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

Andy Lutomirski luto at amacapital.net
Tue May 24 11:42:49 AEST 2016


On Mon, May 23, 2016 at 4:02 PM, Jiri Kosina <jikos at kernel.org> wrote:
> On Fri, 20 May 2016, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
>
>> I think it would be negligible, at least for interrupts, since
>> interrupts are already extremely expensive.  But I don't love adding
>> assembly code that makes them even slower.  The real thing I dislike
>> about this approach is that it's not a normal stack frame, so you need
>> code in the unwinder to unwind through it correctly, which makes me
>> think that you're not saving much complexity by adding the pushes.
>
> I fail to see what is so special about the stack frame; it's in fact
> pretty normal.
>
> It has added semantic value for "those who know", but the others will
> (pretty much correctly) consider it to be a stackframe from a function
> call, and be done with it.
>
> What am I missing?

In Josh's code, the stack looks like:

...
interrupted frame
pt_regs
pointer to pt_regs
address of pt_regs dummy function
rbp
handler frame

A naive unwinder won't unwind this correctly, as there's no link back
to the interrupted frame's RIP.  If the layout changed to:


...
interrupted frame
pt_regs
interrupted RIP
rbp
handler frame

then I think it would unwind correctly, but the pt_regs would be
invisible, which is IMO a bit unfortunate.  It could also be (I
think):


...
interrupted frame
pt_regs
interrupted rbp
interrupted RIP
pointer to pt_regs
address of pt_regs dummy function
pointer to "interrupted RIP" stack slot
handler frame

but now this is *five* pushes for the dummy frame, which I think is
getting a bit out of hand.

--Andy


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