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Inserts past 75% load call schedule_work(&ht->run_work) to kick an
async resize. If a caller holds a raw spinlock (e.g. an
insecure_elasticity user), schedule_work() under that lock records
caller_lock -> pool->lock -> pi_lock -> rq->__lock
A cycle forms if any of these locks is acquired in the reverse
direction elsewhere. sched_ext, the only current insecure_elasticity
user, hits this: it holds scx_sched_lock across rhashtable inserts of
sub-schedulers, while scx_bypass() takes rq->__lock -> scx_sched_lock.
Exercising the resize path produces:
Chain exists of:
&pool->lock --> &rq->__lock --> scx_sched_lock
Bounce the kick from the insert paths through irq_work so
schedule_work() runs from hard IRQ context with the caller's lock no
longer held. rht_deferred_worker()'s self-rearm on error stays on
schedule_work(&ht->run_work) - the worker runs in process context with
no caller lock held, and keeping the self-requeue on @run_work lets
cancel_work_sync() in rhashtable_free_and_destroy() drain it.
v3: Keep rht_deferred_worker()'s self-rearm on schedule_work(&run_work).
Routing it through irq_work in v2 broke cancel_work_sync()'s
self-requeue handling - an irq_work queued after irq_work_sync()
returned but while cancel_work_sync() was still waiting could fire
post-teardown.
v2: Bounce unconditionally instead of gating on insecure_elasticity,
as suggested by Herbert.
Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
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