Re: [PATCH v12 09/14] x86/sgx: Implement async reclamation for cgroup

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On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 13:55 -0500, Haitao Huang wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Apr 2024 20:32:14 -0500, Huang, Kai <kai.huang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> > 
> > 
> > On 16/04/2024 3:20 pm, Haitao Huang wrote:
> > > From: Kristen Carlson Accardi <kristen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > >  In cases EPC pages need be allocated during a page fault and the cgroup
> > > usage is near its limit, an asynchronous reclamation needs be triggered
> > > to avoid blocking the page fault handling.
> > >  Create a workqueue, corresponding work item and function definitions
> > > for EPC cgroup to support the asynchronous reclamation.
> > >  In case the workqueue allocation is failed during init, disable cgroup.
> > 
> > It's fine and reasonable to disable (SGX EPC) cgroup.  The problem is  
> > "exactly what does this mean" isn't quite clear.
> > 
> First, this is really some corner case most people don't care: during  
> init, kernel can't even allocate a workqueue object. So I don't think we  
> should write extra code to implement some sophisticated solution. Any  
> solution we come up with may just not work as the way user want or solve  
> the real issue due to the fact such allocation failure even happens at  
> init time.

I think for such boot time failure we can either choose directly BUG_ON(),
or we try to handle it _nicely_, but not half-way.  My experience is
adding BUG_ON() should be avoided in general, but it might be acceptable
during kernel boot.  I will leave it to others.


[...]

> > 
> > ..., IIUC you choose a (third) solution that is even one more step back:
> > 
> > It just makes try_charge() always succeed, but EPC pages are still  
> > managed in the "per-cgroup" list.
> > 
> > But this solution, AFAICT, doesn't work.  The reason is when you fail to  
> > allocate EPC page you will do the global reclaim, but now the global  
> > list is empty.
> > 
> > Am I missing anything?
> 
> But when cgroups enabled in config, global reclamation starts from root  
> and reclaim from the whole hierarchy if user may still be able to create.  
> Just that we don't have async/sync per-cgroup reclaim triggered.

OK.  I missed this as it is in a later patch.

> 
> > 
> > So my thinking is, we have two options:
> > 
> > 1) Modify the MISC cgroup core code to allow the kernel to disable one  
> > particular resource.  It shouldn't be hard, e.g., we can add a  
> > 'disabled' flag to the 'struct misc_res'.
> > 
> > Hmm.. wait, after checking, the MISC cgroup won't show any control files  
> > if the "capacity" of the resource is 0:
> > 
> > "
> >   * Miscellaneous resources capacity for the entire machine. 0 capacity
> >   * means resource is not initialized or not present in the host.
> > "
> > 
> > So I really suppose we should go with this route, i.e., by just setting  
> > the EPC capacity to 0?
> > 
> > Note misc_cg_try_charge() will fail if capacity is 0, but we can make it  
> > return success by explicitly check whether SGX cgroup is disabled by  
> > using a helper, e.g., sgx_cgroup_disabled().
> > 
> > And you always return the root SGX cgroup in sgx_get_current_cg() when  
> > sgx_cgroup_disabled() is true.
> > 
> > And in sgx_reclaim_pages_global(), you do something like:
> > 
> > 	static void sgx_reclaim_pages_global(..)
> > 	{
> > 	#ifdef CONFIG_CGROUP_MISC
> > 		if (sgx_cgroup_disabled())
> > 			sgx_reclaim_pages(&sgx_root_cg.lru);
> > 		else
> > 			sgx_cgroup_reclaim_pages(misc_cg_root());
> > 	#else
> > 		sgx_reclaim_pages(&sgx_global_list);
> > 	#endif
> > 	}
> > 
> > I am perhaps missing some other spots too but you got the idea.
> > 
> > At last, after typing those, I believe we should have a separate patch  
> > to handle disable SGX cgroup at initialization time.  And you can even  
> > put this patch _somewhere_ after the patch
> > 
> > 	"x86/sgx: Implement basic EPC misc cgroup functionality"
> > 
> > and before this patch.
> > 
> > It makes sense to have such patch anyway, because with it we can easily  
> > to add a kernel command line 'sgx_cgroup=disabled" if the user wants it  
> > disabled (when someone has such requirement in the future).
> > 
> 
> I think we can add support for "sgx_cgroup=disabled" in future if indeed  
> needed. But just for init failure, no?
> 

It's not about the commandline, which we can add in the future when
needed.  It's about we need to have a way to handle SGX cgroup being
disabled at boot time nicely, because we already have a case where we need
to do so.

Your approach looks half-way to me, and is not future extendible.  If we
choose to do it, do it right -- that is, we need a way to disable it
completely in both kernel and userspace so that userspace won't be able to
see it.




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