padata: set cpu_index of unused CPUs to -1

[ Upstream commit 1bd845bcb41d5b7f83745e0cb99273eb376f2ec5 ]

The parallel queue per-cpu data structure gets initialized only for CPUs
in the 'pcpu' CPU mask set. This is not sufficient as the reorder timer
may run on a different CPU and might wrongly decide it's the target CPU
for the next reorder item as per-cpu memory gets memset(0) and we might
be waiting for the first CPU in cpumask.pcpu, i.e. cpu_index 0.

Make the '__this_cpu_read(pd->pqueue->cpu_index) == next_queue->cpu_index'
compare in padata_get_next() fail in this case by initializing the
cpu_index member of all per-cpu parallel queues. Use -1 for unused ones.

Signed-off-by: Mathias Krause <minipli@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Jordan <daniel.m.jordan@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Mathias Krause 2020-05-21 16:46:55 -04:00 committed by Greg Kroah-Hartman
parent 74607fdfb8
commit 6949737c1e

View File

@ -462,8 +462,14 @@ static void padata_init_pqueues(struct parallel_data *pd)
struct padata_parallel_queue *pqueue;
cpu_index = 0;
for_each_cpu(cpu, pd->cpumask.pcpu) {
for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
pqueue = per_cpu_ptr(pd->pqueue, cpu);
if (!cpumask_test_cpu(cpu, pd->cpumask.pcpu)) {
pqueue->cpu_index = -1;
continue;
}
pqueue->pd = pd;
pqueue->cpu_index = cpu_index;
cpu_index++;