On Thu, Sep 01, 2005 at 01:35:23PM +0200, Arjan van de Ven wrote: > +static inline void glock_put(struct gfs2_glock *gl) > +{ > + if (atomic_read(&gl->gl_count) == 1) > + gfs2_glock_schedule_for_reclaim(gl); > + gfs2_assert(gl->gl_sbd, atomic_read(&gl->gl_count) > 0,); > + atomic_dec(&gl->gl_count); > +} > > this code has a race
The first two lines of the function with the race are non-essential and could be removed. In the common case where there's no race, they just add efficiency by moving the glock to the reclaim list immediately. Otherwise, the scand thread would do it later when actively trying to reclaim glocks. > +static inline int queue_empty(struct gfs2_glock *gl, struct list_head *head) > +{ > + int empty; > + spin_lock(&gl->gl_spin); > + empty = list_empty(head); > + spin_unlock(&gl->gl_spin); > + return empty; > +} > > that looks like a racey interface to me... if so.. why bother locking at > all? The spinlock protects the list but is not the primary method of synchronizing processes that are working with a glock. When the list is in fact empty, there will be no race, and the locking wouldn't be necessary. In this case, the "glmutex" in the code fragment below is preventing any change in the list, so we can safely release the spinlock immediately. When the list is not empty, then a process could be adding another entry to the list without "glmutex" locked [1], making the spinlock necessary. In this case we quit after queue_empty() returns and don't do anything else, so releasing the spinlock immediately was still safe. [1] A process that already holds a glock (i.e. has a "holder" struct on the gl_holders list) is allowed to hold it again by adding another holder struct to the same list. It adds the second hold without locking glmutex. if (gfs2_glmutex_trylock(gl)) { if (gl->gl_ops == &gfs2_inode_glops) { struct gfs2_inode *ip = get_gl2ip(gl); if (ip && !atomic_read(&ip->i_count)) gfs2_inode_destroy(ip); } if (queue_empty(gl, &gl->gl_holders) && gl->gl_state != LM_ST_UNLOCKED) handle_callback(gl, LM_ST_UNLOCKED); gfs2_glmutex_unlock(gl); } There is a second way that queue_empty() is used, and that's within assertions that the list is empty. If the assertion is correct, locking isn't necessary; locking is only needed if there's already another bug causing the list to not be empty and the assertion to fail. > static int gi_skeleton(struct gfs2_inode *ip, struct gfs2_ioctl *gi, > + gi_filler_t filler) > +{ > + unsigned int size = gfs2_tune_get(ip->i_sbd, gt_lockdump_size); > + char *buf; > + unsigned int count = 0; > + int error; > + > + if (size > gi->gi_size) > + size = gi->gi_size; > + > + buf = kmalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!buf) > + return -ENOMEM; > + > + error = filler(ip, gi, buf, size, &count); > + if (error) > + goto out; > + > + if (copy_to_user(gi->gi_data, buf, count + 1)) > + error = -EFAULT; > > where does count get a sensible value? from filler() We'll add comments in the code to document the things above. Thanks, Dave - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/