Re: [PATCH v2 5/5] audit: do not use exclusive wait in audit_receive()
From: Eiichi Tsukata
Date: Mon May 22 2023 - 00:44:31 EST
> On May 20, 2023, at 5:54, Paul Moore <paul@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On May 11, 2023 Eiichi Tsukata <eiichi.tsukata@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>> kauditd thread issues wake_up() before it goes to sleep. The wake_up()
>> call wakes up only one process as waiter side uses exclusive wait.
>> This can be problematic when there are multiple processes (one is in
>> audit_receive() and others are in audit_log_start()) waiting on
>> audit_backlog_wait queue.
>>
>> For example, if there are two processes waiting:
>>
>> Process (A): in audit_receive()
>> Process (B): in audit_log_start()
>>
>> And (A) is at the head of the wait queue. Then kauditd's wake_up() only
>> wakes up (A) leaving (B) as it is even if @audit_queue is drained. As a
>> result, (B) can be blocked for up to backlog_wait_time.
>>
>> To prevent the issue, use non-exclusive wait in audit_receive() so that
>> kauditd can wake up all waiters in audit_receive().
>>
>> Fixes: 8f110f530635 ("audit: ensure userspace is penalized the same as the kernel when under pressure")
>> Signed-off-by: Eiichi Tsukata <eiichi.tsukata@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>> ---
>> kernel/audit.c | 17 +++++++++++------
>> 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
>
> This was also discussed in the last patchset.
>
>
This bug is much easily reproducible on real environments and can cause problematic
user space failure like SSH connection timeout.
Let’s not keep the bug unfixed.
(Of course we’ve already carefully tuned audit related params and user space auditd config so that our product won’t hit backlog full.)
Other ideas in my minds are:
(1) Use different wait queues in audit_receive() and audit_log_start() to guarantee kautid
wake_up() tries to wake up a waiter in audit_log_start().
(2) Periodically (say in every 1 sec) check if @audit_queue is full in audit_receive() to prevent
audit_receive() from unnecessarily waiting for so long time.
BTW, the default backlog_wait_time is 60 * HZ which seems pretty large.
I’d appreciate if you could tell me the reason behind that value.
Eiichi