Re: [PATCH v5 0/8] tee: Improve support for kexec and kdump

From: Jens Wiklander
Date: Tue Jun 15 2021 - 03:23:46 EST


Hi Tyler,

On Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 12:33 AM Tyler Hicks
<tyhicks@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> v5:
> - Picked up Reviewed-by's from Jens.
> - Added 'Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' to all commits as this is intended
> to be a bug fix series. I'm happy to sort out backports with the
> stable team.
> - Got rid of the bool is_mapped parameter of optee_disable_shm_cache()
> by abstracting out the function with two wrappers. One
> (optee_disable_shm_cache()) for normal case where the shm cache is
> fully mapped and another (optee_disable_unmapped_shm_cache()) for the
> unusual case of the shm cache having potentially invalid entries.
> - Replaced my previous 'tee: Support kernel shm registration without
> dma-buf' patch with a cleaner implementation ('tee: Correct
> inappropriate usage of TEE_SHM_DMA_BUF flag') from Sumit Garg.
> v4: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210610210913.536081-1-tyhicks@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> v3: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210609002326.210024-1-tyhicks@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
> v2: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210225090610.242623-1-allen.lkml@xxxxxxxxx/
> v1: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20210217092714.121297-1-allen.lkml@xxxxxxxxx/
>
> This series fixes several bugs uncovered while exercising the OP-TEE
> (Open Portable Trusted Execution Environment), ftpm (firmware TPM), and
> tee_bnxt_fw (Broadcom BNXT firmware manager) drivers with kexec and
> kdump (emergency kexec) based workflows.
>
> The majority of the problems are caused by missing .shutdown hooks in
> the drivers. The .shutdown hooks are used by the normal kexec code path
> to let the drivers clean up prior to executing the target kernel. The
> .remove hooks, which are already implemented in these drivers, are not
> called as part of the kexec code path. This resulted in shared memory
> regions, that were cached and/or registered with OP-TEE, not being
> cleared/unregistered prior to kexec. The new kernel would then run into
> problems when handling the previously cached virtual addresses or trying
> to register newly allocated shared memory objects that overlapped with
> the previously registered virtual addresses. The TEE didn't receive
> notification that the old virtual addresses were no longer meaningful
> and that a new kernel, with a new address space, would soon be running.
>
> However, implementing .shutdown hooks was not enough for supporting
> kexec. There was an additional problem caused by the TEE driver's
> reliance on the dma-buf subsystem for multi-page shared memory objects
> that were registered with the TEE. Shared memory objects backed by a
> dma-buf use a different mechanism for reference counting. When the final
> reference is released, work is scheduled to be executed to unregister
> the shared memory with the TEE but that work is only completed prior to
> the current task returning the userspace. In the case of a kexec
> operation, the current task that's calling the driver .shutdown hooks
> never returns to userspace prior to the kexec operation so the shared
> memory was never unregistered. This eventually caused problems from
> overlapping shared memory regions that were registered with the TEE
> after several kexec operations. The large 4M contiguous region
> allocated by the tee_bnxt_fw driver reliably ran into this issue on the
> fourth kexec on a system with 8G of RAM.
>
> The use of dma-buf makes sense for shared memory that's in use by
> userspace but dma-buf's aren't needed for shared memory that will only
> used by the driver. This series separates dma-buf backed shared memory
> allocated by the kernel from multi-page shared memory that the kernel
> simply needs registered with the TEE for private use.
>
> One other noteworthy change in this series is to completely refuse to
> load the OP-TEE driver in the kdump kernel. This is needed because the
> secure world may have had all of its threads in suspended state when the
> regular kernel crashed. The kdump kernel would then hang during boot
> because the OP-TEE driver's .probe function would attempt to use a
> secure world thread when they're all in suspended state. Another problem
> is that shared memory allocations could fail under the kdump kernel
> because the previously registered were not unregistered (the .shutdown
> hook is not called when kexec'ing into the kdump kernel).
>
> The first patch in the series fixes potential memory leaks that are not
> directly related to kexec or kdump but were noticed during the
> development of this series.
>
> Tyler
>
> Allen Pais (2):
> optee: fix tee out of memory failure seen during kexec reboot
> firmware: tee_bnxt: Release TEE shm, session, and context during kexec
>
> Jens Wiklander (1):
> tee: add tee_shm_alloc_kernel_buf()
>
> Sumit Garg (1):
> tee: Correct inappropriate usage of TEE_SHM_DMA_BUF flag
>
> Tyler Hicks (4):
> optee: Fix memory leak when failing to register shm pages
> optee: Refuse to load the driver under the kdump kernel
> optee: Clear stale cache entries during initialization
> tpm_ftpm_tee: Free and unregister TEE shared memory during kexec
>
> drivers/char/tpm/tpm_ftpm_tee.c | 8 ++---
> drivers/firmware/broadcom/tee_bnxt_fw.c | 14 ++++++--
> drivers/tee/optee/call.c | 38 +++++++++++++++++++---
> drivers/tee/optee/core.c | 43 ++++++++++++++++++++++++-
> drivers/tee/optee/optee_private.h | 1 +
> drivers/tee/optee/rpc.c | 5 +--
> drivers/tee/optee/shm_pool.c | 20 +++++++++---
> drivers/tee/tee_shm.c | 20 +++++++++++-
> include/linux/tee_drv.h | 2 ++
> 9 files changed, 132 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
>
> --
> 2.25.1
>

It looks like we're almost done now. Thanks for your patience to see
this through.

I suppose it makes most sense to take this via my tree, but before I
can do that I'll need acks from the maintainers of
drivers/char/tpm/tpm_ftpm_tee.c ("tpm_ftpm_tee: Free and unregister
TEE shared memory during kexec") and
drivers/firmware/broadcom/tee_bnxt_fw.c ("firmware: tee_bnxt: Release
TEE shm, session, and context during kexec").

Cheers,
Jens