Debian bug #46859, Debian bug #195360
IRC, unknown channel, unknown date:
<youpi> azeem, marcus: ext2fs.static: thread-cancel.c:55:
hurd_thread_cancel: Assertion '! __spin_lock_locked
(&ss->critical_section_lock)' failed
<youpi> I actually don't understand this assertion
<youpi> it's just before __spin_lock (&ss->critical_section_lock);
<youpi> why should one check that a lock is free before taking it ?
<youpi> just the same in hurdexec.c
<youpi> (no, ss is not our own sigstate, so it's not safe to assume no
other path can take it)
<youpi> there's another one in sysdeps/mach/hurd/spawni.c
<youpi> and jmp-unwind.c
<antrik> youpi: why do you think it's nonsense?... the fact that we take
the lock (so we can't be interrupted) doesn't mean we are willing to wait
for others to release the lock... maybe the code path should never be
reached while others have a lock, or something
<youpi> then it's useless to take the lock
<youpi> "we take the lock (so we can't be interrupted)": no, it's not _our_
lock here, it's the lock of the thread we want to cancel
<antrik> what exactly is cancelling a thread?... (sorry, I don't really
have experience with thread programming)
<youpi> ~= killing it
<antrik> well, we take the lock so nobody can mess with the thread while we
are cancelling it, no?...
<youpi> yes
<youpi> that is fine
<youpi> but checking that the lock is free before taking it doesn't make
sense
<youpi> why nobody should be able to take the lock ?
<youpi> and if nobody is, why do we take it ? (since nobody would be able
to take it)
<antrik> well, maybe after taking the lock, we do some action that might
result in others trying to take it...
<youpi> nope: look at the code :)
<youpi> or maybe the cancel_hook, but I really doubt it
See discussion about critical_section_lock
on glibc.