Re: [PATCH 7/9] iomap: write iomap validity checks

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On Thu, Nov 17, 2022 at 04:58:08PM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> From: Dave Chinner <dchinner@xxxxxxxxxx>
> 
> A recent multithreaded write data corruption has been uncovered in
> the iomap write code. The core of the problem is partial folio
> writes can be flushed to disk while a new racing write can map it
> and fill the rest of the page:
> 
> writeback			new write
> 
> allocate blocks
>   blocks are unwritten
> submit IO
> .....
> 				map blocks
> 				iomap indicates UNWRITTEN range
> 				loop {
> 				  lock folio
> 				  copyin data
> .....
> IO completes
>   runs unwritten extent conv
>     blocks are marked written
> 				  <iomap now stale>
> 				  get next folio
> 				}
> 
> Now add memory pressure such that memory reclaim evicts the
> partially written folio that has already been written to disk.
> 
> When the new write finally gets to the last partial page of the new
> write, it does not find it in cache, so it instantiates a new page,
> sees the iomap is unwritten, and zeros the part of the page that
> it does not have data from. This overwrites the data on disk that
> was originally written.
> 
> The full description of the corruption mechanism can be found here:
> 
> https://lore.kernel.org/linux-xfs/20220817093627.GZ3600936@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> 
> To solve this problem, we need to check whether the iomap is still
> valid after we lock each folio during the write. We have to do it
> after we lock the page so that we don't end up with state changes
> occurring while we wait for the folio to be locked.
> 
> Hence we need a mechanism to be able to check that the cached iomap
> is still valid (similar to what we already do in buffered
> writeback), and we need a way for ->begin_write to back out and
> tell the high level iomap iterator that we need to remap the
> remaining write range.
> 
> The iomap needs to grow some storage for the validity cookie that
> the filesystem provides to travel with the iomap. XFS, in
> particular, also needs to know some more information about what the
> iomap maps (attribute extents rather than file data extents) to for
> the validity cookie to cover all the types of iomaps we might need
> to validate.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx>

OK, I think grok this enough to:
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@xxxxxxxxxx>

--D

> ---
>  fs/iomap/buffered-io.c | 29 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
>  fs/iomap/iter.c        | 19 ++++++++++++++++++-
>  include/linux/iomap.h  | 43 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
>  3 files changed, 81 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
> index 028cdf115477..1a7702de76fb 100644
> --- a/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
> +++ b/fs/iomap/buffered-io.c
> @@ -584,7 +584,7 @@ static int iomap_write_begin_inline(const struct iomap_iter *iter,
>  	return iomap_read_inline_data(iter, folio);
>  }
>  
> -static int iomap_write_begin(const struct iomap_iter *iter, loff_t pos,
> +static int iomap_write_begin(struct iomap_iter *iter, loff_t pos,
>  		size_t len, struct folio **foliop)
>  {
>  	const struct iomap_page_ops *page_ops = iter->iomap.page_ops;
> @@ -618,6 +618,27 @@ static int iomap_write_begin(const struct iomap_iter *iter, loff_t pos,
>  		status = (iter->flags & IOMAP_NOWAIT) ? -EAGAIN : -ENOMEM;
>  		goto out_no_page;
>  	}
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * Now we have a locked folio, before we do anything with it we need to
> +	 * check that the iomap we have cached is not stale. The inode extent
> +	 * mapping can change due to concurrent IO in flight (e.g.
> +	 * IOMAP_UNWRITTEN state can change and memory reclaim could have
> +	 * reclaimed a previously partially written page at this index after IO
> +	 * completion before this write reaches this file offset) and hence we
> +	 * could do the wrong thing here (zero a page range incorrectly or fail
> +	 * to zero) and corrupt data.
> +	 */
> +	if (page_ops && page_ops->iomap_valid) {
> +		bool iomap_valid = page_ops->iomap_valid(iter->inode,
> +							&iter->iomap);
> +		if (!iomap_valid) {
> +			iter->iomap.flags |= IOMAP_F_STALE;
> +			status = 0;
> +			goto out_unlock;
> +		}
> +	}
> +
>  	if (pos + len > folio_pos(folio) + folio_size(folio))
>  		len = folio_pos(folio) + folio_size(folio) - pos;
>  
> @@ -773,6 +794,8 @@ static loff_t iomap_write_iter(struct iomap_iter *iter, struct iov_iter *i)
>  		status = iomap_write_begin(iter, pos, bytes, &folio);
>  		if (unlikely(status))
>  			break;
> +		if (iter->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_STALE)
> +			break;
>  
>  		page = folio_file_page(folio, pos >> PAGE_SHIFT);
>  		if (mapping_writably_mapped(mapping))
> @@ -1067,6 +1090,8 @@ static loff_t iomap_unshare_iter(struct iomap_iter *iter)
>  		status = iomap_write_begin(iter, pos, bytes, &folio);
>  		if (unlikely(status))
>  			return status;
> +		if (iter->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_STALE)
> +			break;
>  
>  		status = iomap_write_end(iter, pos, bytes, bytes, folio);
>  		if (WARN_ON_ONCE(status == 0))
> @@ -1122,6 +1147,8 @@ static loff_t iomap_zero_iter(struct iomap_iter *iter, bool *did_zero)
>  		status = iomap_write_begin(iter, pos, bytes, &folio);
>  		if (status)
>  			return status;
> +		if (iter->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_STALE)
> +			break;
>  
>  		offset = offset_in_folio(folio, pos);
>  		if (bytes > folio_size(folio) - offset)
> diff --git a/fs/iomap/iter.c b/fs/iomap/iter.c
> index a1c7592d2ade..79a0614eaab7 100644
> --- a/fs/iomap/iter.c
> +++ b/fs/iomap/iter.c
> @@ -7,12 +7,28 @@
>  #include <linux/iomap.h>
>  #include "trace.h"
>  
> +/*
> + * Advance to the next range we need to map.
> + *
> + * If the iomap is marked IOMAP_F_STALE, it means the existing map was not fully
> + * processed - it was aborted because the extent the iomap spanned may have been
> + * changed during the operation. In this case, the iteration behaviour is to
> + * remap the unprocessed range of the iter, and that means we may need to remap
> + * even when we've made no progress (i.e. iter->processed = 0). Hence the
> + * "finished iterating" case needs to distinguish between
> + * (processed = 0) meaning we are done and (processed = 0 && stale) meaning we
> + * need to remap the entire remaining range.
> + */
>  static inline int iomap_iter_advance(struct iomap_iter *iter)
>  {
> +	bool stale = iter->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_STALE;
> +
>  	/* handle the previous iteration (if any) */
>  	if (iter->iomap.length) {
> -		if (iter->processed <= 0)
> +		if (iter->processed < 0)
>  			return iter->processed;
> +		if (!iter->processed && !stale)
> +			return 0;
>  		if (WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->processed > iomap_length(iter)))
>  			return -EIO;
>  		iter->pos += iter->processed;
> @@ -33,6 +49,7 @@ static inline void iomap_iter_done(struct iomap_iter *iter)
>  	WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->iomap.offset > iter->pos);
>  	WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->iomap.length == 0);
>  	WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->iomap.offset + iter->iomap.length <= iter->pos);
> +	WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->iomap.flags & IOMAP_F_STALE);
>  
>  	trace_iomap_iter_dstmap(iter->inode, &iter->iomap);
>  	if (iter->srcmap.type != IOMAP_HOLE)
> diff --git a/include/linux/iomap.h b/include/linux/iomap.h
> index 6bbed915c83a..2ecdd9d90efc 100644
> --- a/include/linux/iomap.h
> +++ b/include/linux/iomap.h
> @@ -49,26 +49,35 @@ struct vm_fault;
>   *
>   * IOMAP_F_BUFFER_HEAD indicates that the file system requires the use of
>   * buffer heads for this mapping.
> + *
> + * IOMAP_F_XATTR indicates that the iomap is for an extended attribute extent
> + * rather than a file data extent.
>   */
> -#define IOMAP_F_NEW		0x01
> -#define IOMAP_F_DIRTY		0x02
> -#define IOMAP_F_SHARED		0x04
> -#define IOMAP_F_MERGED		0x08
> -#define IOMAP_F_BUFFER_HEAD	0x10
> -#define IOMAP_F_ZONE_APPEND	0x20
> +#define IOMAP_F_NEW		(1U << 0)
> +#define IOMAP_F_DIRTY		(1U << 1)
> +#define IOMAP_F_SHARED		(1U << 2)
> +#define IOMAP_F_MERGED		(1U << 3)
> +#define IOMAP_F_BUFFER_HEAD	(1U << 4)
> +#define IOMAP_F_ZONE_APPEND	(1U << 5)
> +#define IOMAP_F_XATTR		(1U << 6)
>  
>  /*
>   * Flags set by the core iomap code during operations:
>   *
>   * IOMAP_F_SIZE_CHANGED indicates to the iomap_end method that the file size
>   * has changed as the result of this write operation.
> + *
> + * IOMAP_F_STALE indicates that the iomap is not valid any longer and the file
> + * range it covers needs to be remapped by the high level before the operation
> + * can proceed.
>   */
> -#define IOMAP_F_SIZE_CHANGED	0x100
> +#define IOMAP_F_SIZE_CHANGED	(1U << 8)
> +#define IOMAP_F_STALE		(1U << 9)
>  
>  /*
>   * Flags from 0x1000 up are for file system specific usage:
>   */
> -#define IOMAP_F_PRIVATE		0x1000
> +#define IOMAP_F_PRIVATE		(1U << 12)
>  
>  
>  /*
> @@ -89,6 +98,7 @@ struct iomap {
>  	void			*inline_data;
>  	void			*private; /* filesystem private */
>  	const struct iomap_page_ops *page_ops;
> +	u64			validity_cookie; /* used with .iomap_valid() */
>  };
>  
>  static inline sector_t iomap_sector(const struct iomap *iomap, loff_t pos)
> @@ -128,6 +138,23 @@ struct iomap_page_ops {
>  	int (*page_prepare)(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, unsigned len);
>  	void (*page_done)(struct inode *inode, loff_t pos, unsigned copied,
>  			struct page *page);
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * Check that the cached iomap still maps correctly to the filesystem's
> +	 * internal extent map. FS internal extent maps can change while iomap
> +	 * is iterating a cached iomap, so this hook allows iomap to detect that
> +	 * the iomap needs to be refreshed during a long running write
> +	 * operation.
> +	 *
> +	 * The filesystem can store internal state (e.g. a sequence number) in
> +	 * iomap->validity_cookie when the iomap is first mapped to be able to
> +	 * detect changes between mapping time and whenever .iomap_valid() is
> +	 * called.
> +	 *
> +	 * This is called with the folio over the specified file position held
> +	 * locked by the iomap code.
> +	 */
> +	bool (*iomap_valid)(struct inode *inode, const struct iomap *iomap);
>  };
>  
>  /*
> -- 
> 2.37.2
> 



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