[PATCH v2 10/10] kernel: might_fault does not imply might_sleep
Michael S. Tsirkin
mst at redhat.com
Mon May 20 06:35:51 EST 2013
On Sun, May 19, 2013 at 04:23:22PM -0400, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Sun, 2013-05-19 at 19:40 +0300, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
>
> > OK I get it. So let me correct myself. The simple code
> > that does something like this under a spinlock:
> > > preempt_disable
> > > pagefault_disable
> > > error = copy_to_user
> > > pagefault_enable
> > > preempt_enable
> > >
> > is not doing anything wrong and should not get a warning,
> > as long as error is handled correctly later.
> > Right?
>
> I came in mid thread and I don't know the context.
The context is that I want to change might_fault
from might_sleep to
might_sleep_if(!in_atomic())
so that above does not trigger warnings even with
CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP enabled.
> Anyway, the above
> looks to me as you just don't want to sleep.
Exactly. upstream we can just do pagefault_disable but to make
this code -rt ready it's best to do preempt_disable as well.
> If you try to copy data to
> user space that happens not to be currently mapped for any reason, you
> will get an error. Even if the address space is completely valid. Is
> that what you want?
>
> -- Steve
>
Yes, this is by design.
We detect that and bounce the work to a thread outside
any locks.
Thanks,
--
MST
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