Re: [PATCH v5 12/24] x86/resctrl: Make resctrl_arch_rmid_read() retry when it is interrupted
From: Reinette Chatre
Date: Thu Aug 24 2023 - 19:02:46 EST
Hi James,
On 8/24/2023 9:55 AM, James Morse wrote:
> Hi Reinette,
>
> On 09/08/2023 23:35, Reinette Chatre wrote:
>> On 7/28/2023 9:42 AM, James Morse wrote:
>>> resctrl_arch_rmid_read() could be called by resctrl in process context,
>>> and then called by the PMU driver from irq context on the same CPU.
>>
>> The changelog is written as a bug report of current behavior.
>> This does not seem to describe current but instead planned future behavior.
>
> I pulled this patch from much later in the tree as it's about to be a problem in this
> series. I haven't yet decided if its an existing bug in resctrl....
>
> ... it doesn't look like this can affect the path through mon_event_read(), as
> generic_exec_single() masks interrupts.
> But an incoming IPI from mon_event_read can corrupt the values for the limbo worker, which
> at the worst would result in early re-use. And the MBM overflow worker ... which would
> corrupt the value seen by user-space.
> free_rmid() is equally affected, the outcome for limbo is the same spurious delay or early
> re-use.
Apologies but these races are not obvious to me. Let me take the first, where the
race could be between mon_event_read() and the limbo worker. From what I can tell
mon_event_read() can be called from user space when creating a new monitoring
group or when viewing data associated with a monitoring group. In both cases
rdtgroup_mutex is held from the time user space triggers the request until
all IPIs are completed. Compare that with the limbo worker, cqm_handle_limbo(),
that also obtains rdtgroup_mutex before it attempts to do its work.
Considering this example I am not able to see how an incoming IPI from
mon_event_read() can interfere with the limbo worker since both
holding rdtgroup_mutex prevents them from running concurrently.
Similarly, the MBM overflow worker takes rdtgroup_mutex, and free_rmid()
is run with rdtgroup_mutex held.
> I'll change the commit messages to describe that, and float this earlier in the series.
> The backport will be a problem. This applies cleanly to v6.1.46, but for v5.15.127 there
> are at least 13 dependencies ... its probably not worth trying to fix as chances are
> no-one is seeing this happen in reality.
>
>
>>> This could cause struct arch_mbm_state's prev_msr value to go backwards,
>>> leading to the chunks value being incremented multiple times.
>>>
>>> The struct arch_mbm_state holds both the previous msr value, and a count
>>> of the number of chunks. These two fields need to be updated atomically.
>>> Similarly __rmid_read() must write to one MSR and read from another,
>>> this must be proteted from re-entrance.
>>
>> proteted -> protected
>>
>>>
>>> Read the prev_msr before accessing the hardware, and cmpxchg() the value
>>> back. If the value has changed, the whole thing is re-attempted. To protect
>>> the MSR, __rmid_read() will retry reads for QM_CTR if QM_EVTSEL has changed
>>> from the selected value.
>>
>> The latter part of the sentence does not seem to match with what the
>> patch does.
>
>
>>> diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/resctrl/monitor.c b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/resctrl/monitor.c
>>> index f0670795b446..62350bbd23e0 100644
>>> --- a/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/resctrl/monitor.c
>>> +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/resctrl/monitor.c
>>> @@ -266,23 +279,35 @@ int resctrl_arch_rmid_read(struct rdt_resource *r, struct rdt_domain *d,
>>> {
>>> struct rdt_hw_resource *hw_res = resctrl_to_arch_res(r);
>>> struct rdt_hw_domain *hw_dom = resctrl_to_arch_dom(d);
>>> + u64 start_msr_val, old_msr_val, msr_val, chunks;
>>> struct arch_mbm_state *am;
>>> - u64 msr_val, chunks;
>>> - int ret;
>>> + int ret = 0;
>>>
>>> if (!cpumask_test_cpu(smp_processor_id(), &d->cpu_mask))
>>> return -EINVAL;
>>>
>>> +interrupted:
>>> + am = get_arch_mbm_state(hw_dom, rmid, eventid);
>>> + if (am)
>>> + start_msr_val = atomic64_read(&am->prev_msr);
>>> +
>>> ret = __rmid_read(rmid, eventid, &msr_val);
>>> if (ret)
>>> return ret;
>>>
>>> am = get_arch_mbm_state(hw_dom, rmid, eventid);
>>> if (am) {
>>> - am->chunks += mbm_overflow_count(am->prev_msr, msr_val,
>>> - hw_res->mbm_width);
>>> - chunks = get_corrected_mbm_count(rmid, am->chunks);
>>> - am->prev_msr = msr_val;
>>> + old_msr_val = atomic64_cmpxchg(&am->prev_msr, start_msr_val,
>>> + msr_val);
>>> + if (old_msr_val != start_msr_val)
>>> + goto interrupted;
>>> +
>
>> hmmm ... what if interruption occurs here?
>
> This is after the MSR write/read, so this function can't get a torn value from the
> hardware. (e.g. reads the wrong RMID). The operations on struct arch_mbm_state are atomic,
> so are still safe if the function becomes re-entrant.
>
> If the re-entrant call accessed the same RMID and the same counter, its atomic64_add()
> would be based on the prev_msr value this call read - because the above cmpxchg succeeded.
>
> (put another way:)
> The interrupting call returns a lower value, consistent with the first call not having
> finished yet. The interrupted call returns the correct value, which is larger than it
> read, because it completed after the interrupting call.
>
I see, thank you. If this does end up being needed for a future
concurrency issue, could you please add a comment describing
this behavior where a later call can return a lower value and
why that is ok? It looks to me, as accomplished with the use of
atomic64_add(), as though this scenario would
end with the correct arch_mbm_state even though the members
are not updated atomically as a unit.
>
>>> + chunks = mbm_overflow_count(start_msr_val, msr_val,
>>> + hw_res->mbm_width);
>>> + atomic64_add(chunks, &am->chunks);
>>> +
>>> + chunks = get_corrected_mbm_count(rmid,
>>> + atomic64_read(&am->chunks));
>>> } else {
>>> chunks = msr_val;
>>> }
>
>
Reinette