Re: [PATCH v10 2/5] sched: Use user_cpus_ptr for saving user provided cpumask in sched_setaffinity()

From: Waiman Long
Date: Tue Jan 17 2023 - 13:50:23 EST


On 1/17/23 11:08, Will Deacon wrote:
Hi Waiman,

On Thu, Sep 22, 2022 at 02:00:38PM -0400, Waiman Long wrote:
The user_cpus_ptr field is added by commit b90ca8badbd1 ("sched:
Introduce task_struct::user_cpus_ptr to track requested affinity"). It
is currently used only by arm64 arch due to possible asymmetric CPU
setup. This patch extends its usage to save user provided cpumask
when sched_setaffinity() is called for all arches. With this patch
applied, user_cpus_ptr, once allocated after a successful call to
sched_setaffinity(), will only be freed when the task exits.

Since user_cpus_ptr is supposed to be used for "requested
affinity", there is actually no point to save current cpu affinity in
restrict_cpus_allowed_ptr() if sched_setaffinity() has never been called.
Modify the logic to set user_cpus_ptr only in sched_setaffinity() and use
it in restrict_cpus_allowed_ptr() and relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr()
if defined but not changing it.

This will be some changes in behavior for arm64 systems with asymmetric
CPUs in some corner cases. For instance, if sched_setaffinity()
has never been called and there is a cpuset change before
relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() is called, its subsequent call will
follow what the cpuset allows but not what the previous cpu affinity
setting allows.

Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
kernel/sched/core.c | 82 ++++++++++++++++++++------------------------
kernel/sched/sched.h | 7 ++++
2 files changed, 44 insertions(+), 45 deletions(-)
We've tracked this down as the cause of an arm64 regression in Android and I've
reproduced the issue with mainline.

Basically, if an arm64 system is booted with "allow_mismatched_32bit_el0" on
the command-line, then the arch code will (amongst other things) call
force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() and relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr()
when exec()'ing a 32-bit or a 64-bit task respectively.

IOW, relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() can be called without a previous force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(). Right?

A possible optimization in this case is to add a bit flag in the task_struct to indicate a previous call to force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(). Without that flag set, relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() can return immediately.


If you consider a system where everything is 64-bit but the cmdline option
above is present, then the call to relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() isn't
expected to do anything in this case, and the old code made sure of that:

@@ -3055,30 +3032,21 @@ __sched_setaffinity(struct task_struct *p, const struct cpumask *mask);
/*
* Restore the affinity of a task @p which was previously restricted by a
- * call to force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(). This will clear (and free)
- * @p->user_cpus_ptr.
+ * call to force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr().
*
* It is the caller's responsibility to serialise this with any calls to
* force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(@p).
*/
void relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(struct task_struct *p)
{
- struct cpumask *user_mask = p->user_cpus_ptr;
- unsigned long flags;
+ int ret;
/*
- * Try to restore the old affinity mask. If this fails, then
- * we free the mask explicitly to avoid it being inherited across
- * a subsequent fork().
+ * Try to restore the old affinity mask with __sched_setaffinity().
+ * Cpuset masking will be done there too.
*/
- if (!user_mask || !__sched_setaffinity(p, user_mask))
- return;
... since it returned early here if '!user_mask' ...
The flag bit will work like the user_mask check here.

-
- raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&p->pi_lock, flags);
- user_mask = clear_user_cpus_ptr(p);
- raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&p->pi_lock, flags);
-
- kfree(user_mask);
+ ret = __sched_setaffinity(p, task_user_cpus(p));
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(ret);
... however, now we end up going down into __sched_setaffinity() with
task_user_cpus(p) giving us the 'cpu_possible_mask'! This can lead to a mixture
of WARN_ON()s and incorrect affinity masks (for example, a newly exec'd task
ends up with the affinity mask of the online CPUs at the point of exec() and is
unable to run on anything onlined later).

CPU hotplug should update the cpumask of existing running application as allowed by cpuset.



I've had a crack at fixing the code above to restore the old behaviour, and it
seems to work for my basic tests (still pending confirmation from others):


diff --git a/kernel/sched/core.c b/kernel/sched/core.c
index bb1ee6d7bdde..0d4a11384648 100644
--- a/kernel/sched/core.c
+++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
@@ -3125,17 +3125,16 @@ __sched_setaffinity(struct task_struct *p, struct affinity_context *ctx);
void relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr(struct task_struct *p)
{
struct affinity_context ac = {
- .new_mask = task_user_cpus(p),
+ .new_mask = p->user_cpus_ptr,
.flags = 0,
};
- int ret;
/*
* Try to restore the old affinity mask with __sched_setaffinity().
* Cpuset masking will be done there too.
*/
- ret = __sched_setaffinity(p, &ac);
- WARN_ON_ONCE(ret);
+ if (ac.new_mask)
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(__sched_setaffinity(p, &ac));
}
void set_task_cpu(struct task_struct *p, unsigned int new_cpu)


With this change, task_user_cpus() is only used by restrict_cpus_allowed_ptr()
so I'd be inclined to remove it altogether tbh.

What do you think?

The problem here is that force_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() can be called without a matching relax_compatible_cpus_allowed_ptr() at the end. So we may end up artificially restrict the number of cpus that can be used when running a 64-bit binary.

What do you think about the idea of having a bit flag to track that?

Cheers,
Longman