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author | Ben Zhang <benzh@chromium.org> | 2014-04-03 14:47:18 -0700 |
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committer | Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> | 2014-04-03 16:20:58 -0700 |
commit | 62572e29bc530b38921ef6059088b4788a9832a5 (patch) | |
tree | 1da2d3feddf55f007b0fe6e9db68bbbfbd265f78 /kernel/watchdog.c | |
parent | 45d4f855046631d63dab8832ba8a8369ed8e04bd (diff) | |
download | linux-62572e29bc530b38921ef6059088b4788a9832a5.tar.gz linux-62572e29bc530b38921ef6059088b4788a9832a5.tar.bz2 linux-62572e29bc530b38921ef6059088b4788a9832a5.zip |
kernel/watchdog.c: touch_nmi_watchdog should only touch local cpu not every one
I ran into a scenario where while one cpu was stuck and should have
panic'd because of the NMI watchdog, it didn't. The reason was another
cpu was spewing stack dumps on to the console. Upon investigation, I
noticed that when writing to the console and also when dumping the
stack, the watchdog is touched.
This causes all the cpus to reset their NMI watchdog flags and the
'stuck' cpu just spins forever.
This change causes the semantics of touch_nmi_watchdog to be changed
slightly. Previously, I accidentally changed the semantics and we
noticed there was a codepath in which touch_nmi_watchdog could be
touched from a preemtible area. That caused a BUG() to happen when
CONFIG_DEBUG_PREEMPT was enabled. I believe it was the acpi code.
My attempt here re-introduces the change to have the
touch_nmi_watchdog() code only touch the local cpu instead of all of the
cpus. But instead of using __get_cpu_var(), I use the
__raw_get_cpu_var() version.
This avoids the preemption problem. However my reasoning wasn't because
I was trying to be lazy. Instead I rationalized it as, well if
preemption is enabled then interrupts should be enabled to and the NMI
watchdog will have no reason to trigger. So it won't matter if the
wrong cpu is touched because the percpu interrupt counters the NMI
watchdog uses should still be incrementing.
Don said:
: I'm ok with this patch, though it does alter the behaviour of how
: touch_nmi_watchdog works. For the most part I don't think most callers
: need to touch all of the watchdogs (on each cpu). Perhaps a corner case
: will pop up (the scheduler?? to mimic touch_all_softlockup_watchdogs() ).
:
: But this does address an issue where if a system is locked up and one cpu
: is spewing out useful debug messages (or error messages), the hard lockup
: will fail to go off. We have seen this on RHEL also.
Signed-off-by: Don Zickus <dzickus@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ben Zhang <benzh@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/watchdog.c')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/watchdog.c | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/watchdog.c b/kernel/watchdog.c index 01c6f979486f..e90089fd78e0 100644 --- a/kernel/watchdog.c +++ b/kernel/watchdog.c @@ -158,14 +158,14 @@ void touch_all_softlockup_watchdogs(void) #ifdef CONFIG_HARDLOCKUP_DETECTOR void touch_nmi_watchdog(void) { - if (watchdog_user_enabled) { - unsigned cpu; - - for_each_present_cpu(cpu) { - if (per_cpu(watchdog_nmi_touch, cpu) != true) - per_cpu(watchdog_nmi_touch, cpu) = true; - } - } + /* + * Using __raw here because some code paths have + * preemption enabled. If preemption is enabled + * then interrupts should be enabled too, in which + * case we shouldn't have to worry about the watchdog + * going off. + */ + __raw_get_cpu_var(watchdog_nmi_touch) = true; touch_softlockup_watchdog(); } EXPORT_SYMBOL(touch_nmi_watchdog); |