On Wed, Feb 23, 2022 at 07:21:50PM +0000, Dhanraj, Vijay wrote: > Hi All, > > Regarding the recent update of splitting the page permissions change > request into two IOCTLS (RELAX and RESTRICT), can we combine them into > one? That is, revert to how it was done in the v1 version? > > Why? Currently in Gramine (a library OS for unmodified applications, > https://gramineproject.io/) with the new proposed change, one needs to > store the page permission for each page or range of pages. And for every > request of `mmap` or `mprotect`, Gramine would have to do a lookup of the > page permissions for the request range and then call the respective IOCTL > either RESTRICT or RELAX. This seems a little overwhelming. > > Request: Instead, can we do `MODPE`, call `RESTRICT` IOCTL, and then do > an `EACCEPT` irrespective of RELAX or RESTRICT page permission request? > With this approach, we can avoid storing page permissions and simplify > the implementation. > > I understand RESTRICT IOCTL would do a `MODPR` and trigger `ETRACK` flows > to do TLB shootdowns which might not be needed for RELAX IOCTL but I am > not sure what will be the performance impact. Is there any data point to > see the performance impact? > > Thanks, > -Vijay This should get better in the next versuin. "relax" is gone. And for dynamic EAUG'd pages only VMA and EPCM permissions matter, i.e. internal vm_max_prot_bits is set to RWX. I patched the existing series eno For Enarx I'm using the following patterns. Shim mmap() handler: 1. Ask host for mmap() syscall. 2. Construct secinfo matching the protection bits. 3. For each page in the address range: EACCEPTCOPY with a zero page. Shim mprotect() handler: 1. Ask host for mprotect() syscall. 2. For each page in the address range: EACCEPT with PROT_NONE secinfo and EMODPE with the secinfo having the prot bits. Backend mprotect() handler: 1. Invoke ENCLAVE_RESTRICT_PERMISSIONS ioctl for the address range with PROT_NONE. 2. Invoke real mprotect() syscall. Not super-complicated. That is the safest way to changes permissions i.e. use EMODPR only to reset the permissions, and EMODPE as EMODP. Then the page is always either inaccessible completely or with the correct permissions. Any other ways to use EMODPR are a bit questionable. That's why I tend to think that it would be better to kernel provide only limited version of it to reset the permissions. Most of the other use will be most likely mis-use. IMHO there is only one legit pattern to use it, i.e. "least racy" pattern. I would replace SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_RESTRICT_PERMISSIONS with SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_RESET_PERMISSIONS that resets pages to PROT_NONE or embed this straight into mprotect(). BR, Jarkko