From: Douglas Anderson Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2016 21:04:02 +0000 (-0700) Subject: FROMLIST: timers: Fix usleep_range() in the context of wake_up_process() X-Git-Tag: firefly_0821_release~1430 X-Git-Url: http://demsky.eecs.uci.edu/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=886a7d9ca9e178ee7f9f65949de56a0d9912718f;p=firefly-linux-kernel-4.4.55.git FROMLIST: timers: Fix usleep_range() in the context of wake_up_process() Users of usleep_range() expect that it will _never_ return in less time than the minimum passed parameter. However, nothing in any of the code ensures this. Specifically: usleep_range() => do_usleep_range() => schedule_hrtimeout_range() => schedule_hrtimeout_range_clock() just ends up calling schedule() with an appropriate timeout set using the hrtimer. If someone else happens to wake up our task then we'll happily return from usleep_range() early. msleep() already has code to handle this case since it will loop as long as there was still time left. usleep_range() had no such loop. The problem is is easily demonstrated with a small bit of test code: static int usleep_test_task(void *data) { atomic_t *done = data; ktime_t start, end; start = ktime_get(); usleep_range(50000, 100000); end = ktime_get(); pr_info("Requested 50000 - 100000 us. Actually slept for %llu us\n", (unsigned long long)ktime_to_us(ktime_sub(end, start))); atomic_set(done, 1); return 0; } static void run_usleep_test(void) { struct task_struct *t; atomic_t done; atomic_set(&done, 0); t = kthread_run(usleep_test_task, &done, "usleep_test_task"); while (!atomic_read(&done)) { wake_up_process(t); udelay(1000); } kthread_stop(t); } If you run the above code without this patch you get things like: Requested 50000 - 100000 us. Actually slept for 967 us If you run the above code _with_ this patch, you get: Requested 50000 - 100000 us. Actually slept for 50001 us Presumably this problem was not detected before because: - It's not terribly common to use wake_up_process() directly. - Other ways for processes to wake up are not typically mixed with usleep_range(). - There aren't lots of places that use usleep_range(), since many people call either msleep() or udelay(). Change-Id: Ibb93ce0dd9fb9688d4a8d10447c098c1dfbd7a1d Reported-by: Tao Huang Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson Reviewed-by: Brian Norris Reviewed-by: Andreas Mohr (am from https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9369963/) --- diff --git a/kernel/time/timer.c b/kernel/time/timer.c index d1798fa0c743..a5f643d82df0 100644 --- a/kernel/time/timer.c +++ b/kernel/time/timer.c @@ -1697,12 +1697,28 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(msleep_interruptible); static void __sched do_usleep_range(unsigned long min, unsigned long max) { + ktime_t now, end; ktime_t kmin; u64 delta; + int ret; - kmin = ktime_set(0, min * NSEC_PER_USEC); + now = ktime_get(); + end = ktime_add_us(now, min); delta = (u64)(max - min) * NSEC_PER_USEC; - schedule_hrtimeout_range(&kmin, delta, HRTIMER_MODE_REL); + do { + kmin = ktime_sub(end, now); + ret = schedule_hrtimeout_range(&kmin, delta, HRTIMER_MODE_REL); + + /* + * If schedule_hrtimeout_range() returns 0 then we actually + * hit the timeout. If not then we need to re-calculate the + * new timeout ourselves. + */ + if (ret == 0) + break; + + now = ktime_get(); + } while (ktime_before(now, end)); } /**