From: "Kalderon, Michal" <michal.kalde...@cavium.com> Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 18:59:04 +0000
> From: Kalderon, Michal > Sent: Tuesday, October 3, 2017 9:05 PM > To: David Miller >>From: David Miller <da...@davemloft.net> >>Sent: Tuesday, October 3, 2017 8:17 PM >>>> @@ -423,6 +423,41 @@ static void qed_ll2_rxq_parse_reg(struct qed_hwfn >>>> *p_hwfn, >>>> } >>>> >>>> static int >>>> +qed_ll2_handle_slowpath(struct qed_hwfn *p_hwfn, >>>> + struct qed_ll2_info *p_ll2_conn, >>>> + union core_rx_cqe_union *p_cqe, >>>> + unsigned long *p_lock_flags) >>>> +{ >>>... >>>> + spin_unlock_irqrestore(&p_rx->lock, *p_lock_flags); >>>> + >>> >>>You can't drop this lock. >>> >>>Another thread can enter the loop of our caller and process RX queue >>>entries, then we would return from here and try to process the same >>>entries again. >> >>The lock is there to synchronize access to chains between >>qed_ll2_rxq_completion >>and qed_ll2_post_rx_buffer. qed_ll2_rxq_completion can't be called from >>different threads, the light l2 uses the single sp status block we have. >>The reason we release the lock is to avoid a deadlock where as a result of >>calling >>upper-layer driver it will potentially post additional rx-buffers. > > Dave, is there anything else needed from me on this? > Noticed the series is still in "Changes Requested". I'm still not convinced that the lock dropping is legitimate. What if a spurious interrupt arrives? If the execution path in the caller is serialized for some reason, why are you using a spinlock and don't use that serialization for the mutual exclusion necessary for these queue indexes?