On 06/20/2019 04:27 PM, Eric Farman wrote:
On 6/20/19 3:40 PM, Farhan Ali wrote:
There is a small window where it's possible that an interrupt can
arrive and can call cp_free, while we are still processing a channel
program (i.e allocating memory, pinnging pages, translating
s/pinnging/pinning/
addresses etc). This can lead to allocating and freeing at the same
time and can cause memory corruption.
Let's not call cp_free if we are currently processing a channel program.
The check around this cp_free() call is for a solicited interrupt, so
it's presumably in response to a SSCH we issued. But if we're still
processing a CP, then we hadn't issued the SSCH to the hardware yet. So
what is this interrupt for? Do the contents of irb.cpa provide any
clues, perhaps if it's in the current cp or for someone else?
I don't think the interrupt is in response to an ssch but rather due to
an csch/hsch.
Signed-off-by: Farhan Ali <alifm@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
I have been running my test overnight with this patch and I haven't
seen the stack traces that I mentioned about earlier. I would like
to get some reviews on this and also if this is the right thing to
do?
Thanks
Farhan
drivers/s390/cio/vfio_ccw_drv.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/drivers/s390/cio/vfio_ccw_drv.c b/drivers/s390/cio/vfio_ccw_drv.c
index 66a66ac..61ece3f 100644
--- a/drivers/s390/cio/vfio_ccw_drv.c
+++ b/drivers/s390/cio/vfio_ccw_drv.c
@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ static void vfio_ccw_sch_io_todo(struct work_struct *work)
(SCSW_ACTL_DEVACT | SCSW_ACTL_SCHACT));
if (scsw_is_solicited(&irb->scsw)) {
cp_update_scsw(&private->cp, &irb->scsw);
As I alluded earlier, do we know this irb is for this cp? If no, what
does this function end up putting in the scsw?
- if (is_final)
+ if (is_final && private->state != VFIO_CCW_STATE_CP_PROCESSING)
In looking at how we set this state, and how we exit it, I see we do:
if SSCH got CC0, CP_PROCESSING -> CP_PENDING
if SSCH got !CC0, CP_PROCESSING -> IDLE
While the first scenario happens immediately after the SSCH instruction,
I guess it could be just tiny enough, like the io_trigger FSM patch I
sent a few weeks ago.
Meanwhile, the latter happens way after we return from the jump table.
So that scenario leaves considerable time for such an interrupt to
occur, though I don't understand why it would if we got a CC(1-3) on the
SSCH.
And anyway, the return from fsm_io_helper() in that case will also call
cp_free(). So why does the cp->initialized check provide protection
from a double-free in that direction, but not here? I'm confused.
I have a theory where I think it's possible to have 2 different threads
executing cp_free
If we start with private->state == IDLE and the guest issues a
clear/halt and then an ssch
- clear/halt will be issued to hardware, and if succeeds we will return
cc=0 to guest
- the guest can then issue ssch
- we get an interrupt for csch/hsch and we queue the interrupt in the
workqueue
- we start processing the ssch and then at the same time another cpu
could be working on the
interrupt
Thread 1 Thread 2
-------- --------
fsm_io_request vfio_ccw_sch_io_todo
cp_init cp_free
cp_prefetch
fsm_io_helper
cp_free
The test that I am trying is with a guest running an fio workload, while
at the same time stressing the error recovery path in the guest. So
there is a lot of ssch and lot of csch.
Of course I don't think my patch completely solves the problem, I think
it just makes the window narrower. I just wanted to get a discussion
started :)
Now that I am thinking more about it, I think we might have to protect
cp with it's own mutex.
Thanks
Farhan
cp_free(&private->cp);
}
mutex_lock(&private->io_mutex);