On 2024/5/20 16:49, Jan Kara wrote:
> On Thu 16-05-24 16:27:25, Zhang Yi wrote:
>> On 2024/5/15 8:25, Jan Kara wrote:
>>> On Mon 13-05-24 15:21:19, Zhang Yi wrote:
>>> Also accessing j_commit_sequence without any
>>> lock is theoretically problematic wrt compiler optimization. You should have
>>> READ_ONCE() there and the places modifying j_commit_sequence need to use
>>> WRITE_ONCE().
>>>
>>
>> Thanks for pointing this out, but I'm not sure if we have to need READ_ONCE()
>> here. IIUC, if we add READ_ONCE(), we could make sure to get the latest
>> j_commit_sequence, if not, there is a window (it might becomes larger) that
>> we could get the old value and jbd2_transaction_committed() could return false
>> even if the given transaction was just committed, but I think the window is
>> always there, so it looks like it is not a big problem, is that right?
>
> Well, all accesses to any memory should use READ_ONCE(), be protected by a
> lock, or use types that handle atomicity on assembly level (like atomic_t,
> or atomic bit operations and similar). Otherwise the compiler is free to
> assume the underlying memory cannot change and generate potentionally
> invalid code. In this case, I don't think realistically any compiler will
> do it but still it is a good practice and also it saves us from KCSAN
> warnings. If you want to know more details about possible problems, see
>
> tools/memory-model/Documentation/explanation.txt
>
> chapter "PLAIN ACCESSES AND DATA RACES".
>
Sure, this document is really helpful, I'll add READ_ONCE() and
WRITE_ONCE() here, thanks a lot.
Yi.