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Message-ID: <aa8f36da-1489-a094-35ce-286bb3f25243@redhat.com>
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 11:03:57 +0800
From: Jason Wang <jasowang@...hat.com>
To: "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@...hat.com>
Cc: kvm@...r.kernel.org, virtualization@...ts.linux-foundation.org,
netdev@...r.kernel.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
Tonghao Zhang <xiangxia.m.yue@...il.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH net 2/4] vhost_net: rework on the lock ordering for busy
polling
On 2018/12/11 下午12:04, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 11:06:43AM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
>> On 2018/12/11 上午9:34, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
>>> On Mon, Dec 10, 2018 at 05:44:52PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
>>>> When we try to do rx busy polling in tx path in commit 441abde4cd84
>>>> ("net: vhost: add rx busy polling in tx path"), we lock rx vq mutex
>>>> after tx vq mutex is held. This may lead deadlock so we try to lock vq
>>>> one by one in commit 78139c94dc8c ("net: vhost: lock the vqs one by
>>>> one"). With this commit, we avoid the deadlock with the assumption
>>>> that handle_rx() and handle_tx() run in a same process. But this
>>>> commit remove the protection for IOTLB updating which requires the
>>>> mutex of each vq to be held.
>>>>
>>>> To solve this issue, the first step is to have a exact same lock
>>>> ordering for vhost_net. This is done through:
>>>>
>>>> - For handle_rx(), if busy polling is enabled, lock tx vq immediately.
>>>> - For handle_tx(), always lock rx vq before tx vq, and unlock it if
>>>> busy polling is not enabled.
>>>> - Remove the tricky locking codes in busy polling.
>>>>
>>>> With this, we can have a exact same lock ordering for vhost_net, this
>>>> allows us to safely revert commit 78139c94dc8c ("net: vhost: lock the
>>>> vqs one by one") in next patch.
>>>>
>>>> The patch will add two more atomic operations on the tx path during
>>>> each round of handle_tx(). 1 byte TCP_RR does not notice such
>>>> overhead.
>>>>
>>>> Fixes: commit 78139c94dc8c ("net: vhost: lock the vqs one by one")
>>>> Cc: Tonghao Zhang<xiangxia.m.yue@...il.com>
>>>> Signed-off-by: Jason Wang<jasowang@...hat.com>
>>>> ---
>>>> drivers/vhost/net.c | 18 +++++++++++++++---
>>>> 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/vhost/net.c b/drivers/vhost/net.c
>>>> index ab11b2bee273..5f272ab4d5b4 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/vhost/net.c
>>>> +++ b/drivers/vhost/net.c
>>>> @@ -513,7 +513,6 @@ static void vhost_net_busy_poll(struct vhost_net *net,
>>>> struct socket *sock;
>>>> struct vhost_virtqueue *vq = poll_rx ? tvq : rvq;
>>>> - mutex_lock_nested(&vq->mutex, poll_rx ? VHOST_NET_VQ_TX: VHOST_NET_VQ_RX);
>>>> vhost_disable_notify(&net->dev, vq);
>>>> sock = rvq->private_data;
>>>> @@ -543,8 +542,6 @@ static void vhost_net_busy_poll(struct vhost_net *net,
>>>> vhost_net_busy_poll_try_queue(net, vq);
>>>> else if (!poll_rx) /* On tx here, sock has no rx data. */
>>>> vhost_enable_notify(&net->dev, rvq);
>>>> -
>>>> - mutex_unlock(&vq->mutex);
>>>> }
>>>> static int vhost_net_tx_get_vq_desc(struct vhost_net *net,
>>>> @@ -913,10 +910,16 @@ static void handle_tx_zerocopy(struct vhost_net *net, struct socket *sock)
>>>> static void handle_tx(struct vhost_net *net)
>>>> {
>>>> struct vhost_net_virtqueue *nvq = &net->vqs[VHOST_NET_VQ_TX];
>>>> + struct vhost_net_virtqueue *nvq_rx = &net->vqs[VHOST_NET_VQ_RX];
>>>> struct vhost_virtqueue *vq = &nvq->vq;
>>>> + struct vhost_virtqueue *vq_rx = &nvq_rx->vq;
>>>> struct socket *sock;
>>>> + mutex_lock_nested(&vq_rx->mutex, VHOST_NET_VQ_RX);
>>>> mutex_lock_nested(&vq->mutex, VHOST_NET_VQ_TX);
>>>> + if (!vq->busyloop_timeout)
>>>> + mutex_unlock(&vq_rx->mutex);
>>>> +
>>>> sock = vq->private_data;
>>>> if (!sock)
>>>> goto out;
>>>> @@ -933,6 +936,8 @@ static void handle_tx(struct vhost_net *net)
>>>> handle_tx_copy(net, sock);
>>>> out:
>>>> + if (vq->busyloop_timeout)
>>>> + mutex_unlock(&vq_rx->mutex);
>>>> mutex_unlock(&vq->mutex);
>>>> }
>>> So rx mutex taken on tx path now. And tx mutex is on rc path ... This
>>> is just messed up. Why can't tx polling drop rx lock before
>>> getting the tx lock and vice versa?
>>
>> Because we want to poll both tx and rx virtqueue at the same time
>> (vhost_net_busy_poll()).
>>
>> while (vhost_can_busy_poll(endtime)) {
>> if (vhost_has_work(&net->dev)) {
>> *busyloop_intr = true;
>> break;
>> }
>>
>> if ((sock_has_rx_data(sock) &&
>> !vhost_vq_avail_empty(&net->dev, rvq)) ||
>> !vhost_vq_avail_empty(&net->dev, tvq))
>> break;
>>
>> cpu_relax();
>>
>> }
>>
>>
>> And we disable kicks and notification for better performance.
> Right but it's all slow path - it happens when queue is
> otherwise empty. So this is what I am saying: let's drop the locks
> we hold around this.
Is this really safe? I looks to me it can race with SET_VRING_ADDR. And
the codes did more:
- access sock object
- access device IOTLB
- enable and disable notification
None of above is safe without the protection of vq mutex.
>
>
>>> Or if we really wanted to force everything to be locked at
>>> all times, let's just use a single mutex.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> We could, but it might requires more changes which could be done for -next I
>> believe.
>>
>>
>> Thanks
> I'd rather we kept the fine grained locking. E.g. people are
> looking at splitting the tx and rx threads. But if not possible
> let's fix it cleanly with a coarse-grained one. A mess here will
> just create more trouble later.
>
I believe we won't go back to coarse one. Looks like we can solve this
by using mutex_trylock() for rxq during TX. And don't do polling for rxq
is a IOTLB updating is pending.
Let me post V2.
Thanks
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