Re: Fw: [PATCH] ia64: race flushing icache in do_no_page path

From: Nick Piggin
Date: Fri Apr 27 2007 - 07:55:44 EST


Mike Stroyan wrote:
On Thu, Apr 26, 2007 at 05:53:49PM +1000, Nick Piggin wrote:

I had a couple of questions which I'm hoping someone would be kind
enough to explain :)

...

I wonder how this is different to all the other code which calls
lazy_mmu_prot_update() after set_pte_at(). do_swap_page, for example,
_could_ fault in executable code, couldn't it?


The do_swap_page code does look suspect. It seems to be working on
ia64 because a DMA transfer of data from swap to the allocated page
is removing old lines from the icache. If code on an anonymous page
was swapping in without direct DMA to the page then the same problem
could occur. I can't think of a reasonable situation that would cause
swapping in to not use DMA. Swapping to/from NFS does not seem reasonable
to me anyway.

But that's because of ia64's cache coherency implementation. I don't really
follow the documentation to know whether it should be one way or the other,
but surely it should be done either before or after the set_pte_at, not both.

Anyway, how about fremap or mprotect, for example?

It is because do_swap_page uses flush_icache_page()? So why doesn't
the flush_icache_page() work in do_no_page as well? (It seems to look
like a superset of lazy_mmu_prot_update on ia64?!?).


flush_icache_page() on ia64 is provided by include/asm-ia64/cacheflush.h.
It doesn't have any effect at all.

#define flush_icache_page(vma,page) do { } while (0)

You're right, sorry I was mistakenly looking at the flush_range. That was
my only immediate concern with your patch... So, for finding and fixing
that bug you have my admiration :)

OK, I'm still not sure that I understand why lazy_mmu_prot_update should be
used rather than flush_icache_page (in concept, not ia64 implementation).
Sure, flush_icache_page isn't given the pte, but let's assume we can change
that.

lazy_mmu_prot_update() is supposed to get icache flushes done when they
need to be. And it is supposed to avoid unneeded flushes when the icache
is known to be clean for a page.

That's the theory. However, I'd still like to know how the arch code can
make the assertion that icache is known to be at all times other than at
the time of a fault?

Ie. what if an operation which causes incoherency is carried out _after_
an executable mapping is installed for that page.

--
SUSE Labs, Novell Inc.
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