Hello,

On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 04:39:20PM +0200, Petr Mladek wrote:
> +/*
> + * Test whether @work is being queued from another work
> + * executing on the same kthread.
> + */
> +static bool is_chained_work(struct kthread_worker *worker)
> +{
> +     struct kthread_worker *current_worker;
> +
> +     current_worker = current_kthread_worker();
> +     /*
> +      * Return %true if I'm a kthread worker executing a work item on
> +      * the given @worker.
> +      */
> +     return current_worker && current_worker == worker;
> +}

I'm not sure full-on chained work detection is necessary here.
kthread worker's usages tend to be significantly simpler and draining
is only gonna be used for destruction.

> +void drain_kthread_worker(struct kthread_worker *worker)
> +{
> +     int flush_cnt = 0;
> +
> +     spin_lock_irq(&worker->lock);
> +     worker->nr_drainers++;
> +
> +     while (!list_empty(&worker->work_list)) {
> +             /*
> +              * Unlock, so we could move forward. Note that queuing
> +              * is limited by @nr_drainers > 0.
> +              */
> +             spin_unlock_irq(&worker->lock);
> +
> +             flush_kthread_worker(worker);
> +
> +             if (++flush_cnt == 10 ||
> +                 (flush_cnt % 100 == 0 && flush_cnt <= 1000))
> +                     pr_warn("kthread worker %s: drain_kthread_worker() 
> isn't complete after %u tries\n",
> +                             worker->task->comm, flush_cnt);
> +
> +             spin_lock_irq(&worker->lock);
> +     }

I'd just do something like WARN_ONCE(flush_cnt++ > 10, "kthread worker: ...").

Thanks.

-- 
tejun
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