Am Dienstag, den 18.06.2019, 11:29 -0400 schrieb Alan Stern:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Oliver Neukum wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > looking at those deadlocks it looks to me like UAS can
> > deadlock on itself. What do you think?
> >
> > Regards
> > Oliver
> >
> > From 2d497f662e6c03fe9e0a75e05b64d52514e890b3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> > From: Oliver Neukum <[email protected]>
> > Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 15:03:56 +0200
> > Subject: [PATCH] UAS: fix deadlock in error handling and PM flushing work
> >
> > A SCSI error handler and block runtime PM must not allocate
> > memory with GFP_KERNEL. Furthermore they must not wait for
> > tasks allocating memory with GFP_KERNEL.
> > That means that they cannot share a workqueue with arbitrary tasks.
> >
> > Fix this for UAS using a private workqueue.
>
> I'm not so sure that one long-running task in a workqueue will block
> other tasks. Workqueues have variable numbers of threads, added and
> removed on demand. (On the other hand, when new threads need to be
> added the workqueue manager probably uses GFP_KERNEL.)
Do we have a guarantee it will reschedule already scheduled works?
The deadlock would be something like
uas_pre_reset() -> uas_wait_for_pending_cmnds() ->
flush_work(&devinfo->work) -> kmalloc() -> DEADLOCK
You can also make this chain with uas_suspend()
> Even if you disagree, perhaps we should have a global workqueue with a
> permanently set noio flag. It could be shared among multiple drivers
> such as uas and the hub driver for purposes like this. (In fact, the
> hub driver already has its own dedicated workqueue.)
That is a good idea. But does UAS need WQ_MEM_RECLAIM?
Regards
Oliver