On Fri, Mar 23, 2018 at 09:21:05PM -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Mar 2018 15:57:04 -0700
> Joel Fernandes <joe...@google.com> wrote:
> 
> > > diff --git a/net/l2tp/l2tp_core.c b/net/l2tp/l2tp_core.c
> > > index 194a7483bb93..857b494bee29 100644
> > > --- a/net/l2tp/l2tp_core.c
> > > +++ b/net/l2tp/l2tp_core.c
> > > @@ -1677,6 +1677,8 @@ void __l2tp_session_unhash(struct l2tp_session 
> > > *session)
> > >  {
> > >         struct l2tp_tunnel *tunnel = session->tunnel;
> > >
> > > +       might_sleep();
> > > +
> > >         /* Remove the session from core hashes */
> > >         if (tunnel) {
> > >                 /* Remove from the per-tunnel hash */  
> > 
> > Thanks Thomas and Steven, also shouldn't this code be calling
> > synchronize_rcu_bh instead of synchronize_rcu, to complement the
> > rcu_read_lock_bh? In which situations would you call one versus the
> > other?
> 
> Probably, as the comment above rcu_read_lock_bh is:
> 
>  * rcu_read_lock_bh() - mark the beginning of an RCU-bh critical section
>  *
>  * This is equivalent of rcu_read_lock(), but to be used when updates
>  * are being done using call_rcu_bh() or synchronize_rcu_bh(). Since
>  * both call_rcu_bh() and synchronize_rcu_bh() consider completion of a
>  * softirq handler to be a quiescent state, a process in RCU read-side
>  * critical section must be protected by disabling softirqs.
> 
> It appears that the reason to use rcu_read_lock_bh() is if you are
> calling synchronize_rcu_bh(). Otherwise, one could just be using
> straight rcu_read_lock().

Agreed, these do have to match.  (I am still working on collapsing
RCU-preempt, RCU-bh, and RCU-sched into one thing per Linus's request,
but still at the pen-and-paper stage.  Not all that difficult, just a
lot of cases to cover.)

                                                        Thanx, Paul

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