rcu/nocb: Remove deferred wakeup checks for extended quiescent states

The idea behind the checks for extended quiescent states at the end of
__call_rcu_nocb() is to handle cases where call_rcu() is invoked directly
from within an extended quiescent state, for example, from the idle loop.
However, this will result in a timer-mediated deferred wakeup, which
will cause the needed wakeup to happen within a jiffy or thereabouts.
There should be no forward-progress concerns, and if there are, the proper
response is to exit the extended quiescent state while executing the
endless blast of call_rcu() invocations, for example, using RCU_NONIDLE().
Given the more realistic case of an isolated call_rcu() invocation, there
should be no problem.

This commit therefore removes the checks for invoking call_rcu() within
an extended quiescent state for on no-CBs CPUs.

Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.ibm.com>
This commit is contained in:
Paul E. McKenney 2019-04-16 15:15:24 -07:00
parent 85f69b3212
commit ca5c825808
1 changed files with 0 additions and 10 deletions

View File

@ -1709,16 +1709,6 @@ static bool __call_rcu_nocb(struct rcu_data *rdp, struct rcu_head *rhp,
-atomic_long_read(&rdp->nocb_q_count_lazy),
-rcu_get_n_cbs_nocb_cpu(rdp));
/*
* If called from an extended quiescent state with interrupts
* disabled, invoke the RCU core in order to allow the idle-entry
* deferred-wakeup check to function.
*/
if (irqs_disabled_flags(flags) &&
!rcu_is_watching() &&
cpu_online(smp_processor_id()))
invoke_rcu_core();
return true;
}