On 08/02, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > > On Fri, Aug 01, 2014 at 08:40:59PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > On 08/01, Paul E. McKenney wrote: > > > > > > On Fri, Aug 01, 2014 at 04:11:44PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > > > > Not sure this makes any sense, but perhaps we can check for the new > > > > callbacks and start the next gp. IOW, the main loop roughly does > > > > > > > > for (;;) { > > > > list = rcu_tasks_cbs_head; > > > > rcu_tasks_cbs_head = NULL; > > > > > > > > if (!list) > > > > sleep(); > > > > > > > > synchronize_sched(); > > > > > > > > wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(); > > > > > > > > synchronize_sched(); > > > > > > > > process_callbacks(list); > > > > } > > > > > > > > we can "join" 2 synchronize_sched's and do > > > > > > > > ready_list = NULL; > > > > for (;;) { > > > > list = rcu_tasks_cbs_head; > > > > rcu_tasks_cbs_head = NULL; > > > > > > > > if (!list && !ready_list) > > > > sleep(); > > > > > > > > synchronize_sched(); > > > > > > > > if (ready_list) { > > > > process_callbacks(ready_list); > > > > ready_list = NULL; > > > > } > > > > > > > > if (!list) > > > > continue; > > > > > > > > wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(); > > > > ready_list = list; > > > > } > > > > > > The lack of barriers for the updates I am checking mean that I really > > > do need a synchronize_sched() on either side of the grace-period wait. > > > > Yes, > > > > > The grace period needs to guarantee that anything that happened on any > > > CPU before the start of the grace period happens before anything that > > > happens on any CPU after the end of the grace period. If I leave off > > > either synchronize_sched(), we lose this guarantee. > > > > But the 2nd variant still has synchronize_sched() on both sides? > > Your second variant above? Unless it is in wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdouts(), > I am not seeing it.
I guess I probably misunderstood you from the very beginning. And now I am curious what exactly I missed... The code above doesn't do process_callbacks() after wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(), it does this only after another synchronize_sched(). The only difference is that we dequeue the next generation of the pending rcu_tasks_cbs_head callbacks. IOW. Lets look at the current code. Suppose that synchronize_rcu_tasks() is called when rcu_tasks_kthread() sleeps in wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(). In this case the new wakeme_after_rcu callback will sit in rcu_tasks_cbs_head until rcu_tasks_kthread() does the 2nd synchronize_sched() + process_callbacks(). Only after that it will be dequeued and rcu_tasks_kthread() will start another gp. This means that we have 3 synchronize_sched()'s before synchronize_rcu_tasks() returns. Do we really need this? With the 2nd variant the new callback will be dequeud right after wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(), and we only have 2 necessary synchronize_sched()'s around wait_for_rcu_tasks_holdout(). But it seems that I missed something else. Could you please spell? Oleg. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/