On Thu, 2012-10-18 at 10:18 +0800, Lai Jiangshan wrote:
> > 
> > Looking at the patch, you are correct. The read side doesn't need the
> > memory barrier as the worse thing that will happen is that it sees the
> > locked = false, and will just grab the mutex unnecessarily.
> 
> ---------------------
> A memory barrier can be added iff these two things are known:
>       1) it disables the disordering between what and what.
>       2) what is the corresponding mb() that it pairs with.
> 

OK, I was just looking at the protection and actions of the locked flag,
but I see what you are saying with the data itself.

> You tried to add a mb() in percpu_up_write(), OK, I know it disables the 
> disordering
> between the writes to the protected data and the statement "p->locked = 
> false",
> But I can't find out the corresponding mb() that it pairs with.
> 
> percpu_down_read()                                    writes to the data
>       The cpu cache/prefetch the data                 writes to the data
>       which is chaos                                  writes to the data
>                                                       percpu_up_write()
>                                                               mb()
>                                                               p->locked = 
> false;
>       unlikely(p->locked)
>               the cpu see p->lock = false,
>               don't discard the cached/prefetch data
>       this_cpu_inc(*p->counters);
>       the code of read-access to the data
>       ****and we use the chaos data*****
> 
> So you need to add a mb() after "unlikely(p->locked)".

Does it need a full mb() or could it be just a rmb()? The down_read I
wouldn't think would need to protect against stores, would it? The
memory barrier should probably go in front of the unlikely() too. The
write to p->counters is handled by the synchronized sched, and adding a
rmb() in front of the unlikely check would keep prefetched data from
passing this barrier.

This is a perfect example why this primitive should be vetted outside of
mainline before it gets merged.

-- Steve


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