On Tue, Sep 28, 2021 at 9:20 AM Rongwei Wang <rongwei.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On 9/28/21 6:24 AM, Song Liu wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 24, 2021 at 12:12 AM Rongwei Wang > > <rongwei.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >> On 9/24/21 10:43 AM, Andrew Morton wrote: > >>> On Thu, 23 Sep 2021 01:04:54 +0800 Rongwei Wang <rongwei.wang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> On Sep 22, 2021, at 7:37 PM, Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>> On Wed, Sep 22, 2021 at 03:06:44PM +0800, Rongwei Wang wrote: > >>>>>> Transparent huge page has supported read-only non-shmem files. The file- > >>>>>> backed THP is collapsed by khugepaged and truncated when written (for > >>>>>> shared libraries). > >>>>>> > >>>>>> However, there is race in two possible places. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> 1) multiple writers truncate the same page cache concurrently; > >>>>>> 2) collapse_file rolls back when writer truncates the page cache; > >>>>> > >>>>> As I've said before, the bug here is that somehow there is a writable fd > >>>>> to a file with THPs. That's what we need to track down and fix. > >>>> Hi, Matthew > >>>> I am not sure get your means. We know “mm, thp: relax the VM_DENYWRITE constraint on file-backed THPs" > >>>> Introduced file-backed THPs for DSO. It is possible {very rarely} for DSO to be opened in writeable way. > >>>> > >>>> ... > >>>> > >>>>> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mm/YUdL3lFLFHzC80Wt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/ > >>>> All in all, what you mean is that we should solve this race at the source? > >>> > >>> Matthew is being pretty clear here: we shouldn't be permitting > >>> userspace to get a writeable fd for a thp-backed file. > >>> > >>> Why are we permitting the DSO to be opened writeably? If there's a > >>> legitimate case for doing this then presumably "mm, thp: relax the > >> There is a use case to stress file-backed THP within attachment. > >> I test this case in a system which has enabled CONFIG_READ_ONLY_THP_FOR_FS: > >> > >> $ gcc -Wall -g -o stress_madvise_dso stress_madvise_dso.c > >> $ ulimit -s unlimited > >> $ ./stress_madvise_dso 10000 <libtest.so> > >> > >> the meaning of above parameters: > >> 10000: the max test time; > >> <libtest.so>: the DSO that will been mapped into file-backed THP by > >> madvise. It recommended that the text segment of DSO to be tested is > >> greater than 2M. > >> > >> The crash will been triggered at once in the latest kernel. And this > >> case also can used to trigger the bug that mentioned in our another patch. > > > > Hmm.. I am not able to use the repro program to crash the system. Not > > sure what I did wrong. > > > Hi > I have tried to check my test case again. Can you make sure the DSO that > you test have THP mapping? > > If you are willing to try again, I can send my libtest.c which is used > to test by myself (actually, it shouldn't be target DSO problem). > > Thanks very much! > > OTOH, does it make sense to block writes within khugepaged, like: > > > > diff --git i/mm/khugepaged.c w/mm/khugepaged.c > > index 045cc579f724e..ad7c41ec15027 100644 > > --- i/mm/khugepaged.c > > +++ w/mm/khugepaged.c > > @@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ enum scan_result { > > SCAN_CGROUP_CHARGE_FAIL, > > SCAN_TRUNCATED, > > SCAN_PAGE_HAS_PRIVATE, > > + SCAN_BUSY_WRITE, > > }; > > > > #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS > > @@ -1652,6 +1653,11 @@ static void collapse_file(struct mm_struct *mm, > > /* Only allocate from the target node */ > > gfp = alloc_hugepage_khugepaged_gfpmask() | __GFP_THISNODE; > > > > + if (deny_write_access(file)) { > > + result = SCAN_BUSY_WRITE; > > + return; > > + } > > + > This can indeed avoid some possible races from source. > > But, I am thinking about whether this will lead to DDoS attack? > I remember the reason of DSO has ignored MAP_DENYWRITE in kernel > is that DDoS attack. In addition, 'deny_write_access' will change > the behavior, such as user will get 'Text file busy' during > collapse_file. I am not sure whether the behavior changing is acceptable > in user space. > > If it is acceptable, I am very willing to fix the races like your way. I guess we should not let the write get ETXTBUSY for khugepaged work. I am getting some segfault on stress_madvise_dso. And it doesn't really generate the bug stack in my vm (qemu-system-x86_64). Is there an newer version of it? Thanks, Song