Re: [PATCH] softirq: fix memory corruption when freeing tasklet_struct
From: Hannes Reinecke
Date: Fri Jan 26 2024 - 03:52:40 EST
On 1/26/24 00:15, Damien Le Moal wrote:
On 1/26/24 07:04, Mikulas Patocka wrote:
On Thu, 25 Jan 2024, Linus Torvalds wrote:
On Thu, 25 Jan 2024 at 10:30, Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
There's a problem with the tasklet API - there is no reliable way how to
free a structure that contains tasklet_struct. The problem is that the
function tasklet_action_common calls task_unlock(t) after it called the
callback. If the callback does something that frees tasklet_struct,
task_unlock(t) would write into free memory.
Ugh.
I see what you're doing, but I have to say, I dislike this patch
immensely. It feels like a serious misdesign that is then papered over
with a hack.
I'd much rather see us trying to move away from tasklets entirely in
cases like this. Just say "you cannot do that".
OK. I will delete tasklets from both dm-crypt and dm-verity - it will
simplify them quite a bit.
BTW. Do you think that we should get rid of request-based device mapper as
well? (that's another thing that looks like code bloat to me)
That would force removing dm-multipath, which is I think the only DM driver
using requests. But given how widespread the use of dm-multipath is, killing it
would likely make a lot of people unhappy...
Oh, it's this time of the year again?
(This topic regularly comes up ...)
The reason is not that it will disable dm-multipath (Mike Snitzer put in
bio-based multipathing as an additional code path); the reason is that
dm-multipath performance will suffer when you remove request-based DM.
DM-multipath schedules based on request (if you use the request-based
interface) or bios (if you use the bio-based interface).
Any merge decision is typically done by the block layer when combining
bios into requests; and you can only merge bios if the bvecs are adjacent.
So if you use bio-based multipathing you will spread sequential bios
across all paths, leaving the block layer unable to merge requests.
For request based multipathing the requests are already fully-formed,
and scheduling across paths does not change them.
Things are slightly better with multi-page bvecs nowadays, but the
overall picture still stands.
Another thing is timeouts; bios don't do timeouts, so a bio can run
for an arbitrary time with no chance of interrupting it.
Requests do have a timeout, and will be aborted from the driver when
the timeout is hit.
Seeing that 99% of all I/O issues I've seen _are_ timeouts it becomes
a crucial feature if you want dm-multipath to control failover time.
Cheers,
Hannes
--
Dr. Hannes Reinecke Kernel Storage Architect
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