On Thu, Aug 27 2020 at 09:47, peterz wrote: > On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 09:24:19PM -0400, Joel Fernandes wrote: >> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 09:18:26PM -0400, Joel Fernandes wrote: >> > On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 10:47:41AM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: >> > > Lots of things take locks, due to a wee bug, rcu_lockdep didn't notice >> > > that the locking tracepoints were using RCU. >> > > >> > > Push rcu_idle_{enter,exit}() as deep as possible into the idle paths, >> > > this also resolves a lot of _rcuidle()/RCU_NONIDLE() usage. >> > > >> > > Specifically, sched_clock_idle_wakeup_event() will use ktime which >> > > will use seqlocks which will tickle lockdep, and >> > > stop_critical_timings() uses lock. >> > >> > I was wondering if those tracepoints should just use _rcuidle variant of >> > the >> > trace call. But that's a terrible idea considering that would add unwanted >> > overhead I think. >> > >> > Reviewed-by: Joel Fernandes (Google) <j...@joelfernandes.org> >> >> BTW, if tracepoint is converted to use RCU-trace flavor, then these kinds of >> issues go away, no? That RCU flavor is always watching. > > All trace_*_rcuidle() and RCU_NONIDLE() usage is a bug IMO.
It's the same problem as low level entry/exit. And that stuff is a hack which papers over the problem instead of fixing it from ground up. But we are talking about tracing, right? Thanks, tglx