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Stephen Boyd authored
If a workqueue is flushed with flush_work() lockdep checking can be circumvented. For example: static DEFINE_MUTEX(mutex); static void my_work(struct work_struct *w) { mutex_lock(&mutex); mutex_unlock(&mutex); } static DECLARE_WORK(work, my_work); static int __init start_test_module(void) { schedule_work(&work); return 0; } module_init(start_test_module); static void __exit stop_test_module(void) { mutex_lock(&mutex); flush_work(&work); mutex_unlock(&mutex); } module_exit(stop_test_module); would not always print a warning when flush_work() was called. In this trivial example nothing could go wrong since we are guaranteed module_init() and module_exit() don't run concurrently, but if the work item is schedule asynchronously we could have a scenario where the work item is running just at the time flush_work() is called resulting in a classic ABBA locking problem. Add a lockdep hint by acquiring and releasing the work item lockdep_map in flush_work() so that we always catch this potential deadlock scenario. Signed-off-by: Stephen Boyd <sboyd@codeaurora.org> Reviewed-by: Yong Zhang <yong.zhang0@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>
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