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Re: vwakeup: neg numoutput



On Mon, Jun 30, 2008 at 09:10:09PM +0200, Manuel Bouyer wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 30, 2008 at 10:27:07AM -0700, Bill Stouder-Studenmund wrote:
> > > > Would this be a good candidate for the atomic update operations? That 
> > > > way 
> > > > you don't need a lock.
> > > 
> > > Could be, but then it needs to be updated atomically everywhere.
> > 
> > Right.
> > 
> > But if you can't take a lock, then you need to do something. :-) And 
> > either cscope or eid (probably eid) can help you change the whole tree at 
> > once.
> 
> I don't know either, but I can do it with grep :)
> 
> I don't know how to translate this kind of construct then:
>                 mutex_enter(&vp->v_interlock);
>               while (vp->v_numoutput > 0)
>                       cv_wait(&vp->v_cv, &vp->v_interlock);
>               mutex_exit(&vp->v_interlock);

You would have to hold the lock to move v_numoutput from a non-zero value to
to zero.

> they're used in several places. There are also places where it seems it's
> expected to have vp->v_numoutput stable for several lines of code:

> vfs_subr2.c:
>         mutex_enter(&vp->v_interlock);
>               while (vp->v_numoutput != 0)
>                       cv_wait(&vp->v_cv, &vp->v_interlock);
>       dirty = !LIST_EMPTY(&vp->v_dirtyblkhd);
>       mutex_exit(&vp->v_interlock);

You can't assume that with v_numoutput, it's only used to ensure that
already in flight I/O operations have completed.
 
> there's also genfs_do_putpages().
> I'm not sure it's doable to change this to atomic ops.
> 
> Last, I suspect ccd.c also has locking issues with v_numoutput and locking.
> 
> Would using a software interrupt to run the xbdback handler work to take
> v_interlock mutex ?

Yes.

Andrew


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