| ====================================================== |
| A Tour Through TREE_RCU's Grace-Period Memory Ordering |
| ====================================================== |
| |
| August 8, 2017 |
| |
| This article was contributed by Paul E. McKenney |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| This document gives a rough visual overview of how Tree RCU's |
| grace-period memory ordering guarantee is provided. |
| |
| What Is Tree RCU's Grace Period Memory Ordering Guarantee? |
| ========================================================== |
| |
| RCU grace periods provide extremely strong memory-ordering guarantees |
| for non-idle non-offline code. |
| Any code that happens after the end of a given RCU grace period is guaranteed |
| to see the effects of all accesses prior to the beginning of that grace |
| period that are within RCU read-side critical sections. |
| Similarly, any code that happens before the beginning of a given RCU grace |
| period is guaranteed to not see the effects of all accesses following the end |
| of that grace period that are within RCU read-side critical sections. |
| |
| Note well that RCU-sched read-side critical sections include any region |
| of code for which preemption is disabled. |
| Given that each individual machine instruction can be thought of as |
| an extremely small region of preemption-disabled code, one can think of |
| ``synchronize_rcu()`` as ``smp_mb()`` on steroids. |
| |
| RCU updaters use this guarantee by splitting their updates into |
| two phases, one of which is executed before the grace period and |
| the other of which is executed after the grace period. |
| In the most common use case, phase one removes an element from |
| a linked RCU-protected data structure, and phase two frees that element. |
| For this to work, any readers that have witnessed state prior to the |
| phase-one update (in the common case, removal) must not witness state |
| following the phase-two update (in the common case, freeing). |
| |
| The RCU implementation provides this guarantee using a network |
| of lock-based critical sections, memory barriers, and per-CPU |
| processing, as is described in the following sections. |
| |
| Tree RCU Grace Period Memory Ordering Building Blocks |
| ===================================================== |
| |
| The workhorse for RCU's grace-period memory ordering is the |
| critical section for the ``rcu_node`` structure's |
| ``->lock``. These critical sections use helper functions for lock |
| acquisition, including ``raw_spin_lock_rcu_node()``, |
| ``raw_spin_lock_irq_rcu_node()``, and ``raw_spin_lock_irqsave_rcu_node()``. |
| Their lock-release counterparts are ``raw_spin_unlock_rcu_node()``, |
| ``raw_spin_unlock_irq_rcu_node()``, and |
| ``raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore_rcu_node()``, respectively. |
| For completeness, a ``raw_spin_trylock_rcu_node()`` is also provided. |
| The key point is that the lock-acquisition functions, including |
| ``raw_spin_trylock_rcu_node()``, all invoke ``smp_mb__after_unlock_lock()`` |
| immediately after successful acquisition of the lock. |
| |
| Therefore, for any given ``rcu_node`` structure, any access |
| happening before one of the above lock-release functions will be seen |
| by all CPUs as happening before any access happening after a later |
| one of the above lock-acquisition functions. |
| Furthermore, any access happening before one of the |
| above lock-release function on any given CPU will be seen by all |
| CPUs as happening before any access happening after a later one |
| of the above lock-acquisition functions executing on that same CPU, |
| even if the lock-release and lock-acquisition functions are operating |
| on different ``rcu_node`` structures. |
| Tree RCU uses these two ordering guarantees to form an ordering |
| network among all CPUs that were in any way involved in the grace |
| period, including any CPUs that came online or went offline during |
| the grace period in question. |
| |
| The following litmus test exhibits the ordering effects of these |
| lock-acquisition and lock-release functions:: |
| |
| 1 int x, y, z; |
| 2 |
| 3 void task0(void) |
| 4 { |
| 5 raw_spin_lock_rcu_node(rnp); |
| 6 WRITE_ONCE(x, 1); |
| 7 r1 = READ_ONCE(y); |
| 8 raw_spin_unlock_rcu_node(rnp); |
| 9 } |
| 10 |
| 11 void task1(void) |
| 12 { |
| 13 raw_spin_lock_rcu_node(rnp); |
| 14 WRITE_ONCE(y, 1); |
| 15 r2 = READ_ONCE(z); |
| 16 raw_spin_unlock_rcu_node(rnp); |
| 17 } |
| 18 |
| 19 void task2(void) |
| 20 { |
| 21 WRITE_ONCE(z, 1); |
| 22 smp_mb(); |
| 23 r3 = READ_ONCE(x); |
| 24 } |
| 25 |
| 26 WARN_ON(r1 == 0 && r2 == 0 && r3 == 0); |
| |
| The ``WARN_ON()`` is evaluated at "the end of time", |
| after all changes have propagated throughout the system. |
| Without the ``smp_mb__after_unlock_lock()`` provided by the |
| acquisition functions, this ``WARN_ON()`` could trigger, for example |
| on PowerPC. |
| The ``smp_mb__after_unlock_lock()`` invocations prevent this |
| ``WARN_ON()`` from triggering. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But the chain of rcu_node-structure lock acquisitions guarantees | |
| | that new readers will see all of the updater's pre-grace-period | |
| | accesses and also guarantees that the updater's post-grace-period | |
| | accesses will see all of the old reader's accesses. So why do we | |
| | need all of those calls to smp_mb__after_unlock_lock()? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | Because we must provide ordering for RCU's polling grace-period | |
| | primitives, for example, get_state_synchronize_rcu() and | |
| | poll_state_synchronize_rcu(). Consider this code:: | |
| | | |
| | CPU 0 CPU 1 | |
| | ---- ---- | |
| | WRITE_ONCE(X, 1) WRITE_ONCE(Y, 1) | |
| | g = get_state_synchronize_rcu() smp_mb() | |
| | while (!poll_state_synchronize_rcu(g)) r1 = READ_ONCE(X) | |
| | continue; | |
| | r0 = READ_ONCE(Y) | |
| | | |
| | RCU guarantees that the outcome r0 == 0 && r1 == 0 will not | |
| | happen, even if CPU 1 is in an RCU extended quiescent state | |
| | (idle or offline) and thus won't interact directly with the RCU | |
| | core processing at all. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| This approach must be extended to include idle CPUs, which need |
| RCU's grace-period memory ordering guarantee to extend to any |
| RCU read-side critical sections preceding and following the current |
| idle sojourn. |
| This case is handled by calls to the strongly ordered |
| ``atomic_add_return()`` read-modify-write atomic operation that |
| is invoked within ``rcu_dynticks_eqs_enter()`` at idle-entry |
| time and within ``rcu_dynticks_eqs_exit()`` at idle-exit time. |
| The grace-period kthread invokes ``rcu_dynticks_snap()`` and |
| ``rcu_dynticks_in_eqs_since()`` (both of which invoke |
| an ``atomic_add_return()`` of zero) to detect idle CPUs. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But what about CPUs that remain offline for the entire grace period? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | Such CPUs will be offline at the beginning of the grace period, so | |
| | the grace period won't expect quiescent states from them. Races | |
| | between grace-period start and CPU-hotplug operations are mediated | |
| | by the CPU's leaf ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` as described | |
| | above. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| The approach must be extended to handle one final case, that of waking a |
| task blocked in ``synchronize_rcu()``. This task might be affined to |
| a CPU that is not yet aware that the grace period has ended, and thus |
| might not yet be subject to the grace period's memory ordering. |
| Therefore, there is an ``smp_mb()`` after the return from |
| ``wait_for_completion()`` in the ``synchronize_rcu()`` code path. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | What? Where??? I don't see any ``smp_mb()`` after the return from | |
| | ``wait_for_completion()``!!! | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | That would be because I spotted the need for that ``smp_mb()`` during | |
| | the creation of this documentation, and it is therefore unlikely to | |
| | hit mainline before v4.14. Kudos to Lance Roy, Will Deacon, Peter | |
| | Zijlstra, and Jonathan Cameron for asking questions that sensitized | |
| | me to the rather elaborate sequence of events that demonstrate the | |
| | need for this memory barrier. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Tree RCU's grace--period memory-ordering guarantees rely most heavily on |
| the ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` field, so much so that it is |
| necessary to abbreviate this pattern in the diagrams in the next |
| section. For example, consider the ``rcu_prepare_for_idle()`` function |
| shown below, which is one of several functions that enforce ordering of |
| newly arrived RCU callbacks against future grace periods: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| 1 static void rcu_prepare_for_idle(void) |
| 2 { |
| 3 bool needwake; |
| 4 struct rcu_data *rdp = this_cpu_ptr(&rcu_data); |
| 5 struct rcu_node *rnp; |
| 6 int tne; |
| 7 |
| 8 lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); |
| 9 if (rcu_rdp_is_offloaded(rdp)) |
| 10 return; |
| 11 |
| 12 /* Handle nohz enablement switches conservatively. */ |
| 13 tne = READ_ONCE(tick_nohz_active); |
| 14 if (tne != rdp->tick_nohz_enabled_snap) { |
| 15 if (!rcu_segcblist_empty(&rdp->cblist)) |
| 16 invoke_rcu_core(); /* force nohz to see update. */ |
| 17 rdp->tick_nohz_enabled_snap = tne; |
| 18 return; |
| 19 } |
| 20 if (!tne) |
| 21 return; |
| 22 |
| 23 /* |
| 24 * If we have not yet accelerated this jiffy, accelerate all |
| 25 * callbacks on this CPU. |
| 26 */ |
| 27 if (rdp->last_accelerate == jiffies) |
| 28 return; |
| 29 rdp->last_accelerate = jiffies; |
| 30 if (rcu_segcblist_pend_cbs(&rdp->cblist)) { |
| 31 rnp = rdp->mynode; |
| 32 raw_spin_lock_rcu_node(rnp); /* irqs already disabled. */ |
| 33 needwake = rcu_accelerate_cbs(rnp, rdp); |
| 34 raw_spin_unlock_rcu_node(rnp); /* irqs remain disabled. */ |
| 35 if (needwake) |
| 36 rcu_gp_kthread_wake(); |
| 37 } |
| 38 } |
| |
| But the only part of ``rcu_prepare_for_idle()`` that really matters for |
| this discussion are lines 32–34. We will therefore abbreviate this |
| function as follows: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: rcu_node-lock.svg |
| |
| The box represents the ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` critical |
| section, with the double line on top representing the additional |
| ``smp_mb__after_unlock_lock()``. |
| |
| Tree RCU Grace Period Memory Ordering Components |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Tree RCU's grace-period memory-ordering guarantee is provided by a |
| number of RCU components: |
| |
| #. `Callback Registry`_ |
| #. `Grace-Period Initialization`_ |
| #. `Self-Reported Quiescent States`_ |
| #. `Dynamic Tick Interface`_ |
| #. `CPU-Hotplug Interface`_ |
| #. `Forcing Quiescent States`_ |
| #. `Grace-Period Cleanup`_ |
| #. `Callback Invocation`_ |
| |
| Each of the following section looks at the corresponding component in |
| detail. |
| |
| Callback Registry |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| If RCU's grace-period guarantee is to mean anything at all, any access |
| that happens before a given invocation of ``call_rcu()`` must also |
| happen before the corresponding grace period. The implementation of this |
| portion of RCU's grace period guarantee is shown in the following |
| figure: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-callback-registry.svg |
| |
| Because ``call_rcu()`` normally acts only on CPU-local state, it |
| provides no ordering guarantees, either for itself or for phase one of |
| the update (which again will usually be removal of an element from an |
| RCU-protected data structure). It simply enqueues the ``rcu_head`` |
| structure on a per-CPU list, which cannot become associated with a grace |
| period until a later call to ``rcu_accelerate_cbs()``, as shown in the |
| diagram above. |
| |
| One set of code paths shown on the left invokes ``rcu_accelerate_cbs()`` |
| via ``note_gp_changes()``, either directly from ``call_rcu()`` (if the |
| current CPU is inundated with queued ``rcu_head`` structures) or more |
| likely from an ``RCU_SOFTIRQ`` handler. Another code path in the middle |
| is taken only in kernels built with ``CONFIG_RCU_FAST_NO_HZ=y``, which |
| invokes ``rcu_accelerate_cbs()`` via ``rcu_prepare_for_idle()``. The |
| final code path on the right is taken only in kernels built with |
| ``CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU=y``, which invokes ``rcu_accelerate_cbs()`` via |
| ``rcu_advance_cbs()``, ``rcu_migrate_callbacks``, |
| ``rcutree_migrate_callbacks()``, and ``takedown_cpu()``, which in turn |
| is invoked on a surviving CPU after the outgoing CPU has been completely |
| offlined. |
| |
| There are a few other code paths within grace-period processing that |
| opportunistically invoke ``rcu_accelerate_cbs()``. However, either way, |
| all of the CPU's recently queued ``rcu_head`` structures are associated |
| with a future grace-period number under the protection of the CPU's lead |
| ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock``. In all cases, there is full |
| ordering against any prior critical section for that same ``rcu_node`` |
| structure's ``->lock``, and also full ordering against any of the |
| current task's or CPU's prior critical sections for any ``rcu_node`` |
| structure's ``->lock``. |
| |
| The next section will show how this ordering ensures that any accesses |
| prior to the ``call_rcu()`` (particularly including phase one of the |
| update) happen before the start of the corresponding grace period. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But what about ``synchronize_rcu()``? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | The ``synchronize_rcu()`` passes ``call_rcu()`` to ``wait_rcu_gp()``, | |
| | which invokes it. So either way, it eventually comes down to | |
| | ``call_rcu()``. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Grace-Period Initialization |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Grace-period initialization is carried out by the grace-period kernel |
| thread, which makes several passes over the ``rcu_node`` tree within the |
| ``rcu_gp_init()`` function. This means that showing the full flow of |
| ordering through the grace-period computation will require duplicating |
| this tree. If you find this confusing, please note that the state of the |
| ``rcu_node`` changes over time, just like Heraclitus's river. However, |
| to keep the ``rcu_node`` river tractable, the grace-period kernel |
| thread's traversals are presented in multiple parts, starting in this |
| section with the various phases of grace-period initialization. |
| |
| The first ordering-related grace-period initialization action is to |
| advance the ``rcu_state`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` grace-period-number |
| counter, as shown below: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp-init-1.svg |
| |
| The actual increment is carried out using ``smp_store_release()``, which |
| helps reject false-positive RCU CPU stall detection. Note that only the |
| root ``rcu_node`` structure is touched. |
| |
| The first pass through the ``rcu_node`` tree updates bitmasks based on |
| CPUs having come online or gone offline since the start of the previous |
| grace period. In the common case where the number of online CPUs for |
| this ``rcu_node`` structure has not transitioned to or from zero, this |
| pass will scan only the leaf ``rcu_node`` structures. However, if the |
| number of online CPUs for a given leaf ``rcu_node`` structure has |
| transitioned from zero, ``rcu_init_new_rnp()`` will be invoked for the |
| first incoming CPU. Similarly, if the number of online CPUs for a given |
| leaf ``rcu_node`` structure has transitioned to zero, |
| ``rcu_cleanup_dead_rnp()`` will be invoked for the last outgoing CPU. |
| The diagram below shows the path of ordering if the leftmost |
| ``rcu_node`` structure onlines its first CPU and if the next |
| ``rcu_node`` structure has no online CPUs (or, alternatively if the |
| leftmost ``rcu_node`` structure offlines its last CPU and if the next |
| ``rcu_node`` structure has no online CPUs). |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp-init-2.svg |
| |
| The final ``rcu_gp_init()`` pass through the ``rcu_node`` tree traverses |
| breadth-first, setting each ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field |
| to the newly advanced value from the ``rcu_state`` structure, as shown |
| in the following diagram. |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp-init-3.svg |
| |
| This change will also cause each CPU's next call to |
| ``__note_gp_changes()`` to notice that a new grace period has started, |
| as described in the next section. But because the grace-period kthread |
| started the grace period at the root (with the advancing of the |
| ``rcu_state`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field) before setting each leaf |
| ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field, each CPU's observation of |
| the start of the grace period will happen after the actual start of the |
| grace period. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But what about the CPU that started the grace period? Why wouldn't it | |
| | see the start of the grace period right when it started that grace | |
| | period? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | In some deep philosophical and overly anthromorphized sense, yes, the | |
| | CPU starting the grace period is immediately aware of having done so. | |
| | However, if we instead assume that RCU is not self-aware, then even | |
| | the CPU starting the grace period does not really become aware of the | |
| | start of this grace period until its first call to | |
| | ``__note_gp_changes()``. On the other hand, this CPU potentially gets | |
| | early notification because it invokes ``__note_gp_changes()`` during | |
| | its last ``rcu_gp_init()`` pass through its leaf ``rcu_node`` | |
| | structure. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Self-Reported Quiescent States |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When all entities that might block the grace period have reported |
| quiescent states (or as described in a later section, had quiescent |
| states reported on their behalf), the grace period can end. Online |
| non-idle CPUs report their own quiescent states, as shown in the |
| following diagram: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-qs.svg |
| |
| This is for the last CPU to report a quiescent state, which signals the |
| end of the grace period. Earlier quiescent states would push up the |
| ``rcu_node`` tree only until they encountered an ``rcu_node`` structure |
| that is waiting for additional quiescent states. However, ordering is |
| nevertheless preserved because some later quiescent state will acquire |
| that ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock``. |
| |
| Any number of events can lead up to a CPU invoking ``note_gp_changes`` |
| (or alternatively, directly invoking ``__note_gp_changes()``), at which |
| point that CPU will notice the start of a new grace period while holding |
| its leaf ``rcu_node`` lock. Therefore, all execution shown in this |
| diagram happens after the start of the grace period. In addition, this |
| CPU will consider any RCU read-side critical section that started before |
| the invocation of ``__note_gp_changes()`` to have started before the |
| grace period, and thus a critical section that the grace period must |
| wait on. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But a RCU read-side critical section might have started after the | |
| | beginning of the grace period (the advancing of ``->gp_seq`` from | |
| | earlier), so why should the grace period wait on such a critical | |
| | section? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | It is indeed not necessary for the grace period to wait on such a | |
| | critical section. However, it is permissible to wait on it. And it is | |
| | furthermore important to wait on it, as this lazy approach is far | |
| | more scalable than a “big bang” all-at-once grace-period start could | |
| | possibly be. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| If the CPU does a context switch, a quiescent state will be noted by |
| ``rcu_note_context_switch()`` on the left. On the other hand, if the CPU |
| takes a scheduler-clock interrupt while executing in usermode, a |
| quiescent state will be noted by ``rcu_sched_clock_irq()`` on the right. |
| Either way, the passage through a quiescent state will be noted in a |
| per-CPU variable. |
| |
| The next time an ``RCU_SOFTIRQ`` handler executes on this CPU (for |
| example, after the next scheduler-clock interrupt), ``rcu_core()`` will |
| invoke ``rcu_check_quiescent_state()``, which will notice the recorded |
| quiescent state, and invoke ``rcu_report_qs_rdp()``. If |
| ``rcu_report_qs_rdp()`` verifies that the quiescent state really does |
| apply to the current grace period, it invokes ``rcu_report_rnp()`` which |
| traverses up the ``rcu_node`` tree as shown at the bottom of the |
| diagram, clearing bits from each ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->qsmask`` |
| field, and propagating up the tree when the result is zero. |
| |
| Note that traversal passes upwards out of a given ``rcu_node`` structure |
| only if the current CPU is reporting the last quiescent state for the |
| subtree headed by that ``rcu_node`` structure. A key point is that if a |
| CPU's traversal stops at a given ``rcu_node`` structure, then there will |
| be a later traversal by another CPU (or perhaps the same one) that |
| proceeds upwards from that point, and the ``rcu_node`` ``->lock`` |
| guarantees that the first CPU's quiescent state happens before the |
| remainder of the second CPU's traversal. Applying this line of thought |
| repeatedly shows that all CPUs' quiescent states happen before the last |
| CPU traverses through the root ``rcu_node`` structure, the “last CPU” |
| being the one that clears the last bit in the root ``rcu_node`` |
| structure's ``->qsmask`` field. |
| |
| Dynamic Tick Interface |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Due to energy-efficiency considerations, RCU is forbidden from |
| disturbing idle CPUs. CPUs are therefore required to notify RCU when |
| entering or leaving idle state, which they do via fully ordered |
| value-returning atomic operations on a per-CPU variable. The ordering |
| effects are as shown below: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-dyntick.svg |
| |
| The RCU grace-period kernel thread samples the per-CPU idleness variable |
| while holding the corresponding CPU's leaf ``rcu_node`` structure's |
| ``->lock``. This means that any RCU read-side critical sections that |
| precede the idle period (the oval near the top of the diagram above) |
| will happen before the end of the current grace period. Similarly, the |
| beginning of the current grace period will happen before any RCU |
| read-side critical sections that follow the idle period (the oval near |
| the bottom of the diagram above). |
| |
| Plumbing this into the full grace-period execution is described |
| `below <Forcing Quiescent States_>`__. |
| |
| CPU-Hotplug Interface |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| RCU is also forbidden from disturbing offline CPUs, which might well be |
| powered off and removed from the system completely. CPUs are therefore |
| required to notify RCU of their comings and goings as part of the |
| corresponding CPU hotplug operations. The ordering effects are shown |
| below: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-hotplug.svg |
| |
| Because CPU hotplug operations are much less frequent than idle |
| transitions, they are heavier weight, and thus acquire the CPU's leaf |
| ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` and update this structure's |
| ``->qsmaskinitnext``. The RCU grace-period kernel thread samples this |
| mask to detect CPUs having gone offline since the beginning of this |
| grace period. |
| |
| Plumbing this into the full grace-period execution is described |
| `below <Forcing Quiescent States_>`__. |
| |
| Forcing Quiescent States |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| As noted above, idle and offline CPUs cannot report their own quiescent |
| states, and therefore the grace-period kernel thread must do the |
| reporting on their behalf. This process is called “forcing quiescent |
| states”, it is repeated every few jiffies, and its ordering effects are |
| shown below: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp-fqs.svg |
| |
| Each pass of quiescent state forcing is guaranteed to traverse the leaf |
| ``rcu_node`` structures, and if there are no new quiescent states due to |
| recently idled and/or offlined CPUs, then only the leaves are traversed. |
| However, if there is a newly offlined CPU as illustrated on the left or |
| a newly idled CPU as illustrated on the right, the corresponding |
| quiescent state will be driven up towards the root. As with |
| self-reported quiescent states, the upwards driving stops once it |
| reaches an ``rcu_node`` structure that has quiescent states outstanding |
| from other CPUs. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | The leftmost drive to root stopped before it reached the root | |
| | ``rcu_node`` structure, which means that there are still CPUs | |
| | subordinate to that structure on which the current grace period is | |
| | waiting. Given that, how is it possible that the rightmost drive to | |
| | root ended the grace period? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | Good analysis! It is in fact impossible in the absence of bugs in | |
| | RCU. But this diagram is complex enough as it is, so simplicity | |
| | overrode accuracy. You can think of it as poetic license, or you can | |
| | think of it as misdirection that is resolved in the | |
| | `stitched-together diagram <Putting It All Together_>`__. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Grace-Period Cleanup |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Grace-period cleanup first scans the ``rcu_node`` tree breadth-first |
| advancing all the ``->gp_seq`` fields, then it advances the |
| ``rcu_state`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field. The ordering effects are |
| shown below: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp-cleanup.svg |
| |
| As indicated by the oval at the bottom of the diagram, once grace-period |
| cleanup is complete, the next grace period can begin. |
| |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Quick Quiz**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | But when precisely does the grace period end? | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | **Answer**: | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| | There is no useful single point at which the grace period can be said | |
| | to end. The earliest reasonable candidate is as soon as the last CPU | |
| | has reported its quiescent state, but it may be some milliseconds | |
| | before RCU becomes aware of this. The latest reasonable candidate is | |
| | once the ``rcu_state`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field has been | |
| | updated, but it is quite possible that some CPUs have already | |
| | completed phase two of their updates by that time. In short, if you | |
| | are going to work with RCU, you need to learn to embrace uncertainty. | |
| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Callback Invocation |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Once a given CPU's leaf ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->gp_seq`` field has |
| been updated, that CPU can begin invoking its RCU callbacks that were |
| waiting for this grace period to end. These callbacks are identified by |
| ``rcu_advance_cbs()``, which is usually invoked by |
| ``__note_gp_changes()``. As shown in the diagram below, this invocation |
| can be triggered by the scheduling-clock interrupt |
| (``rcu_sched_clock_irq()`` on the left) or by idle entry |
| (``rcu_cleanup_after_idle()`` on the right, but only for kernels build |
| with ``CONFIG_RCU_FAST_NO_HZ=y``). Either way, ``RCU_SOFTIRQ`` is |
| raised, which results in ``rcu_do_batch()`` invoking the callbacks, |
| which in turn allows those callbacks to carry out (either directly or |
| indirectly via wakeup) the needed phase-two processing for each update. |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-callback-invocation.svg |
| |
| Please note that callback invocation can also be prompted by any number |
| of corner-case code paths, for example, when a CPU notes that it has |
| excessive numbers of callbacks queued. In all cases, the CPU acquires |
| its leaf ``rcu_node`` structure's ``->lock`` before invoking callbacks, |
| which preserves the required ordering against the newly completed grace |
| period. |
| |
| However, if the callback function communicates to other CPUs, for |
| example, doing a wakeup, then it is that function's responsibility to |
| maintain ordering. For example, if the callback function wakes up a task |
| that runs on some other CPU, proper ordering must in place in both the |
| callback function and the task being awakened. To see why this is |
| important, consider the top half of the `grace-period |
| cleanup`_ diagram. The callback might be |
| running on a CPU corresponding to the leftmost leaf ``rcu_node`` |
| structure, and awaken a task that is to run on a CPU corresponding to |
| the rightmost leaf ``rcu_node`` structure, and the grace-period kernel |
| thread might not yet have reached the rightmost leaf. In this case, the |
| grace period's memory ordering might not yet have reached that CPU, so |
| again the callback function and the awakened task must supply proper |
| ordering. |
| |
| Putting It All Together |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A stitched-together diagram is here: |
| |
| .. kernel-figure:: TreeRCU-gp.svg |
| |
| Legal Statement |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| This work represents the view of the author and does not necessarily |
| represent the view of IBM. |
| |
| Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. |
| |
| Other company, product, and service names may be trademarks or service |
| marks of others. |