[RFC PATCH v2 05/18] sched: add task flag for preempt IRQ tracking

Josh Poimboeuf jpoimboe at redhat.com
Sat Apr 30 08:41:12 AEST 2016


On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 02:37:41PM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 29, 2016 at 2:25 PM, Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe at redhat.com> wrote:
> > I think the easiest way to make it work would be to modify the idtentry
> > macro to put all the idt entries in a dedicated section.  Then the
> > unwinder could easily detect any calls from that code.
> 
> That would work.  Would it make sense to do the same for the irq entries?

Yes, I think so.

> >> I suppose we could try to rejigger the code so that rbp points to
> >> pt_regs or similar.
> >
> > I think we should avoid doing something like that because it would break
> > gdb and all the other unwinders who don't know about it.
> 
> How so?
> 
> Currently, rbp in the entry code is meaningless.  I'm suggesting that,
> when we do, for example, 'call \do_sym' in idtentry, we point rbp to
> the pt_regs.  Currently it points to something stale (which the
> dump_stack code might be relying on.  Hmm.)  But it's probably also
> safe to assume that if you unwind to the 'call \do_sym', then pt_regs
> is the next thing on the stack, so just doing the section thing would
> work.

Yes, rbp is meaningless on the entry from user space.  But if an
in-kernel interrupt occurs (e.g. page fault, preemption) and you have
nested entry, rbp keeps its old value, right?  So the unwinder can walk
past the nested entry frame and keep going until it gets to the original
entry.

> We should really re-add DWARF some day.

Working on it :-)

-- 
Josh


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