From: "Michael S. Tsirkin" mst@redhat.com
[ Upstream commit 01c3259818a11f3cc3cd767adbae6b45849c03c1 ]
When we fill up a receive VQ, try_fill_recv currently tries to count kicks using a 64 bit stats counter. Turns out, on a 32 bit kernel that uses a seqcount. sequence counts are "lock" constructs where you need to make sure that writers are serialized.
In turn, this means that we mustn't run two try_fill_recv concurrently. Which of course we don't. We do run try_fill_recv sometimes from a softirq napi context, and sometimes from a fully preemptible context, but the later always runs with napi disabled.
However, when it comes to the seqcount, lockdep is trying to enforce the rule that the same lock isn't accessed from preemptible and softirq context - it doesn't know about napi being enabled/disabled. This causes a false-positive warning:
WARNING: inconsistent lock state ... inconsistent {SOFTIRQ-ON-W} -> {IN-SOFTIRQ-W} usage.
As a work around, shut down the warning by switching to u64_stats_update_begin_irqsave - that works by disabling interrupts on 32 bit only, is a NOP on 64 bit.
Reported-by: Thomas Gleixner tglx@linutronix.de Suggested-by: Eric Dumazet eric.dumazet@gmail.com Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin mst@redhat.com Signed-off-by: David S. Miller davem@davemloft.net Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman gregkh@linuxfoundation.org --- drivers/net/virtio_net.c | 6 ++++-- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/net/virtio_net.c b/drivers/net/virtio_net.c index c88ee37..b21223b 100644 --- a/drivers/net/virtio_net.c +++ b/drivers/net/virtio_net.c @@ -1242,9 +1242,11 @@ static bool try_fill_recv(struct virtnet_info *vi, struct receive_queue *rq, break; } while (rq->vq->num_free); if (virtqueue_kick_prepare(rq->vq) && virtqueue_notify(rq->vq)) { - u64_stats_update_begin(&rq->stats.syncp); + unsigned long flags; + + flags = u64_stats_update_begin_irqsave(&rq->stats.syncp); rq->stats.kicks++; - u64_stats_update_end(&rq->stats.syncp); + u64_stats_update_end_irqrestore(&rq->stats.syncp, flags); }
return !oom;