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Message-ID: <20140731131331.GT19379@twins.programming.kicks-ass.net>
Date:	Thu, 31 Jul 2014 15:13:31 +0200
From:	Peter Zijlstra <peterz@...radead.org>
To:	Ilya Dryomov <ilya.dryomov@...tank.com>
Cc:	Linux Kernel Mailing List <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>,
	Ingo Molnar <mingo@...nel.org>,
	Ceph Development <ceph-devel@...r.kernel.org>,
	davidlohr@...com, jason.low2@...com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] locking/mutexes: Revert "locking/mutexes: Add extra
 reschedule point"

On Thu, Jul 31, 2014 at 04:37:29PM +0400, Ilya Dryomov wrote:

> This didn't make sense to me at first too, and I'll be happy to be
> proven wrong, but we can reproduce this with rbd very reliably under
> higher than usual load, and the revert makes it go away.  What we are
> seeing in the rbd scenario is the following.

This is drivers/block/rbd.c ? I can find but a single mutex_lock() in
there.

> Suppose foo needs mutexes A and B, bar needs mutex B.  foo acquires
> A and then wants to acquire B, but B is held by bar.  foo spins
> a little and ends up calling schedule_preempt_disabled() on line 484
> above, but that call never returns, even though a hundred usecs later
> bar releases B.  foo ends up stuck in mutex_lock() indefinitely, but
> still holds A and everybody else who needs A gets behind A.  Given that
> this A happens to be a central libceph mutex all rbd activity halts.
> Deadlock may not be the best term for this, but never returning from
> mutex_lock(&B) even though B has been unlocked is *a* problem.
> 
> This obviously doesn't happen every time schedule_preempt_disabled() on
> line 484 is called, so there must be some sort of race here.  I'll send
> along the actual rbd stack traces shortly.

Smells like maybe current->state != TASK_RUNNING, does the below
trigger?

If so, you've wrecked something in whatever...

---
 kernel/locking/mutex.c | 6 +++++-
 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/kernel/locking/mutex.c b/kernel/locking/mutex.c
index ae712b25e492..3d726fdaa764 100644
--- a/kernel/locking/mutex.c
+++ b/kernel/locking/mutex.c
@@ -473,8 +473,12 @@ __mutex_lock_common(struct mutex *lock, long state, unsigned int subclass,
 	 * reschedule now, before we try-lock the mutex. This avoids getting
 	 * scheduled out right after we obtained the mutex.
 	 */
-	if (need_resched())
+	if (need_resched()) {
+		if (WARN_ON_ONCE(current->state != TASK_RUNNING))
+			__set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING);
+
 		schedule_preempt_disabled();
+	}
 #endif
 	spin_lock_mutex(&lock->wait_lock, flags);
 

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