| RCU and lockdep checking |
| |
| All flavors of RCU have lockdep checking available, so that lockdep is |
| aware of when each task enters and leaves any flavor of RCU read-side |
| critical section. Each flavor of RCU is tracked separately (but note |
| that this is not the case in 2.6.32 and earlier). This allows lockdep's |
| tracking to include RCU state, which can sometimes help when debugging |
| deadlocks and the like. |
| |
| In addition, RCU provides the following primitives that check lockdep's |
| state: |
| |
| rcu_read_lock_held() for normal RCU. |
| rcu_read_lock_bh_held() for RCU-bh. |
| rcu_read_lock_sched_held() for RCU-sched. |
| srcu_read_lock_held() for SRCU. |
| |
| These functions are conservative, and will therefore return 1 if they |
| aren't certain (for example, if CONFIG_DEBUG_LOCK_ALLOC is not set). |
| This prevents things like WARN_ON(!rcu_read_lock_held()) from giving false |
| positives when lockdep is disabled. |
| |
| In addition, a separate kernel config parameter CONFIG_PROVE_RCU enables |
| checking of rcu_dereference() primitives: |
| |
| rcu_dereference(p): |
| Check for RCU read-side critical section. |
| rcu_dereference_bh(p): |
| Check for RCU-bh read-side critical section. |
| rcu_dereference_sched(p): |
| Check for RCU-sched read-side critical section. |
| srcu_dereference(p, sp): |
| Check for SRCU read-side critical section. |
| rcu_dereference_check(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c" along with |
| rcu_read_lock_held(). This is useful in code that is |
| invoked by both RCU readers and updaters. |
| rcu_dereference_bh_check(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c" along with |
| rcu_read_lock_bh_held(). This is useful in code that |
| is invoked by both RCU-bh readers and updaters. |
| rcu_dereference_sched_check(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c" along with |
| rcu_read_lock_sched_held(). This is useful in code that |
| is invoked by both RCU-sched readers and updaters. |
| srcu_dereference_check(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c" along with |
| srcu_read_lock_held()(). This is useful in code that |
| is invoked by both SRCU readers and updaters. |
| rcu_dereference_index_check(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c", but the caller |
| must supply one of the rcu_read_lock_held() functions. |
| This is useful in code that uses RCU-protected arrays |
| that is invoked by both RCU readers and updaters. |
| rcu_dereference_raw(p): |
| Don't check. (Use sparingly, if at all.) |
| rcu_dereference_protected(p, c): |
| Use explicit check expression "c", and omit all barriers |
| and compiler constraints. This is useful when the data |
| structure cannot change, for example, in code that is |
| invoked only by updaters. |
| rcu_access_pointer(p): |
| Return the value of the pointer and omit all barriers, |
| but retain the compiler constraints that prevent duplicating |
| or coalescsing. This is useful when when testing the |
| value of the pointer itself, for example, against NULL. |
| |
| The rcu_dereference_check() check expression can be any boolean |
| expression, but would normally include a lockdep expression. However, |
| any boolean expression can be used. For a moderately ornate example, |
| consider the following: |
| |
| file = rcu_dereference_check(fdt->fd[fd], |
| lockdep_is_held(&files->file_lock) || |
| atomic_read(&files->count) == 1); |
| |
| This expression picks up the pointer "fdt->fd[fd]" in an RCU-safe manner, |
| and, if CONFIG_PROVE_RCU is configured, verifies that this expression |
| is used in: |
| |
| 1. An RCU read-side critical section (implicit), or |
| 2. with files->file_lock held, or |
| 3. on an unshared files_struct. |
| |
| In case (1), the pointer is picked up in an RCU-safe manner for vanilla |
| RCU read-side critical sections, in case (2) the ->file_lock prevents |
| any change from taking place, and finally, in case (3) the current task |
| is the only task accessing the file_struct, again preventing any change |
| from taking place. If the above statement was invoked only from updater |
| code, it could instead be written as follows: |
| |
| file = rcu_dereference_protected(fdt->fd[fd], |
| lockdep_is_held(&files->file_lock) || |
| atomic_read(&files->count) == 1); |
| |
| This would verify cases #2 and #3 above, and furthermore lockdep would |
| complain if this was used in an RCU read-side critical section unless one |
| of these two cases held. Because rcu_dereference_protected() omits all |
| barriers and compiler constraints, it generates better code than do the |
| other flavors of rcu_dereference(). On the other hand, it is illegal |
| to use rcu_dereference_protected() if either the RCU-protected pointer |
| or the RCU-protected data that it points to can change concurrently. |
| |
| There are currently only "universal" versions of the rcu_assign_pointer() |
| and RCU list-/tree-traversal primitives, which do not (yet) check for |
| being in an RCU read-side critical section. In the future, separate |
| versions of these primitives might be created. |