rcu: apply RCU protection to wake_affine()

The task_group() function returns a pointer that must be protected
by either RCU, the ->alloc_lock, or the cgroup lock (see the
rcu_dereference_check() in task_subsys_state(), which is invoked by
task_group()).  The wake_affine() function currently does none of these,
which means that a concurrent update would be within its rights to free
the structure returned by task_group().  Because wake_affine() uses this
structure only to compute load-balancing heuristics, there is no reason
to acquire either of the two locks.

Therefore, this commit introduces an RCU read-side critical section that
starts before the first call to task_group() and ends after the last use
of the "tg" pointer returned from task_group().  Thanks to Li Zefan for
pointing out the need to extend the RCU read-side critical section from
that proposed by the original patch.

Signed-off-by: Daniel J Blueman <daniel.blueman@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
This commit is contained in:
Daniel J Blueman 2010-06-01 14:06:13 +01:00 committed by Paul E. McKenney
parent 7e27d6e778
commit f3b577dec1
1 changed files with 2 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -1240,6 +1240,7 @@ static int wake_affine(struct sched_domain *sd, struct task_struct *p, int sync)
* effect of the currently running task from the load
* of the current CPU:
*/
rcu_read_lock();
if (sync) {
tg = task_group(current);
weight = current->se.load.weight;
@ -1275,6 +1276,7 @@ static int wake_affine(struct sched_domain *sd, struct task_struct *p, int sync)
balanced = this_eff_load <= prev_eff_load;
} else
balanced = true;
rcu_read_unlock();
/*
* If the currently running task will sleep within