On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 20:32:14 -0500, Huang, Kai <kai.huang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 16/04/2024 3:20 pm, Haitao Huang wrote:
From: Kristen Carlson Accardi <kristen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
In cases EPC pages need be allocated during a page fault and the cgroup
usage is near its limit, an asynchronous reclamation needs be triggered
to avoid blocking the page fault handling.
Create a workqueue, corresponding work item and function definitions
for EPC cgroup to support the asynchronous reclamation.
In case the workqueue allocation is failed during init, disable cgroup.
It's fine and reasonable to disable (SGX EPC) cgroup. The problem is
"exactly what does this mean" isn't quite clear.
First, this is really some corner case most people don't care: during
init, kernel can't even allocate a workqueue object. So I don't think we
should write extra code to implement some sophisticated solution. Any
solution we come up with may just not work as the way user want or solve
the real issue due to the fact such allocation failure even happens at
init time.
So IMHO the current solution should be fine and I'll answer some of your
detailed questions below.
Given SGX EPC is just one type of MISC cgroup resources, we cannot just
disable MISC cgroup as a whole.
So, the first interpretation is we treat the entire MISC_CG_RES_SGX
resource type doesn't exist, that is, we just don't show control files
in the file system, and all EPC pages are tracked in the global list.
But it might be not straightforward to implement in the SGX driver,
i.e., we might need to do more MISC cgroup core code change to make it
being able to support disable particular resource at runtime -- I need
to double check.
So if that is not something worth to do, we will still need to live with
the fact that, the user is still able to create SGX cgroup in the
hierarchy and see those control files, and being able to read/write them.
Can not reliably predict what will happen. Most likely the ENOMEM will be
returned by sgx_cgroup_alloc() if reached or other error in the stack if
not reached to sgx_cgroup_alloc()
and user fails on creating anything.
But if they do end up creating some cgroups (sgx_cgroup_alloc() and
everything else on the call stack passed without failure), everything
still kind of works for the reason answered below.
The second interpretation I suppose is, although the SGX cgroup is still
seen as supported in userspace, in kernel we just treat it doesn't exist.
Specifically, that means: 1) we always return the root SGX cgroup for
any EPC page when allocating a new one; 2) as a result, we still track
all EPC pages in a single global list.
Current code has similar behavior without extra code.
But from the code below ...
static int __sgx_cgroup_try_charge(struct sgx_cgroup *epc_cg)
{
if (!misc_cg_try_charge(MISC_CG_RES_SGX_EPC, epc_cg->cg, PAGE_SIZE))
@@ -117,19 +226,28 @@ int sgx_cgroup_try_charge(struct sgx_cgroup
*sgx_cg, enum sgx_reclaim reclaim)
{
int ret;
+ /* cgroup disabled due to wq allocation failure during
sgx_cgroup_init(). */
+ if (!sgx_cg_wq)
+ return 0;
+
..., IIUC you choose a (third) solution that is even one more step back:
It just makes try_charge() always succeed, but EPC pages are still
managed in the "per-cgroup" list.
But this solution, AFAICT, doesn't work. The reason is when you fail to
allocate EPC page you will do the global reclaim, but now the global
list is empty.
Am I missing anything?
But when cgroups enabled in config, global reclamation starts from root
and reclaim from the whole hierarchy if user may still be able to create.
Just that we don't have async/sync per-cgroup reclaim triggered.
So my thinking is, we have two options:
1) Modify the MISC cgroup core code to allow the kernel to disable one
particular resource. It shouldn't be hard, e.g., we can add a
'disabled' flag to the 'struct misc_res'.
Hmm.. wait, after checking, the MISC cgroup won't show any control files
if the "capacity" of the resource is 0:
"
* Miscellaneous resources capacity for the entire machine. 0 capacity
* means resource is not initialized or not present in the host.
"
So I really suppose we should go with this route, i.e., by just setting
the EPC capacity to 0?
Note misc_cg_try_charge() will fail if capacity is 0, but we can make it
return success by explicitly check whether SGX cgroup is disabled by
using a helper, e.g., sgx_cgroup_disabled().
And you always return the root SGX cgroup in sgx_get_current_cg() when
sgx_cgroup_disabled() is true.
And in sgx_reclaim_pages_global(), you do something like:
static void sgx_reclaim_pages_global(..)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_CGROUP_MISC
if (sgx_cgroup_disabled())
sgx_reclaim_pages(&sgx_root_cg.lru);
else
sgx_cgroup_reclaim_pages(misc_cg_root());
#else
sgx_reclaim_pages(&sgx_global_list);
#endif
}
I am perhaps missing some other spots too but you got the idea.
At last, after typing those, I believe we should have a separate patch
to handle disable SGX cgroup at initialization time. And you can even
put this patch _somewhere_ after the patch
"x86/sgx: Implement basic EPC misc cgroup functionality"
and before this patch.
It makes sense to have such patch anyway, because with it we can easily
to add a kernel command line 'sgx_cgroup=disabled" if the user wants it
disabled (when someone has such requirement in the future).
I think we can add support for "sgx_cgroup=disabled" in future if indeed
needed. But just for init failure, no?
Thanks
Haitao