Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Wed, May 01, 2024 at 05:49:50PM +0530, Ritesh Harjani wrote: >> Dave Chinner <david@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 10:29:16PM +0800, Zhang Yi wrote: >> >> From: Zhang Yi <yi.zhang@xxxxxxxxxx> >> >> >> >> Now we lookup extent status entry without holding the i_data_sem before >> >> inserting delalloc block, it works fine in buffered write path and >> >> because it holds i_rwsem and folio lock, and the mmap path holds folio >> >> lock, so the found extent locklessly couldn't be modified concurrently. >> >> But it could be raced by fallocate since it allocate block whitout >> >> holding i_rwsem and folio lock. >> >> >> >> ext4_page_mkwrite() ext4_fallocate() >> >> block_page_mkwrite() >> >> ext4_da_map_blocks() >> >> //find hole in extent status tree >> >> ext4_alloc_file_blocks() >> >> ext4_map_blocks() >> >> //allocate block and unwritten extent >> >> ext4_insert_delayed_block() >> >> ext4_da_reserve_space() >> >> //reserve one more block >> >> ext4_es_insert_delayed_block() >> >> //drop unwritten extent and add delayed extent by mistake >> > >> > Shouldn't this be serialised by the file invalidation lock? Hole >> > punching via fallocate must do this to avoid data use-after-free >> > bugs w.r.t racing page faults and all the other fallocate ops need >> > to serialise page faults to avoid page cache level data corruption. >> > Yet here we see a problem resulting from a fallocate operation >> > racing with a page fault.... >> >> IIUC, fallocate operations which invalidates the page cache contents needs >> to take th invalidate_lock in exclusive mode to prevent page fault >> operations from loading pages for stale mappings (blocks which were >> marked free might get reused). This can cause stale data exposure. >> >> Here the fallocate operation require allocation of unwritten extents and >> does not require truncate of pagecache range. So I guess, it is not >> strictly necessary to hold the invalidate lock here. > > True, but you can make exactly the same argument for write() vs > fallocate(). Yet this path in ext4_fallocate() locks out > concurrent write()s and waits for DIOs in flight to drain. What > makes buffered writes triggered by page faults special? > > i.e. if you are going to say "we don't need serialisation between > writes and fallocate() allocating unwritten extents", then why is it > still explicitly serialising against both buffered and direct IO and > not just truncate and other fallocate() operations? > >> But I see XFS does take IOLOCK_EXCL AND MMAPLOCK_EXCL even for this operation. > > Yes, that's the behaviour preallocation has had in XFS since we > introduced the MMAPLOCK almost a decade ago. This was long before > the file_invalidation_lock() was even a glimmer in Jan's eye. > > btrfs does the same thing, for the same reasons. COW support makes > extent tree manipulations excitingly complex at times... > >> I guess we could use the invalidate lock for fallocate operation in ext4 >> too. However, I think we still require the current patch. The reason is >> ext4_da_map_blocks() call here first tries to lookup the extent status >> cache w/o any i_data_sem lock in the fastpath. If it finds a hole, it >> takes the i_data_sem in write mode and just inserts an entry into extent >> status cache w/o re-checking for the same under the exclusive lock. >> ...So I believe we still should have this patch which re-verify under >> the write lock if whether any other operation has inserted any entry >> already or not. > > Yup, I never said the code in the patch is wrong or unnecessary; I'm > commenting on the high level race condition that lead to the bug > beting triggered. i.e. that racing data modification operations with > low level extent manipulations is often dangerous and a potential > source of very subtle, hard to trigger, reproduce and debug issues > like the one reported... > Yes, thanks for explaining and commenting on the high level design. It was indeed helpful. And I agree with your comment on, we can refactor out the common operations from fallocate path and use invalidate lock to protect against data modification (page fault) and extent manipulation path (fallocate operations). -ritesh