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[GitHub/moto-9609/android_kernel_motorola_exynos9610.git] / Documentation / locking / crossrelease.txt
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1Crossrelease
2============
3
4Started by Byungchul Park <byungchul.park@lge.com>
5
6Contents:
7
8 (*) Background
9
10 - What causes deadlock
11 - How lockdep works
12
13 (*) Limitation
14
15 - Limit lockdep
16 - Pros from the limitation
17 - Cons from the limitation
18 - Relax the limitation
19
20 (*) Crossrelease
21
22 - Introduce crossrelease
23 - Introduce commit
24
25 (*) Implementation
26
27 - Data structures
28 - How crossrelease works
29
30 (*) Optimizations
31
32 - Avoid duplication
33 - Lockless for hot paths
34
35 (*) APPENDIX A: What lockdep does to work aggresively
36
37 (*) APPENDIX B: How to avoid adding false dependencies
38
39
40==========
41Background
42==========
43
44What causes deadlock
45--------------------
46
47A deadlock occurs when a context is waiting for an event to happen,
48which is impossible because another (or the) context who can trigger the
49event is also waiting for another (or the) event to happen, which is
50also impossible due to the same reason.
51
52For example:
53
54 A context going to trigger event C is waiting for event A to happen.
55 A context going to trigger event A is waiting for event B to happen.
56 A context going to trigger event B is waiting for event C to happen.
57
58A deadlock occurs when these three wait operations run at the same time,
59because event C cannot be triggered if event A does not happen, which in
60turn cannot be triggered if event B does not happen, which in turn
61cannot be triggered if event C does not happen. After all, no event can
62be triggered since any of them never meets its condition to wake up.
63
64A dependency might exist between two waiters and a deadlock might happen
65due to an incorrect releationship between dependencies. Thus, we must
66define what a dependency is first. A dependency exists between them if:
67
68 1. There are two waiters waiting for each event at a given time.
69 2. The only way to wake up each waiter is to trigger its event.
70 3. Whether one can be woken up depends on whether the other can.
71
72Each wait in the example creates its dependency like:
73
74 Event C depends on event A.
75 Event A depends on event B.
76 Event B depends on event C.
77
78 NOTE: Precisely speaking, a dependency is one between whether a
79 waiter for an event can be woken up and whether another waiter for
80 another event can be woken up. However from now on, we will describe
81 a dependency as if it's one between an event and another event for
82 simplicity.
83
84And they form circular dependencies like:
85
86 -> C -> A -> B -
87 / \
88 \ /
89 ----------------
90
91 where 'A -> B' means that event A depends on event B.
92
93Such circular dependencies lead to a deadlock since no waiter can meet
94its condition to wake up as described.
95
96CONCLUSION
97
98Circular dependencies cause a deadlock.
99
100
101How lockdep works
102-----------------
103
104Lockdep tries to detect a deadlock by checking dependencies created by
105lock operations, acquire and release. Waiting for a lock corresponds to
106waiting for an event, and releasing a lock corresponds to triggering an
107event in the previous section.
108
109In short, lockdep does:
110
111 1. Detect a new dependency.
112 2. Add the dependency into a global graph.
113 3. Check if that makes dependencies circular.
114 4. Report a deadlock or its possibility if so.
115
116For example, consider a graph built by lockdep that looks like:
117
118 A -> B -
119 \
120 -> E
121 /
122 C -> D -
123
124 where A, B,..., E are different lock classes.
125
126Lockdep will add a dependency into the graph on detection of a new
127dependency. For example, it will add a dependency 'E -> C' when a new
128dependency between lock E and lock C is detected. Then the graph will be:
129
130 A -> B -
131 \
132 -> E -
133 / \
134 -> C -> D - \
135 / /
136 \ /
137 ------------------
138
139 where A, B,..., E are different lock classes.
140
141This graph contains a subgraph which demonstrates circular dependencies:
142
143 -> E -
144 / \
145 -> C -> D - \
146 / /
147 \ /
148 ------------------
149
150 where C, D and E are different lock classes.
151
152This is the condition under which a deadlock might occur. Lockdep
153reports it on detection after adding a new dependency. This is the way
154how lockdep works.
155
156CONCLUSION
157
158Lockdep detects a deadlock or its possibility by checking if circular
159dependencies were created after adding each new dependency.
160
161
162==========
163Limitation
164==========
165
166Limit lockdep
167-------------
168
169Limiting lockdep to work on only typical locks e.g. spin locks and
170mutexes, which are released within the acquire context, the
171implementation becomes simple but its capacity for detection becomes
172limited. Let's check pros and cons in next section.
173
174
175Pros from the limitation
176------------------------
177
178Given the limitation, when acquiring a lock, locks in a held_locks
179cannot be released if the context cannot acquire it so has to wait to
180acquire it, which means all waiters for the locks in the held_locks are
181stuck. It's an exact case to create dependencies between each lock in
182the held_locks and the lock to acquire.
183
184For example:
185
186 CONTEXT X
187 ---------
188 acquire A
189 acquire B /* Add a dependency 'A -> B' */
190 release B
191 release A
192
193 where A and B are different lock classes.
194
195When acquiring lock A, the held_locks of CONTEXT X is empty thus no
196dependency is added. But when acquiring lock B, lockdep detects and adds
197a new dependency 'A -> B' between lock A in the held_locks and lock B.
198They can be simply added whenever acquiring each lock.
199
200And data required by lockdep exists in a local structure, held_locks
201embedded in task_struct. Forcing to access the data within the context,
202lockdep can avoid racy problems without explicit locks while handling
203the local data.
204
205Lastly, lockdep only needs to keep locks currently being held, to build
206a dependency graph. However, relaxing the limitation, it needs to keep
207even locks already released, because a decision whether they created
208dependencies might be long-deferred.
209
210To sum up, we can expect several advantages from the limitation:
211
212 1. Lockdep can easily identify a dependency when acquiring a lock.
213 2. Races are avoidable while accessing local locks in a held_locks.
214 3. Lockdep only needs to keep locks currently being held.
215
216CONCLUSION
217
218Given the limitation, the implementation becomes simple and efficient.
219
220
221Cons from the limitation
222------------------------
223
224Given the limitation, lockdep is applicable only to typical locks. For
225example, page locks for page access or completions for synchronization
226cannot work with lockdep.
227
228Can we detect deadlocks below, under the limitation?
229
230Example 1:
231
232 CONTEXT X CONTEXT Y CONTEXT Z
233 --------- --------- ----------
234 mutex_lock A
235 lock_page B
236 lock_page B
237 mutex_lock A /* DEADLOCK */
238 unlock_page B held by X
239 unlock_page B
240 mutex_unlock A
241 mutex_unlock A
242
243 where A and B are different lock classes.
244
245No, we cannot.
246
247Example 2:
248
249 CONTEXT X CONTEXT Y
250 --------- ---------
251 mutex_lock A
252 mutex_lock A
253 wait_for_complete B /* DEADLOCK */
254 complete B
255 mutex_unlock A
256 mutex_unlock A
257
258 where A is a lock class and B is a completion variable.
259
260No, we cannot.
261
262CONCLUSION
263
264Given the limitation, lockdep cannot detect a deadlock or its
265possibility caused by page locks or completions.
266
267
268Relax the limitation
269--------------------
270
271Under the limitation, things to create dependencies are limited to
272typical locks. However, synchronization primitives like page locks and
273completions, which are allowed to be released in any context, also
274create dependencies and can cause a deadlock. So lockdep should track
275these locks to do a better job. We have to relax the limitation for
276these locks to work with lockdep.
277
278Detecting dependencies is very important for lockdep to work because
279adding a dependency means adding an opportunity to check whether it
280causes a deadlock. The more lockdep adds dependencies, the more it
281thoroughly works. Thus Lockdep has to do its best to detect and add as
282many true dependencies into a graph as possible.
283
284For example, considering only typical locks, lockdep builds a graph like:
285
286 A -> B -
287 \
288 -> E
289 /
290 C -> D -
291
292 where A, B,..., E are different lock classes.
293
294On the other hand, under the relaxation, additional dependencies might
295be created and added. Assuming additional 'FX -> C' and 'E -> GX' are
296added thanks to the relaxation, the graph will be:
297
298 A -> B -
299 \
300 -> E -> GX
301 /
302 FX -> C -> D -
303
304 where A, B,..., E, FX and GX are different lock classes, and a suffix
305 'X' is added on non-typical locks.
306
307The latter graph gives us more chances to check circular dependencies
308than the former. However, it might suffer performance degradation since
309relaxing the limitation, with which design and implementation of lockdep
310can be efficient, might introduce inefficiency inevitably. So lockdep
311should provide two options, strong detection and efficient detection.
312
313Choosing efficient detection:
314
315 Lockdep works with only locks restricted to be released within the
316 acquire context. However, lockdep works efficiently.
317
318Choosing strong detection:
319
320 Lockdep works with all synchronization primitives. However, lockdep
321 suffers performance degradation.
322
323CONCLUSION
324
325Relaxing the limitation, lockdep can add additional dependencies giving
326additional opportunities to check circular dependencies.
327
328
329============
330Crossrelease
331============
332
333Introduce crossrelease
334----------------------
335
336In order to allow lockdep to handle additional dependencies by what
337might be released in any context, namely 'crosslock', we have to be able
338to identify those created by crosslocks. The proposed 'crossrelease'
339feature provoides a way to do that.
340
341Crossrelease feature has to do:
342
343 1. Identify dependencies created by crosslocks.
344 2. Add the dependencies into a dependency graph.
345
346That's all. Once a meaningful dependency is added into graph, then
347lockdep would work with the graph as it did. The most important thing
348crossrelease feature has to do is to correctly identify and add true
349dependencies into the global graph.
350
351A dependency e.g. 'A -> B' can be identified only in the A's release
352context because a decision required to identify the dependency can be
353made only in the release context. That is to decide whether A can be
354released so that a waiter for A can be woken up. It cannot be made in
355other than the A's release context.
356
357It's no matter for typical locks because each acquire context is same as
358its release context, thus lockdep can decide whether a lock can be
359released in the acquire context. However for crosslocks, lockdep cannot
360make the decision in the acquire context but has to wait until the
361release context is identified.
362
363Therefore, deadlocks by crosslocks cannot be detected just when it
364happens, because those cannot be identified until the crosslocks are
365released. However, deadlock possibilities can be detected and it's very
366worth. See 'APPENDIX A' section to check why.
367
368CONCLUSION
369
370Using crossrelease feature, lockdep can work with what might be released
371in any context, namely crosslock.
372
373
374Introduce commit
375----------------
376
377Since crossrelease defers the work adding true dependencies of
378crosslocks until they are actually released, crossrelease has to queue
379all acquisitions which might create dependencies with the crosslocks.
380Then it identifies dependencies using the queued data in batches at a
381proper time. We call it 'commit'.
382
383There are four types of dependencies:
384
3851. TT type: 'typical lock A -> typical lock B'
386
387 Just when acquiring B, lockdep can see it's in the A's release
388 context. So the dependency between A and B can be identified
389 immediately. Commit is unnecessary.
390
3912. TC type: 'typical lock A -> crosslock BX'
392
393 Just when acquiring BX, lockdep can see it's in the A's release
394 context. So the dependency between A and BX can be identified
395 immediately. Commit is unnecessary, too.
396
3973. CT type: 'crosslock AX -> typical lock B'
398
399 When acquiring B, lockdep cannot identify the dependency because
400 there's no way to know if it's in the AX's release context. It has
401 to wait until the decision can be made. Commit is necessary.
402
4034. CC type: 'crosslock AX -> crosslock BX'
404
405 When acquiring BX, lockdep cannot identify the dependency because
406 there's no way to know if it's in the AX's release context. It has
407 to wait until the decision can be made. Commit is necessary.
408 But, handling CC type is not implemented yet. It's a future work.
409
410Lockdep can work without commit for typical locks, but commit step is
411necessary once crosslocks are involved. Introducing commit, lockdep
412performs three steps. What lockdep does in each step is:
413
4141. Acquisition: For typical locks, lockdep does what it originally did
415 and queues the lock so that CT type dependencies can be checked using
416 it at the commit step. For crosslocks, it saves data which will be
417 used at the commit step and increases a reference count for it.
418
4192. Commit: No action is reauired for typical locks. For crosslocks,
420 lockdep adds CT type dependencies using the data saved at the
421 acquisition step.
422
4233. Release: No changes are required for typical locks. When a crosslock
424 is released, it decreases a reference count for it.
425
426CONCLUSION
427
428Crossrelease introduces commit step to handle dependencies of crosslocks
429in batches at a proper time.
430
431
432==============
433Implementation
434==============
435
436Data structures
437---------------
438
439Crossrelease introduces two main data structures.
440
4411. hist_lock
442
443 This is an array embedded in task_struct, for keeping lock history so
444 that dependencies can be added using them at the commit step. Since
445 it's local data, it can be accessed locklessly in the owner context.
446 The array is filled at the acquisition step and consumed at the
447 commit step. And it's managed in circular manner.
448
4492. cross_lock
450
451 One per lockdep_map exists. This is for keeping data of crosslocks
452 and used at the commit step.
453
454
455How crossrelease works
456----------------------
457
458It's the key of how crossrelease works, to defer necessary works to an
459appropriate point in time and perform in at once at the commit step.
460Let's take a look with examples step by step, starting from how lockdep
461works without crossrelease for typical locks.
462
463 acquire A /* Push A onto held_locks */
464 acquire B /* Push B onto held_locks and add 'A -> B' */
465 acquire C /* Push C onto held_locks and add 'B -> C' */
466 release C /* Pop C from held_locks */
467 release B /* Pop B from held_locks */
468 release A /* Pop A from held_locks */
469
470 where A, B and C are different lock classes.
471
472 NOTE: This document assumes that readers already understand how
473 lockdep works without crossrelease thus omits details. But there's
474 one thing to note. Lockdep pretends to pop a lock from held_locks
475 when releasing it. But it's subtly different from the original pop
476 operation because lockdep allows other than the top to be poped.
477
478In this case, lockdep adds 'the top of held_locks -> the lock to acquire'
479dependency every time acquiring a lock.
480
481After adding 'A -> B', a dependency graph will be:
482
483 A -> B
484
485 where A and B are different lock classes.
486
487And after adding 'B -> C', the graph will be:
488
489 A -> B -> C
490
491 where A, B and C are different lock classes.
492
493Let's performs commit step even for typical locks to add dependencies.
494Of course, commit step is not necessary for them, however, it would work
495well because this is a more general way.
496
497 acquire A
498 /*
499 * Queue A into hist_locks
500 *
501 * In hist_locks: A
502 * In graph: Empty
503 */
504
505 acquire B
506 /*
507 * Queue B into hist_locks
508 *
509 * In hist_locks: A, B
510 * In graph: Empty
511 */
512
513 acquire C
514 /*
515 * Queue C into hist_locks
516 *
517 * In hist_locks: A, B, C
518 * In graph: Empty
519 */
520
521 commit C
522 /*
523 * Add 'C -> ?'
524 * Answer the following to decide '?'
525 * What has been queued since acquire C: Nothing
526 *
527 * In hist_locks: A, B, C
528 * In graph: Empty
529 */
530
531 release C
532
533 commit B
534 /*
535 * Add 'B -> ?'
536 * Answer the following to decide '?'
537 * What has been queued since acquire B: C
538 *
539 * In hist_locks: A, B, C
540 * In graph: 'B -> C'
541 */
542
543 release B
544
545 commit A
546 /*
547 * Add 'A -> ?'
548 * Answer the following to decide '?'
549 * What has been queued since acquire A: B, C
550 *
551 * In hist_locks: A, B, C
552 * In graph: 'B -> C', 'A -> B', 'A -> C'
553 */
554
555 release A
556
557 where A, B and C are different lock classes.
558
559In this case, dependencies are added at the commit step as described.
560
561After commits for A, B and C, the graph will be:
562
563 A -> B -> C
564
565 where A, B and C are different lock classes.
566
567 NOTE: A dependency 'A -> C' is optimized out.
568
569We can see the former graph built without commit step is same as the
570latter graph built using commit steps. Of course the former way leads to
571earlier finish for building the graph, which means we can detect a
572deadlock or its possibility sooner. So the former way would be prefered
573when possible. But we cannot avoid using the latter way for crosslocks.
574
575Let's look at how commit steps work for crosslocks. In this case, the
576commit step is performed only on crosslock AX as real. And it assumes
577that the AX release context is different from the AX acquire context.
578
579 BX RELEASE CONTEXT BX ACQUIRE CONTEXT
580 ------------------ ------------------
581 acquire A
582 /*
583 * Push A onto held_locks
584 * Queue A into hist_locks
585 *
586 * In held_locks: A
587 * In hist_locks: A
588 * In graph: Empty
589 */
590
591 acquire BX
592 /*
593 * Add 'the top of held_locks -> BX'
594 *
595 * In held_locks: A
596 * In hist_locks: A
597 * In graph: 'A -> BX'
598 */
599
600 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
601 It must be guaranteed that the following operations are seen after
602 acquiring BX globally. It can be done by things like barrier.
603 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
604
605 acquire C
606 /*
607 * Push C onto held_locks
608 * Queue C into hist_locks
609 *
610 * In held_locks: C
611 * In hist_locks: C
612 * In graph: 'A -> BX'
613 */
614
615 release C
616 /*
617 * Pop C from held_locks
618 *
619 * In held_locks: Empty
620 * In hist_locks: C
621 * In graph: 'A -> BX'
622 */
623 acquire D
624 /*
625 * Push D onto held_locks
626 * Queue D into hist_locks
627 * Add 'the top of held_locks -> D'
628 *
629 * In held_locks: A, D
630 * In hist_locks: A, D
631 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D'
632 */
633 acquire E
634 /*
635 * Push E onto held_locks
636 * Queue E into hist_locks
637 *
638 * In held_locks: E
639 * In hist_locks: C, E
640 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D'
641 */
642
643 release E
644 /*
645 * Pop E from held_locks
646 *
647 * In held_locks: Empty
648 * In hist_locks: D, E
649 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D'
650 */
651 release D
652 /*
653 * Pop D from held_locks
654 *
655 * In held_locks: A
656 * In hist_locks: A, D
657 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D'
658 */
659 commit BX
660 /*
661 * Add 'BX -> ?'
662 * What has been queued since acquire BX: C, E
663 *
664 * In held_locks: Empty
665 * In hist_locks: D, E
666 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D',
667 * 'BX -> C', 'BX -> E'
668 */
669
670 release BX
671 /*
672 * In held_locks: Empty
673 * In hist_locks: D, E
674 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D',
675 * 'BX -> C', 'BX -> E'
676 */
677 release A
678 /*
679 * Pop A from held_locks
680 *
681 * In held_locks: Empty
682 * In hist_locks: A, D
683 * In graph: 'A -> BX', 'A -> D',
684 * 'BX -> C', 'BX -> E'
685 */
686
687 where A, BX, C,..., E are different lock classes, and a suffix 'X' is
688 added on crosslocks.
689
690Crossrelease considers all acquisitions after acqiuring BX are
691candidates which might create dependencies with BX. True dependencies
692will be determined when identifying the release context of BX. Meanwhile,
693all typical locks are queued so that they can be used at the commit step.
694And then two dependencies 'BX -> C' and 'BX -> E' are added at the
695commit step when identifying the release context.
696
697The final graph will be, with crossrelease:
698
699 -> C
700 /
701 -> BX -
702 / \
703 A - -> E
704 \
705 -> D
706
707 where A, BX, C,..., E are different lock classes, and a suffix 'X' is
708 added on crosslocks.
709
710However, the final graph will be, without crossrelease:
711
712 A -> D
713
714 where A and D are different lock classes.
715
716The former graph has three more dependencies, 'A -> BX', 'BX -> C' and
717'BX -> E' giving additional opportunities to check if they cause
718deadlocks. This way lockdep can detect a deadlock or its possibility
719caused by crosslocks.
720
721CONCLUSION
722
723We checked how crossrelease works with several examples.
724
725
726=============
727Optimizations
728=============
729
730Avoid duplication
731-----------------
732
733Crossrelease feature uses a cache like what lockdep already uses for
734dependency chains, but this time it's for caching CT type dependencies.
735Once that dependency is cached, the same will never be added again.
736
737
738Lockless for hot paths
739----------------------
740
741To keep all locks for later use at the commit step, crossrelease adopts
742a local array embedded in task_struct, which makes access to the data
743lockless by forcing it to happen only within the owner context. It's
744like how lockdep handles held_locks. Lockless implmentation is important
745since typical locks are very frequently acquired and released.
746
747
748=================================================
749APPENDIX A: What lockdep does to work aggresively
750=================================================
751
752A deadlock actually occurs when all wait operations creating circular
753dependencies run at the same time. Even though they don't, a potential
754deadlock exists if the problematic dependencies exist. Thus it's
755meaningful to detect not only an actual deadlock but also its potential
756possibility. The latter is rather valuable. When a deadlock occurs
757actually, we can identify what happens in the system by some means or
758other even without lockdep. However, there's no way to detect possiblity
759without lockdep unless the whole code is parsed in head. It's terrible.
760Lockdep does the both, and crossrelease only focuses on the latter.
761
762Whether or not a deadlock actually occurs depends on several factors.
763For example, what order contexts are switched in is a factor. Assuming
764circular dependencies exist, a deadlock would occur when contexts are
765switched so that all wait operations creating the dependencies run
766simultaneously. Thus to detect a deadlock possibility even in the case
767that it has not occured yet, lockdep should consider all possible
768combinations of dependencies, trying to:
769
7701. Use a global dependency graph.
771
772 Lockdep combines all dependencies into one global graph and uses them,
773 regardless of which context generates them or what order contexts are
774 switched in. Aggregated dependencies are only considered so they are
775 prone to be circular if a problem exists.
776
7772. Check dependencies between classes instead of instances.
778
779 What actually causes a deadlock are instances of lock. However,
780 lockdep checks dependencies between classes instead of instances.
781 This way lockdep can detect a deadlock which has not happened but
782 might happen in future by others but the same class.
783
7843. Assume all acquisitions lead to waiting.
785
786 Although locks might be acquired without waiting which is essential
787 to create dependencies, lockdep assumes all acquisitions lead to
788 waiting since it might be true some time or another.
789
790CONCLUSION
791
792Lockdep detects not only an actual deadlock but also its possibility,
793and the latter is more valuable.
794
795
796==================================================
797APPENDIX B: How to avoid adding false dependencies
798==================================================
799
800Remind what a dependency is. A dependency exists if:
801
802 1. There are two waiters waiting for each event at a given time.
803 2. The only way to wake up each waiter is to trigger its event.
804 3. Whether one can be woken up depends on whether the other can.
805
806For example:
807
808 acquire A
809 acquire B /* A dependency 'A -> B' exists */
810 release B
811 release A
812
813 where A and B are different lock classes.
814
815A depedency 'A -> B' exists since:
816
817 1. A waiter for A and a waiter for B might exist when acquiring B.
818 2. Only way to wake up each is to release what it waits for.
819 3. Whether the waiter for A can be woken up depends on whether the
820 other can. IOW, TASK X cannot release A if it fails to acquire B.
821
822For another example:
823
824 TASK X TASK Y
825 ------ ------
826 acquire AX
827 acquire B /* A dependency 'AX -> B' exists */
828 release B
829 release AX held by Y
830
831 where AX and B are different lock classes, and a suffix 'X' is added
832 on crosslocks.
833
834Even in this case involving crosslocks, the same rule can be applied. A
835depedency 'AX -> B' exists since:
836
837 1. A waiter for AX and a waiter for B might exist when acquiring B.
838 2. Only way to wake up each is to release what it waits for.
839 3. Whether the waiter for AX can be woken up depends on whether the
840 other can. IOW, TASK X cannot release AX if it fails to acquire B.
841
842Let's take a look at more complicated example:
843
844 TASK X TASK Y
845 ------ ------
846 acquire B
847 release B
848 fork Y
849 acquire AX
850 acquire C /* A dependency 'AX -> C' exists */
851 release C
852 release AX held by Y
853
854 where AX, B and C are different lock classes, and a suffix 'X' is
855 added on crosslocks.
856
857Does a dependency 'AX -> B' exist? Nope.
858
859Two waiters are essential to create a dependency. However, waiters for
860AX and B to create 'AX -> B' cannot exist at the same time in this
861example. Thus the dependency 'AX -> B' cannot be created.
862
863It would be ideal if the full set of true ones can be considered. But
864we can ensure nothing but what actually happened. Relying on what
865actually happens at runtime, we can anyway add only true ones, though
866they might be a subset of true ones. It's similar to how lockdep works
867for typical locks. There might be more true dependencies than what
868lockdep has detected in runtime. Lockdep has no choice but to rely on
869what actually happens. Crossrelease also relies on it.
870
871CONCLUSION
872
873Relying on what actually happens, lockdep can avoid adding false
874dependencies.