From: Stephen Hemminger <stephen@networkplumber.org>
To: Rasmus Villemoes <rasmus.villemoes@prevas.dk>
Cc: Network Development <netdev@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: rtnl_trylock() versus SCHED_FIFO lockup
Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2020 16:34:25 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20200805163425.6c13ef11@hermes.lan> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <b6eca125-351c-27c5-c34b-08c611ac2511@prevas.dk>
On Wed, 5 Aug 2020 16:25:23 +0200
Rasmus Villemoes <rasmus.villemoes@prevas.dk> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We're seeing occasional lockups on an embedded board (running an -rt
> kernel), which I believe I've tracked down to the
>
> if (!rtnl_trylock())
> return restart_syscall();
>
> in net/bridge/br_sysfs_br.c. The problem is that some SCHED_FIFO task
> writes a "1" to the /sys/class/net/foo/bridge/flush file, while some
> lower-priority SCHED_FIFO task happens to hold rtnl_lock(). When that
> happens, the higher-priority task is stuck in an eternal ERESTARTNOINTR
> loop, and the lower-priority task never gets runtime and thus cannot
> release the lock.
>
> I've written a script that rather quickly reproduces this both on our
> target and my desktop machine (pinning everything on one CPU to emulate
> the uni-processor board), see below. Also, with this hacky patch
There is a reason for the trylock, it works around a priority inversion.
The real problem is expecting a SCHED_FIFO task to be safe with this
kind of network operation.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2020-08-05 23:34 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2020-08-05 14:25 rtnl_trylock() versus SCHED_FIFO lockup Rasmus Villemoes
2020-08-05 23:34 ` Stephen Hemminger [this message]
2020-08-06 9:17 ` Rasmus Villemoes
2020-08-06 9:46 ` Nikolay Aleksandrov
2020-08-07 3:39 ` Stephen Hemminger
2020-08-07 8:03 ` Rasmus Villemoes
2020-08-07 15:03 ` Stephen Hemminger
[not found] ` <20200809134924.12056-1-hdanton@sina.com>
2020-08-09 14:12 ` Nikolay Aleksandrov
2020-08-09 14:18 ` Nikolay Aleksandrov
2020-08-09 15:32 ` Stephen Hemminger
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