Re: [PATCH RFC 0/5] mm/gup: Introduce exclusive GUP pinning

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On Thu, Jun 20, 2024, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 20.06.24 22:30, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> > On Thu, Jun 20, 2024, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> > > On 20.06.24 18:36, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> > > > On Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 04:45:08PM +0200, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> > > > 
> > > > > If we could disallow pinning any shared pages, that would make life a lot
> > > > > easier, but I think there were reasons for why we might require it. To
> > > > > convert shared->private, simply unmap that folio (only the shared parts
> > > > > could possibly be mapped) from all user page tables.
> > > > 
> > > > IMHO it should be reasonable to make it work like ZONE_MOVABLE and
> > > > FOLL_LONGTERM. Making a shared page private is really no different
> > > > from moving it.
> > > > 
> > > > And if you have built a VMM that uses VMA mapped shared pages and
> > > > short-term pinning then you should really also ensure that the VM is
> > > > aware when the pins go away. For instance if you are doing some virtio
> > > > thing with O_DIRECT pinning then the guest will know the pins are gone
> > > > when it observes virtio completions.
> > > > 
> > > > In this way making private is just like moving, we unmap the page and
> > > > then drive the refcount to zero, then move it.
> > > Yes, but here is the catch: what if a single shared subpage of a large folio
> > > is (validly) longterm pinned and you want to convert another shared subpage
> > > to private?
> > > 
> > > Sure, we can unmap the whole large folio (including all shared parts) before
> > > the conversion, just like we would do for migration. But we cannot detect
> > > that nobody pinned that subpage that we want to convert to private.
> > > 
> > > Core-mm is not, and will not, track pins per subpage.
> > > 
> > > So I only see two options:
> > > 
> > > a) Disallow long-term pinning. That means, we can, with a bit of wait,
> > >     always convert subpages shared->private after unmapping them and
> > >     waiting for the short-term pin to go away. Not too bad, and we
> > >     already have other mechanisms disallow long-term pinnings (especially
> > >     writable fs ones!).
> > 
> > I don't think disallowing _just_ long-term GUP will suffice, if we go the "disallow
> > GUP" route than I think it needs to disallow GUP, period.  Like the whole "GUP
> > writes to file-back memory" issue[*], which I think you're alluding to, short-term
> > GUP is also problematic.  But unlike file-backed memory, for TDX and SNP (and I
> > think pKVM), a single rogue access has a high probability of being fatal to the
> > entire system.
> 
> Disallowing short-term should work, in theory, because the

By "short-term", I assume you mean "long-term"?  Or am I more lost than I realize?

> writes-to-fileback has different issues (the PIN is not the problem but the
> dirtying).
>
> It's more related us not allowing long-term pins for FSDAX pages, because
> the lifetime of these pages is determined by the FS.
> 
> What we would do is
> 
> 1) Unmap the large folio completely and make any refaults block.
> -> No new pins can pop up
> 
> 2) If the folio is pinned, busy-wait until all the short-term pins are
>    gone.

This is the step that concerns me.   "Relatively short time" is, well, relative.
Hmm, though I suppose if userspace managed to map a shared page into something
that pins the page, and can't force an unpin, e.g. by stopping I/O?, then either
there's a host userspace bug or a guest bug, and so effectively hanging the vCPU
that is waiting for the conversion to complete is ok.

> 3) Safely convert the relevant subpage from shared -> private
> 
> Not saying it's the best approach, but it should be doable.




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