The entry/exit handling for exceptions, interrupts, syscalls and KVM is not really documented except for some comments. Fill the gaps. Reported-by: Nicolas Saenz Julienne <nsaenzju@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> --- Documentation/core-api/entry.rst | 268 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Documentation/core-api/index.rst | 8 + kernel/entry/common.c | 1 3 files changed, 276 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/core-api/entry.rst @@ -0,0 +1,268 @@ +Entry/exit handling for exceptions, interrupts, syscalls and KVM +================================================================ + +For any transition from one execution domain into another the kernel +requires update of various states. The state updates have strict rules +versus ordering. + +The states which need to be updated are: + + * Lockdep + * RCU + * Preemption counter + * Tracing + * Time accounting + +The update order depends on the transition type and is explained below in +the transition type sections. + +Non-instrumentable code - noinstr +--------------------------------- + +Low level transition code cannot be instrumented before RCU is watching and +after RCU went into a non watching state (NOHZ, NOHZ_FULL) as most +instrumentation facilities depend on RCU. + +Aside of that many architectures have to save register state, e.g. debug or +cause registers before another exception of the same type can happen. A +breakpoint in the breakpoint entry code would overwrite the debug registers +of the inital breakpoint. + +Such code has to be marked with the 'noinstr' attribute. That places the +code into a special section which is taboo for instrumentation and debug +facilities. + +In a function which is marked 'noinstr' it's only allowed to call into +non-instrumentable code except when the invocation of instrumentable code +is annotated with a instrumentation_begin()/instrumentation_end() pair:: + + noinstr void entry(void) + { + handle_entry(); <-- must be 'noinstr' or '__always_inline' + ... + instrumentation_begin(); + handle_context(); <-- instrumentable code + instrumentation_end(); + ... + handle_exit(); <-- must be 'noinstr' or '__always_inline' + } + +This allows verification of the 'noinstr' restrictions via objtool on +supported architectures. + +Invoking non-instrumentable functions from instrumentable context has no +restrictions and is useful to protect e.g. state switching which would +cause malfunction if instrumented. + +All non-instrumentable entry/exit code sections before and after the RCU +state transitions must run with interrupts disabled. + +Syscalls +-------- + +Syscall entry exit code starts obviously in low level architecture specific +assembly code and calls out into C-code after establishing low level +architecture specific state and stack frames. This low level code must not +be instrumented. A typical syscall handling function invoked from low level +assembly code looks like this:: + + noinstr void do_syscall(struct pt_regs \*regs, int nr) + { + arch_syscall_enter(regs); + nr = syscall_enter_from_user_mode(regs, nr); + + instrumentation_begin(); + + if (!invoke_syscall(regs, nr) && nr != -1) + result_reg(regs) = __sys_ni_syscall(regs); + + instrumentation_end(); + + syscall_exit_to_user_mode(regs); + } + +syscall_enter_from_user_mode() first invokes enter_from_user_mode() which +establishes state in the following order: + + * Lockdep + * RCU / Context tracking + * Tracing + +and then invokes the various entry work functions like ptrace, seccomp, +audit, syscall tracing etc. After the function returns instrumentable code +can be invoked. After returning from the syscall handler the instrumentable +code section ends and syscall_exit_to_user_mode() is invoked. + +syscall_exit_to_user_mode() handles all work which needs to be done before +returning to user space like tracing, audit, signals, task work etc. After +that it invokes exit_to_user_mode() which again handles the state +transition in the reverse order: + + * Tracing + * RCU / Context tracking + * Lockdep + +syscall_enter_from_user_mode() and syscall_exit_to_user_mode() are also +available as fine grained subfunctions in cases where the architecture code +has to do extra work between the various steps. In such cases it has to +ensure that enter_from_user_mode() is called first on entry and +exit_to_user_mode() is called last on exit. + + +KVM +--- + +Entering or exiting guest mode is very similar to syscalls. From the host +kernel point of view the CPU goes off into user space when entering the +guest and returns to the kernel on exit. + +kvm_guest_enter_irqoff() is a KVM specific variant of exit_to_user_mode() +and kvm_guest_exit_irqoff() is the KVM variant of enter_from_user_mode(). +The state operations have the same ordering. + +Task work handling is done separately for guest at the boundary of the +vcpu_run() loop via xfer_to_guest_mode_handle_work() which is a subset of +the work handled on return to user space. + +Interrupts and regular exceptions +--------------------------------- + +Interrupts entry and exit handling is slightly more complex than syscalls +and KVM transitions. + +If an interrupt is raised while the CPU executes in user space, the entry +and exit handling is exactly the same as for syscalls. + +If the interrupt is raised while the CPU executes in kernel space the entry +and exit handling is slightly different. RCU state is only updated when the +interrupt was raised in context of the idle task because that's the only +kernel context where RCU can be not watching on NOHZ enabled kernels. +Lockdep and tracing have to be updated unconditionally. + +irqentry_enter() and irqentry_exit() provide the implementation for this. + +The architecture specific part looks similar to syscall handling:: + + noinstr void do_interrupt(struct pt_regs \*regs, int nr) + { + arch_interrupt_enter(regs); + state = irqentry_enter(regs); + + instrumentation_begin(); + + irq_enter_rcu(); + invoke_irq_handler(regs, nr); + irq_exit_rcu(); + + instrumentation_end(); + + irqentry_exit(regs, state); + } + +Note, that the invocation of the actual interrupt handler is within a +irq_enter_rcu() and irq_exit_rcu() pair. + +irq_enter_rcu() updates the preemption count which makes in_hardirq() +return true, handles NOHZ tick state and interrupt time accounting. This +means that up to the point where irq_enter_rcu() is invoked in_hardirq() +returns false. + +irq_exit_rcu() handles interrupt time accounting, undoes the preemption +count update and eventually handles soft interrupts and NOHZ tick state. + +The preemption count could be established in irqentry_enter() already, but +there is no real value to do so. This allows the preemption count to be +traced and just puts a restriction on the early entry code up to +irq_enter_rcu(). + +This also keeps the handling vs. irq_exit_rcu() symmetric and +irq_exit_rcu() must undo the preempt count elevation before handling soft +interrupts and irqentry_exit() also requires that because it might +schedule. + + +NMI and NMI-like exceptions +--------------------------- + +NMIs and NMI like exceptions, e.g. Machine checks, double faults, debug +interrupts etc. can hit any context and have to be extra careful vs. the +state. + +Debug exceptions can handle user space breakpoints or watchpoints in the +same way as an interrupt which was raised while executing in user space, +but kernel mode debug exceptions have to be treated like NMIs as they can +even happen in NMI context, e.g. due to code patching. + +Also Machine check exceptions can handle user mode exceptions like regular +interrupts, but for kernel mode exceptions they have to be treated like +NMIs. + +NMIs and the other NMI-like exceptions handle state transitions in the most +straight forward way and do not differentiate between user and kernel mode +origin. + +The state update on entry is handled in irqentry_nmi_enter() which updates +state in the following order: + + * Preemption counter + * Lockdep + * RCU + * Tracing + +The exit counterpart irqenttry_nmi_exit() does the reverse operation in the +reverse order. + +Note, that the update of the preemption counter has to be the first +operation on enter and the last operation on exit. The reason is that both +lockdep and RCU rely on in_nmi() returning true in this case. The +preemption count modification in the NMI entry/exit case can obviously not +be traced. + +Architecture specific code looks like this:: + + noinstr void do_nmi(struct pt_regs \*regs) + { + arch_nmi_enter(regs); + state = irqentry_nmi_enter(regs); + + instrumentation_begin(); + + invoke_nmi_handler(regs); + + instrumentation_end(); + irqentry_nmi_exit(regs); + } + +and for e.g. a debug exception it can look like this:: + + noinstr void do_debug(struct pt_regs \*regs) + { + arch_nmi_enter(regs); + + debug_regs = save_debug_regs(); + + if (user_mode(regs)) { + state = irqentry_enter(regs); + + instrumentation_begin(); + + user_mode_debug_handler(regs, debug_regs); + + instrumentation_end(); + + irqentry_exit(regs, state); + } else { + state = irqentry_nmi_enter(regs); + + instrumentation_begin(); + + kernel_mode_debug_handler(regs, debug_regs); + + instrumentation_end(); + + irqentry_nmi_exit(regs, state); + } + } + +There is no combined irqentry_nmi_if_kernel() function available as the +above cannot be handled in an exception agnostic way. --- a/Documentation/core-api/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/core-api/index.rst @@ -44,6 +44,14 @@ Library functionality that is used throu timekeeping errseq +Low level entry and exit +======================== + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + + entry + Concurrency primitives ====================== --- a/kernel/entry/common.c +++ b/kernel/entry/common.c @@ -1,5 +1,4 @@ // SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 - #include <linux/context_tracking.h> #include <linux/entry-common.h> #include <linux/highmem.h>