenney wrote:

> On Mon, Jun 03, 2019 at 02:42:00PM +0800, Boqun Feng wrote:
> > On Mon, Jun 03, 2019 at 01:26:26PM +0800, Herbert Xu wrote:
> > > On Sun, Jun 02, 2019 at 08:47:07PM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > > >
> > > > 1. These guarantees are of full memory barriers, -not- compiler
> > > > barriers.
> > >
> > > What I'm saying is that wherever they are, they must come with
> > > compiler barriers. I'm not aware of any synchronisation mechanism
> > > in the kernel that gives a memory barrier without a compiler barrier.
> > >
> > > > 2. These rules don't say exactly where these full memory barriers
> > > > go. SRCU is at one extreme, placing those full barriers in
> > > > srcu_read_lock() and srcu_read_unlock(), and !PREEMPT Tree RCU
> > > > at the other, placing these barriers entirely within the callback
> > > > queueing/invocation, grace-period computation, and the scheduler.
> > > > Preemptible Tree RCU is in the middle, with rcu_read_unlock()
> > > > sometimes including a full memory barrier, but other times with
> > > > the full memory barrier being confined as it is with !PREEMPT
> > > > Tree RCU.
> > >
> > > The rules do say that the (full) memory barrier must precede any
> > > RCU read-side that occur after the synchronize_rcu and after the
> > > end of any RCU read-side that occur before the synchronize_rcu.
> > >
> > > All I'm arguing is that wherever that full mb is, as long as it
> > > also carries with it a barrier() (which it must do if it's done
> > > using an existing kernel mb/locking primitive), then we're fine.
> > >
> > > > Interleaving and inserting full memory barriers as per the rules above:
> > > >
> > > > CPU1: WRITE_ONCE(a, 1)
> > > > CPU1: synchronize_rcu
> > > > /* Could put a full memory barrier here, but it wouldn't help. */
> > >
> > > CPU1: smp_mb();
> > > CPU2: smp_mb();
> > >
> > > Let's put them in because I think they are critical. smp_mb() also
> > > carries with it a barrier().
> > >
> > > > CPU2: rcu_read_lock();
> > > > CPU1: b = 2;
> > > > CPU2: if (READ_ONCE(a) == 0)
> > > > CPU2: if (b != 1) /* Weakly ordered CPU moved this up! */
> > > > CPU2: b = 1;
> > > > CPU2: rcu_read_unlock
> > > >
> > > > In fact, CPU2's load from b might be moved up to race with CPU1's store,
> > > > which (I believe) is why the model complains in this case.
> > >
> > > Let's put aside my doubt over how we're even allowing a compiler
> > > to turn
> > >
> > > b = 1
> > >
> > > into
> > >
> > > if (b != 1)
> > > b = 1

Even if you don't think the compiler will ever do this, the C standard
gives compilers the right to invent read accesses if a plain (i.e.,
non-atomic and non-volatile) write is present. The Linux Kernel Memory
Model has to assume that compilers will sometimes do this, even if it
doesn't take the exact form of checking a variable's value before
writing to it.

(Incidentally, regardless of whether the compiler will ever do this, I
have seen examples in the kernel where people did exactly this
manually, in order to avoid dirtying a cache line unnecessarily.)

> > > Since you seem to be assuming that (a == 0) is true in this case
> >
> > I think Paul's example assuming (a == 0) is false, and maybe
>
> Yes, otherwise, P0()'s write to "b" cannot have happened.
>
> > speculative writes (by compilers) needs to added into consideration?

On the other hand, the C standard does not allow compilers to add
speculative writes. The LKMM assumes they will never occur.

> I would instead call it the compiler eliminating needless writes
> by inventing reads -- if the variable already has the correct value,
> no write happens. So no compiler speculation.
>
> However, it is difficult to create a solid defensible example. Yes,
> from LKMM's viewpoint, the weakly reordered invented read from "b"
> can be concurrent with P0()'s write to "b", but in that case the value
> loaded would have to manage to be equal to 1 for anything bad to happen.
> This does feel wrong to me, but again, it is difficult to create a solid
> defensible example.
>
> > Please consider the following case (I add a few smp_mb()s), the case may
> > be a little bit crasy, you have been warned ;-)
> >
> > CPU1: WRITE_ONCE(a, 1)
> > CPU1: synchronize_rcu called
> >
> > CPU1: smp_mb(); /* let assume there is one here */
> >
> > CPU2: rcu_read_lock();
> > CPU2: smp_mb(); /* let assume there is one here */
> >
> > /* "if (b != 1) b = 1" reordered */
> > CPU2: r0 = b; /* if (b != 1) reordered here, r0 == 0 */
> > CPU2: if (r0 != 1) /* true */
> > CPU2: b = 1; /* b == 1 now, this is a speculative write
> > by compiler
> > */
> >
> > CPU1: b = 2; /* b == 2 */
> >
> > CPU2: if (READ_ONCE(a) == 0) /* false */
> > CPU2: ...
> > CPU2 else /* undo the speculative write */
> > CPU2: b = r0; /* b == 0 */
> >
> > CPU2: smp_mb();
> > CPU2: read_read_unlock();
> >
> > I know this is too crasy for us to think a compiler like this, but this
> > might be the reason why the model complain about this.
> >
> > Paul, did I get this right? Or you mean something else?
>
> Mostly there, except that I am not yet desperate enough to appeal to
> compilers speculating stores. ;-)

This example really does point out a weakness in the LKMM's handling of
data races. Herbert's litmus test is a great starting point:


C xu

{}

P0(int *a, int *b)
{
WRITE_ONCE(*a, 1);
synchronize_rcu();
*b = 2;
}

P1(int *a, int *b)
{
rcu_read_lock();
if (READ_ONCE(*a) == 0)
*b = 1;
rcu_read_unlock();
}

exists (~b=2)


Currently the LKMM says the test is allowed and there is a data race,
but this answer clearly is wrong since it would violate the RCU
guarantee.

The problem is that the LKMM currently requires all ordering/visibility
of plain accesses to be mediated by marked accesses. But in this case,
the visibility is mediated by RCU. Technically, we need to add a
relation like

([M] ; po ; rcu-fence ; po ; [M])

into the definitions of ww-vis, wr-vis, and rw-xbstar. Doing so
changes the litmus test's result to "not allowed" and no data race.
However, I'm not certain that this single change is the entire fix;
more thought is needed.

Alan