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From 3f0ea0b864562c6bd1cee892026067eaea7be242 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Petr Mladek <pmladek@suse.com>
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 2023 13:53:32 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] workqueue: Warn when a new worker could not be created
Git-commit: 3f0ea0b864562c6bd1cee892026067eaea7be242
Patch-mainline: v6.4-rc1
References: bsc#1211044

The workqueue watchdog reports a lockup when there was not any progress
in the worker pool for a long time. The progress means that a pending
work item starts being proceed.

The progress is guaranteed by using idle workers or creating new workers
for pending work items.

There are several reasons why a new worker could not be created:

   + there is not enough memory

   + there is no free pool ID (IDR API)

   + the system reached PID limit

   + the process creating the new worker was interrupted

   + the last idle worker (manager) has not been scheduled for a long
     time. It was not able to even start creating the kthread.

None of these failures is reported at the moment. The only clue is that
show_one_worker_pool() prints that there is a manager. It is the last
idle worker that is responsible for creating a new one. But it is not
clear if create_worker() is failing and why.

Make the debugging easier by printing errors in create_worker().

The error code is important, especially from kthread_create_on_node().
It helps to distinguish the various reasons. For example, reaching
memory limit (-ENOMEM), other system limits (-EAGAIN), or process
interrupted (-EINTR).

Use pr_once() to avoid repeating the same error every CREATE_COOLDOWN
for each stuck worker pool.

Ratelimited printk() might be better. It would help to know if the problem
remains. It would be more clear if the create_worker() errors and workqueue
stalls are related. Also old messages might get lost when the internal log
buffer is full. The problem is that printk() might touch the watchdog.
For example, see touch_nmi_watchdog() in serial8250_console_write().
It would require synchronization of the begin and length of the ratelimit
interval with the workqueue watchdog. Otherwise, the error messages
might break the watchdog. This does not look worth the complexity.

Signed-off-by: Petr Mladek <pmladek@suse.com>
Signed-off-by: Tejun Heo <tj@kernel.org>

---
 kernel/workqueue.c | 14 +++++++++++---
 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/kernel/workqueue.c b/kernel/workqueue.c
index 8c0ec21a86a2..9760f0fca82d 100644
--- a/kernel/workqueue.c
+++ b/kernel/workqueue.c
@@ -1936,12 +1936,16 @@ static struct worker *create_worker(struct worker_pool *pool)
 
 	/* ID is needed to determine kthread name */
 	id = ida_simple_get(&pool->worker_ida, 0, 0, GFP_KERNEL);
-	if (id < 0)
+	if (id < 0) {
+		pr_err_once("workqueue: Failed to allocate a worker ID: %d\n", id);
 		goto fail;
+	}
 
 	worker = alloc_worker(pool->node);
-	if (!worker)
+	if (!worker) {
+		pr_err_once("workqueue: Failed to allocate a worker\n");
 		goto fail;
+	}
 
 	worker->pool = pool;
 	worker->id = id;
@@ -1953,8 +1958,11 @@ static struct worker *create_worker(struct worker_pool *pool)
 
 	worker->task = kthread_create_on_node(worker_thread, worker, pool->node,
 					      "kworker/%s", id_buf);
-	if (IS_ERR(worker->task))
+	if (IS_ERR(worker->task)) {
+		pr_err_once("workqueue: Failed to create a worker thread: %ld",
+			    PTR_ERR(worker->task));
 		goto fail;
+	}
 
 	set_user_nice(worker->task, pool->attrs->nice);
 	kthread_bind_mask(worker->task, pool->attrs->cpumask);
-- 
2.35.3