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authorNicholas Mc Guire <hofrat@osadl.org>2015-02-20 12:28:48 -0500
committerJonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>2015-04-04 15:20:26 +0200
commit4988aaa6e508614e5d4c4f08723635fc8191188b (patch)
treeb2c87001796ae2f3e9537b6173c897adea7a4bb8
parent4997166a393851d0595f85cbe1195208d582e172 (diff)
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doc: completion: context, scope and language fixes
Fix for imprecise/wrong statements on context in which wait_for_completion*() can be called, updated notes on "going out of scope" problems and some language fixups. Signed-off-by: Nicholas Mc Guire <hofrat@osadl.org> Acked-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
-rw-r--r--Documentation/scheduler/completion.txt99
1 files changed, 55 insertions, 44 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/scheduler/completion.txt b/Documentation/scheduler/completion.txt
index f77651eca31e..083d9c931b8d 100644
--- a/Documentation/scheduler/completion.txt
+++ b/Documentation/scheduler/completion.txt
@@ -11,11 +11,11 @@ to have reached a point or a specific state, completions can provide a race
free solution to this problem. Semantically they are somewhat like a
pthread_barriers and have similar use-cases.
-Completions are a code synchronization mechanism that is preferable to any
+Completions are a code synchronization mechanism which are preferable to any
misuse of locks. Any time you think of using yield() or some quirky
msleep(1); loop to allow something else to proceed, you probably want to
look into using one of the wait_for_completion*() calls instead. The
-advantage of using completions is clear intent of the code but also more
+advantage of using completions is clear intent of the code, but also more
efficient code as both threads can continue until the result is actually
needed.
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ with the event reduced to a simple flag appropriately called "done" in
struct completion, that tells the waiting threads of execution if they
can continue safely.
-As completions are scheduling related the code is found in
+As completions are scheduling related, the code is found in
kernel/sched/completion.c - for details on completion design and
implementation see completions-design.txt
@@ -32,9 +32,9 @@ implementation see completions-design.txt
Usage:
------
-There are three parts to the using completions, the initialization of the
+There are three parts to using completions, the initialization of the
struct completion, the waiting part through a call to one of the variants of
-wait_for_completion() and the signaling side through a call to complete(),
+wait_for_completion() and the signaling side through a call to complete()
or complete_all(). Further there are some helper functions for checking the
state of completions.
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ handling of completions is:
providing the wait queue to place tasks on for waiting and the flag for
indicating the state of affairs.
-Completions should be named to convey the intent of the waiter. A good
+Completions should be named to convey the intent of the waiter. A good
example is:
wait_for_completion(&early_console_added);
@@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ the default state to "not available", that is, "done" is set to 0.
The re-initialization function, reinit_completion(), simply resets the
done element to "not available", thus again to 0, without touching the
-wait queue. Calling init_completion() on the same completions object is
+wait queue. Calling init_completion() on the same completion object is
most likely a bug as it re-initializes the queue to an empty queue and
enqueued tasks could get "lost" - use reinit_completion() in that case.
@@ -87,10 +87,17 @@ initialization should always use:
DECLARE_COMPLETION_ONSTACK(setup_done)
suitable for automatic/local variables on the stack and will make lockdep
-happy. Note also that one needs to making *sure* the completion passt to
+happy. Note also that one needs to make *sure* the completion passed to
work threads remains in-scope, and no references remain to on-stack data
when the initiating function returns.
+Using on-stack completions for code that calls any of the _timeout or
+_interruptible/_killable variants is not advisable as they will require
+additional synchronization to prevent the on-stack completion object in
+the timeout/signal cases from going out of scope. Consider using dynamically
+allocated completions when intending to use the _interruptible/_killable
+or _timeout variants of wait_for_completion().
+
Waiting for completions:
------------------------
@@ -101,21 +108,22 @@ A typical usage scenario is:
structure completion setup_done;
init_completion(&setup_done);
- initialze_work(...,&setup_done,...)
+ initialize_work(...,&setup_done,...)
/* run non-dependent code */ /* do setup */
- wait_for_completion(&seupt_done); complete(setup_done)
+ wait_for_completion(&setup_done); complete(setup_done)
-This is not implying any temporal order of wait_for_completion() and the
+This is not implying any temporal order on wait_for_completion() and the
call to complete() - if the call to complete() happened before the call
to wait_for_completion() then the waiting side simply will continue
-immediately as all dependencies are satisfied.
+immediately as all dependencies are satisfied if not it will block until
+completion is signaled by complete().
Note that wait_for_completion() is calling spin_lock_irq/spin_unlock_irq
so it can only be called safely when you know that interrupts are enabled.
-Calling it from hard-irq context will result in hard to detect spurious
-enabling of interrupts.
+Calling it from hard-irq or irqs-off atomic contexts will result in hard
+to detect spurious enabling of interrupts.
wait_for_completion():
@@ -123,10 +131,13 @@ wait_for_completion():
The default behavior is to wait without a timeout and mark the task as
uninterruptible. wait_for_completion() and its variants are only safe
-in soft-interrupt or process context but not in hard-irq context.
+in process context (as they can sleep) but not in atomic context,
+interrupt context, with disabled irqs. or preemption is disabled - see also
+try_wait_for_completion() below for handling completion in atomic/interrupt
+context.
+
As all variants of wait_for_completion() can (obviously) block for a long
-time, you probably don't want to call this with held locks - see also
-try_wait_for_completion() below.
+time, you probably don't want to call this with held mutexes.
Variants available:
@@ -141,20 +152,20 @@ A common problem that occurs is to have unclean assignment of return types,
so care should be taken with assigning return-values to variables of proper
type. Checking for the specific meaning of return values also has been found
to be quite inaccurate e.g. constructs like
-if(!wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(...)) would execute the same
+if (!wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(...)) would execute the same
code path for successful completion and for the interrupted case - which is
probably not what you want.
int wait_for_completion_interruptible(struct completion *done)
-marking the task TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a signal was received while waiting.
-It will return -ERESTARTSYS and 0 otherwise.
+This function marks the task TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a signal was received
+while waiting it will return -ERESTARTSYS and 0 otherwise.
unsigned long wait_for_completion_timeout(struct completion *done,
unsigned long timeout)
-The task is marked as TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE and will wait at most timeout
-(in jiffies). If timeout occurs it return 0 else the remaining time in
+The task is marked as TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE and will wait at most 'timeout'
+(in jiffies). If timeout occurs it returns 0 else the remaining time in
jiffies (but at least 1). Timeouts are preferably passed by msecs_to_jiffies()
or usecs_to_jiffies(). If the returned timeout value is deliberately ignored
a comment should probably explain why (e.g. see drivers/mfd/wm8350-core.c
@@ -163,21 +174,21 @@ wm8350_read_auxadc())
long wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(
struct completion *done, unsigned long timeout)
-passing a timeout in jiffies and marking the task as TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a
-signal was received it will return -ERESTARTSYS, 0 if completion timed-out and
-the remaining time in jiffies if completion occurred.
+This function passes a timeout in jiffies and marking the task as
+TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE. If a signal was received it will return -ERESTARTSYS, 0 if
+completion timed out and the remaining time in jiffies if completion occurred.
Further variants include _killable which passes TASK_KILLABLE as the
-designated tasks state and will return a -ERESTARTSYS if interrupted or
-else 0 if completions was achieved as well as a _timeout variant.
+designated tasks state and will return -ERESTARTSYS if interrupted or
+else 0 if completion was achieved as well as a _timeout variant.
long wait_for_completion_killable(struct completion *done)
long wait_for_completion_killable_timeout(struct completion *done,
unsigned long timeout)
-The _io variants wait_for_completion_io behave the same as the non-_io
+The _io variants wait_for_completion_io() behave the same as the non-_io
variants, except for accounting waiting time as waiting on IO, which has
-an impact on how scheduling is calculated.
+an impact on how the task is accounted in scheduling stats.
void wait_for_completion_io(struct completion *done)
unsigned long wait_for_completion_io_timeout(struct completion *done
@@ -187,13 +198,13 @@ an impact on how scheduling is calculated.
Signaling completions:
----------------------
-A thread of execution that wants to signal that the conditions for
-continuation have been achieved calls complete() to signal exactly one
-of the waiters that it can continue.
+A thread that wants to signal that the conditions for continuation have been
+achieved calls complete() to signal exactly one of the waiters that it can
+continue.
void complete(struct completion *done)
-or calls complete_all to signal all current and future waiters.
+or calls complete_all() to signal all current and future waiters.
void complete_all(struct completion *done)
@@ -205,32 +216,32 @@ wakeup order is the same in which they were enqueued (FIFO order).
If complete() is called multiple times then this will allow for that number
of waiters to continue - each call to complete() will simply increment the
done element. Calling complete_all() multiple times is a bug though. Both
-complete() and complete_all() can be called in hard-irq context safely.
+complete() and complete_all() can be called in hard-irq/atomic context safely.
There only can be one thread calling complete() or complete_all() on a
-particular struct completions at any time - serialized through the wait
+particular struct completion at any time - serialized through the wait
queue spinlock. Any such concurrent calls to complete() or complete_all()
probably are a design bug.
Signaling completion from hard-irq context is fine as it will appropriately
-lock with spin_lock_irqsave/spin_unlock_irqrestore.
+lock with spin_lock_irqsave/spin_unlock_irqrestore and it will never sleep.
try_wait_for_completion()/completion_done():
--------------------------------------------
-The try_wait_for_completion will not put the thread on the wait queue but
-rather returns false if it would need to enqueue (block) the thread, else it
-consumes any posted completions and returns true.
+The try_wait_for_completion() function will not put the thread on the wait
+queue but rather returns false if it would need to enqueue (block) the thread,
+else it consumes any posted completions and returns true.
- bool try_wait_for_completion(struct completion *done)
+ bool try_wait_for_completion(struct completion *done)
-Finally to check state of a completions without changing it in any way is
-provided by completion_done() returning false if there are any posted
+Finally to check state of a completion without changing it in any way is
+provided by completion_done() returning false if there is any posted
completion that was not yet consumed by waiters implying that there are
waiters and true otherwise;
- bool completion_done(struct completion *done)
+ bool completion_done(struct completion *done)
Both try_wait_for_completion() and completion_done() are safe to be called in
-hard-irq context.
+hard-irq or atomic context.