RCU on Uniprocessor Systems

A common misconception is that, on UP systems, the call_rcu() primitive may immediately invoke its function. The basis of this misconception is that since there is only one CPU, it should not be necessary to wait for anything else to get done, since there are no other CPUs for anything else to be happening on. Although this approach will sort of work a surprising amount of the time, it is a very bad idea in general. This document presents three examples that demonstrate exactly how bad an idea this is.

Example 1: softirq Suicide

Suppose that an RCU-based algorithm scans a linked list containing elements A, B, and C in process context, and can delete elements from this same list in softirq context. Suppose that the process-context scan is referencing element B when it is interrupted by softirq processing, which deletes element B, and then invokes call_rcu() to free element B after a grace period.

Now, if call_rcu() were to directly invoke its arguments, then upon return from softirq, the list scan would find itself referencing a newly freed element B. This situation can greatly decrease the life expectancy of your kernel.

This same problem can occur if call_rcu() is invoked from a hardware interrupt handler.

Example 2: Function-Call Fatality

Of course, one could avert the suicide described in the preceding example by having call_rcu() directly invoke its arguments only if it was called from process context. However, this can fail in a similar manner.

Suppose that an RCU-based algorithm again scans a linked list containing elements A, B, and C in process contexts, but that it invokes a function on each element as it is scanned. Suppose further that this function deletes element B from the list, then passes it to call_rcu() for deferred freeing. This may be a bit unconventional, but it is perfectly legal RCU usage, since call_rcu() must wait for a grace period to elapse. Therefore, in this case, allowing call_rcu() to immediately invoke its arguments would cause it to fail to make the fundamental guarantee underlying RCU, namely that call_rcu() defers invoking its arguments until all RCU read-side critical sections currently executing have completed.

Quick Quiz #1:

Why is it not legal to invoke synchronize_rcu() in this case?

Answers to Quick Quiz

Example 3: Death by Deadlock

Suppose that call_rcu() is invoked while holding a lock, and that the callback function must acquire this same lock. In this case, if call_rcu() were to directly invoke the callback, the result would be self-deadlock.

In some cases, it would possible to restructure to code so that the call_rcu() is delayed until after the lock is released. However, there are cases where this can be quite ugly:

  1. If a number of items need to be passed to call_rcu() within the same critical section, then the code would need to create a list of them, then traverse the list once the lock was released.

  2. In some cases, the lock will be held across some kernel API, so that delaying the call_rcu() until the lock is released requires that the data item be passed up via a common API. It is far better to guarantee that callbacks are invoked with no locks held than to have to modify such APIs to allow arbitrary data items to be passed back up through them.

If call_rcu() directly invokes the callback, painful locking restrictions or API changes would be required.

Quick Quiz #2:

What locking restriction must RCU callbacks respect?

Answers to Quick Quiz

Summary

Permitting call_rcu() to immediately invoke its arguments breaks RCU, even on a UP system. So do not do it! Even on a UP system, the RCU infrastructure must respect grace periods, and must invoke callbacks from a known environment in which no locks are held.

Note that it is safe for synchronize_rcu() to return immediately on UP systems, including PREEMPT SMP builds running on UP systems.

Quick Quiz #3:

Why can’t synchronize_rcu() return immediately on UP systems running preemptable RCU?

Answer to Quick Quiz #1:

Why is it not legal to invoke synchronize_rcu() in this case?

Because the calling function is scanning an RCU-protected linked list, and is therefore within an RCU read-side critical section. Therefore, the called function has been invoked within an RCU read-side critical section, and is not permitted to block.

Answer to Quick Quiz #2:

What locking restriction must RCU callbacks respect?

Any lock that is acquired within an RCU callback must be acquired elsewhere using an _bh variant of the spinlock primitive. For example, if “mylock” is acquired by an RCU callback, then a process-context acquisition of this lock must use something like spin_lock_bh() to acquire the lock. Please note that it is also OK to use _irq variants of spinlocks, for example, spin_lock_irqsave().

If the process-context code were to simply use spin_lock(), then, since RCU callbacks can be invoked from softirq context, the callback might be called from a softirq that interrupted the process-context critical section. This would result in self-deadlock.

This restriction might seem gratuitous, since very few RCU callbacks acquire locks directly. However, a great many RCU callbacks do acquire locks indirectly, for example, via the kfree() primitive.

Answer to Quick Quiz #3:

Why can’t synchronize_rcu() return immediately on UP systems running preemptable RCU?

Because some other task might have been preempted in the middle of an RCU read-side critical section. If synchronize_rcu() simply immediately returned, it would prematurely signal the end of the grace period, which would come as a nasty shock to that other thread when it started running again.