On (03/07/19 13:06), John Ogness wrote:
> On 2019-03-04, Sergey Senozhatsky <sergey.senozhatsky.w...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> +  /* the printk kthread never exits */
> >> +  for (;;) {
> >> +          ret = prb_iter_wait_next(&iter, buf,
> >> +                                   PRINTK_RECORD_MAX, &master_seq);
> >> +          if (ret == -ERESTARTSYS) {
> >> +                  continue;
> >> +          } else if (ret < 0) {
> >> +                  /* iterator invalid, start over */
> >> +                  prb_iter_init(&iter, &printk_rb, NULL);
> >> +                  continue;
> >> +          }
> >> +
> >> +          msg = (struct printk_log *)buf;
> >> +          format_text(msg, master_seq, ext_text, &ext_len, text,
> >> +                      &len, printk_time);
> >> +
> >> +          console_lock();
> >> +          if (len > 0 || ext_len > 0) {
> >> +                  call_console_drivers(ext_text, ext_len, text, len);
> >> +                  boot_delay_msec(msg->level);
> >> +                  printk_delay();
> >> +          }
> >> +          console_unlock();
> >> +  }
> >
> > This, theoretically, creates a whole new world of possibilities for
> > console drivers. Now they can do GFP_KERNEL allocations and stall
> > printk_kthread during OOM; or they can explicitly reschedule from
> > ->write() callback (via console_conditional_schedule()) because
> > console_lock() sets console_may_schedule.
> 
> This was the intention.

This can stall the entire printing pipeline

OOM -> printk_kthread() -> console_lock() -> con_foo() -> kmalloc(GFP_KERNEL) 
-> OOM

> Although, as I mentioned in a previous response[0], perhaps we should
> not loosen the requirements on write().

Right. Console drivers better stay restricted; very restricted.

> It is exactly that disable_preempt() that is so harmful for realtime tasks.

I'll reply in another email (later today, or tomorrow).

        -ss

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