Re: [PATCH] ipv4: tcp: security_sk_alloc() needed for unicast_sock

From: Eric Dumazet
Date: Thu Aug 09 2012 - 13:46:14 EST


On Thu, 2012-08-09 at 12:05 -0400, Eric Paris wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 11:36 AM, Eric Dumazet <eric.dumazet@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2012-08-09 at 11:07 -0400, Paul Moore wrote:
> >
> >> Is is possible to do the call to security_sk_alloc() in the ip_init() function
> >> or does the per-cpu nature of the socket make this a pain?
> >>
> >
> > Its a pain, if we want NUMA affinity.
> >
> > Here, each cpu should get memory from its closest node.
>
> I really really don't like it. I won't say NAK, but it is the first
> and only place in the kernel where I believe we allocate an object and
> don't allocate the security blob until some random later point in
> time.

...

> If it is such a performance issue to have the security blob in
> the same numa node, isn't adding a number of branches and putting this
> function call on every output at least as bad? Aren't we discouraged
> from GFP_ATOMIC? In __init we can use GFP_KERNEL.

What a big deal. Its done _once_ time per cpu, and this is so small blob
of memory you'll have to show us one single failure out of one million
boots.

If the security_sk_alloc() fails, we dont care. We are about sending a
RESET or ACK packet. They can be lost by the network, or even skb
allocation can fail. Nobody ever noticed and complained.

Every time we accept() a new socket (and call security_sk_alloc()), its
done under soft irq, thus GFP_ATOMIC, and you didn't complain yet, while
a socket needs about 2 Kbytes of memory...

>
> This still doesn't fix these sockets entirely. We now have the
> security blob allocated, but it was never set to something useful.
> Paul, are you looking into this? This is a bandaide, not a fix....
>

Please do so, on a followup patch, dont pretend I must fix all this
stuff.


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