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Re: [PATCH v1] s390x/tcg: MVCL: Exit to main loop if there are pending i
From: |
David Hildenbrand |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH v1] s390x/tcg: MVCL: Exit to main loop if there are pending interrupts |
Date: |
Wed, 2 Oct 2019 09:04:56 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.8.0 |
On 01.10.19 23:59, Richard Henderson wrote:
> On 10/1/19 12:47 PM, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>> On 01.10.19 21:17, Richard Henderson wrote:
>>> On 10/1/19 11:16 AM, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>>>> +static inline bool should_interrupt_instruction(CPUState *cs)
>>>> +{
>>>> + /*
>>>> + * Something asked us to stop executing chained TBs, e.g.,
>>>> + * cpu_interrupt() or cpu_exit().
>>>> + */
>>>> + if ((int32_t)atomic_read(&cpu_neg(cs)->icount_decr.u32) < 0) {
>>>> + return true;
>>>> + }
>>>> +
>>>> + /* We have a deliverable interrupt pending. */
>>>> + if ((atomic_read(&cs->interrupt_request) & CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD) &&
>>>> + s390_cpu_has_int(S390_CPU(cs))) {
>>>> + return true;
>>>> + }
>>>> + return false;
>>>> +}
>>>
>>> The first condition should be true whenever the second condition is true.
>>
>> @@ -1018,6 +1018,7 @@ static inline bool
>> should_interrupt_instruction(CPUState *cs)
>> /* We have a deliverable interrupt pending. */
>> if ((atomic_read(&cs->interrupt_request) & CPU_INTERRUPT_HARD) &&
>> s390_cpu_has_int(S390_CPU(cs))) {
>> + g_assert((int32_t)atomic_read(&cpu_neg(cs)->icount_decr.u32) < 0);
>> return true;
>> }
>> return false;
>>
>>
>> ...
>>
>>
>> [ 60.109761] systemd[1]: Set hostname to <rhel8>.
>> **
>> ERROR:/home/dhildenb/git/qemu/target/s390x/mem_helper.c:1021:should_interrupt_instruction:
>> assertion failed: ((int32_t)atomic_read(&cpu_neg(cs)->icount_decr.u32) < 0)
>>
>>
>> A race? Roughly 20-30% pass the first but not the second check. And
>> in total, on a Fedora 30 boot, I can maybe see 30 calls of
>> should_interrupt_instruction() succeeding.
>>
>> I thought these could be pending interrupts that were not deliverable
>> when injected but are now deliverable. For these,
>> icount_decr.u32.high would already have been set to 0.
>>
>> OTOH, I guess we always exit the TB in case we change the "deliverable" state
>> of an IRQ, e.g., after LPSW or LCTL. E.g.,
>>
>> static DisasJumpType op_lctlg(DisasContext *s, DisasOps *o)
>> {
>> ...
>> /* Exit to main loop to reevaluate s390_cpu_exec_interrupt. */
>> return DISAS_PC_STALE_NOCHAIN;
>> }
>>
>> Maybe really a race then - or we are not properly exiting back to the
>> main loop in all scenarios.
>
> I think that it's a race right here in should_interrupt_instruction.
>
> Notice, interrupt_request gets set before icount_decr. Indeed, the barrier
> happens immediately before the set of icount_decr in cpu_exit().
>
> (It is briefly confusing that we have a barrier in cpu_exit and not in
> tcg_handle_interrupt. But that's explained by the cpu_is_self -- no need for
> a
> barrier for the current cpu. I also think we could usefully use
> atomic_store_release instead of a separate smp_wmb.)
>
> Therefore checking interrupt_request after checking icount_decr violates the
> ordering rules.
>
> This is confirmed, ish, by noticing putting a breakpoint at that second return
> (or assert) and noticing that icount_decr.u16.hi == -1. It did get set by one
> of the other threads, and before gdb managed to stop the world.
I am still puzzled why I can trigger that many races. I'll do some more
investigation, however, if there would be a deliverable interrupt which
will not set icount_decr.u16.hi == -1, then we would have to fix
something that ionstead. So the second check in this patch can indeed
go, thanks for clarifying!
--
Thanks,
David / dhildenb