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Message-ID: <20140114192713.GA22262@fieldses.org>
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2014 14:27:13 -0500
From: "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@...ldses.org>
To: Andy Lutomirski <luto@...capital.net>
Cc: Jeff Layton <jlayton@...hat.com>,
Linux FS Devel <linux-fsdevel@...r.kernel.org>,
nfs-ganesha-devel@...ts.sourceforge.net,
samba-technical@...ts.samba.org,
"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH v5 13/14] locks: skip deadlock detection on FL_FILE_PVT
locks
On Thu, Jan 09, 2014 at 04:58:59PM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 4:49 PM, Jeff Layton <jlayton@...hat.com> wrote:
> > On Thu, 09 Jan 2014 12:25:25 -0800
> > Andy Lutomirski <luto@...capital.net> wrote:
> >> When I think of deadlocks caused by r/w locks (which these are), I think
> >> of two kinds. First is what the current code tries to detect: two
> >> processes that are each waiting for each other. I don't know whether
> >> POSIX enshrines the idea of detecting that, but I wouldn't be surprised,
> >> considering how awful the old POSIX locks are.
...
> >> The sensible kind of detectable deadlock involves just one lock, and it
> >> happens when two processes both hold read locks and try to upgrade to
> >> write locks. This should be efficiently detectable and makes upgrading
> >> locks safe(r).
This also involves two processes waiting on each other, and the current
code should detect either case equally well.
...
> For this kind of deadlock detection, nothing global is needed -- I'm
> only talking about detecting deadlocks due to two tasks upgrading
> locks on the same file (with overlapping ranges) at the same time.
>
> This is actually useful for SQL-like things. Imagine this scenario:
>
> Program 1:
>
> Open a file
> BEGIN;
> SELECT whatever; -- acquires a read lock
>
> Program 2:
>
> Open the same file
> BEGIN;
> SELECT whatever; -- acquires a read lock
>
> Program 1:
> UPDATE something; -- upgrades to write
>
> Now program 1 is waiting for program 2 to release its lock. But if
> program 2 tries to UPDATE, then it deadlocks. A friendly MySQL
> implementation (which, sadly, does not include sqlite) will fail the
> abort the transaction instead.
And then I suppose you'd need to get an exclusive lock when you retry,
to guarantee forward progress in the face of multiple processes retrying
at once.
I don't know, is this so useful?
> It would be nice if the kernel
> supported this.
>
> Note that unlocking and then re-locking for write is incorrect -- it
> would allow program 2 to write inconsistent data.
>
> I think that implementing this could be as simple as having some way
> to check if a struct file_lock is currently trying to upgrade from
> read to write and, if you try to upgrade and end up waiting for such a
> lock, aborting.
You have to be clear what you mean by "such a lock". What you really
want to know is whether you'd be waiting on a lock that might be waiting
on a lock you hold.
To a first approximation, the current works with a graph with tasks as
nodes and an arrow from node X to node Y if X is waiting on a lock held
by node Y. And it follows arrows in that graph looking for cycles.
And sure I guess it would be a bit nicer if you only bothered checking
for cycles that touch this one file.
But I'd really rather avoid the complication of deadlock detection
unless somebody can make a really strong case that they need it.
> The nasty case, though, is if you try to write-lock a
> range while holding a read-lock on only part of the range -- you could
> end up acquiring part of the range and deadlocking on the rest. Now
> you need to remember enough state to be able to abort.
We wait until the entire lock can be applied, and then apply it all
atomically (under i_lock).
> (Actually, what happens if you receive a signal which waiting on a file lock?)
Return -EINTR.
> I would personally be okay with removing the existing deadlock
> detector entirely. I wouldn't be surprised if no one relies on it.
I'd be in favor.
--b.
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