* David Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > that was pretty much the only place in the whole kernel that got hit > > by some rcu-preempt side-effect - and even this appears to show that > > it's a real bug that was in hiding. > > No, rather, it's the only location that triggered an automated > debugging check. The very first set of code paths we checked, in > response to the bug trigger, showed beyond a shadow of a doubt that > this assumption is pervasive and in many locations that none of the > automated debugging checks live. > > The tree should be fully audited before such a huge semantic change > gets added into the tree.
i'd like to add more automated checks to the tree. 'naked' smp_processor_id() use is one telltale sign of such a problem - what other instances could you suggest me to check? The thing is, in 99% of the cases the smp_processor_id() check caught such assumptions in other code because 'preempt off' is inextricably connected to /some/ use of smp_processor_id() - be it get_cpu_var() or any other derivative interface. So i'm wondering what other assumptions there are (or can be) about rcu_read_lock() also being a preempt-off point. Thanks! (btw., i always argued that neither preempt_disable() nor rcu_read_lock() is an ideal interface for locking because both hide critical assumptions and dependencies - and they both are able to create little versions of the 'big BKL mess' that we had to fight a few years ago. (and that we still have to fight today, in certain areas of code.)) Ingo - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html