[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH v6 03/13] vpci: move lock outside of struct vpci
On 04.02.22 14:47, Jan Beulich wrote: > On 04.02.2022 13:37, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote: >> >> On 04.02.22 13:37, Jan Beulich wrote: >>> On 04.02.2022 12:13, Roger Pau Monné wrote: >>>> On Fri, Feb 04, 2022 at 11:49:18AM +0100, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>> On 04.02.2022 11:12, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote: >>>>>> On 04.02.22 11:15, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>> On 04.02.2022 09:58, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote: >>>>>>>> On 04.02.22 09:52, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 04.02.2022 07:34, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote: >>>>>>>>>> @@ -285,6 +286,12 @@ static int modify_bars(const struct pci_dev >>>>>>>>>> *pdev, uint16_t cmd, bool rom_only) >>>>>>>>>> continue; >>>>>>>>>> } >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> + spin_lock(&tmp->vpci_lock); >>>>>>>>>> + if ( !tmp->vpci ) >>>>>>>>>> + { >>>>>>>>>> + spin_unlock(&tmp->vpci_lock); >>>>>>>>>> + continue; >>>>>>>>>> + } >>>>>>>>>> for ( i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(tmp->vpci->header.bars); >>>>>>>>>> i++ ) >>>>>>>>>> { >>>>>>>>>> const struct vpci_bar *bar = >>>>>>>>>> &tmp->vpci->header.bars[i]; >>>>>>>>>> @@ -303,12 +310,14 @@ static int modify_bars(const struct pci_dev >>>>>>>>>> *pdev, uint16_t cmd, bool rom_only) >>>>>>>>>> rc = rangeset_remove_range(mem, start, end); >>>>>>>>>> if ( rc ) >>>>>>>>>> { >>>>>>>>>> + spin_unlock(&tmp->vpci_lock); >>>>>>>>>> printk(XENLOG_G_WARNING "Failed to remove [%lx, >>>>>>>>>> %lx]: %d\n", >>>>>>>>>> start, end, rc); >>>>>>>>>> rangeset_destroy(mem); >>>>>>>>>> return rc; >>>>>>>>>> } >>>>>>>>>> } >>>>>>>>>> + spin_unlock(&tmp->vpci_lock); >>>>>>>>>> } >>>>>>>>> At the first glance this simply looks like another unjustified (in the >>>>>>>>> description) change, as you're not converting anything here but you >>>>>>>>> actually add locking (and I realize this was there before, so I'm >>>>>>>>> sorry >>>>>>>>> for not pointing this out earlier). >>>>>>>> Well, I thought that the description already has "...the lock can be >>>>>>>> used (and in a few cases is used right away) to check whether vpci >>>>>>>> is present" and this is enough for such uses as here. >>>>>>>>> But then I wonder whether you >>>>>>>>> actually tested this, since I can't help getting the impression that >>>>>>>>> you're introducing a live-lock: The function is called from >>>>>>>>> cmd_write() >>>>>>>>> and rom_write(), which in turn are called out of vpci_write(). Yet >>>>>>>>> that >>>>>>>>> function already holds the lock, and the lock is not (currently) >>>>>>>>> recursive. (For the 3rd caller of the function - init_bars() - otoh >>>>>>>>> the locking looks to be entirely unnecessary.) >>>>>>>> Well, you are correct: if tmp != pdev then it is correct to acquire >>>>>>>> the lock. But if tmp == pdev and rom_only == true >>>>>>>> then we'll deadlock. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> It seems we need to have the locking conditional, e.g. only lock >>>>>>>> if tmp != pdev >>>>>>> Which will address the live-lock, but introduce ABBA deadlock potential >>>>>>> between the two locks. >>>>>> I am not sure I can suggest a better solution here >>>>>> @Roger, @Jan, could you please help here? >>>>> Well, first of all I'd like to mention that while it may have been okay to >>>>> not hold pcidevs_lock here for Dom0, it surely needs acquiring when >>>>> dealing >>>>> with DomU-s' lists of PCI devices. The requirement really applies to the >>>>> other use of for_each_pdev() as well (in vpci_dump_msi()), except that >>>>> there it probably wants to be a try-lock. >>>>> >>>>> Next I'd like to point out that here we have the still pending issue of >>>>> how to deal with hidden devices, which Dom0 can access. See my RFC patch >>>>> "vPCI: account for hidden devices in modify_bars()". Whatever the solution >>>>> here, I think it wants to at least account for the extra need there. >>>> Yes, sorry, I should take care of that. >>>> >>>>> Now it is quite clear that pcidevs_lock isn't going to help with avoiding >>>>> the deadlock, as it's imo not an option at all to acquire that lock >>>>> everywhere else you access ->vpci (or else the vpci lock itself would be >>>>> pointless). But a per-domain auxiliary r/w lock may help: Other paths >>>>> would acquire it in read mode, and here you'd acquire it in write mode (in >>>>> the former case around the vpci lock, while in the latter case there may >>>>> then not be any need to acquire the individual vpci locks at all). FTAOD: >>>>> I haven't fully thought through all implications (and hence whether this >>>>> is >>>>> viable in the first place); I expect you will, documenting what you've >>>>> found in the resulting patch description. Of course the double lock >>>>> acquire/release would then likely want hiding in helper functions. >>>> I've been also thinking about this, and whether it's really worth to >>>> have a per-device lock rather than a per-domain one that protects all >>>> vpci regions of the devices assigned to the domain. >>>> >>>> The OS is likely to serialize accesses to the PCI config space anyway, >>>> and the only place I could see a benefit of having per-device locks is >>>> in the handling of MSI-X tables, as the handling of the mask bit is >>>> likely very performance sensitive, so adding a per-domain lock there >>>> could be a bottleneck. >>> Hmm, with method 1 accesses serializing globally is basically >>> unavoidable, but with MMCFG I see no reason why OSes may not (move >>> to) permit(ting) parallel accesses, with serialization perhaps done >>> only at device level. See our own pci_config_lock, which applies to >>> only method 1 accesses; we don't look to be serializing MMCFG >>> accesses at all. >>> >>>> We could alternatively do a per-domain rwlock for vpci and special case >>>> the MSI-X area to also have a per-device specific lock. At which point >>>> it becomes fairly similar to what you propose. >> @Jan, @Roger >> >> 1. d->vpci_lock - rwlock <- this protects vpci >> 2. pdev->vpci->msix_tbl_lock - rwlock <- this protects MSI-X tables >> or should it better be pdev->msix_tbl_lock as MSI-X tables don't >> really depend on vPCI? > If so, perhaps indeed better the latter. But as said in reply to Roger, > I'm not convinced (yet) that doing away with the per-device lock is a > good move. As said there - we're ourselves doing fully parallel MMCFG > accesses, so OSes ought to be fine to do so, too. But with pdev->vpci_lock we face ABBA... > > Jan > >
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