• D
    FS-Cache: The retrieval remaining-pages counter needs to be atomic_t · 1bb4b7f9
    David Howells 提交于
    struct fscache_retrieval contains a count of the number of pages that still
    need some processing (n_pages).  This is decremented as the pages are
    processed.
    
    However, this needs to be atomic as fscache_retrieval_complete() (I think) just
    occasionally may be called from cachefiles_read_backing_file() and
    cachefiles_read_copier() simultaneously.
    
    This happens when an fscache_read_or_alloc_pages() request containing a lot of
    pages (say a couple of hundred) is being processed.  The read on each backing
    page is dispatched individually because we need to insert a monitor into the
    waitqueue to catch when the read completes.  However, under low-memory
    conditions, we might be forced to wait in the allocator - and this gives the
    I/O on the backing page a chance to complete first.
    
    When the I/O completes, fscache_enqueue_retrieval() chucks the retrieval onto
    the workqueue without waiting for the operation to finish the initial I/O
    dispatch (we want to release any pages we can as soon as we can), thus both can
    end up running simultaneously and potentially attempting to partially complete
    the retrieval simultaneously (ENOMEM may occur, backing pages may already be in
    the page cache).
    
    This was demonstrated by parallelling the non-atomic counter with an atomic
    counter and printing both of them when the assertion fails.  At this point, the
    atomic counter has reached zero, but the non-atomic counter has not.
    
    To fix this, make the counter an atomic_t.
    
    This results in the following bug appearing
    
    	FS-Cache: Assertion failed
    	3 == 5 is false
    	------------[ cut here ]------------
    	kernel BUG at fs/fscache/operation.c:421!
    
    or
    
    	FS-Cache: Assertion failed
    	3 == 5 is false
    	------------[ cut here ]------------
    	kernel BUG at fs/fscache/operation.c:414!
    
    With a backtrace like the following:
    
    RIP: 0010:[<ffffffffa0211b1d>] fscache_put_operation+0x1ad/0x240 [fscache]
    Call Trace:
     [<ffffffffa0213185>] fscache_retrieval_work+0x55/0x270 [fscache]
     [<ffffffffa0213130>] ? fscache_retrieval_work+0x0/0x270 [fscache]
     [<ffffffff81090b10>] worker_thread+0x170/0x2a0
     [<ffffffff81096d10>] ? autoremove_wake_function+0x0/0x40
     [<ffffffff810909a0>] ? worker_thread+0x0/0x2a0
     [<ffffffff81096966>] kthread+0x96/0xa0
     [<ffffffff8100c0ca>] child_rip+0xa/0x20
     [<ffffffff810968d0>] ? kthread+0x0/0xa0
     [<ffffffff8100c0c0>] ? child_rip+0x0/0x20
    Signed-off-by: NDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
    Reviewed-and-tested-By: NMilosz Tanski <milosz@adfin.com>
    Acked-by: NJeff Layton <jlayton@redhat.com>
    1bb4b7f9
fscache-cache.h 19.2 KB