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Message-Id: <200810302117.49419.rjw@sisk.pl>
Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 21:17:48 +0100
From: "Rafael J. Wysocki" <rjw@...k.pl>
To: Miklos Szeredi <miklos@...redi.hu>
Cc: stern@...land.harvard.edu, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
ncunningham@...a.org.au, linux-pm@...ts.linux-foundation.org
Subject: Re: [linux-pm] Freezer: Don't count threads waiting for frozen filesystems.
On Thursday, 30 of October 2008, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> On Thu, 30 Oct 2008, Alan Stern wrote:
> > On Thu, 30 Oct 2008, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> >
> > > On Wed, 29 Oct 2008, Alan Stern wrote:
> > > > I discussed this last summer with Rafael. It's a lot harder than it
> > > > looks, for all sorts of reasons. For example, what about user tasks
> > > > that have access to memory-mapped I/O regions?
> > >
> > > What about them? Freezing doesn't seem to help with that.
> >
> > Sure it does. A frozen process can't touch a memory-mapped I/O region,
> > whereas a non-frozen process can.
>
> But it can be in the middle of I/O by your definition.
>
> > > > I don't know. There are other interfaces too, like sysfs attributes,
> > > > that would have to be handled specially. On the whole, the freezer
> > > > seems much, much simpler.
> > >
> > > OK, then non-device files on "regular" filesystems.
> >
> > Would you like to write a first-pass patch? I don't think it will
> > work.
>
> If somebody doesn't beat me to it, I'll do that (first implemented
> with a global rw-sem).
>
> > Doing that seems like a lot of work, just as modifying every driver
> > does. Changing a few kernel entry points is simpler, but I'm pretty
> > sure it won't work. For instance, tasks can block arbitrarily long on
> > read calls (waiting for data to arrive); you can't allow such things to
> > prevent the system from suspending.
>
> But we already do: either
>
> a) it's in interruptible sleep (I/O on sockets, pipes, etc), and
> freezing simply interrupts it, or
>
> b) it's in uninterruptible sleep and suspend will wait it out (or
> time out).
>
> In the new scheme we could retain that part of the freezer: interrupt
> all tasks which are inside the critical region and wait for them to
> exit the critical region.
>
> To put it in another way: it's still the freezer, it does all the same
> things as the old freezer, except that the condition for freezing is
> not that the task is out of the kernel, rather that it's out of the
> disable_supend - enable_suspend region. As such it's not a big change
> to the whole suspend system, and so there shouldn't be anything big
> going wrong there.
I like this idea.
I was thinking about using task flags to mark processes as "not freezable
at the moment", which would make the freezer to wait for such tasks
(currently a task may only be always freezable or not freezable at all,
which is not very flexible).
Unfortunately, I didn't have the time to implement this.
Thanks,
Rafael
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