On 03/26/2013 01:51 PM, Davidlohr Bueso wrote:
> On Tue, 2013-03-26 at 13:33 -0400, Sasha Levin wrote:
>> On 03/20/2013 03:55 PM, Rik van Riel wrote:
>>> This series makes the sysv semaphore code more scalable,
>>> by reducing the time the semaphore lock is held, and making
>>> the locking more scalable for semaphore arrays with multiple
>>> semaphores.
>>
>> Hi Rik,
>>
>> Another issue that came up is:
>>
>> [   96.347341] ================================================
>> [   96.348085] [ BUG: lock held when returning to user space! ]
>> [   96.348834] 3.9.0-rc4-next-20130326-sasha-00011-gbcb2313 #318 Tainted: G  
>>       W
>> [   96.360300] ------------------------------------------------
>> [   96.361084] trinity-child9/7583 is leaving the kernel with locks still 
>> held!
>> [   96.362019] 1 lock held by trinity-child9/7583:
>> [   96.362610]  #0:  (rcu_read_lock){.+.+..}, at: [<ffffffff8192eafb>] 
>> SYSC_semtimedop+0x1fb/0xec0
>>
>> It seems that we can leave semtimedop without releasing the rcu read lock.
>>
>> I'm a bit confused by what's going on in semtimedop with regards to rcu read 
>> lock, it
>> seems that this behaviour is actually intentional?
>>
>>         rcu_read_lock();
>>         sma = sem_obtain_object_check(ns, semid);
>>         if (IS_ERR(sma)) {
>>                 if (un)
>>                         rcu_read_unlock();
>>                 error = PTR_ERR(sma);
>>                 goto out_free;
>>         }
>>
>> When I've looked at that it seems that not releasing the read lock was (very)
>> intentional.
> 
> This logic was from the original code, which I also found to be quite
> confusing.

I wasn't getting this warning with the old code, so there was probably something
else that triggers this now.

>>
>> After that, the only code path that would release the lock starts with:
>>
>>         if (un) {
>>              ...
>>
>> So we won't release the lock at all if un is NULL?
>>
> 
> Not necessarily, we do release everything at the end of the function: 
> 
> out_unlock_free:
>       sem_unlock(sma, locknum);

Ow, there's a rcu_read_unlock() in sem_unlock()? This complicates things even
more I suspect. If un is non-NULL we'll be unlocking rcu lock twice?

        if (un->semid == -1) {
                rcu_read_unlock();
                goto out_unlock_free;
        }
[...]
        out_unlock_free:
                sem_unlock(sma, locknum);


Thanks,
Sasha
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