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author | Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> | 2020-05-27 23:11:13 +0300 |
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committer | Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> | 2020-05-28 11:31:09 +0300 |
commit | 91710728d1725de51d06b40674abf6e860d592c7 (patch) | |
tree | 488807dfb3a547c5b8dbf88c7210fb3f08e39e63 /Documentation/locking | |
parent | 4f470fff6768ed860819aa36d0c8199385364155 (diff) | |
download | linux-91710728d1725de51d06b40674abf6e860d592c7.tar.xz |
locking: Introduce local_lock()
preempt_disable() and local_irq_disable/save() are in principle per CPU big
kernel locks. This has several downsides:
- The protection scope is unknown
- Violation of protection rules is hard to detect by instrumentation
- For PREEMPT_RT such sections, unless in low level critical code, can
violate the preemptability constraints.
To address this PREEMPT_RT introduced the concept of local_locks which are
strictly per CPU.
The lock operations map to preempt_disable(), local_irq_disable/save() and
the enabling counterparts on non RT enabled kernels.
If lockdep is enabled local locks gain a lock map which tracks the usage
context. This will catch cases where an area is protected by
preempt_disable() but the access also happens from interrupt context. local
locks have identified quite a few such issues over the years, the most
recent example is:
b7d5dc21072cd ("random: add a spinlock_t to struct batched_entropy")
Aside of the lockdep coverage this also improves code readability as it
precisely annotates the protection scope.
PREEMPT_RT substitutes these local locks with 'sleeping' spinlocks to
protect such sections while maintaining preemtability and CPU locality.
local locks can replace:
- preempt_enable()/disable() pairs
- local_irq_disable/enable() pairs
- local_irq_save/restore() pairs
They are also used to replace code which implicitly disables preemption
like:
- get_cpu()/put_cpu()
- get_cpu_var()/put_cpu_var()
with PREEMPT_RT friendly constructs.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Andrzej Siewior <bigeasy@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20200527201119.1692513-2-bigeasy@linutronix.de
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/locking')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/locking/locktypes.rst | 215 |
1 files changed, 204 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/locking/locktypes.rst b/Documentation/locking/locktypes.rst index 09f45ce38d26..1b577a8bf982 100644 --- a/Documentation/locking/locktypes.rst +++ b/Documentation/locking/locktypes.rst @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ The kernel provides a variety of locking primitives which can be divided into two categories: - Sleeping locks + - CPU local locks - Spinning locks This document conceptually describes these lock types and provides rules @@ -44,9 +45,23 @@ Sleeping lock types: On PREEMPT_RT kernels, these lock types are converted to sleeping locks: + - local_lock - spinlock_t - rwlock_t + +CPU local locks +--------------- + + - local_lock + +On non-PREEMPT_RT kernels, local_lock functions are wrappers around +preemption and interrupt disabling primitives. Contrary to other locking +mechanisms, disabling preemption or interrupts are pure CPU local +concurrency control mechanisms and not suited for inter-CPU concurrency +control. + + Spinning locks -------------- @@ -67,6 +82,7 @@ can have suffixes which apply further protections: _irqsave/restore() Save and disable / restore interrupt disabled state =================== ==================================================== + Owner semantics =============== @@ -139,6 +155,56 @@ implementation, thus changing the fairness: writer from starving readers. +local_lock +========== + +local_lock provides a named scope to critical sections which are protected +by disabling preemption or interrupts. + +On non-PREEMPT_RT kernels local_lock operations map to the preemption and +interrupt disabling and enabling primitives: + + =========================== ====================== + local_lock(&llock) preempt_disable() + local_unlock(&llock) preempt_enable() + local_lock_irq(&llock) local_irq_disable() + local_unlock_irq(&llock) local_irq_enable() + local_lock_save(&llock) local_irq_save() + local_lock_restore(&llock) local_irq_save() + =========================== ====================== + +The named scope of local_lock has two advantages over the regular +primitives: + + - The lock name allows static analysis and is also a clear documentation + of the protection scope while the regular primitives are scopeless and + opaque. + + - If lockdep is enabled the local_lock gains a lockmap which allows to + validate the correctness of the protection. This can detect cases where + e.g. a function using preempt_disable() as protection mechanism is + invoked from interrupt or soft-interrupt context. Aside of that + lockdep_assert_held(&llock) works as with any other locking primitive. + +local_lock and PREEMPT_RT +------------------------- + +PREEMPT_RT kernels map local_lock to a per-CPU spinlock_t, thus changing +semantics: + + - All spinlock_t changes also apply to local_lock. + +local_lock usage +---------------- + +local_lock should be used in situations where disabling preemption or +interrupts is the appropriate form of concurrency control to protect +per-CPU data structures on a non PREEMPT_RT kernel. + +local_lock is not suitable to protect against preemption or interrupts on a +PREEMPT_RT kernel due to the PREEMPT_RT specific spinlock_t semantics. + + raw_spinlock_t and spinlock_t ============================= @@ -258,10 +324,82 @@ implementation, thus changing semantics: PREEMPT_RT caveats ================== +local_lock on RT +---------------- + +The mapping of local_lock to spinlock_t on PREEMPT_RT kernels has a few +implications. For example, on a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel the following code +sequence works as expected:: + + local_lock_irq(&local_lock); + raw_spin_lock(&lock); + +and is fully equivalent to:: + + raw_spin_lock_irq(&lock); + +On a PREEMPT_RT kernel this code sequence breaks because local_lock_irq() +is mapped to a per-CPU spinlock_t which neither disables interrupts nor +preemption. The following code sequence works perfectly correct on both +PREEMPT_RT and non-PREEMPT_RT kernels:: + + local_lock_irq(&local_lock); + spin_lock(&lock); + +Another caveat with local locks is that each local_lock has a specific +protection scope. So the following substitution is wrong:: + + func1() + { + local_irq_save(flags); -> local_lock_irqsave(&local_lock_1, flags); + func3(); + local_irq_restore(flags); -> local_lock_irqrestore(&local_lock_1, flags); + } + + func2() + { + local_irq_save(flags); -> local_lock_irqsave(&local_lock_2, flags); + func3(); + local_irq_restore(flags); -> local_lock_irqrestore(&local_lock_2, flags); + } + + func3() + { + lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); + access_protected_data(); + } + +On a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel this works correctly, but on a PREEMPT_RT kernel +local_lock_1 and local_lock_2 are distinct and cannot serialize the callers +of func3(). Also the lockdep assert will trigger on a PREEMPT_RT kernel +because local_lock_irqsave() does not disable interrupts due to the +PREEMPT_RT-specific semantics of spinlock_t. The correct substitution is:: + + func1() + { + local_irq_save(flags); -> local_lock_irqsave(&local_lock, flags); + func3(); + local_irq_restore(flags); -> local_lock_irqrestore(&local_lock, flags); + } + + func2() + { + local_irq_save(flags); -> local_lock_irqsave(&local_lock, flags); + func3(); + local_irq_restore(flags); -> local_lock_irqrestore(&local_lock, flags); + } + + func3() + { + lockdep_assert_held(&local_lock); + access_protected_data(); + } + + spinlock_t and rwlock_t ----------------------- -These changes in spinlock_t and rwlock_t semantics on PREEMPT_RT kernels +The changes in spinlock_t and rwlock_t semantics on PREEMPT_RT kernels have a few implications. For example, on a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel the following code sequence works as expected:: @@ -282,9 +420,61 @@ local_lock mechanism. Acquiring the local_lock pins the task to a CPU, allowing things like per-CPU interrupt disabled locks to be acquired. However, this approach should be used only where absolutely necessary. +A typical scenario is protection of per-CPU variables in thread context:: -raw_spinlock_t --------------- + struct foo *p = get_cpu_ptr(&var1); + + spin_lock(&p->lock); + p->count += this_cpu_read(var2); + +This is correct code on a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel, but on a PREEMPT_RT kernel +this breaks. The PREEMPT_RT-specific change of spinlock_t semantics does +not allow to acquire p->lock because get_cpu_ptr() implicitly disables +preemption. The following substitution works on both kernels:: + + struct foo *p; + + migrate_disable(); + p = this_cpu_ptr(&var1); + spin_lock(&p->lock); + p->count += this_cpu_read(var2); + +On a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel migrate_disable() maps to preempt_disable() +which makes the above code fully equivalent. On a PREEMPT_RT kernel +migrate_disable() ensures that the task is pinned on the current CPU which +in turn guarantees that the per-CPU access to var1 and var2 are staying on +the same CPU. + +The migrate_disable() substitution is not valid for the following +scenario:: + + func() + { + struct foo *p; + + migrate_disable(); + p = this_cpu_ptr(&var1); + p->val = func2(); + +While correct on a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel, this breaks on PREEMPT_RT because +here migrate_disable() does not protect against reentrancy from a +preempting task. A correct substitution for this case is:: + + func() + { + struct foo *p; + + local_lock(&foo_lock); + p = this_cpu_ptr(&var1); + p->val = func2(); + +On a non-PREEMPT_RT kernel this protects against reentrancy by disabling +preemption. On a PREEMPT_RT kernel this is achieved by acquiring the +underlying per-CPU spinlock. + + +raw_spinlock_t on RT +-------------------- Acquiring a raw_spinlock_t disables preemption and possibly also interrupts, so the critical section must avoid acquiring a regular @@ -325,22 +515,25 @@ Lock type nesting rules The most basic rules are: - - Lock types of the same lock category (sleeping, spinning) can nest - arbitrarily as long as they respect the general lock ordering rules to - prevent deadlocks. + - Lock types of the same lock category (sleeping, CPU local, spinning) + can nest arbitrarily as long as they respect the general lock ordering + rules to prevent deadlocks. + + - Sleeping lock types cannot nest inside CPU local and spinning lock types. - - Sleeping lock types cannot nest inside spinning lock types. + - CPU local and spinning lock types can nest inside sleeping lock types. - - Spinning lock types can nest inside sleeping lock types. + - Spinning lock types can nest inside all lock types These constraints apply both in PREEMPT_RT and otherwise. The fact that PREEMPT_RT changes the lock category of spinlock_t and -rwlock_t from spinning to sleeping means that they cannot be acquired while -holding a raw spinlock. This results in the following nesting ordering: +rwlock_t from spinning to sleeping and substitutes local_lock with a +per-CPU spinlock_t means that they cannot be acquired while holding a raw +spinlock. This results in the following nesting ordering: 1) Sleeping locks - 2) spinlock_t and rwlock_t + 2) spinlock_t, rwlock_t, local_lock 3) raw_spinlock_t and bit spinlocks Lockdep will complain if these constraints are violated, both in |