[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] fix race condition between libvirtd event handling and libxl fd deregister
Ian Campbell wrote: > On Fri, 2013-01-11 at 17:51 +0000, Jim Fehlig wrote: > >> Ian Campbell wrote: >> >>> On Mon, 2012-12-10 at 16:56 +0000, Ian Jackson wrote: >>> >>> >>>> Ian Jackson writes ("Re: [PATCH] fix race condition between libvirtd event >>>> handling and libxl fd deregister"): >>>> >>>> >>>>> I'm not surprised that the original patch makes Bamvor's symptoms go >>>>> away. Bamvor had one of the possible races (the fd-related one) but >>>>> not the other. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> Here (followups to this message, shortly) is v3 of my two-patch series >>>> which after conversation with Ian C I think fully fixes the race, and >>>> which I have tested now. >>>> >>>> >>> Is this version now tested and ready to be applied? >>> >>> >> Hi Ian, >> >> I have been doing quite a bit of testing with this version, but have one >> remaining issue wrt races between the libvirt libxl driver and libxl. >> Earlier in this thread you mentioned this potential solution >> >> "The other scheme which springs to mind is to do reference counting, with >> the application holding a reference whenever the event is present in its >> event loop (such that there is any chance of the event being generated) >> and libxl holding a reference while it considers the event to be active" >> >> I thought this was a good approach, particularly since libvirt has >> excellent support for it. When libxl registers an fd/timer, I create an >> object containing the details with an initial reference count of 1. If >> the fd/timer is successfully injected into libvirt's event loop, I take >> another reference on the object. The object is only destroyed after >> libxl has deregistered the fd/timer *and* it has been removed from >> libvirt's event loop. For each fd/timer object, I also increment the >> reference count on my libxl_ctx object. This approach works well IMO. >> It ensures the libxl_ctx exists for the life of all fd/timer objects. >> > > Is taking a reference count on the ctx for each fd/timer strictly > necessary? > > You can guarantee that the ctx lifetime is greater than the fd/timer > lifetime because if you were to destroy the ctx then it would teardown > the fd/timer as part of ctx_free (I think? More of an Ian J question). > Yes, but the teardown of timers in particular is asynchronous. libxl calls the modify timeout hook with abs_t of {0,0}, the timer fires on next iteration of event loop invoking the callback, which calls libxl_osevent_occurred_timeout() to finally cleanup the timeout on the libxl side. But in the meantime, the associated ctx has been freed. Taking a ref count on the ctx avoids this race. > Without those extra references I think the problem you describe below > doesn't happen. > Right, but then the ctx disappears before all fds/timers have been cleaned up. > >> The only wrench in this machinery is that watch_efd is not deregistered >> until calling libxl_ctx_free(). But I never get to that point since >> that fd registration holds a reference on my libxl_ctx :(. My first >> thought was to cleanup/deregister that fd on domain death, but I didn't >> have much success creating a patch. Perhaps I should look at that again... >> > > I'd be worried about libxl internal uses of this watch which you cannot > easily control preventing you from doing this. > Agreed :/. Jim _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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