Re: phylib locking (was: Re: [REGRESSION] Re: [patch V3 09/33] genirq/msi: Add range checking) to msi_insert_desc()

From: Russell King (Oracle)
Date: Mon Feb 20 2023 - 15:16:11 EST


[dropped most on the Cc as this has probably deviated off topic for
them... and changed the subject]

On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 08:43:44PM +0100, Andrew Lunn wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 07:17:11PM +0000, Russell King (Oracle) wrote:
> > On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 06:29:33PM +0000, Marc Zyngier wrote:
> > > Lockdep also reports[1] a possible circular locking dependency between
> > > phy_attach_direct() and rtnetlink_rcv_msg(), which looks interesting.
> > >
> > > [1] https://paste.debian.net/1271454/
> >
> > Adding Andrew, but really this should be in a separate thread, since
> > this has nothing to do with MSI.
> >
> > It looks like the open path takes the RTNL lock followed by the phydev
> > lock, whereas the PHY probe path takes the phydev lock, and then if
> > there's a SFP attached to the PHY, we end up taking the RTNL lock.
> > That's going to be utterly horrid to try and solve, and isn't going
> > to be quick to fix.
>
> What are we actually trying to protect in phy_probe() when we take the
> lock and call phydev->drv->probe(phydev) ?
>
> The main purpose of the lock is to protect members of phydev, such as
> link, speed, duplex, which can be inconsistent when the lock is not
> held. But the PHY is not attached to a MAC yet, so a MAC cannot be
> using it, and those members of phydev are not valid yet anyway.
>
> The lock also prevents parallel operation on the device by phylib, but
> i cannot think of how that could happen at this early stage in the
> life of the PHY.
>
> So maybe we can move the mutex_lock() after the call to
> phydev->drv->probe()?

That's what I've been thinking too - I dug back in the history, and
it was a spin_lock_bh(), and before that it was a spin_lock().

The patch that converted it to a spin_lock_bh() is a brilliant
example of a poor commit message "Lock debugging finds a problem"
but doesn't say _what_ the problem was! Going back further still, the
spin_lock() was there from the very beginnings of PHYLIB. So the
reasoning for having a lock here has been lost in the depths of time.

The lock certainly doesn't prevent any interaction with
phy_attach_direct(), so it seems to be utterly pointless to take
the lock in the probe() function.

So yes, I agree, we can move the lock - and I wonder whether we
could just get rid of it completely in phy_probe().

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