Thread (17 messages) 17 messages, 4 authors, 2019-05-28

Re: [PATCH RFC 0/5] Remove some notrace RCU APIs

From: Joel Fernandes <hidden>
Date: 2019-05-25 18:14:13
Also in: linux-doc, lkml, rcu

On Sat, May 25, 2019 at 08:50:35AM -0700, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
On Sat, May 25, 2019 at 10:19:54AM -0400, Joel Fernandes wrote:
quoted
On Sat, May 25, 2019 at 07:08:26AM -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
quoted
On Sat, 25 May 2019 04:14:44 -0400
Joel Fernandes [off-list ref] wrote:
quoted
quoted
I guess the difference between the _raw_notrace and just _raw variants
is that _notrace ones do a rcu_check_sparse(). Don't we want to keep
that check?  
This is true.

Since the users of _raw_notrace are very few, is it worth keeping this API
just for sparse checking? The API naming is also confusing. I was expecting
_raw_notrace to do fewer checks than _raw, instead of more. Honestly, I just
want to nuke _raw_notrace as done in this series and later we can introduce a
sparse checking version of _raw if need-be. The other option could be to
always do sparse checking for _raw however that used to be the case and got
changed in http://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/linux-afs/2016-July/001016.html
What if we just rename _raw to _raw_nocheck, and _raw_notrace to _raw ?
That would also mean changing 160 usages of _raw to _raw_nocheck in the
kernel :-/.

The tracing usage of _raw_notrace is only like 2 or 3 users. Can we just call
rcu_check_sparse directly in the calling code for those and eliminate the APIs?

I wonder what Paul thinks about the matter as well.
My thought is that it is likely that a goodly number of the current uses
of _raw should really be some form of _check, with lockdep expressions
spelled out.  Not that working out what exactly those lockdep expressions
should be is necessarily a trivial undertaking.  ;-)
Yes, currently where I am a bit stuck is the rcu_dereference_raw()
cannot possibly know what SRCU domain it is under, so lockdep cannot check if
an SRCU lock is held without the user also passing along the SRCU domain. I
am trying to change lockdep to see if it can check if *any* srcu domain lock
is held (regardless of which one) and complain if none are. This is at least
better than no check at all.

However, I think it gets tricky for mutexes. If you have something like:
mutex_lock(some_mutex);
p = rcu_dereference_raw(gp);
mutex_unlock(some_mutex);

This might be a perfectly valid invocation of _raw, however my checks (patch
is still cooking) trigger a lockdep warning becase _raw cannot know that this
is Ok. lockdep thinks it is not in a reader section. This then gets into the
territory of a new rcu_derference_raw_protected(gp, assert_held(some_mutex))
which sucks because its yet another API. To circumvent this issue, can we
just have callers of rcu_dereference_raw ensure that they call
rcu_read_lock() if they are protecting dereferences by a mutex? That would
make things a lot easier and also may be Ok since rcu_read_lock is quite
cheap.
That aside, if we are going to change the name of an API that is
used 160 places throughout the tree, we would need to have a pretty
good justification.  Without such a justification, it will just look
like pointless churn to the various developers and maintainers on the
receiving end of the patches.
Actually, the API name change is not something I want to do, it is Steven
suggestion. My suggestion is let us just delete _raw_notrace and just use the
_raw API for tracing, since _raw doesn't do any tracing anyway. Steve pointed
that _raw_notrace does sparse checking unlike _raw, but I think that isn't an
issue since _raw doesn't do such checking at the moment anyway.. (if possible
check my cover letter again for details/motivation of this series).

thanks!

 - Joel
							Thanx, Paul
quoted
thanks, Steven!
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