Re: [PATCH net-next v6 07/23] zinc: ChaCha20 ARM and ARM64 implementations

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Wed Sep 26 2018 - 13:23:59 EST




> On Sep 26, 2018, at 10:03 AM, Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Sep 26, 2018 at 6:21 PM Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> Are, is what youâre saying that the Zinc chacha20 functions should call simd_relax() every n bytes automatically for some reasonable value of n? If so, seems sensible, except that some care might be needed to make sure they interact with preemption correctly.
>>
>> What I mean is: the public Zinc entry points should either be callable in an atomic context or they should not be. I think this should be checked at runtime in an appropriate place with an __might_sleep or similar. Or simd_relax should learn to *not* schedule if the result of preempt_enable() leaves it atomic. (And the latter needs to be done in a way that works even on non-preempt kernels, and I donât remember whether thatâs possible.). And this should happen regardless of how many bytes are processed. IOW, calling into Zinc should be equally not atomic-safe for 100 bytes and for 10 MB.
>
> I'm not sure this is actually a problem. Namely:
>
> preempt_disable();
> kernel_fpu_begin();
> kernel_fpu_end();
> schedule(); <--- bug!
>
> Calling kernel_fpu_end() disables preemption, but AFAIK, preemption
> enabling/disabling is recursive, so kernel_fpu_end's use of
> preempt_disable won't actually do anything until the outer preempt
> enable is called:
>
> preempt_disable();
> kernel_fpu_begin();
> kernel_fpu_end();
> preempt_enable();
> schedule(); <--- works!
>
> Or am I missing some more subtle point?
>

No, I think youâre right. I was mid-remembering precisely how simd_relax() worked.