when thread is in kernel mode, it can cause dead loop, now unlock
process lock after acquired sleep queue lock and thread lock to
avoid the problem. This means TDF_NEEDSIGCHK and TDF_NEEDSUSPCHK must
be set with process lock and thread lock being hold at same time.
unnecessary, the normal process lock and thread lock are enough. The
spin lock is still needed for process and thread exiting to mimic
single sched_lock.
the command set (only so long as the module is present):
o add db_command_register and db_command_unregister to add and remove
commands, respectively
o replace linker sets with SYSINIT's (and SYSUINIT's) that register
commands
o expose 3 list heads: db_cmd_table, db_show_table, and db_show_all_table
for registering top-level commands, show operands, and show all operands,
respectively
While here also:
o sort command lists
o add DB_ALIAS, DB_SHOW_ALIAS, and DB_SHOW_ALL_ALIAS to add aliases
for existing commands
o add "show all trace" as an alias for "show alltrace"
o add "show all locks" as an alias for "show alllocks"
Submitted by: Guillaume Ballet <gballet@gmail.com> (original version)
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 month
it had been assigned to the last sleeping thread. That thread might have
started running on another CPU and have reused that sleep queue. Fix it
by just walking the thread queue using TAILQ_FOREACH_SAFE() rather than
a while loop.
PR: amd64/124200
Discovered by: tegge
Tested by: benjsc
MFC after: 1 week
routine wakes up proc0 so that proc0 can swap the thread back in.
Historically, this has been done by waking up proc0 directly from
setrunnable() itself via a wakeup(). When waking up a sleeping thread
that was swapped out (the usual case when waking proc0 since only sleeping
threads are eligible to be swapped out), this resulted in a bit of
recursion (e.g. wakeup() -> setrunnable() -> wakeup()).
With sleep queues having separate locks in 6.x and later, this caused a
spin lock LOR (sleepq lock -> sched_lock/thread lock -> sleepq lock).
An attempt was made to fix this in 7.0 by making the proc0 wakeup use
the ithread mechanism for doing the wakeup. However, this required
grabbing proc0's thread lock to perform the wakeup. If proc0 was asleep
elsewhere in the kernel (e.g. waiting for disk I/O), then this degenerated
into the same LOR since the thread lock would be some other sleepq lock.
Fix this by deferring the wakeup of the swapper until after the sleepq
lock held by the upper layer has been locked. The setrunnable() routine
now returns a boolean value to indicate whether or not proc0 needs to be
woken up. The end result is that consumers of the sleepq API such as
*sleep/wakeup, condition variables, sx locks, and lockmgr, have to wakeup
proc0 if they get a non-zero return value from sleepq_abort(),
sleepq_broadcast(), or sleepq_signal().
Discussed with: jeff
Glanced at by: sam
Tested by: Jurgen Weber jurgen - ish com au
MFC after: 2 weeks
variables and sysctl nodes.
- In reset walk the children of kern_sched_stats and reset the counters
via the oid_arg1 pointer. This allows us to add arbitrary counters to
the tree and still reset them properly.
- Define a set of switch types to be passed with flags to mi_switch().
These types are named SWT_*. These types correspond to SCHED_STATS
counters and are automatically handled in this way.
- Make the new SWT_ types more specific than the older switch stats.
There are now stats for idle switches, remote idle wakeups, remote
preemption ithreads idling, etc.
- Add switch statistics for ULE's pickcpu algorithm. These stats include
how much migration there is, how often affinity was successful, how
often threads were migrated to the local cpu on wakeup, etc.
Sponsored by: Nokia
to enter thread_suspend_check().
- Set TDF_ASTPENDING along with TDF_NEEDSUSPCHK so we can move the
thread_suspend_check() to ast() rather than userret().
- Check TDF_NEEDSUSPCHK in the sleepq_catch_signals() optimization so
that we don't miss a suspend request. If this is set use the
expensive signal path.
- Set NEEDSUSPCHK when creating a new thread in thr in case the
creating thread is due to be suspended as well but has not yet.
Reviewed by: davidxu (Authored original patch)
before doing the very expensive cursig() and related locking. NEEDSIGCHK
is updated whenever our signal mask change or when a signal is delivered and
should be sufficient to avoid the more expensive tests. This eliminates
another source of PROC_LOCK contention in multithreaded programs.
a simple (wmesg, count) tuple in a hash to keep track of how many times
we sleep at each wait message. We hash on message and not channel. No
line number information is given as typically wait messages are not used in
more than one place. Identical strings defined at different addresses will
show up with seperate counters.
- Use debug.sleepq.enable to enable, .reset to reset, and .stats dumps stats.
- Do an unsynchronized check in sleepq_switch() prior to switching before
calling sleepq_profile() which uses a global lock to synchronize the hash.
Only sleeps which actually cause a context switch are counted.
- Close a sleepqueue signal race by interlocking with the per-process
spinlock. This was mistakenly omitted from the thread_lock patch and
has been a race since.
MFC After: 1 week
PR: bin/117603
Reported by: Danny Braniss <danny@cs.huji.ac.il>
While the KSE project was quite successful in bringing threading to
FreeBSD, the M:N approach taken by the kse library was never developed
to its full potential. Backwards compatibility will be provided via
libmap.conf for dynamically linked binaries and static binaries will
be broken.
sched_sleep(). This removes extra thread_lock() acquisition and
allows the scheduler to decide what to do with the static boost.
- Change the priority arguments to cv_* to match sleepq/msleep/etc.
where 0 means no priority change. Catch -1 in cv_broadcastpri() and
convert it to 0 for now.
- Set a flag when sleeping in a way that is compatible with swapping
since direct priority comparisons are meaningless now.
- Add a sysctl to ule, kern.sched.static_boost, that defaults to on which
controls the boost behavior. Turning it off gives better performance
in some workloads but needs more investigation.
- While we're modifying sleepq, change signal and broadcast to both
return with the lock held as the lock was held on enter.
Reviewed by: jhb, peter
the provided lock or &blocked_lock. The thread may be temporarily
assigned to the blocked_lock by the scheduler so a direct comparison
can not always be made.
- Use THREAD_LOCKPTR_ASSERT() in the primary consumers of the scheduling
interfaces. The schedulers themselves still use more explicit asserts.
Sponsored by: Nokia
while the thread does not hold the thread lock would stop blocking for
subsequent interruptible sleeps and would always immediately fail the
sleep with EWOULDBLOCK instead (even sleeps that didn't have a timeout).
Some background:
- KSE has a facility for allowing one thread to interrupt another thread.
During this process, the target thread aborts any interruptible sleeps
much as if the target thread had a pending signal. Once the target
thread acknowledges the interrupt, normal sleep handling resumes. KSE
manages this via the TDF_INTERRUPTED flag. Specifically, it sets the
flag when it sends an interrupt to another thread and clears it when
the interrupt is acknowledged. (Note that this is purely a software
interrupt sort of thing and has no relation to hardware interrupts
or kernel interrupt threads.)
- The old code for handling the sleep timeout race handled the race
by setting the TDF_INTERRUPT flag and faking a KSE-style thread
interrupt to the thread in the process of going to sleep. It probably
should have just checked the TDF_TIMEOUT flag in sleepq_catch_signals()
instead.
- The bug was that the sleepq code would set TDF_INTERRUPT but it was
never cleared. The sleepq code couldn't safely clear it in case there
actually was a real KSE thread interrupt pending for the target thread
(in fact, the sleepq timeout actually stomped on said pending interrupt).
Thus, any future interruptible sleeps (*sleep(.. PCATCH ..) or
cv_*wait_sig()) would see the TDF_INTERRUPT flag set and immediately
fail with EWOULDBLOCK. The flag could be cleared if the thread belonged
to a KSE process and another thread posted an interrupt to the original
thread. However, in the more common case of a non-KSE process, the
thread would pretty much stop sleeping.
- Fix the bug by just setting TDF_TIMEOUT in the sleepq timeout code and
not messing with TDF_INTERRUPT and td_intrval. With yesterday's fix to
fix sleepq_switch() to check TDF_TIMEOUT, this is now sufficient.
MFC after: 3 days
being properly cancelled by a timeout. In general there is a race
between a the sleepq timeout handler firing while the thread is still
in the process of going to sleep. In 6.x with sched_lock, the race was
largely protected by sched_lock. The only place it was "exposed" and had
to be handled was while checking for any pending signals in
sleepq_catch_signals().
With the thread lock changes, the thread lock is dropped in between
sleepq_add() and sleepq_*wait*() opening up a new window for this race.
Thus, if the timeout fired while the sleeping thread was in between
sleepq_add() and sleepq_*wait*(), the thread would be marked as timed
out, but the thread would not be dequeued and sleepq_switch() would
still block the thread until it was awakened via some other means. In
the case of pause(9) where there is no other wakeup, the thread would
never be awakened.
Fix this by teaching sleepq_switch() to check if the thread has had its
sleep canceled before blocking by checking the TDF_TIMEOUT flag and
aborting the sleep and dequeueing the thread if it is set.
MFC after: 3 days
Reported by: dwhite, peter
opposed to what process. Since threads by default have teh name of the
process unless over-written with more useful information, just print the
thread name instead.
races for some struct thread members.
More specifically, this bug seems responsible for some memory dumping
problems people were experiencing.
Fix this adding correct thread locking.
Tested by: rwatson
Submitted by: tegge
Approved by: jeff
Approved by: re
- Adapt sleepqueues to the new thread_lock() mechanism.
- Delay assigning the sleep queue spinlock as the thread lock until after
we've checked for signals. It is illegal for a thread to return in
mi_switch() with any lock assigned to td_lock other than the scheduler
locks.
- Change sleepq_catch_signals() to do the switch if necessary to simplify
the callers.
- Simplify timeout handling now that locking a sleeping thread has the
side-effect of locking the sleepqueue. Some previous races are no
longer possible.
Tested by: kris, current@
Tested on: i386, amd64, ULE, 4BSD, libthr, libkse, PREEMPTION, etc.
Discussed with: kris, attilio, kmacy, jhb, julian, bde (small parts each)
speedup and will be more useful after each gains a spinlock in the
impending thread_lock() commit.
- Move initialization and asserts into init/fini routines. fini routines
are only needed in the INVARIANTS case for now.
Submitted by: Attilio Rao <attilio@FreeBSD.org>
Tested by: kris, jeff
- in trying to avoid nested brackets and #ifdef INVARIANTS around i at the
top, I broke booting for INVARIANTS all together :-(
- the cleanest fix is to simply assign to sq twice if INVARIANTS is enabled
- tested both with and without INVARIANTS :-/
which allows to use it with different kinds of locks. For example it allows
to implement Solaris conditions variables which will be used in ZFS port on
top of sx(9) locks.
Reviewed by: jhb
not need to clear it now, this should fix panic when msleep is recursivly
called. Patch is slightly adjusted after review.
Reviewed by: jhb
Tested by: Csaba Henk, csaba-ml at creo.hu
MFC after: 3 days
suspension code. When a thread A is going to sleep, it calls
sleepq_catch_signals() to detect any pending signals or thread
suspension request, if nothing happens, it returns without
holding process lock or scheduler lock, this opens a race
window which allows thread B to come in and do process
suspension work, however since A is still at running state,
thread B can do nothing to A, thread A continues, and puts
itself into actually sleeping state, but B has never seen it,
and it sits there forever until B is woken up by other threads
sometimes later(this can be very long delay or never
happen). Fix this bug by forcing sleepq_catch_signals to
return with scheduler lock held.
Fix sleepq_abort() by passing it an interrupted code, previously,
it worked as wakeup_one(), and the interruption can not be
identified correctly by sleep queue code when the sleeping
thread is resumed.
Let thread_suspend_check() returns EINTR or ERESTART, so sleep
queue no longer has to use SIGSTOP as a hack to build a return
value.
Reviewed by: jhb
MFC after: 1 week
argument and looks for a sleep queue associated with that wait channel.
If it finds one it will display information such as the list of threads
sleeping on that queue. If it can't find a sleep queue for that wait
channel, then it will see if that address matches any of the active
sleep queues. If so, it will display information about the sleepq at the
specified address.
- Prefer '_' to ' ', as it results in more easily parsed results in
memory monitoring tools such as vmstat.
- Remove punctuation that is incompatible with using memory type names
as file names, such as '/' characters.
- Disambiguate some collisions by adding subsystem prefixes to some
memory types.
- Generally prefer lower case to upper case.
- If the same type is defined in multiple architecture directories,
attempt to use the same name in additional cases.
Not all instances were caught in this change, so more work is required to
finish this conversion. Similar changes are required for UMA zone names.
state where sleeping on a sleep queue is not allowed. The facility
doesn't support recursion but uses a simple private per-thread flag
(TDP_NOSLEEPING). The sleepq_add() function will panic if the flag is
set and INVARIANTS is enabled.
- Use this new facility to replace the g_xup and g_xdown mutexes that were
(ab)used to achieve similar behavior.
- Disallow sleeping in interrupt threads when invoking interrupt handlers.
MFC after: 1 week
Reviewed by: phk
Specifically, sleepq_broadcast() uses td_slpq for its private pending
queue of threads that it is going to wake up after it takes them off the
sleep queue. The problem is that if one of the threads is actually not
asleep yet, then we can end up with td_slpq being corrupted and/or the
thread being made runnable at the wrong time resulting in the td_sleepqueue
== NULL assertion failures occasionally reported under heavy load.
The fix is to stop being so fancy and ditch the whole pending queue bit.
Instead, sleepq_remove_thread() and sleepq_resume_thread() were merged
into one function that requires the caller to hold sched_lock. This
fixes several places that unlocked sched_lock only to call a function
that then locked sched_lock, so even though sched_lock is now held
slightly longer, removing the extra lock acquires (1 pair instead of 3
in some cases) probably makes it an overall win if you don't include the
fact that it closes a race. This is definitely a 5.4 candidate.
PR: kern/79693
Submitted by: Steven Sears stevenjsears at yahoo dot com
MFC after: 4 days
priority. The sleep queues don't get updated when the priority of
threads changes, so sleepq_signal() might not always wakeup the
highest priority thread. Updating the queues when thread priorities
change cannot be easily done due to lock orders, so instead we do an
O(n) walk of the queue for a sleepq_signal() operation instead of O(1).
On the other hand, adding a thread to a sleep queue now goes from O(n)
to O(1) so it ends up as an even tradeoff. The correctness here with
regards to priorities is actually fairly important. msleep() gives
interactive threads their priority "boost" after they are placed on the
queue, but before this fix that "boost" wasn't used to determine the
highest priority thread that sleepq_signal() awoke.
- Fix up some comments.
Inspired by: ups, bde