From: "Stephen C. Tweedie" <sct@redhat.com>
To: Rik van Riel <riel@conectiva.com.br>
Cc: "Stephen C. Tweedie" <sct@redhat.com>,
Linus Torvalds <torvalds@transmeta.com>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linux-mm@kvack.org,
Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>,
Ben LaHaise <bcrl@redhat.com>, Christoph Rohland <cr@sap.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Fix races in 2.4.2-ac22 SysV shared memory
Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2001 17:50:52 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20010325175052.B18649@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.21.0103242203290.1863-100000@imladris.rielhome.conectiva>; from riel@conectiva.com.br on Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 10:05:18PM -0300
Hi,
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 10:05:18PM -0300, Rik van Riel wrote:
> On Sun, 25 Mar 2001, Stephen C. Tweedie wrote:
>
> > Rik, do you think it is really necessary to take the page lock and
> > release it inside lookup_swap_cache? I may be overlooking something,
> > but I can't see the benefit of it ---
>
> I don't think we need to do this, except to protect us from
> using a page which isn't up-to-date yet and locked because
> of disk IO.
But it doesn't --- page_launder can try to lock the page after it
checks the refcount, without taking any locks which protect us against
running lookup_swap_cache in parallel. If we get our reference after
page_launder checks the count, we can find the page getting locked out
from underneath our feet.
> Reclaim_page() takes the pagecache_lock before trying to
> free anything, so there's no reason to lock against that.
Exactly. We're not in danger of _losing_ the page, because
reclaim_page is locked more aggressively than page_launder. We still
risk having the page locked against us after lookup_swap_cache does
its own UnlockPage.
So, if lookup_swap_cache doesn't actually ensure that the page is
unlocked, are there any callers which implicitly rely on
lookup_swap_cache() doing a wait_on_page?
--Stephen
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2001-03-25 16:50 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-03-23 1:13 Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-03-23 19:58 ` Linus Torvalds
2001-03-23 22:20 ` Alan Cox
2001-03-23 22:23 ` Alexander Viro
2001-03-23 22:29 ` Alan Cox
2001-03-23 22:27 ` Linus Torvalds
2001-03-23 22:35 ` Alan Cox
2001-03-23 22:37 ` Linus Torvalds
2001-03-23 22:31 ` David S. Miller
2001-03-25 0:13 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-03-25 1:05 ` Rik van Riel
2001-03-25 16:50 ` Stephen C. Tweedie [this message]
2001-03-28 9:18 ` Christoph Rohland
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