On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 10:27:48AM -0700, Mike Kravetz wrote: > > pgd = pgd_offset(mm, addr); > > - if (!pgd_present(*pgd)) > > + if (!pgd_present(READ_ONCE(*pgd))) > > return NULL; > > p4d = p4d_offset(pgd, addr); > > - if (!p4d_present(*p4d)) > > + if (!p4d_present(READ_ONCE(*p4d))) > > return NULL; > > > > pud = pud_offset(p4d, addr); > > One would argue that pgd and p4d can not change from present to !present > during the execution of this code. To me, that seems like the issue which > would cause an issue. Of course, I could be missing something. This I am not sure of, I think it must be true under the read side of the mmap_sem, but probably not guarenteed under RCU.. In any case, it doesn't matter, the fact that *p4d can change at all is problematic. Unwinding the above inlines we get: p4d = p4d_offset(pgd, addr) if (!p4d_present(*p4d)) return NULL; pud = (pud_t *)p4d_page_vaddr(*p4d) + pud_index(address); According to our memory model the compiler/CPU is free to execute this as: p4d = p4d_offset(pgd, addr) p4d_for_vaddr = *p4d; if (!p4d_present(*p4d)) return NULL; pud = (pud_t *)p4d_page_vaddr(p4d_for_vaddr) + pud_index(address); In the case where p4 goes from !present -> present (ie handle_mm_fault()): p4d_for_vaddr == p4d_none, and p4d_present(*p4d) == true, meaning the p4d_page_vaddr() will crash. Basically the problem here is not just missing READ_ONCE, but that the p4d is read multiple times at all. It should be written like gup_fast does, to guarantee a single CPU read of the unstable data: p4d = READ_ONCE(*p4d_offset(pgdp, addr)); if (!p4d_present(p4)) return NULL; pud = pud_offset(&p4d, addr); At least this is what I've been able to figure out :\ > > Also, the remark about pmd_offset() seems accurate. The > > get_user_fast_pages() pattern seems like the correct one to emulate: > > > > pud = READ_ONCE(*pudp); > > if (pud_none(pud)) > > .. > > if (!pud_'is a pmd pointer') > > .. > > pmdp = pmd_offset(&pud, address); > > pmd = READ_ONCE(*pmd); > > [...] > > > > Passing &pud in avoids another de-reference of the pudp. Honestly all > > these APIs that take in page table pointers and internally > > de-reference them seem very hard to use correctly when the page table > > access isn't fully locked against write. And the same protocol for the PUD, etc. > > It looks like at least the p4d read from the pgd is also unlocked here > > as handle_mm_fault() writes to it?? > > Yes, there is no locking required to call huge_pte_offset(). None? Not RCU or read mmap_sem? Jason