Hi Zi, On Wed, Dec 4, 2024 at 7:30 PM Zi Yan <ziy@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 4 Dec 2024, at 12:33, Zi Yan wrote: > > On 4 Dec 2024, at 11:29, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > >> On Wed, Dec 04, 2024 at 11:16:51AM -0500, Zi Yan wrote: > >>>> So maybe the clearing done as part of page allocator isn't enough here. > >>>> > >>> Basically, mips needs to flush data cache if kmap address is aliased to > >> > >> People use "aliased" in contronym ways. Do you mean "has a > >> non-congruent alias" or "has a congruent alias"? > >> > >>> userspace address. This means when mips has THP on, the patch below > >>> is not enough to fix the issue. > >>> > >>> In post_alloc_hook(), it does not make sense to pass userspace address > >>> in to determine whether to flush dcache or not. > >>> > >>> One way to fix it is to add something like arch_userpage_post_alloc() > >>> to flush dcache if kmap address is aliased to userspace address. > >>> But my questions are that > >>> 1) if kmap address will always be the same for two separate kmap_local() calls, > >> > >> No. It just takes the next address in the stack. > > > > Hmm, if kmap_local() gives different addresses, wouldn’t init_on_alloc be > > causing issues before my patch? In the page allocator, the page is zeroed > > from one kmap address without flush, then clear_user_highpage() clears > > it again with another kmap address with flush. After returning to userspace, > > the user application works on the page but when the cache line used by > > init_on_alloc is written back (with 0s) at eviction, user data is corrupted. > > Am I missing anything? Or all arch with cache aliasing never enables > > init_on_alloc? > > Hi Geert, > > Regarding the above concern, have you ever had CONFIG_INIT_ON_ALLOC_DEFAULT_ON > for your MIPS machine and encountered any issue? Or let me know if my reasoning > above is flawed. > > To test it, I wonder if you can 1) revert my patch and 2) turn on > CONFIG_INIT_ON_ALLOC_DEFAULT_ON for your MIPS machine and run some applications > to see if any error happens. That seems to work fine... Kernel log confirms it's enabled: -mem auto-init: stack:off, heap alloc:off, heap free:off +mem auto-init: stack:off, heap alloc:on, heap free:off Gr{oetje,eeting}s, Geert -- Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that. -- Linus Torvalds