[PATCH net v3] net: stmmac: protect updates of 64-bit statistics counters

Petr Tesařík petr at tesarici.cz
Wed Mar 6 02:03:12 PST 2024


On Wed, 6 Mar 2024 10:01:53 +0100
Petr Tesařík <petr at tesarici.cz> wrote:

> On Wed, 6 Mar 2024 09:23:53 +0100
> "Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis)" <regressions at leemhuis.info> wrote:
> 
> > On 28.02.24 12:03, Petr Tesařík wrote:  
> > > On Wed, 28 Feb 2024 07:19:56 +0100
> > > "Linux regression tracking (Thorsten Leemhuis)" <regressions at leemhuis.info> wrote:
> > >     
> > >> Net maintainers, chiming in here, as it seems handling this regression
> > >> stalled.    
> > > Indeed, I was too busy with sandbox mode...    
> > 
> > Hmm, no reply in the past week to Petr's request for help from someone
> > with more knowledge about the field. :-/
> > 
> > So I guess this means that this won't be fixed for 6.8? Unfortunate, but
> > well, that's how it it sometimes.  
> 
> For the record, I _can_ reproduce lockdep splats on my device, but they
> don't make any sense to me. They seem to confirm Jisheng Zhang's
> conclusion that lockdep conflates two locks which should have different
> lock-classes.
> 
> So far I have noticed only one issue: the per-cpu syncp's are not
> initialized. I'll recompile and see if that's what confuses lockdep.

That wasn't the issue. FTR the syncp was in fact initialized, because
devm_netdev_alloc_pcpu_stats() is a macro that also takes care of the
initialization of the syncp struct field.

The problem is u64_stats_init().

Commit 9464ca650008 ("net: make u64_stats_init() a function") changed
it to an inline function. But that's wrong. It uses seqcount_init(),
which in turn declares:

	static struct lock_class_key __key;

This assumes that each lock gets its own instance. But if
u64_stats_init() is a function (albeit an inline one), all calls
within the same file end up using the same instance.

Eric, would it be OK to revert the above-mentioned commit?

Petr T



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