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-rw-r--r--drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c161
1 files changed, 161 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
index 656e9ac2d028..0005bc002529 100644
--- a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
+++ b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-fence.c
@@ -111,6 +111,160 @@ u64 dma_fence_context_alloc(unsigned num)
EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_context_alloc);
/**
+ * DOC: fence signalling annotation
+ *
+ * Proving correctness of all the kernel code around &dma_fence through code
+ * review and testing is tricky for a few reasons:
+ *
+ * * It is a cross-driver contract, and therefore all drivers must follow the
+ * same rules for lock nesting order, calling contexts for various functions
+ * and anything else significant for in-kernel interfaces. But it is also
+ * impossible to test all drivers in a single machine, hence brute-force N vs.
+ * N testing of all combinations is impossible. Even just limiting to the
+ * possible combinations is infeasible.
+ *
+ * * There is an enormous amount of driver code involved. For render drivers
+ * there's the tail of command submission, after fences are published,
+ * scheduler code, interrupt and workers to process job completion,
+ * and timeout, gpu reset and gpu hang recovery code. Plus for integration
+ * with core mm with have &mmu_notifier, respectively &mmu_interval_notifier,
+ * and &shrinker. For modesetting drivers there's the commit tail functions
+ * between when fences for an atomic modeset are published, and when the
+ * corresponding vblank completes, including any interrupt processing and
+ * related workers. Auditing all that code, across all drivers, is not
+ * feasible.
+ *
+ * * Due to how many other subsystems are involved and the locking hierarchies
+ * this pulls in there is extremely thin wiggle-room for driver-specific
+ * differences. &dma_fence interacts with almost all of the core memory
+ * handling through page fault handlers via &dma_resv, dma_resv_lock() and
+ * dma_resv_unlock(). On the other side it also interacts through all
+ * allocation sites through &mmu_notifier and &shrinker.
+ *
+ * Furthermore lockdep does not handle cross-release dependencies, which means
+ * any deadlocks between dma_fence_wait() and dma_fence_signal() can't be caught
+ * at runtime with some quick testing. The simplest example is one thread
+ * waiting on a &dma_fence while holding a lock::
+ *
+ * lock(A);
+ * dma_fence_wait(B);
+ * unlock(A);
+ *
+ * while the other thread is stuck trying to acquire the same lock, which
+ * prevents it from signalling the fence the previous thread is stuck waiting
+ * on::
+ *
+ * lock(A);
+ * unlock(A);
+ * dma_fence_signal(B);
+ *
+ * By manually annotating all code relevant to signalling a &dma_fence we can
+ * teach lockdep about these dependencies, which also helps with the validation
+ * headache since now lockdep can check all the rules for us::
+ *
+ * cookie = dma_fence_begin_signalling();
+ * lock(A);
+ * unlock(A);
+ * dma_fence_signal(B);
+ * dma_fence_end_signalling(cookie);
+ *
+ * For using dma_fence_begin_signalling() and dma_fence_end_signalling() to
+ * annotate critical sections the following rules need to be observed:
+ *
+ * * All code necessary to complete a &dma_fence must be annotated, from the
+ * point where a fence is accessible to other threads, to the point where
+ * dma_fence_signal() is called. Un-annotated code can contain deadlock issues,
+ * and due to the very strict rules and many corner cases it is infeasible to
+ * catch these just with review or normal stress testing.
+ *
+ * * &struct dma_resv deserves a special note, since the readers are only
+ * protected by rcu. This means the signalling critical section starts as soon
+ * as the new fences are installed, even before dma_resv_unlock() is called.
+ *
+ * * The only exception are fast paths and opportunistic signalling code, which
+ * calls dma_fence_signal() purely as an optimization, but is not required to
+ * guarantee completion of a &dma_fence. The usual example is a wait IOCTL
+ * which calls dma_fence_signal(), while the mandatory completion path goes
+ * through a hardware interrupt and possible job completion worker.
+ *
+ * * To aid composability of code, the annotations can be freely nested, as long
+ * as the overall locking hierarchy is consistent. The annotations also work
+ * both in interrupt and process context. Due to implementation details this
+ * requires that callers pass an opaque cookie from
+ * dma_fence_begin_signalling() to dma_fence_end_signalling().
+ *
+ * * Validation against the cross driver contract is implemented by priming
+ * lockdep with the relevant hierarchy at boot-up. This means even just
+ * testing with a single device is enough to validate a driver, at least as
+ * far as deadlocks with dma_fence_wait() against dma_fence_signal() are
+ * concerned.
+ */
+#ifdef CONFIG_LOCKDEP
+struct lockdep_map dma_fence_lockdep_map = {
+ .name = "dma_fence_map"
+};
+
+/**
+ * dma_fence_begin_signalling - begin a critical DMA fence signalling section
+ *
+ * Drivers should use this to annotate the beginning of any code section
+ * required to eventually complete &dma_fence by calling dma_fence_signal().
+ *
+ * The end of these critical sections are annotated with
+ * dma_fence_end_signalling().
+ *
+ * Returns:
+ *
+ * Opaque cookie needed by the implementation, which needs to be passed to
+ * dma_fence_end_signalling().
+ */
+bool dma_fence_begin_signalling(void)
+{
+ /* explicitly nesting ... */
+ if (lock_is_held_type(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 1))
+ return true;
+
+ /* rely on might_sleep check for soft/hardirq locks */
+ if (in_atomic())
+ return true;
+
+ /* ... and non-recursive readlock */
+ lock_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 0, 0, 1, 1, NULL, _RET_IP_);
+
+ return false;
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_begin_signalling);
+
+/**
+ * dma_fence_end_signalling - end a critical DMA fence signalling section
+ *
+ * Closes a critical section annotation opened by dma_fence_begin_signalling().
+ */
+void dma_fence_end_signalling(bool cookie)
+{
+ if (cookie)
+ return;
+
+ lock_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, _RET_IP_);
+}
+EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_end_signalling);
+
+void __dma_fence_might_wait(void)
+{
+ bool tmp;
+
+ tmp = lock_is_held_type(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 1);
+ if (tmp)
+ lock_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, _THIS_IP_);
+ lock_map_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map);
+ lock_map_release(&dma_fence_lockdep_map);
+ if (tmp)
+ lock_acquire(&dma_fence_lockdep_map, 0, 0, 1, 1, NULL, _THIS_IP_);
+}
+#endif
+
+
+/**
* dma_fence_signal_locked - signal completion of a fence
* @fence: the fence to signal
*
@@ -170,14 +324,19 @@ int dma_fence_signal(struct dma_fence *fence)
{
unsigned long flags;
int ret;
+ bool tmp;
if (!fence)
return -EINVAL;
+ tmp = dma_fence_begin_signalling();
+
spin_lock_irqsave(fence->lock, flags);
ret = dma_fence_signal_locked(fence);
spin_unlock_irqrestore(fence->lock, flags);
+ dma_fence_end_signalling(tmp);
+
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(dma_fence_signal);
@@ -210,6 +369,8 @@ dma_fence_wait_timeout(struct dma_fence *fence, bool intr, signed long timeout)
might_sleep();
+ __dma_fence_might_wait();
+
trace_dma_fence_wait_start(fence);
if (fence->ops->wait)
ret = fence->ops->wait(fence, intr, timeout);