On Tue, Mar 2, 2021 at 11:37 AM Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Ilya Lipnitskiy <ilya.lipnitskiy@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Mon, Mar 1, 2021 at 12:43 PM Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> Ilya Lipnitskiy <ilya.lipnitskiy@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> > >> > Eric, All, > >> > > >> > The following error appears when running Linux 5.10.18 on an embedded > >> > MIPS mt7621 target: > >> > [ 0.301219] BUG: Bad rss-counter state mm:(ptrval) type:MM_ANONPAGES val:1 > >> > > >> > Being a very generic error, I started digging and added a stack dump > >> > before the BUG: > >> > Call Trace: > >> > [<80008094>] show_stack+0x30/0x100 > >> > [<8033b238>] dump_stack+0xac/0xe8 > >> > [<800285e8>] __mmdrop+0x98/0x1d0 > >> > [<801a6de8>] free_bprm+0x44/0x118 > >> > [<801a86a8>] kernel_execve+0x160/0x1d8 > >> > [<800420f4>] call_usermodehelper_exec_async+0x114/0x194 > >> > [<80003198>] ret_from_kernel_thread+0x14/0x1c > >> > > >> > So that's how I got to looking at fs/exec.c and noticed quite a few > >> > changes last year. Turns out this message only occurs once very early > >> > at boot during the very first call to kernel_execve. current->mm is > >> > NULL at this stage, so acct_arg_size() is effectively a no-op. > >> > >> If you believe this is a new error you could bisect the kernel > >> to see which change introduced the behavior you are seeing. > >> > >> > More digging, and I traced the RSS counter increment to: > >> > [<8015adb4>] add_mm_counter_fast+0xb4/0xc0 > >> > [<80160d58>] handle_mm_fault+0x6e4/0xea0 > >> > [<80158aa4>] __get_user_pages.part.78+0x190/0x37c > >> > [<8015992c>] __get_user_pages_remote+0x128/0x360 > >> > [<801a6d9c>] get_arg_page+0x34/0xa0 > >> > [<801a7394>] copy_string_kernel+0x194/0x2a4 > >> > [<801a880c>] kernel_execve+0x11c/0x298 > >> > [<800420f4>] call_usermodehelper_exec_async+0x114/0x194 > >> > [<80003198>] ret_from_kernel_thread+0x14/0x1c > >> > > >> > In fact, I also checked vma_pages(bprm->vma) and lo and behold it is set to 1. > >> > > >> > How is fs/exec.c supposed to handle implied RSS increments that happen > >> > due to page faults when discarding the bprm structure? In this case, > >> > the bug-generating kernel_execve call never succeeded, it returned -2, > >> > but I didn't trace exactly what failed. > >> > >> Unless I am mistaken any left over pages should be purged by exit_mmap > >> which is called by mmput before mmput calls mmdrop. > > Good to know. Some more digging and I can say that we hit this error > > when trying to unmap PFN 0 (is_zero_pfn(pfn) returns TRUE, > > vm_normal_page returns NULL, zap_pte_range does not decrement > > MM_ANONPAGES RSS counter). Is my understanding correct that PFN 0 is > > usable, but special? Or am I totally off the mark here? > > It would be good to know if that is the page that get_user_pages_remote > returned to copy_string_kernel. The zero page that is always zero, > should never be returned when a writable mapping is desired. Indeed, pfn 0 is returned from get_arg_page: (page is 0x809cf000, page_to_pfn(page) is 0) and it is the same page that is being freed and not refcounted in mmput/zap_pte_range. Confirmed with good old printk. Also, ZERO_PAGE(0)==0x809fc000 -> PFN 5120. I think I have found the problem though, after much digging and thanks to all the information provided. init_zero_pfn() gets called too late (after the call to is_zero_pfn(0) from mmput returns true), until then zero_pfn == 0, and after, zero_pfn == 5120. Boom. So PFN 0 is special, but only for a little bit, enough for something on my system to call kernel_execve :) Question: is my system not supposed to be calling kernel_execve this early or does init_zero_pfn() need to happen earlier? init_zero_pfn is currently a core_initcall. > > > Here is the (optimized) stack trace when the counter does not get decremented: > > [<8015b078>] vm_normal_page+0x114/0x1a8 > > [<8015dc98>] unmap_page_range+0x388/0xacc > > [<8015e5a0>] unmap_vmas+0x6c/0x98 > > [<80166194>] exit_mmap+0xd8/0x1ac > > [<800290c0>] mmput+0x58/0xf8 > > [<801a6f8c>] free_bprm+0x2c/0xc4 > > [<801a8890>] kernel_execve+0x160/0x1d8 > > [<800420e0>] call_usermodehelper_exec_async+0x114/0x194 > > [<80003198>] ret_from_kernel_thread+0x14/0x1c > > > >> > >> AKA it looks very very fishy this happens and this does not look like > >> an execve error. > > I think you are right, I'm probably wrong to bother you. However, > > since the thread is already started, let me add linux-mm here :) > > It happens during exec. I don't mind looking and pointing you a useful > direction. > > >> > >> On the other hand it would be good to know why kernel_execve is failing. > >> Then the error handling paths could be scrutinized, and we can check to > >> see if everything that should happen on an error path does. > > I can check on this, but likely it's the init system not doing things > > quite in the right order on my platform, or something similar. The > > error is ENOENT from do_open_execat(). > > That does narrow things down considerably. > After the error all we do is: > Clear in_execve and fs->in_exec. > Return from bprm_execve > Call free_bprm > Which does: > if (bprm->mm) { > acct_arg_size(bprm, 0); > mmput(bprm->mm); > } > > So it really needs to be the mmput that cleans things up.\ > > I would really verify the correspondence between what get_arg_page > returns and what gets freed in mmput if it is not too difficult. > I think it should just be a page or two. > > Eric Ilya