Re: [PATCH] vsock/virtio: Remove queued_replies pushback logic

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Hi Stefano,

On 15.11.24 12:59, Stefano Garzarella wrote:

On Fri, Nov 15, 2024 at 10:30:16AM +0000, Alexander Graf wrote:
Ever since the introduction of the virtio vsock driver, it included
pushback logic that blocks it from taking any new RX packets until the
TX queue backlog becomes shallower than the virtqueue size.

This logic works fine when you connect a user space application on the
hypervisor with a virtio-vsock target, because the guest will stop
receiving data until the host pulled all outstanding data from the VM.

So, why not skipping this only when talking with a sibling VM?


I don't think there is a way to know, is there?




With Nitro Enclaves however, we connect 2 VMs directly via vsock:

 Parent      Enclave

   RX -------- TX
   TX -------- RX

This means we now have 2 virtio-vsock backends that both have the pushback
logic. If the parent's TX queue runs full at the same time as the
Enclave's, both virtio-vsock drivers fall into the pushback path and
no longer accept RX traffic. However, that RX traffic is TX traffic on
the other side which blocks that driver from making any forward
progress. We're not in a deadlock.

To resolve this, let's remove that pushback logic altogether and rely on
higher levels (like credits) to ensure we do not consume unbounded
memory.

I spoke quickly with Stefan who has been following the development from
the beginning and actually pointed out that there might be problems
with the control packets, since credits only covers data packets, so
it doesn't seem like a good idea remove this mechanism completely.


Can you help me understand which situations the current mechanism really helps with, so we can look at alternatives?




Fixes: 0ea9e1d3a9e3 ("VSOCK: Introduce virtio_transport.ko")

I'm not sure we should add this Fixes tag, this seems very risky
backporting on stable branches IMHO.


Which situations do you believe it will genuinely break anything in? As it stands today, if you run upstream parent and enclave and hammer them with vsock traffic, you get into a deadlock. Even without the flow control, you will never hit a deadlock. But you may get a brown-out like situation while Linux is flushing its buffers.

Ideally we want to have actual flow control to mitigate the problem altogether. But I'm not quite sure how and where. Just blocking all receiving traffic causes problems.


If we cannot find a better mechanism to replace this with something
that works both guest <-> host and guest <-> guest, I would prefer
to do this just for guest <-> guest communication.
Because removing this completely seems too risky for me, at least
without a proof that control packets are fine.


So your concern is that control packets would not receive pushback, so we would allow unbounded traffic to get queued up? Can you suggest options to help with that?


Alex




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