When we unlock a range, we remove the range from the
locked bdev list before doing the for_each_channel
iteration to remove the range from each channel.
But at the same time, right after removing from the
locked list, a new lock on that range could start.
In that case, we also do a for_each_channel to add
the range to each channel, and that will race with
the for_each_channel remove. When the lock start
wins, it finds the range already in the channel,
but doesn't set the owner_range which results in
a seg fault when the for_each_channel completes.
The fix is actually rather simple. We just add the
locked_ctx to the comparison when checking if the
range is already in the channel. If the locked_ctx
matches, then we know it was added as part of
initializing a new channel. If it doesn't, then
we create a new range object pointing to the new
locked_ctx. The first one will get removed when
the remove for_each_channel catches up.
Signed-off-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com>
Change-Id: I94f8b20376dd437f404add35744d42fc148303ff
Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/c/spdk/spdk/+/482620
Community-CI: Broadcom SPDK FC-NVMe CI <spdk-ci.pdl@broadcom.com>
Tested-by: SPDK CI Jenkins <sys_sgci@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Shuhei Matsumoto <shuhei.matsumoto.xt@hitachi.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul Luse <paul.e.luse@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Maciej Szwed <maciej.szwed@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Ben Walker <benjamin.walker@intel.com>