diff options
author | Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com> | 2021-11-19 21:31:46 +1000 |
---|---|---|
committer | Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au> | 2021-11-29 23:08:43 +1100 |
commit | e012c499985c608c936410d8bab29d9596d62859 (patch) | |
tree | c21fd1d9a026ed1b096a1fec92bc71ed848d10d4 /arch | |
parent | 57dd3a7bdf311e4a499fe0decabcdf2484e2538a (diff) |
powerpc/watchdog: help remote CPUs to flush NMI printk output
The printk layer at the moment does not seem to have a good way to force
flush printk messages that are created in NMI context, except in the
panic path.
NMI-context printk messages normally get to the console with irq_work,
but that won't help if the CPU is stuck with irqs disabled, as can be
the case for hard lockup watchdog messages.
The watchdog currently flushes the printk buffers after detecting a
lockup on remote CPUs, but they may not have processed their NMI IPI
yet by that stage, or they may have self-detected a lockup in which
case they won't go via this NMI IPI path.
Improve the situation by having NMI-context mark a flag if it called
printk, and have watchdog timer interrupts check if that flag was set
and try to flush if it was. Latency is not a big problem because we
were already stuck for a while, just need to try to make sure the
messages eventually make it out.
Depends-on: 5d5e4522a7f4 ("printk: restore flushing of NMI buffers on remote CPUs after NMI backtraces")
Signed-off-by: Nicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Laurent Dufour <ldufour@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20211119113146.752759-6-npiggin@gmail.com
Diffstat (limited to 'arch')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/powerpc/kernel/watchdog.c | 37 |
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/kernel/watchdog.c b/arch/powerpc/kernel/watchdog.c index 23745af38d62..bfc27496fe7e 100644 --- a/arch/powerpc/kernel/watchdog.c +++ b/arch/powerpc/kernel/watchdog.c @@ -86,6 +86,7 @@ static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64, wd_timer_tb); /* SMP checker bits */ static unsigned long __wd_smp_lock; static unsigned long __wd_reporting; +static unsigned long __wd_nmi_output; static cpumask_t wd_smp_cpus_pending; static cpumask_t wd_smp_cpus_stuck; static u64 wd_smp_last_reset_tb; @@ -154,6 +155,23 @@ static void wd_lockup_ipi(struct pt_regs *regs) else dump_stack(); + /* + * __wd_nmi_output must be set after we printk from NMI context. + * + * printk from NMI context defers printing to the console to irq_work. + * If that NMI was taken in some code that is hard-locked, then irqs + * are disabled so irq_work will never fire. That can result in the + * hard lockup messages being delayed (indefinitely, until something + * else kicks the console drivers). + * + * Setting __wd_nmi_output will cause another CPU to notice and kick + * the console drivers for us. + * + * xchg is not needed here (it could be a smp_mb and store), but xchg + * gives the memory ordering and atomicity required. + */ + xchg(&__wd_nmi_output, 1); + /* Do not panic from here because that can recurse into NMI IPI layer */ } @@ -227,12 +245,6 @@ static void watchdog_smp_panic(int cpu) cpumask_clear(&wd_smp_cpus_ipi); } - /* - * Force flush any remote buffers that might be stuck in IRQ context - * and therefore could not run their irq_work. - */ - printk_trigger_flush(); - if (hardlockup_panic) nmi_panic(NULL, "Hard LOCKUP"); @@ -337,6 +349,17 @@ static void watchdog_timer_interrupt(int cpu) if ((s64)(tb - wd_smp_last_reset_tb) >= (s64)wd_smp_panic_timeout_tb) watchdog_smp_panic(cpu); + + if (__wd_nmi_output && xchg(&__wd_nmi_output, 0)) { + /* + * Something has called printk from NMI context. It might be + * stuck, so this this triggers a flush that will get that + * printk output to the console. + * + * See wd_lockup_ipi. + */ + printk_trigger_flush(); + } } DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER_NMI(soft_nmi_interrupt) @@ -386,6 +409,8 @@ DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER_NMI(soft_nmi_interrupt) print_irqtrace_events(current); show_regs(regs); + xchg(&__wd_nmi_output, 1); // see wd_lockup_ipi + if (sysctl_hardlockup_all_cpu_backtrace) trigger_allbutself_cpu_backtrace(); |