Re: [PATCH RFC v2 18/27] arm64: mte: Reserve tag block for the zero page

From: Alexandru Elisei
Date: Wed Nov 29 2023 - 06:30:42 EST


On Tue, Nov 28, 2023 at 06:06:54PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
> On 19.11.23 17:57, Alexandru Elisei wrote:
> > On arm64, the zero page receives special treatment by having the tagged
> > flag set on MTE initialization, not when the page is mapped in a process
> > address space. Reserve the corresponding tag block when tag storage
> > management is being activated.
>
> Out of curiosity: why does the shared zeropage require tagged storage? What
> about the huge zeropage?

There are two different tags that are used for tag checking: the logical
tag, the tag embedded in bits 59:56 of an address, and the physical tag
corresponding to the address. This tag is stored in a separate memory
location, called tag storage. When an access is performed, hardware
compares the logical tag (from the address) with the physical tag (from the
tag storage). If they match, the access is permitted.

The physical tag is set with special instructions.

Userspace pointers have bits 59:56 zero. If the pointer is in a VMA with
MTE enabled, then for userspace to be able to access this address, the
physical tag must also be 0b0000.

To make it easier on userspace, when a page is first mapped as tagged, its
tags are cleared by the kernel; this way, userspace can access the address
immediately, without clearing the physical tags beforehand. Another reason
for clearing the physical tags when a page is mapped as tagged would be to
avoid leaking uninitialized tags to userspace.

The zero page is special, because the physical tags are not zeroed every
time the page is mapped in a process; instead, the zero page is marked as
tagged (by setting a page flag) and the physical tags are zeroed only once,
when MTE is enabled at boot.

All of this means that when tag storage is enabled, which happens after MTE
is enabled, the tag storage corresponding to the zero page is already in
use and must be rezerved, and it can never be used for data allocations.

I hope all of the above makes sense. I can also put it in the commit
message :)

As for the zero huge page, the MTE code in the kernel treats it like a
regular page, and it zeroes the tags when it is mapped as tagged in a
process. I agree that this might not be the best solution from a
performance perspective, but it has worked so far.

With tag storage management enabled, set_pte_at()->mte_sync_tags() will
discover that the huge zero page doesn't have tag storage reserved, the
table entry will be mapped as invalid to use the page fault-on-access
mechanism that I introduce later in the series [1] to reserve tag storage,
and after that set_pte_at() will zero the physical tags.

[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/20231119165721.9849-20-alexandru.elisei@xxxxxxx/

Thanks,
Alex

>
> --
> Cheers,
>
> David / dhildenb
>