[REPOST,wq/for-6.9] workqueue: Don't implicitly make UNBOUND workqueues w/ @max_active==1 ordered
Commit Message
5c0338c68706 ("workqueue: restore WQ_UNBOUND/max_active==1 to be ordered")
automoatically promoted UNBOUND workqueues w/ @max_active==1 to ordered
workqueues because UNBOUND workqueues w/ @max_active==1 used to be the way
to create ordered workqueues and the new NUMA support broke it. These
problems can be subtle and the fact that they can only trigger on NUMA
machines made them even more difficult to debug.
However, overloading the UNBOUND allocation interface this way creates other
issues. It's difficult to tell whether a given workqueue actually needs to
be ordered and users that legitimately want a min concurrency level wq
unexpectedly gets an ordered one instead. With planned UNBOUND workqueue
udpates to improve execution locality and more prevalence of chiplet designs
which can benefit from such improvements, this isn't a state we wanna be in
forever.
There aren't that many UNBOUND w/ @max_active==1 users in the tree and the
preceding patches audited all and converted them to
alloc_ordered_workqueue() as appropriate. This patch removes the implicit
promotion of UNBOUND w/ @max_active==1 workqueues to ordered ones.
v2: v1 patch incorrectly dropped !list_empty(&wq->pwqs) condition in
apply_workqueue_attrs_locked() which spuriously triggers WARNING and
fails workqueue creation. Fix it.
Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
Reported-by: kernel test robot <oliver.sang@intel.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/oe-lkp/202304251050.45a5df1f-oliver.sang@intel.com
---
Hello,
The only remaining case that allocates an UNBOUND workqueue with @max_active
w/o WQ_SYSFS is the newly added fs/bcachefs/btree_update_interior.c and Kent
confirmed that that wq doesn't need ordering.
I'm applying this patch to wq/for-6.9.
Thanks.
Documentation/core-api/workqueue.rst | 14 +++++---------
include/linux/workqueue.h | 4 +---
kernel/workqueue.c | 22 ++++------------------
3 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-)
@@ -256,15 +256,11 @@ may queue at the same time. Unless ther
throttling the number of active work items, specifying '0' is
recommended.
-Some users depend on the strict execution ordering of ST wq. The
-combination of ``@max_active`` of 1 and ``WQ_UNBOUND`` used to
-achieve this behavior. Work items on such wq were always queued to the
-unbound worker-pools and only one work item could be active at any given
-time thus achieving the same ordering property as ST wq.
-
-In the current implementation the above configuration only guarantees
-ST behavior within a given NUMA node. Instead ``alloc_ordered_workqueue()`` should
-be used to achieve system-wide ST behavior.
+Some users depend on strict execution ordering where only one work item
+is in flight at any given time and the work items are processed in
+queueing order. While the combination of ``@max_active`` of 1 and
+``WQ_UNBOUND`` used to achieve this behavior, this is no longer the
+case. Use ``alloc_ordered_queue()`` instead.
Example Execution Scenarios
@@ -392,7 +392,6 @@ enum wq_flags {
__WQ_DRAINING = 1 << 16, /* internal: workqueue is draining */
__WQ_ORDERED = 1 << 17, /* internal: workqueue is ordered */
__WQ_LEGACY = 1 << 18, /* internal: create*_workqueue() */
- __WQ_ORDERED_EXPLICIT = 1 << 19, /* internal: alloc_ordered_workqueue() */
/* BH wq only allows the following flags */
__WQ_BH_ALLOWS = WQ_BH | WQ_HIGHPRI,
@@ -507,8 +506,7 @@ alloc_workqueue(const char *fmt, unsigne
* Pointer to the allocated workqueue on success, %NULL on failure.
*/
#define alloc_ordered_workqueue(fmt, flags, args...) \
- alloc_workqueue(fmt, WQ_UNBOUND | __WQ_ORDERED | \
- __WQ_ORDERED_EXPLICIT | (flags), 1, ##args)
+ alloc_workqueue(fmt, WQ_UNBOUND | __WQ_ORDERED | (flags), 1, ##args)
#define create_workqueue(name) \
alloc_workqueue("%s", __WQ_LEGACY | WQ_MEM_RECLAIM, 1, (name))
@@ -5007,12 +5007,8 @@ static int apply_workqueue_attrs_locked(
return -EINVAL;
/* creating multiple pwqs breaks ordering guarantee */
- if (!list_empty(&wq->pwqs)) {
- if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED_EXPLICIT))
- return -EINVAL;
-
- wq->flags &= ~__WQ_ORDERED;
- }
+ if (!list_empty(&wq->pwqs) && WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED))
+ return -EINVAL;
ctx = apply_wqattrs_prepare(wq, attrs, wq_unbound_cpumask);
if (IS_ERR(ctx))
@@ -5333,15 +5329,6 @@ struct workqueue_struct *alloc_workqueue
return NULL;
}
- /*
- * Unbound && max_active == 1 used to imply ordered, which is no longer
- * the case on many machines due to per-pod pools. While
- * alloc_ordered_workqueue() is the right way to create an ordered
- * workqueue, keep the previous behavior to avoid subtle breakages.
- */
- if ((flags & WQ_UNBOUND) && max_active == 1)
- flags |= __WQ_ORDERED;
-
/* see the comment above the definition of WQ_POWER_EFFICIENT */
if ((flags & WQ_POWER_EFFICIENT) && wq_power_efficient)
flags |= WQ_UNBOUND;
@@ -5564,14 +5551,13 @@ void workqueue_set_max_active(struct wor
if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & WQ_BH))
return;
/* disallow meddling with max_active for ordered workqueues */
- if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED_EXPLICIT))
+ if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED))
return;
max_active = wq_clamp_max_active(max_active, wq->flags, wq->name);
mutex_lock(&wq->mutex);
- wq->flags &= ~__WQ_ORDERED;
wq->saved_max_active = max_active;
if (wq->flags & WQ_UNBOUND)
wq->saved_min_active = min(wq->saved_min_active, max_active);
@@ -7028,7 +7014,7 @@ int workqueue_sysfs_register(struct work
* attributes breaks ordering guarantee. Disallow exposing ordered
* workqueues.
*/
- if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED_EXPLICIT))
+ if (WARN_ON(wq->flags & __WQ_ORDERED))
return -EINVAL;
wq->wq_dev = wq_dev = kzalloc(sizeof(*wq_dev), GFP_KERNEL);