kthreads->kproc and back to kthread.. next patch
Julian Elischer
julian at elischer.org
Tue Oct 23 11:00:20 PDT 2007
Kostik Belousov wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 22, 2007 at 06:09:40PM -0700, Julian Elischer wrote:
>>> The kernel is a single unified address space; I thought
>>> that the only real benefit to "true" kthreads was just elimination of
>>> duplication of vmspaces for all off the kthreads that are currently
>>> running around.
>> yes, and the overhead that goes with it. i.e. double the number of
>> processes on an average system -> extra contention on process related locks
>> etc.
>
> kproc_create() specifies RFMEM for the fork1() call, thus vmspace is
> actually already shared.
true, but there is more to a process than vmspace.
generally making things threads that don't need to be
processes can remove quite a bit of cruft.
I'm still working on the replacement kthread_xxx code.
i have a working version but there are some aesthetic issues I'm looking at.
>
> Some time ago I have reported to alc@ (and I suspect this is what might
> catalyzed the efforts) is that, for instance, nfs client creating kproc
> for nfsiod while holding vnode locks easily leads to deadlock.
We're looking at it..
>
> In the dump supplied by Peter Holm, nfs client trying to do
> kproc_create() attempted to hold allproc_lock inside fork1() and held
> some vnode lock. Other process in the page fault handler held vm map
> lock and tried to acquire the vnode lock. To finish the lock loop,
> sysctl handler vmtotal() aquired allproc lock and waited for lock of
> the vm map.
yes
>
> Using kthread instead of kproc would eliminate allproc and related
> locking.
yes
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