On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 01:44:42AM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 4:01 PM Linus Torvalds > <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > The more I look at the mprotect code, the less I like it. We seem to > > be much better about the TLB flushes in other places (looking at > > mremap, for example). The mprotect code seems to be very laissez-faire > > about the TLB flushing. > > No, this doesn't help. > > > Does adding a TLB flush to before that > > > > pte_unmap_unlock(pte - 1, ptl); > > > > fix things for you? > > It really doesn't fix it. Exactly because - as pointed out earlier - > the actual page *copy* happens outside the pte lock. I appreciate all the pointers. It seems to me it does. > So what can happen is: > > - CPU 1 holds the page table lock, while doing the write protect. It > has cleared the writable bit, but hasn't flushed the TLB's yet > > - CPU 2 did *not* have the TLB entry, sees the new read-only state, > takes a COW page fault, and reads the PTE from memory (into > vmf->orig_pte) In handle_pte_fault(), we lock page table and check pte_write(), so we either see a RW pte before CPU 1 runs or a RO one with no stale tlb entries after CPU 1 runs, assume CPU 1 flushes tlb while holding the same page table lock (not mmap_lock). > - CPU 2 correctly decides it needs to be a COW, and copies the page contents > > - CPU 3 *does* have a stale TLB (because TLB invalidation hasn't > happened yet), and writes to that page in users apce > > - CPU 1 now does the TLB invalidate, and releases the page table lock > > - CPU 2 gets the page table lock, sees that its PTE matches > vmf->orig_pte, and switches it to be that writable copy of the page. > > where the copy happened before CPU 3 had stopped writing to the page. > > So the pte lock doesn't actually matter, unless we actually do the > page copy inside of it (on CPU2), in addition to doing the TLB flush > inside of it (on CPU1). > > mprotect() is actually safe for two independent reasons: (a) it does > the mmap_sem for writing (so mprotect can't race with the COW logic at > all), and (b) it changes the vma permissions so turning something > read-only actually disables COW anyway, since it won't be a COW, it > will be a SIGSEGV. > > So mprotect() is irrelevant, other than the fact that it shares some > code with that "turn it read-only in the page tables". > > fork() is a much closer operation, in that it actually triggers that > COW behavior, but fork() takes the mmap_sem for writing, so it avoids > this too. > > So it's really just userfaultfd and that kind of ilk that is relevant > here, I think. But that "you need to flush the TLB before releasing > the page table lock" was not true (well, it's true in other > circumstances - just not *here*), and is not part of the solution. > > Or rather, if it's part of the solution here, it would have to be > matched with that "page copy needs to be done under the page table > lock too". > > Linus >