Lockdep warnings on kexec (virtio_blk, hrtimers)

Thomas Gleixner tglx at linutronix.de
Fri Dec 13 05:23:11 PST 2024


On Fri, Dec 13 2024 at 19:48, Ming Lei wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 13, 2024 at 12:31:24PM +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
>> I'd rather say, that's a kexec problem. On the same instance a loop test
>> of suspend to ram with pm_test=core just works fine. That's equivalent
>> to the kexec scenario. It goes down to syscore_suspend() and skips the
>> actual suspend low level magic. It then resumes with syscore_resume()
>> and brings the machine back up.
>> 
>> That runs for 2 hours now, while the kexec muck dies within 2
>> minutes....
>> 
>> And if you look at the difference of these implementations, you might
>> notice that kexec just implemented some rudimentary version of the
>> actual suspend logic. Based on let's hope it works that way.
>> 
>> This is just insane and should be rewritten to actually reuse the suspend
>> mechanism, which is way better tested than this kexec jump muck.
>
> But kexec is supposed to align with reboot/shutdown, instead of suspend,
> and it is calling ->shutdown() for notifying driver & device.

That's only true for the case where the new kernel takes over.

In the case KEXEC_JUMP=n and kexec_image->preserve_context == true, then
it is supposed to align with suspend/resume and if you look at the code
then it actually mimics suspend/resume in the most dilettanteish way.

It's a patently bad idea to clobber the kernel with kexec jump "fixes"
instead of using the well tested and established suspend/resume
machinery.

All it takes is to:

    1) disable the wakeup logic

    2) provide a mechanism to invoke machine_kexec() instead of the
       actual suspend mechanism.

No?

Thanks

        tglx






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